summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--39759-8.txt9645
-rw-r--r--39759-8.zipbin0 -> 216824 bytes
-rw-r--r--39759-h.zipbin0 -> 255872 bytes
-rw-r--r--39759-h/39759-h.htm11521
-rw-r--r--39759-h/images/tp.jpgbin0 -> 29959 bytes
-rw-r--r--39759.txt9645
-rw-r--r--39759.zipbin0 -> 216794 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
10 files changed, 30827 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/39759-8.txt b/39759-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d97b04f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39759-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,9645 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of
+Scotland Volume 18, by Alexander Leighton
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
+
+
+Title: Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of Scotland Volume 18
+ Historical, Traditionary, & Imaginative.
+
+Author: Alexander Leighton
+
+Release Date: May 22, 2012 [EBook #39759]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WILSON'S TALES OF THE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Clarke, Mary Meehan and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Wilson's
+ Tales of the Borders
+ AND OF SCOTLAND.
+
+ HISTORICAL, TRADITIONARY, & IMAGINATIVE.
+
+ WITH A GLOSSARY.
+
+ REVISED BY
+ ALEXANDER LEIGHTON,
+ _One of the Original Editors and Contributors._
+
+ VOL. XVIII.
+
+ LONDON:
+ WALTER SCOTT, 14 PATERNOSTER SQUARE,
+ AND NEWCASTLE-UPON-TYNE.
+ 1884.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+ Page
+
+ THOMAS OF CHARTRES, (_Hugh Miller_), 1
+
+ THE FUGITIVE, (_John Mackay Wilson_), 33
+
+ THE BRIDE OF BRAMBLEHAUGH, (_Alexander Leighton_), 63
+
+ GLEANINGS OF THE COVENANT, (_Professor Thomas Gillespie_)--
+
+ XIV. JAMES RENWICK, 95
+
+ XV. OLD ISBEL KIRK, 105
+
+ XVI. THE CURLERS, 110
+
+ XVII. THE VIOLATED COFFIN, 119
+
+ THE SURGEON'S TALES, (_Alexander Leighton_)--
+
+ THE MONOMANIAC, 127
+
+ THE FOUNDLING AT SEA, (_Alexander Campbell_), 159
+
+ THE ASSASSIN, (_Alexander Campbell_), 178
+
+ THE PRISONER OF WAR, (_John Howell_), 191
+
+ WILLIE WASTLE'S ACCOUNT OF HIS WIFE, (_John Mackay Wilson_), 223
+
+ THE STONE-BREAKER, (_Alexander Campbell_), 255
+
+ LAIRD RORIESON'S WILL, (_Alexander Leighton_), 276
+
+
+
+
+WILSON'S TALES OF THE BORDERS AND OF SCOTLAND.
+
+
+
+
+THOMAS OF CHARTRES.
+
+
+One morning, early in the spring of 1298, a small Scottish vessel lay
+becalmed in the middle of the Irish Channel, about fifteen leagues to
+the south of the Isle of Man. During the whole of the previous night,
+she had been borne steadily southward, by a light breeze from off the
+fast receding island; but it had sunk as the sun rose, and she was now
+heaving slowly to the swell, which still continued to roll onward, in
+long glassy ridges from the north. A thick fog had risen as the wind
+fell--one of those low sea fogs which, leaving the central heavens
+comparatively clear, hangs its dense, impervious volumes around the
+horizon; and the little vessel lay as if imprisoned within a circular
+wall of darkness, while the sun, reddened by the haze, looked down
+cheerily upon her from above. She was a small and very rude-looking
+vessel, furnished with two lug-sails of dark brown, much in the manner
+of a modern Dutch lugger; with a poop and forecastle singularly high,
+compared with her height in the waist; and with sides which, attaining
+their full breadth scarcely a foot over the water, sloped abruptly
+inwards, towards the deck, like the wall of a mole or pier. The
+parapet-like bulwarks of both poop and forecastle were cut into deep
+embrasures, and ran, like those of a tower, all around the areas they
+enclosed, looking down nearly as loftily on the midships as on the
+water. The sides were black as pitch could render them--the sails
+scarcely less dark; but, as if to shew man's love of the ornamental in
+even the rudest stage of art, a huge misshapen lion flared in vermillion
+on the prow, and over the stern hung the blue flag of Scotland, with the
+silver cross of St Andrew stretching from corner to corner.
+
+From eight to ten seamen lounged about the decks. They were
+uncouth-looking men, heavily attired in jerkins and caps of blue
+woollen, with long, thick beards, and strongly-marked features. The
+master, a man considerably advanced in life--for, though his eye seemed
+as bright as ever, his hair and beard had become white as snow--was
+rather better dressed. He wore above his jerkin a short cloak of blue
+which confessed, in its finer texture, the superiority of the looms of
+Flanders over those of his own country; and a slender cord of silver ran
+round a cap of the same material. His nether garments, however, were
+coarse and rude as those of his seamen; and the shoes he wore were
+fashioned, like theirs, of the undressed skin of the deer, with the hair
+still attached; giving to the foot that brush-like appearance which had
+acquired to his countrymen of the age, from their more polished
+neighbours, the appellation of rough-footed Scots. Neither the number,
+nor the appearance of the crew, singular and wild as the latter was,
+gave the vessel aught of a warlike aspect; and yet there were
+appearances that might have led one to doubt whether she was quite so
+unprepared for attack or defence as at the first view might be premised.
+There ran round the butt of each mast a rack filled with spears, of more
+knightly appearance than could have belonged to a few rude seamen--for
+of some of these the handles were chased with silver, and to some there
+were strips of pennon attached; and a rich crimson cloak, with several
+pieces of mail, were spread out to the morning sun, on one of the
+shrouds.
+
+The crew, we have said, were lounging about the deck, unemployed in the
+calm, when a strong, iron-studded door opened in the poop, and a young
+and very handsome man stepped forward.
+
+"Has my unfortunate cloak escaped stain?" he said to the master. "Your
+sea-water is no brightener of colour."
+
+"It will not yet much ashame you, Clelland," said the master, "even amid
+the gallants of France; but, were it worse, there is little fear, with
+these eyes of yours, of being overlooked by the ladies."
+
+"Nay, now, Brichan, that's but a light compliment from so grave a man as
+you," said Clelland. "You forget how small a chance I shall have beside
+my cousin."
+
+"Not jealous of the Governor, Clelland, I hope?" said the old man,
+gaily. "Nay, trust me, you are in little danger. Sir William is perhaps
+quite as handsome a man as you, and taller by the head and shoulders;
+but, trust me, no one will ever think of him as a pretty fellow. He
+stands too much alone for that. Has he risen yet?"
+
+"Risen!--he has been with the chaplain for I know not how long. Their
+Latin broke in upon my dreams two hours ago. But what have we yonder, on
+the edge of that bank of fog! Is it one of the mermaidens you were
+telling me of yesterday?"
+
+"Nay," said the master, "it is but a poor seal, risen to take the air.
+But what have we beyond it? By heavens I see the dim outline of a large
+vessel, through the fog! and yonder, not half a bow-shot beyond, there
+is another! Saints forbid that it be not the English fleet, or the ships
+of Thomas of Chartres! Clelland, good Clelland, do call up the Governor
+and his company!"
+
+Clelland stepped up to the door in the poop, and shouted hastily to his
+companions within--"Strange sails in sight!--supposed enemies--it were
+well to don your armours." And then turning to a seaman. "Assist me,
+good fellow," he said, "in bracing on mine."
+
+"Thomas of Chartres, to a certainty!" exclaimed the master--"and not a
+breath to bear us away! Would to heavens that I were dead and buried, or
+had never been born!"
+
+"Why all this ado, Brichan?" said Clelland, who, assisted by the sailor,
+was coolly buckling on his mail. "It was never your wont before, to be
+thus annoyed by danger."
+
+"It is not for myself I fear, noble Clelland," said the master, "if the
+Governor were but away and safe. But, oh, to think that the pride and
+stay of Scotland should fall into the merciless hands of a pirate dog!
+Would that my own life, and the lives of all my crew, could but purchase
+his safety!"
+
+"Take heart, old man," said Clelland, with dignity. "Heaven watches over
+the fortunes of the Governor of Scotland; nor will it suffer him to fall
+obscurely by the hands of a mere plunderer of merchants and seamen.--Rax
+me my long spear."
+
+As he spoke, the Governor himself stepped forward from the door in the
+poop, enveloped from head to foot in complete armour. He was a man of
+more than kingly presence--taller, by nearly a foot, than even the
+tallest man on deck, and broader across the shoulders by full six
+inches; but so admirably was his frame moulded, that, though his stature
+rose to the gigantic, no one could think of him as a giant. His visor
+was up, and exhibited a set of high handsome features, and two of the
+finest blue eyes that ever served as indexes to the feelings of a human
+soul. His chin and upper lip were thickly covered with hair of that
+golden colour so often sung by the elder poets; and a few curling locks
+of rather darker shade escaped from under his helmet. A man of middle
+stature and grave saturnine aspect, who wore a monk's frock over a coat
+of mail, came up behind him.
+
+"What is to befall us now, cousin Clelland?" said the Governor. "Does
+not the truce extend over the channel, think you?"
+
+"Ah, these are not English enemies, noble sir," replied the master. "We
+have fallen on the fleet of the infamous Thomas of Chartres."
+
+"And who is Thomas of Chartres?" asked the Governor.
+
+"A cruel and bloodthirsty pirate--the terror of these seas for the last
+sixteen years. Wo is me!--we have neither force enough to fight, nor
+wind to bear us away!"
+
+"Two large vessels," said the Governor, stepping up to the side, "full
+of armed men, too; but we muster fifty, besides the sailors; and, if
+they attempt boarding us, it must be by boat. Is it not so, master? The
+calm which fixes us here, must prevent them from laying alongside and
+overmastering us."
+
+"Ah, yes, noble sir," said the master; "but we see only a part of the
+fleet."
+
+"Were there ten fleets," exclaimed Clelland, impatiently, "I have met
+with as great odds ashore--and here comes Crawford."
+
+The door in the poop was again thrown open, and from forty to fifty
+warriors, in complete armour, headed by a tall and powerful-looking man,
+came crowding out, and then thronged around the masts, to disengage
+their spears. They were all robust and hardy-looking men--the flower
+apparently of a country side; and the coolness and promptitude with
+which they ranged themselves round their leader, to wait his commands,
+shewed that it was not now for the first time they had been called on to
+prepare for battle. They were, in truth, tried veterans of the long and
+bloody struggle which their country had maintained with Edward--men who,
+ere they had united under a leader worthy to command them, had resisted
+the enemy individually, and preserved, amid their woods and fastnesses,
+at least their personal independence. Such a party of such men, however
+great the odds opposed to them, could not, in any circumstances, be
+deemed other than formidable.
+
+"We are not born for peace, countryman," said the Governor--"war follows
+us even here. Meanwhile, lie down, that the enemy mark not our numbers.
+That foremost vessel is lowering her boat, and yonder tall man in
+scarlet, who takes his seat in the bows, seems to be a leader."
+
+"It is Thomas of Chartres, himself," said the master. "I know him well.
+Some five-and-twenty years ago, we sailed together from Palestine."
+
+"And what," asked the Governor, "could have brought a false pirate
+there?"
+
+"He was no false pirate then," replied the master, "but a true Christian
+knight; and bravely did he fight for the sepulchre. But, on his return
+to France, where he had been pledged to meet with his lady-love, he fell
+under the displeasure of the King, his master; and, ever since, he has
+been a wanderer and a pirate. You will see, as he approaches, the
+scallop in his basnet; and be sure he will be the first man to board
+us."
+
+"Excellent," exclaimed the Governor, gaily; "we shall hold him hostage
+for the good behaviour of his fleet. Mark me, cousin Crawford. His barge
+shoves off, and the men bend to their oars. He will be here in a
+twinkling. Do you stand by our good Ancient--would there were but wind
+enough to unfurl it!--and the instant he bids us strike, why, lower it
+to the deck; but be as sure you hoist it again when you see him fairly
+aboard. And you, dear Clelland, do you take your stand here on the deck
+beside me, and see to it, when I am dealing with the pirate, that you
+keep your long spear between us and his crew. It will be strange if he
+boast of his victory this bout."
+
+The men, at the command of their leader, had prostrated themselves on
+the deck, while his two brethren in arms, Crawford and Clelland,
+stationed themselves at his bidding--the one on the vessel's poop,
+directly under the pennon, the other at his side in the midships. The
+pirate's barge, glittering to the sun with arms and armour, and crowded
+with men, rowed lustily towards them; but, while yet a full hundred
+yards away, a sudden breeze from the west began to murmur through the
+shrouds, and the bellying sails swelled slowly over the side.
+
+"Heaven's mercy be praised!" exclaimed the master, "we shall escape them
+yet. Lay her easy to the wind, good Crawford--lay her easy to the wind,
+and we shall bear out through them all."
+
+"Nay, cousin, nay," said the Governor, his eyes flashing with eagerness,
+"the pirate must not escape us so. Lay the vessel to. Turn her head full
+to the wind. And you, captain, draw off your men to the hold. We must
+not lose our good sailors; and these woollens of yours will scarcely
+turn a French arrow. Nay, 'tis I who am master now"--for the old man
+seemed disposed to linger. "I may resign my charge, perhaps, by and by;
+but you must obey me now."
+
+The master and his sailors left the deck. The barge of the pirate came
+sweeping onward till within two spears' length of the vessel, and then
+hailed her with no courtly summons of surrender. "Strike, dogs, strike!
+or you shall fare the worse!" It was the pirate himself who spoke, and
+Crawford, at his bidding, pulled down the Ancient. The barge dashed
+alongside. Thomas of Chartres, a very tall and very powerful man, seized
+hold of the bulwark rail with one hand, and bearing a naked sword in the
+other, leaped fearlessly aboard, within half a yard of where the
+Governor stood, half-concealed by the shrouds and the bulwarks. In a
+moment the sword was struck down, and the intruder locked in the
+tremendous grasp of the first champion of his time. Crawford hoisted the
+Ancient, yard-high, to the new-risen breeze; while Clelland struck his
+long spear against the pirate who had leaped on the gunwale to follow
+his leader, with such hearty good-will that the steel passed through
+targe and corselet, and he fell back a dead man into the boat. In an
+instant the concealed party had sprung from the deck, and fifty Scottish
+spears bristled over the gunwale, interposing their impenetrable hedge
+between the pirate crew and their leader. For a moment, the latter had
+striven to move his antagonist; but, powerful and sinewy as he was, he
+might as well have attempted to uproot an oak of an hundred summers.
+While yet every muscle was strained in the exertion, the Governor swung
+him from off his feet, suspended him at arm's length for full half a
+moment in the air, and then dashed him violently against the deck. A
+stream of blood gushed from mouth and nostril, and he lay stunned and
+senseless where he fell. Meanwhile, the crew of the barge, taken by
+surprise, and outnumbered, shoved off a boat's length beyond reach of
+the spears, and then rested on their oars.
+
+"He revives," said the warrior in the monk's frock, going up to the
+fallen pirate. "Reiver though he be, he has fought for the holy
+sepulchre, and has worn golden spurs."
+
+"I will deal with him right knightly," said the Governor. "Yield thee,
+Sir Thomas of Chartres," he continued, bending over the prisoner, and
+holding up a dagger to his face--"yield thee true hostage for the good
+conduct of thy fleet--or shall I call the confessor?"
+
+"I yield me true hostage," said the fallen man. "But who art thou,
+terrible warrior, that o'ermasterest De Longoville of France as if he
+were a stripling of twelve summers? Art Wallace, the Scottish
+Champion!"
+
+"Thou yieldest, De Longoville," said the Governor, "to Sir William
+Wallace of Elderslie. But how is it that I meet, in the infamous Thomas
+of Chartres, that true soldier of the Cross, De Longoville? I have heard
+minstrels sing of thy deeds against the Saracen, Sir Knight, while I was
+yet a boy; and yet here art thou now, the dread of the wandering sailor
+and the merchant--a chief among thieves and pirates."
+
+"Alas! noble Wallace, thou sayest too truly," said Sir Thomas; "but yet
+wouldst thou deem me as worthy of pity as of censure, didst thou but
+know all, and the remorse I even now endure. For a full year have I
+determined to quit this wild, unknightly mode of life, and go a pilgrim
+as of old; not to fight for the sepulchre--for the battles of the Cross
+are over--not to fight, but to die for it. But I accept, noble champion,
+this my first defeat on sea, as a message from heaven. Accept of me as
+true soldier under thee, and I will fight for thee in thy country's
+quarrel, to the death."
+
+"Most willingly, brave De Longoville," said the Governor, as he raised
+him from the deck; "Scotland needs sorely the use of such swords as
+thine."
+
+"And deem not her cause less holy," said the monk--for monk he was, the
+well-known Chaplain Blair--"deem not her cause less holy than that of
+the sepulchre itself; nor think that thou shalt eradicate the stain of
+past dishonour less surely in her battles. The cause of justice, De
+Longoville, is the cause of God, contend for it where we may."
+
+Wallace returned to De Longoville the sword of which he had so lately
+disarmed him; and the pirate admiral, on learning that the champion was
+bound for Rochelle, issued orders to his fleet, which, now that the mist
+rose, was found to consist of six large vessels, to follow close in
+their wake. The breeze blew steadily from the north-west, and the ships
+went careering along, each in her own long furrow of white, towards the
+port of their destination; the pirate vessels keeping aloof full two
+bowshots from the Scotsman--for so De Longoville had ordered, to prevent
+suspicion of treachery. He had set aside his armour, and now appeared to
+his new associates as a man of noble and knightly bearing, tall and
+stalwart as any warrior aboard, save the Governor; and, though his hair
+was blanched around his temples, and indicated the approach of age, the
+light step and quick sparkling eye gave evidence that his vigour of
+frame still remained undiminished. He sat apart, with the Governor and
+his two kinsmen, Clelland and Crawford, in the cabin under the poop. It
+was a rude, unornamented apartment, as might be expected, from the
+general appearance of the vessel; but the profusion of arms and pieces
+of armour which hung from the sides, glittering to the light that found
+entrance through a casement in the deck, bestowed on the place an air of
+higher pretension. A table with food and wine was placed before the
+warriors.
+
+"It is now twenty-six years, or thereby," said De Longoville, "since I
+quitted Palestine for France, with the good Louis. I had fought by his
+side on the disastrous field of Massouna, and did all that a man of
+mould might to rescue him from the Saracens, when he fell into their
+hands, exhausted by his wounds and his sore sickness. But that day was
+written a day of defeat and disaster to the soldiers of the Cross. Nor
+need I say how I took my stand, with the best of my countrymen, on the
+walls of Damietta, and maintained them for the good cause, despite of
+the assembled forces of the Moslem, until we had bought back our king
+from captivity, by yielding up the city we defended for his ransom. It
+is enough for a disgraced man and a captive to say that my services were
+not overlooked by those whose notice was most an honour; and that, ere I
+embarked for France, I received the badge of knighthood from the hand
+of the good Louis himself.
+
+"You all know of how different a character Charles of Anjou was from his
+brother the king. I had returned from the crusade rich, only in honour,
+and found the lady of my affections under close thrall by her parents,
+who had resolved that she should marry Loithaire, Lord of Languedoc. I
+knew that her heart was all my own; but I knew, besides, that I must
+become wealthy ere I could hope to compete for her with a rival such as
+Loithaire; and the good Pope Nicholas having made over the crown of the
+Two Sicilies to Charles of Anjou, in an evil hour I entered the army
+with which Charles was to wrest it from the bastard Manfred--having
+certain assurance, from the tyrant himself, that, if he succeeded, I
+should become one of the nobles of Sicily. We encountered Manfred at
+Beneventura, and the bastard was defeated and slain. But I must blush,
+as a knight, for the honour of knighthood--as a Frenchman, for the fair
+fame of my country--when I think of the cruelties which followed. Not
+the worst tyrants of old Rome could have surpassed Charles of Anjou in
+his butcheries. The blood plashed under the hoofs of his charger as he
+passed through the cities of his future kingdom; and, when he had borne
+down all opposition, 'twould seem as if, in his eagerness to destroy all
+who might resist, he had also determined to extirpate all who could
+obey. But his policy proved as unsound as 'twas cruel and unjust, as the
+terrible _Eve of the Vespers_ has since shown. The Princes of Germany,
+headed by the chivalrous Conradine of Swabia, united against us in the
+cause of the people. But the arms of France were again triumphant; the
+confederacy was broken, and the gallant Conradine fell into the hands of
+Charles. It was I, warriors of Scotland! to whom he surrendered; and I
+had granted him, as became a knight, an assurance of knightly
+protection. But would that my arms had been hewn off at the shoulders
+when I first beat down his sword, and intercepted his retreat! The
+infamous Charles treated my knightly assurance with scorn; and--can you
+credit such baseness, noble Wallace!--he ordered Conradine of Swabia--a
+true knight, and an independent prince--for instant execution, as if he
+were a common malefactor. My blood boils, even now, when I recall that
+terrible scene of injustice and cruelty. The soldiers of France crowded
+round the scaffold; and I was among them, burning with shame and rage.
+Ere Conradine bent him to the executioner, he took off his glove, and
+throwing it amongst us, adjured us, if we were not all as dead to honour
+as our leader, to bear it to some of his kinsmen, who would receive it
+as a pledge of investiture in his rights, and as beqeathing the
+obligation to revenge his death. Will you blame me, noble Wallace! that,
+Frenchman as I was, I seized the glove of Conradine, and fled the army
+of Charles; and that, ere I returned to France, I delivered it up to
+Pedro of Arragon, the near kinsman of the last Prince of Swabia?
+
+"My king and friend, the good Louis, had sailed from France for
+Palestine, on his last hapless voyage, ere I had executed my mission. On
+my return to France, however, I found a galley of Toulon on the eve of
+quitting port, to join with his fleet, then on the coast of Africa, and,
+snatching a hurried interview with the lady of my affections, maugre the
+vigilance of her relatives, I embarked to fight under Louis, as of old,
+for the blessed sepulchre. We landed near Tunis, and saw the tents of
+France glittering to the sun. But all was silent as midnight, and the
+royal standard hung reversed over the pavilion of the good Louis. He had
+died that morning of the plague; and his base and cruel brother, the
+false Charles of Anjou, sat beside the corpse. I felt that I had fallen
+among my enemies; for though the young King was there, he was weak and
+inexperienced, and open to the influence of his uncle. The first knight
+I met, as I entered the camp, was Loithaire of Languedoc--now the wily
+friend and counsellor of Charles. There were lying witnesses suborned
+against me, who accused me of the most incredible and unheard-of
+practices; and of these Loithaire was the chief. 'Twas in vain I
+demanded the combat, as a test of my innocence. The combat was denied
+me; my sword was broken before the assembled chivalry of France; my
+shield reversed; and sentence was passed that I should be burnt at a
+stake, and my ashes scattered to the four winds of heaven. But it was
+not written that I should perish so. Scarce an hour before the opening
+of the day appointed for my execution, I broke from prison, assisted by
+a brother soldier, whose life I had saved in Palestine, and escaped to
+France.
+
+"I was a broken and ruined man. But how wondrous the force of true
+affection! My Agnes knew this; and yet, knowing all, she contrived to
+elude her guardians, and fled with me to the sea-shore, where we
+embarked, in a ship of Normandy, for the south of Ireland. From that
+hour De Longoville has fought under no banner but his own. I renounced,
+in my anger, my allegiance to my country-nay, declared war with the
+sovereign who had so injured me. The years passed, and desperate and
+dishonoured men like myself came flocking to me as their leader, till
+not Philip himself, or my old enemy Charles, had more kingly authority
+on land than De Longoville on the sea. But let no man again deceive
+himself as I have done. I had reasoned on the lax morality and doubtful
+honour of kings, and asked myself why I might not, as the admiral and
+prince of my fleet, achieve a less guilty, though not less splendid
+glory than the bastard William of Normandy, or Edward of England, or my
+old enemy Charles of Anjou. But I have long since been taught that what
+were high achievements and honourable conquest in the admiral of a
+hundred vessels, is but sheer piracy in the captain of six. I can trust,
+however, that the last days of De Longoville may yet be deemed equal to
+the first; and that the middle term of his life may be forgiven him for
+its beginning and its close. Not a month since, I carried my wife and
+daughter to France, and took final leave of them, with the purpose of
+setting out on my pilgrimage to Palestine. That intention, noble
+Wallace! is now altered; and I must again seek them out, that they may
+accompany me to Scotland."
+
+"The foul stain of treason, brave Longoville, must be removed," said the
+Governor. "Charles of Anjou has long since gone to his account: does the
+Lord of Languedoc still survive!"
+
+"He still lives," replied the admiral; "his years do not outnumber my
+own."
+
+"Then must he either retract the vile calumny, or grant you the combat.
+The young Philip has pledged his knightly word, when he solicited the
+visit I am now voyaging to pay him, that he would grant me the first
+boon I craved in person, should it involve the alienation of his fairest
+province. That boon, brave De Longoville, will, at least, present you
+with the means of regaining your fair fame."
+
+De Longoville knelt on the cabin floor, and kissed the hand of the
+Governor. The conversation glided imperceptibly to other and lighter
+matters; time passed gaily in the recital of stories of chivalrous
+endurance or exploit; and the gale, which still blew steadily from the
+north-west, promised a speedy accomplishment of their voyage. For four
+days they sailed without shifting back or lowering sail; and, on the
+morning of the fifth, cast anchor in the harbour of Rochelle.
+
+On the evening of the second day after their arrival, a single knight
+was pricking his steed through one of the glades of the immense forest
+which, at this period, covered the greater part of the province of
+Poitiers. He had been passing, ever since morning, through what seemed
+an interminable wilderness of wood--here clustered into almost
+impenetrable thickets shagged with an undergrowth of thorn, there
+opening into long bosky glades and avenues that seemed, however, only to
+lead into recesses still more solitary and remote than those that
+darkened around him. During the early part of the day, the sun had
+looked down gaily among the trees, checkering the sward below with a
+carpeting of alternate light and shadow; and the knight, a lover of
+falconry and the chase, had rode jocundly on through the peopled
+solitude; ever and anon grasping his spear, with the eager spirit of the
+huntsman, as the fawn started up beside his courser, and shot like a
+meteor across the avenue, or the wild boar or wolf rustled in the
+neighbouring brake. Towards evening, however, the eternal sameness of
+the landscape had begun to fatigue him; the sun, too, had disappeared,
+long before his setting, in a veil of impenetrable vapour, mottled with
+grey, ponderous clouds, betokening an approaching storm; and the
+horseman pressed eagerly onward, in the hope of reaching, ere its
+bursting, the hostelry in which he had purposed to pass the evening. He
+had either, however, mistaken his way or miscalculated his distance; for
+after passing dell and dingle, glade and thicket, in monotonous
+succession, for hours on hours, the forest still seemed as dense and
+unending, and the hostelry as distant as ever. A brown and sleepy horror
+seemed to settle over the trees as the evening darkened; the thunder
+began to bellow in long peals, far to the south, and a few heavy drops
+to patter from time to time on the leaves, giving indication of the
+approaching deluge. The knight had just resigned himself to encounter
+all the horrors of the storm, when, on descending into a little bosky
+hollow, through which there passed a minute streamlet, he found himself
+in front of a deserted hermitage. It was a cell, opening, like an
+Egyptian tomb, in the face of a low precipice. A rude stone-cross,
+tapestried with ivy, rose immediately over the narrow door-way.
+
+"The saints be praised!" exclaimed the knight, leaping lightly from his
+horse. "I shall e'en avail myself of the good shelter they have
+provided. But thou, poor Biscay," he continued, patting his steed,
+"wouldst that thou wert with thy master, mine host of the Three _Fleurs
+de Lis!_--there is scant stabling for thee here. This way, however, good
+Biscay--this way. Thou must bide the storm as thou best may'st in yonder
+hollow of the rock." And, leading the animal to the hollow, he fastened
+him to the stem of a huge ivy, and then entered the hermitage.
+
+It consisted of one small rude apartment, hewn, apparently with immense
+labour, in the living rock. A seat and bed of stone occupied the
+opposite sides; and in the extreme end, fronting the door, there was a
+rude image of the Virgin, with a small altar of mouldering stone, placed
+before it. The evening was oppressively sultry, and, taking his seat on
+the bedside, the knight unlaced and set aside his helmet, exhibiting to
+the fast-dying light, the brown curling hair and handsome features of
+our old acquaintance Clelland--for it was no other than he. The thunder
+began to roll in louder and longer peals, and the lightning to illumine,
+at brief intervals, every glade and dingle without, and every minute
+object within; when a loud scream of dismay and terror, blent with the
+infuriated howl of some wild animal, rose from the upper part of the
+dell, and Clelland had but snatched up his spear and leaped out into the
+storm, when a young female, closely pursued by an enormous wolf, came
+rushing down the declivity, in the direction of the hermitage; but, in
+crossing the little stream, overcome apparently by fatigue and terror,
+she stumbled and fell. To interpose his person between the poor girl and
+her ravenous pursuer was with Clelland the work of one moment; to make
+such prompt and efficient use of his spear that the steel head passed
+through and through the monster, and then buried itself in the earth
+beneath, was his employment in the next. The black blood came spouting
+out along the shaft, crimsoning both his hands to the wrists; and the
+transfixed savage, writhing itself round on the wood in its mortal
+agony, and gnashing its immense fangs, just uttered one tremendous howl
+that could be heard even above the pealing of the thunder, and then
+belched out his life at his feet. He raised the fallen girl, who seemed
+for a moment to have sunk into a state of partial swoon, and,
+disengaging his good weapon from the bleeding carcass, he supported her
+to the hermitage in the rock.
+
+She was attired in the garb of a common peasant of the age and country;
+but there was even yet light enough to shew that her beauty was of a
+more dignified expression than is almost ever to be found in a
+cottage--exquisite in colour and form as that which we meet with in the
+latter, may often be. There was a subdued elegance, too, in her few
+brief, but earnest expressions of gratitude to her deliverer, that
+consorted equally ill with her attire. On entering the hermitage, she
+knelt before the altar, and prayed in silence; while Clelland took his
+seat on the stone couch where he had before placed his helmet, leaving
+to his new companion the settle on the opposite side. Meanwhile the
+storm without had increased tenfold. The thunder rolled overhead, peal
+after peal, without break or pause; so that the outbursting of every
+fresh clap was mingled with the echoes in which the wide-spread forest
+had replied to the last. At times, the opposite acclivity, with all its
+thickets, seemed as if enveloped in an atmosphere of fire--at times one
+immense seam of forked lightning came ploughing the pitchy gloom of the
+heavens, from the centre to the horizon. The wild beasts of the forest
+were abroad. Clelland could hear their fierce howlings mingled with the
+terrific bellowings of the heavens. The dead sultry calm was suddenly
+broken. A hurricane went raging through the woods. There was a creaking,
+crackling, rushing sound among the trees, as they strained and quivered
+to the blast; and a roaring, like that of some huge cataract, showed
+that a waterspout had burst in the upper part of the dell, and that the
+little stream was coming down in thunder--a wide and impetuous torrent.
+Clelland's fair companion still remained kneeling before the altar.
+'Twould seem as her prayer of thanks for her great deliverance had
+changed into an earnest and oft-reiterated petition for still further
+protection.
+
+In a pause of the storm, the frightful howlings of a flock of wolves
+were heard rising from over the hermitage, as if hundreds had assembled
+on its roof of rock. Clelland sprung from his seat, and, grasping his
+spear, stood in the doorway.
+
+"We shall have to bide siege," he said to his companion. "I knew not
+that these fierce creatures mustered so thickly here."
+
+"Heaven be our protection!" said the maiden. "They fill every recess of
+the forest. I had left my mother's this evening for but an
+instant--'twas in quest of a tame fawn--when the monster from whose
+murderous fangs you delivered me, started up between me and my home; and
+I had to fly from instant destruction into the thick of the forest."
+
+"And so your place of residence is quite at hand?" said Clelland. "In
+the course of a long day's journey, I have not met with a single human
+habitation."
+
+"The hermitage," replied the maiden, "is but a short half-mile from my
+mother's--would that we were but safe there!"
+
+As she spoke, the howling of the wolves burst out again, in frightful
+chorus, from above, and at least a score of the ravenous animals came
+leaping down over the rock, brushing in their descent the ivy and the
+underwood. Clelland couched his spear, so that nothing could enter by
+the narrow doorway without encountering its sharp point. But the wolves
+came not to the attack; and their yells and howlings from the hollow of
+the rock, blent with the terrified snortings and pawings of poor Biscay,
+shewed that they were bent on an easier conquest, and bulkier, though
+less noble prey. The animal, in his first struggle, broke loose from his
+fastenings, and went galloping madly past; and an intensely bright flash
+of lightning, that illumined the whole scene of terror without, shewed
+him in the act of straining up the opposite bank, with a huge wolf
+fastened to his lacerated back, and closely pursued by full twenty more.
+
+It was, in truth, a night of dread and terror. Towards morning, however,
+the storm gradually sunk into a calm as dead as that which had preceded
+it, and a clear, starry sky looked down on the again silent forest. The
+maiden, now that there was less of danger, was rendered thoroughly
+unhappy by thoughts of her mother. She had left her, she said, but for
+an instant--left her solitary in her dwelling; and how must she have
+passed so terrible a night! Clelland strove to quiet her fears. There
+was a little cloud in the east, he said, already reddening on its lower
+edge; in an hour longer, it would be broad day, and he could then
+conduct her to her mother's.
+
+"You have not always worn such a dress as that which you now wear," he
+continued; "nor have you spent all your days on the edge of the forest.
+Does your father still live?"
+
+There was a pause for a moment.
+
+"I am a native of France," she at length said; "but I have passed most
+of my time in other countries. My father, in fulfilment of a vow, is now
+bound on a pilgrimage to Palestine."
+
+"And may I not crave your name?" asked Clelland.
+
+"My name," she replied, "is Bertha de Longoville. Brave and courtly
+warrior, but for whose generous and knightly daring I would have found
+yester-evening a horrid tomb in the ravenous maw of the wolf, do not, I
+pray you, ask me more. A vow binds me to secrecy for the time."
+
+"Nay, fear not, gentle maiden," said Clelland, "that what you but wish
+to keep secret, I shall once urge you to reveal. But hear me, lady, and
+then judge how far I am to be trusted. You are the only daughter of Sir
+Thomas de Longoville, once a true soldier of the blessed Cross, but, in
+his latter days, less fortunate in his quarrels. Your father is now in
+France, and in two weeks hence will be in Paris."
+
+"Saints and angels!" exclaimed the maiden, "he has fallen into the hands
+of his enemies!"
+
+"Not so, lady; he is among his best friends. The knightly word of Sir
+William Wallace of Elderslie, who never broke faith with friend or
+enemy, is pledged for his safe-keeping. With my kinsman, he is secure of
+at least safety--perhaps even of grace and pardon. But the day has
+broken, maiden; suffer me to conduct you to your mother's."
+
+They left the hermitage together, and ascended the side of the dell. As
+they passed the hollow in the rock, a bright patch of blood caught the
+eye of Clelland.
+
+"Ah, poor Biscay!" he exclaimed; "there is all that now remains of him;
+and how to procure another steed in this wild district, I know not. My
+kinsman will be at Paris long ere his herald gets there. Well, there
+have been greater mishaps. Yonder is the carcass of the wolf I slew
+yester-evening, half eaten by his savage companions."
+
+The morning, we have said, was calm and still; but the storm of the
+preceding night had left behind it no doubtful vestiges of its fury.
+The stream had fallen to its old level, and went tinkling along its
+channel, with a murmur that only served to shew how complete was the
+silence; but the banks were torn and hollowed by the recent torrent, and
+tangled wreaths of brushwood and foliage lay high on the sides of the
+dell. The broken and ragged appearance of the forest gave evidence of
+the force of the hurricane. The fallen trees lay thick on the sides of
+the more exposed acclivities--some reclining like spears, half bent to
+the charge, athwart the spreading boughs of such of their neighbours as
+the storm had spared; others lay as if levelled by the woodman, save
+that their long flexile roots had thrown up vast fragments of turf,
+resembling the broken ruins of cottages. And, in an opening of the wood,
+a gigantic oak, the slow growth of centuries, lay scattered over the
+soil, in raw and splintery fragments, that gave strange evidence of the
+irresistible force of the agent employed in its destruction. The trees
+opened as they advanced, and they emerged from the forest as the first
+beams of the sun had begun to glitter on the topmost boughs. A low,
+moory plain, walled in by a range of distant hills, and mottled with a
+few patches of corn, and a few miserable cottages, lay before them. A
+grey detached tower, somewhat resembling that of an English village
+church, rose on the forest edge, scarce a hundred yards away.
+
+"Yonder tower, Sir Knight," said the maiden, "is the dwelling of my
+mother. Alas! what must she not have endured during the protracted
+horrors of the night!"
+
+"There is, at least, joy waiting her now," said Clelland; "and all will
+soon be well."
+
+They approached the tower. It was a small and very picturesque erection,
+of three low stories in height, with projecting turrets at the front
+corners, connected by a hanging bartizan, over which there rose a sharp
+serrated gable, to the height of about two stories more. A row of
+circular shot-holes, and a low, narrow door-way, were the only openings
+in the lower storey--the few windows in the upper, long and narrow, and
+scarce equal in size to a Norman shield, were thickly barred with iron.
+The building had altogether a dilapidated and deserted appearance; for
+the turrets were broken-edged and mouldering, and some of the large
+square flags had slidden from off the stone roof, and lay in the moat,
+which, from a reservoir, had degenerated into a quagmire, mantled over
+with aquatic plants, and with, here and there, a bush of willow
+springing out from the sides. A single plank afforded a rather doubtful
+passage across; and the iron-studded door of the fortalice lay wide
+open. Clelland hung back as the maiden entered.
+
+"My daughter! my Bertha!" exclaimed a female voice from within; "and do
+you yet live! and are you again restored to me!"
+
+The Knight entered, and found the maiden in the embrace of her mother.
+
+"That I still live," said Bertha, "I owe it to this brave and courtly
+knight. But for his generous daring, your daughter would have found
+strange burial in the ravenous maw of a wolf."
+
+The mother turned round to Clelland, and grasped his mailed hand in both
+hers.
+
+"The saints be your blessing and reward!" she exclaimed; "for I cannot
+repay you. God himself be your reward!--for earth bears no price
+adequate to the benefit. You have restored to the lonely and the broken
+in spirit her only stay and comfort."
+
+"Nay, madam," said Clelland, "I would have done as much for the meanest
+serf; for Bertha de Longoville I could have laid down my life."
+
+The mother again grasped his hand. She was a tall and a still beautiful
+woman, though considerably turned of forty, and though she yet bore
+impressed on her countenance no unequivocal traces of the distress of
+the night. She told them of her sufferings; and was made acquainted in
+turn with the frightful adventure in the hermitage, and, more startling
+still, with the resolution of her husband to confront his calumniators
+at the court of France.
+
+"We must set out instantly on our journey to Paris, Bertha," said the
+matron; "your father, in his imminent peril, must not lack some one, at
+least to comfort, if not to assist him."
+
+"Nay," said Clelland, "ere your setting out, you must first take rest
+enough, to recover the fatigues and watching of the night. And, besides,
+how could two unprotected females travel through such a country as this?
+Hear me, lady: I was hastening to Paris in advance of my party; but now
+that I have missed my way and lost my good steed, they will be all there
+before me. It matters but little. My kinsman can well afford wanting a
+herald. I shall cast myself on your hospitality for the day; and,
+to-morrow, should you feel yourself fully recovered, you shall set out
+for Paris, under such convoy as I can afford you."
+
+Both ladies expressed their warmest gratitude for the kind and generous
+offer; and there was that in the thanks of the younger which Clelland
+would have deemed price sufficient for a service much less redolent of
+pleasure than that he had just tendered. She was in truth one of the
+loveliest women he had ever seen; tall and graceful, and with a
+countenance exquisite in form and colour. But, with all of the bodily
+and the material that constitutes beauty, it was mainly to expression,
+that index of the soul, that she owed her power. There was a steady
+light in the dark hazel eye, joined to an air of quiet, unobtrusive
+self-possession, which seemed to sit on the polished and finely formed
+forehead, that gave evidence of a strong and equable mind; while the
+sweet smile that seemed to lurk about the mouth, and the air of softness
+spread over the lower part of the face, shewed that there mingled with
+the stronger traits of her character the feminine gentleness and
+sweetness of disposition, so fascinating in the sex. A little girl from
+one of the distant cottages entered the building with a milking pail in
+her hands.
+
+"Ah, my good Annette," said the matron, "you left me by much too soon
+yester-evening; but it matters not now. You must busy yourself in
+getting breakfast for us--meanwhile, good Sir Knight, this way. The
+tower is a wild ruin, but all its apartments are not equally ruinous."
+
+They ascended, by a stair hollowed in the thickness of the wall, to an
+upper story. There was but one apartment on each floor; so that the
+entire building consisted but of four, and the two closet-like recesses
+in the turrets. The apartment they now entered was lined with dark oak;
+a massy table of the same material occupied the centre; and a row of
+ponderous stools, like those which Cowper describes in his "Task," ran
+along the wall. An immense chimney, supported by two rude pillars of
+stone, and piled with half-charred billets of wood, projected over the
+floor; the lintel, an oblong tablet about three feet in height, was
+roughened by uncouth heraldic sculptures of merwomen playing on harps,
+and two knights in complete armour fronting each other as in the
+tilt-yard. The windows were small and dark, and barred with iron; and
+through one of these that opened to the east, the morning sun, now risen
+half a spear's length over the forest, found entrance, in a square
+slanting rule of yellow light, which fell on the floor under a square
+recess in the opposite wall. The little girl entered immediately after
+the ladies and Clelland, bearing fire and fuel; a cheerful blaze soon
+roared in the chimney; and, as the morning felt keen and chill after the
+recent storm, they seated themselves before it. An hour passed in
+courtly and animated dialogue, and then breakfast was served up.
+
+The younger lady would fain have prolonged the conversation--for it had
+turned on the struggles of the Scots, and the wonderful exploits of
+Wallace--had not her mother reminded her that they stood much in need of
+rest to strengthen them for their approaching journey. They both,
+therefore, retired to their sleeping apartments in the turrets; while
+the knight, providing himself with a bow and a few arrows, sallied out
+into the forest. The practice in woodcraft, which he had acquired under
+his kinsman, who, in his reverses, could levy on only the woods and
+moors, stood him in so good stead, that, when dinner-time came round, a
+noble haunch of venison and two plump pheasants smoked on the board. But
+Bertha alone made her appearance. Her mother, she said, still felt
+fatigued, and slightly indisposed; but she trusted to be able to join
+them in the course of the evening.
+
+There was nothing Clelland had so anxiously wished for, when spending
+the earlier part of the day in the wood, as some such opportunity of
+passing a few hours with Bertha. And yet, now that the opportunity had
+occurred, he scarce knew how to employ it. The radiant smile of the
+maiden--her light, elegant form, and lovely features--had haunted him
+all the morning; and he wisely enough thought there could be but little
+harm in frankly telling her so. But, now that the fair occasion had
+offered, he found that all his usual frankness had left him, and that he
+could scarce say anything, even on matters more indifferent. And, what
+seemed not a little strange, too, the maiden was scarcely more at her
+ease than himself, and could find not a great deal more to say. Dinner
+passed almost in silence; and Bertha, rising to the square recess in the
+wall, drew from it a flagon filled with wine, which she placed before
+her guest and a vellum volume, bound in velvet and gold.
+
+"This," she said, "is a wonderful romaunt, written by a countryman of
+yours, of whom I have heard the strangest stories. Can you tell me aught
+regarding him?"
+
+"Ah!" said the knight, taking up the volume, "the book of Tristram. I am
+not too young, lady, to have seen the writer--the good Thomas of
+Erceldoune."
+
+"Seen Thomas of Erceldoune! Thomas the Rhymer!" exclaimed the lady. "And
+is it sooth that his prophecies never fail, and that he now lives in
+Elf-land?"
+
+"Nay, lady, the good Thomas sleeps in Lauderdale, with his fathers. But
+we trust much to his prophecies. They have given us heart and hope amid
+our darkest reverses. He predicted the years of oppression and suffering
+which, through the death of our good Alexander, have wasted our country;
+but he prophesied, also, our deliverance through my kinsman, Sir William
+of Elderslie. We have already seen much of the evil he foresaw, and
+much, also, of the good. Scotland, though still threatened by the power
+of Edward, is at this moment free."
+
+"I have long wished," said Bertha, "to see those warriors of Scotland
+whose fame is filling all Europe. And now that wish is gratified--nay,
+more than gratified."
+
+"You see but one of her minor warriors," said Clelland; "but at Paris
+you shall meet with the Governor himself. Your father, Bertha, should he
+succeed in clearing his fair fame--and I know he will--sets out with us
+for Scotland. Will not you and the lady your mother also accompany us?"
+
+"I had deemed my father bound on a pilgrimage to the holy sepulchre,"
+said Bertha.
+
+"But he has since thought," said Clelland, "how much better it were to
+live gloriously fighting in a just quarrel beside the first warrior of
+the world, than to perish obscurely in some loathsome pesthouse of the
+Far East. I myself heard him tender his services to my kinsman."
+
+"Then be sure," said Bertha, "my mother and I will not be separated from
+him. Might one find in Scotland, Sir Knight, some such quiet tower as
+this, where two defenceless women may bide the issue of the contest?"
+
+"Why defenceless, lady? There are many gallant swords in Scotland that
+would needs be beaten down ere you could come to harm. And why not now
+accept of Clelland's? Scotland has greater warriors and better swords;
+but, trust me, lady, she cannot boast of a truer heart. Accept of me,
+lady, as your bounden knight."
+
+A rich flush of crimson suffused the face and neck of the maiden, as she
+held out her hand to Clelland, who raised it respectfully to his lips.
+
+"I accept of thee, noble warrior," she said, "as true and faithful
+knight, seeing that thy own generous tender of service doth but second
+what Heaven had purposed, when, in my imminent peril in the wood, it
+sent thee to my rescue. Trust me, warrior, never yet had lady knight
+whom she respected more."
+
+Clelland again raised her hand to his lips.
+
+"I have a sister, lady," he said, "whose years do not outnumber your
+own. She lives lonely, since the death of my mother, in the home of my
+fathers--a tower roomier and stronger than this, and on the edge of a
+forest nearly as widely spread. You will be her companion, lady, and her
+friend; and your mother will be mistress of the mansion. On the morrow,
+we set out for Paris."
+
+The style in which the party travelled was sufficiently humble. Four
+small and very shaggy palfreys were provided from the neighbouring
+cottages: the ladies and Clelland were mounted on three of these; and
+the fourth, led by a hind, carried the luggage of the party. Before
+setting out, the lady had entrusted to the charge of the knight, a
+small, but very ponderous casket of ebony.
+
+"It needs, in these unsettled times," she said, "some such person to
+care for it; and Bertha and I would fare all the worse for wanting it."
+
+The journey was long and tedious, and the daily stages of the party
+necessarily short. Their route lay through a wild, half-cultivated
+country, which seemed to owe much to the hand of nature, but little to
+that of man. There was an ever-recurring succession, day after day, of
+dreary, wide-spreading forests, with comparatively narrow spaces
+between, which, from the imperfect and doubtful traces of industry which
+they exhibited, seemed as if but lately reclaimed from a state of
+nature. Groups of miserable serfs, bound to the soil even more rigidly
+than their fellow-slaves the cattle, were plying their unskilful and
+unproductive labours in the fields. They passed scattered assemblages of
+dingy hovels, with here and there a grim feudal tower rising in the
+midst--giving evidence, by the strength of its defences, of the
+insecurity and turbulence of the time. The travellers they met with were
+but few. Occasionally a strolling troubadour or harper accompanied them
+part of the way, on his journey from one baronial castle to another. At
+times, they met with armed parties of travelling merchants, bound for
+some distant fair; at times with disbanded artisans, wandering about in
+quest of employment; soldiers in search of a master; or pilgrims newly
+returned from Palestine, attired in cloaks of grey, and bearing the
+scallop in their caps. The hind, their attendant, bore in his scrip,
+from stage to stage, their provisions for the day; and their evenings
+were passed in some rude hostelry by the way-side. The third week had
+passed, ere, one evening on the edge of twilight, they alighted at the
+hostel of St Denis, and ascertained, from mine host, that they were now
+within half a stage of Paris.
+
+The hostel was crowded with travellers; and the ladies and Clelland, for
+the early part of the evening, were fain to take their places in the
+common room beside the fire. A young and handsome troubadour, whose
+jemmy jerkin, and cap of green, edged with silver, shewed that he was
+either one of the more wealthy of his class, or under the patronage of
+some rich nobleman, and who had courteously risen to yield place to
+Bertha, had succeeded in reseating himself beside the knight.
+
+"The hostel swarms with company," said Clelland, addressing him--"pray,
+good minstrel, canst tell me the occasion? Is there a fair holds
+to-morrow?"
+
+"Ah, Sir Knight," said the minstrel, "I should rather ask of thee,
+seeing thy tongue shews thee to be a Scot. Dost not know that thy
+countryman, the brave Wallace of Elderslie, is at court, and that all
+who can, in any wise, leave their homes for a season, are leaving them,
+to see him? It is not once in a lifetime that such a knight may be
+looked at. And, besides, have you not heard that the combat comes on
+to-morrow?"
+
+"I have heard of nothing," said Clelland; "my route has lain, of late,
+through the remoter parts of the country. What combat?"
+
+"Sir Thomas de Longoville, so long a true soldier of the cross--so long,
+too, a wandering pirate--has defied to mortal combat, Loithaire of
+Languedoc; and our fair Philip, through the intercession of Wallace, has
+granted him the lists."
+
+Both the ladies started at the intelligence; and the elder, wrapping up
+her face in her mantle, bent her head well nigh to her knee.
+
+"And how, good minstrel," said Bertha, in a voice tremulous from
+anxiety, "how is it thought the combat will go?"
+
+"That rests with Heaven, fair lady," said the minstrel. "Loithaire is
+known far and wide, as a striker in the lists; but who has not also
+heard of De Longoville, and his wars with the fierce Saracen? Many seem
+to think, too, that he has been foully injured by Loithaire. That soul
+of knightly honour, the good Lord Jonville, has already renewed his
+friendship with him, as his friend and comrade in the battles of
+Palestine, and will attend him to-morrow in the lists."
+
+"May all the saints reward him!" ejaculated the elder lady.
+
+"And at what hour, Sir Minstrel," asked the knight, "does the combat
+come on?"
+
+"At the turn of noon," replied the minstrel, "when the shadow first
+veers to the east. I go to Paris, to find new theme for a ballad, and to
+see the good Wallace, who is himself the theme of so many."
+
+The travellers were early on the road. With all their haste and anxiety,
+however, they saw the sun climbing towards the middle heavens, while the
+city was yet several miles distant. They spurred on their jaded
+palfreys, and entered the suburbs about noon. What was properly the city
+of Paris in this age, occupied one of the larger islands of the Seine,
+and was surrounded by a high wall, flanked at the angles by massy
+towers, and strengthened by rows of thickly-set buttresses; but, on
+either side the river, there were immense assemblages of the dirtiest
+and meanest hovels that the necessities of man had ever huddled
+together. The travellers, however, found but little time for remark in
+passing through. All Paris had poured out her inhabitants, to witness
+the combat, and they now crowded an upper island of the Seine, which the
+chivalry of the age had appropriated as a scene of games, tournaments,
+and duels. Clelland and the ladies had but reached the opposite bank,
+when a flourish of trumpets told them that the combatants had taken
+their places in the lists, and were waiting the signal to engage.
+
+"No further, ladies, no further," said the knight, "or we shall entangle
+ourselves in the outer skirts of the crowd, and see nothing. This way;
+let us ascend this eminence, and the scene, though somewhat distant,
+will be all before us."
+
+They ascended a smooth green knoll, the burial mound of some chieftain
+of the olden time, that overlooked the river. The island lay but a short
+furlong away. They could look over the heads of the congregated
+thousands into the open lists, and see the brilliant assemblage of the
+beauty and gallantry of France, which the fame of De Longoville and his
+opponent, and the singular nature of their quarrel, had drawn together.
+The sun glanced gaily on arms and armour, on many a robe of rich
+embroidery and many a costly jewel, and high over the whole, the
+oriflame of France, so famous in story, waved its flames of crimson and
+gold to the breeze. Knights and squires traversed the area, in gay and
+glittering confusion; and at either end there sat a warrior on
+horseback, as still and motionless as if sculptured in bronze. The
+champion at the northern end was cased from head to foot in sable
+armour, and beside him, under the blue pennon of Scotland, there stood a
+group of knights, who, though tall and stately as any in the lists,
+seemed lessened almost to boys in the presence of a gigantic warrior in
+bright mail, who, like Saul among the people, raised his head and
+shoulders over the proud crests of the assembled chivalry of France.
+
+"Yonder, ladies--yonder is my kinsman," exclaimed Clelland; "yonder is
+Wallace of Elderslie; and the champion beside him is Sir Thomas de
+Longoville."
+
+There was a second flourish of trumpets. Bertha flung herself on her
+knees on the sward, and raised her hands to her eyes. Her mother almost
+fainted outright.
+
+"Nay," said Clelland, "that is but the signal to clear the lists; the
+knights hurry behind the palisades, and the champions are left alone.
+Fear not, dearest Bertha!--there is a God in heaven, and----Ah, there is
+the third flourish! The champions strike their spurs deep into their
+chargers; and see how they rush forward, like thunder clouds before a
+hurricane! They close!--they close!--hark to the crash!--their steeds
+are thrown back on their haunches! Look up, Bertha! look up!--your
+father has won--he has won! Loithaire is flung from his saddle, the
+spear of De Longoville has passed through hauberk and corslet; I saw the
+steel head glitter red at the felon's back. Look up, ladies! look
+up!--De Longoville is safe; nay, more--restored to the honour and fair
+fame of his early manhood. Let us hasten and join him, that we may add
+our congratulations to those of his friends."
+
+Why dwell longer on the story of Thomas de Longoville? No Scotsman
+acquainted with Blind Harry need be told how frequent and honourable the
+mention of his name occurs in the latter pages of that historian.
+Scotland became his adopted country, and well and chivalrously did he
+fight in her battles; till, at length, when well nigh worn out by the
+fatigues and hardships of a long and active life, the decisive victory
+at Bannockburn gave him to enjoy an old age of peace and leisure, in the
+society of his lady, on the lands of his son-in-law. Need we add it was
+the gallant Clelland who stood in this relation to him? The chosen
+knight of Bertha had become her favoured lover, and the favoured lover a
+fond and devoted husband. Of the Governor more anon. There was a time,
+at least, when Scotsmen did not soon weary of stories of the Wight
+Wallace.
+
+
+
+
+THE FUGITIVE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+When Prince Charles Edward, at the head of his hardy Highlanders, took
+up his head-quarters in Edinburgh, issuing proclamations and holding
+levees, amongst those who attended the latter was a young Englishman,
+named Henry Blackett, then a student at the university, and the son of a
+Sir John Blackett of Winburn Priory, in Cheshire. His mother had been a
+Miss Cameron, a native of Inverness-shire, and the daughter of a poor
+but proud military officer. From her he had imbibed principles or
+prejudices in favour of the house of Stuart; and when he had been
+introduced to the young adventurer at Holyrood, and witnessed the zeal
+of his army, his enthusiasm was kindled--there was a romance in the
+undertaking which pleased his love of enterprise, and he resolved to
+offer his sword to the Prince, and hazard his fortunes with him. The
+offer was at once graciously and gratefully accepted, and Henry Blackett
+was enrolled as an officer in the rebel army.
+
+He followed the Prince through prosperity and adversity, and when
+Charles became a fugitive in the land of his fathers, Henry Blackett was
+one of the last to forsake him. He, too, was hunted from one
+hiding-place to another; like him whom he had served, he was a fugitive,
+and a price was set upon his head.
+
+As has been stated, he imbibed his principles in favour of the house of
+Stuart from his mother; but she had been dead for several years. His
+father was a weak man--one of whom it may be said that he had no
+principles at all; but being knighted by King George, on the occasion
+of his performing some civic duty, he became a violent defender of the
+house of Brunswick, and he vowed that, if the law did not, he would
+disinherit his son for having taken up arras in defence of Charles. But
+what chiefly strengthened him in this resolution, was not so much his
+devotion for the reigning family, as his attachment to one Miss Norton,
+the daughter of a Squire Norton of Norton Hall. She was a young lady of
+much beauty, and mistress of what are called accomplishments; but, in
+saying this much, I have recorded all her virtues. Her father's
+character might be summed up in one brief sentence--he was a deep,
+designing, needy villain. He was a gambler--a gentleman by birth--a
+knave in practice. He had long been on terms of familiarity with Sir
+John Blackett--he knew his weakness, and he knew his wealth, and he
+rejoiced in the attachment which he saw him manifesting for his
+daughter, in the hope that it would be the means of bringing his estates
+within his control. But the property of Sir John being entailed, it
+consequently would devolve on Henry as his only surviving son. He,
+therefore, was an obstacle to the accomplishment of the schemes on which
+Norton brooded; and when the latter found that he had joined the army of
+the young Chevalier, he was chiefly instrumental in having his name
+included in the list of those for whose apprehension rewards were
+offered; and he privately, and at his own expense, employed spies to go
+in quest of him. He also endeavoured to excite his father more bitterly
+against him. Nor did his designs rest here--but, as he beheld the
+fondness of the knight for his daughter increase, he, with the cunning
+of a demon, proposed to him to break the entail; and when the other
+inquired how it could be done, he replied--"Nothing is more simple; deny
+him to be your heir--pronounce him illegitimate. There is no living
+witness of your marriage with his mother. The only document to prove it
+is some thumbed leaf in the register of an obscure parish church in the
+Highlands of Scotland; and we can secure it."
+
+To this most unnatural proposal the weak and wicked old man consented;
+and I shall now describe the means employed by Norton to become
+possessed of the parish register referred to.
+
+Squire Norton had a son who was in all respects worthy of such a
+father--he was the image of his mind and person. In short, he was one of
+the _things_ who, in those days, resembled those who in our own call
+themselves _men of the world_, forsooth! and who, under that
+name, infest and corrupt society--making a boast of their
+worthlessness--poisoning innocence--triumphing in their work of
+ruin--and laughing, like spirits of desolation, over the daughter's
+misery and disgrace, the father's anguish, the wretched mother's tears,
+and the shame of a family, which they have accomplished. There are such
+creatures, who disgrace both the soul and the shape of man, who are mere
+shreds and patches of debauchery--sweepings from the shops of the
+tailor, the milliner, and the hair-dresser--who live upon the plunder
+obtained under false pretences from the industrious--who giggle, ogle,
+pat a snuff-box, or affect to nod in a church, to be thought sceptics or
+fine gentlemen. One of such was young Norton; and he was sent down to
+Scotland to destroy the only proof which Henry Blackett, in the event of
+his being pardoned, could bring forward in support of his legitimacy.
+
+He arrived at a lonely village in Inverness-shire, near which the
+cottage formerly occupied by Major Cameron, the grandfather of Henry,
+was situated; and of whom he found that few of the inhabitants
+remembered more than that "there lived a man." Finding the only inn that
+was in the village much more cleanly and comfortable than he had
+anticipated, he resolved to make it his hotel during his residence, and
+inquired of the landlady if there were any one in the village with whom
+a gentleman could spend an evening, and obtain information respecting
+the neighbourhood.
+
+"Fu' shurely! fu' shurely, sir!" replied his Highland hostess--"there pe
+te auld tominie."
+
+"Who?" inquired he, not exactly comprehending her Celtic accent.
+
+"Wha put te auld tominie?" returned she; "an' a tiscreet, goot
+shentleman he pe as in a' te toun."
+
+"The dominie?--the dominie?" he repeated, in a tone of perplexity.
+
+"Oigh! oigh! te tominie," added she, "tat teaches te pits o' pairns, an'
+raises te psalm in te kirk."
+
+He now comprehended her meaning; and from her coupling the dominie's
+name with the kirk, believed that he might be of use to him in the
+accomplishment of his object, and desired that he might be sent for.
+
+"Oigh!" returned she, smiling, "an' he no pe lang, for he like te
+trappie unco weel."
+
+Within five minutes, Dugald Mackay, precentor, teacher, and parish-clerk
+of Glencleugh, entered the parlour of Mrs Macnab. Never was a more
+striking contrast exhibited in castle or in cottage. Here stood young
+Norton, bedecked with all the foppery of an exquisite of his day; and
+there stood Dugald Mackay, his thick bushy grey hair falling on his
+shoulders, holding in his hand a hat not half the size of his head,
+which had neither been made nor bought for him, and which had become
+brown with service, and was now stitched in many places, to keep it
+together. Round it was wrapped a narrow stripe of crape browner than
+itself, and over all winded several yards of gut and hair-line, with
+hooks attached, betokening his angling propensities. Dugald was a
+thickset old man, with a face blooming like his native heather. His feet
+were thrust into immense brogues, as brown as his hat, and their
+formidable patches shewed that their wearer could use the _lingle_ and
+_elshun_, although his profession was to "teach the young idea how to
+shoot." He wore tartan hose--black breeches, fastened at the knees by
+silver gilt buckles, and much the worse for the wear, while, from the
+accumulation of ink and dust, they might have stood upright. His vest
+was huge and double-breasted, its colour not recognised by painters; and
+his shoulders were covered by a very small tartan coat, the tails of
+which hardly reached his waist. Such was Dugald Mackay; and the youth,
+plying him with the bottle, endeavoured to ascertain how far he could
+render him subservient to his purpose.
+
+"You appear fond of angling," said Norton.
+
+"Fond o' fishing?" returned the man of letters; "ou ay; ou ay!--hur hae
+mony time filt te creel o' te shentlemen frae Inverness, for te
+sixpence, and te shilling, and te pig crown, not to let tem gaun pack
+wi' te empty pasket. And hur will teach your honour, or tress your
+honour's hooks, should you be stopping to fish. Here pe goot sport to
+your honour," continued he, raising a bumper to his lips.
+
+The other, glad to assign a plausible pretext for his visit, said that
+he had come a few days for the sake of fishing, and inquired how long
+his guest had been in the neighbourhood.
+
+"Hur peen schulemaister and parish-clerk in Glencleugh for forty year,"
+replied Dugald.
+
+"Parish-clerk!" said Norton, eagerly, and checking himself,
+continued--"that is--in the church you mean, you raise the tunes?"
+
+"Ou ay, hur nainsel' pe precenter too," answered Dugald; "put hur be
+schulemaister and parish-clerk into te pargain."
+
+"And what are your duties as parish-clerk?" inquired the other, in a
+tone of indifference.
+
+"Ou, it pe to keep te pooks wi' te marriages, te christenings, and te
+deaths. Here pe to your honour's very goot luck again," said he,
+swallowing another bumper.
+
+Thus the holder of the birch and parish chronicler began to help himself
+to one glass after another, until the candles began to dance reels and
+strathspeys before him. At length the angler, expressing a wish to see
+such a curiosity as the matrimonial and baptismal register of a hamlet
+so remote, out sallied Dugald, describing curved lines as he went, and
+shortly returned, bearing the eventful quartos under his arm. Norton
+looked through them, laughing, jesting, and professing to be amused, and
+his eye quickly fell upon the page which he sought. Dugald laughed,
+drank, and talked, until his rough head sank upon his breast, and
+certain nasal sounds gave notice that the schoolmaster was abroad. In a
+moment, Norton transferred the leaf which contained the certificate of
+Lady Blackett's marriage, from the volume to his pocket. His father had
+ordered him to destroy it; but the son, vicious as the father,
+determined to keep it, and to hold it over him as an instrument of
+terror to extort money. The dominie being roused to take one glass more
+by way of a night-cap, was led home, as usual, by Mrs Macnab's
+servant-of-all-work, who carried the volumes.
+
+Shortly after this, the marriage between Sir John Blackett and Miss
+Norton took place; her father rejoiced in the success of his schemes,
+and Henry was disinherited and disowned.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+While the latter events which we have recorded in the last chapter were
+taking place, Henry Blackett, the rebel soldier, was a fugitive, flying
+from hiding-place to hiding-place, seeking concealment in the mountains
+and in the glens, in the forest and crowded city, assuming every
+disguise, and hunted from covert to covert. A reward was not offered for
+his apprehension, in particular by government, but he was included
+amongst those whom loyal subjects were forbidden to conceal; and two
+emissaries, sent out by Norton, sought him continually, to deliver him
+up. Ignorant of his father's marriage, or of the villain's part he had
+acted towards him, though conscious of his anger at his having joined
+Prince Charles, he was wandering in Dumfries-shire, by the shores of the
+Solway, disguised as a sailor, and watching an opportunity to return
+home, when the hunters after his life suddenly sprang upon him,
+exclaiming--"Ha! Blackett, the traitor!--the five hundred pounds are
+ours!"
+
+Armed only with the branch of a tree, which he carried partly for
+defence, and as a walking-stick, he repelled them with the desperate
+fierceness of a man whose life is at stake. One he disabled, and the
+other being unable to contend against him singly, permitted him to
+escape. He rushed at his utmost speed across the fields for many miles,
+avoiding the highways and public paths, until he sank panting and
+exhausted on the ground. He had not lain long in this situation when he
+was discovered by a wealthy farmer, who was known in the neighbourhood
+by the appellation of "canny Willie Galloway."
+
+"Puir young chield," said Willie, casting on him a look of compassion,
+"ye seem sadly distressed. Do ye think I could be o' ony service to ye?
+From yer appearance, ye wadna be the waur o' a nicht's lodging, and I
+can only say that ye are heartily welcome to't."
+
+Henry had been so long the object of pursuit and persecution, that he
+regarded every one with suspicion; and starting to his feet and grasping
+the branch firmer in his hand, he said--"Know you what you say?--or
+would you betray the wretched?"
+
+"It is o' nae manner o' use gripping your stick," said Willie, calmly,
+"for I'm allooed to be a first-rate cudgel-player--the best atween
+Stranraer and Dumfries. But, as to kennin' what I said, I was offerin'
+ye a nicht's lodgings; and as to betrayin' the wretched, I wadna see a
+hawk strike doon a sparrow, not a spider a midge, if I could prevent
+it."
+
+"You seem honest," said Henry; "I am miserable, and will trust you."
+
+"Be thankit," answered the other; "I dare to say I'm as honest as my
+neebors; and, as ye seem in distress, I will be very happy to serve ye,
+if I can do't in a creditable way."
+
+Willie Galloway was a bachelor of five and forty, and his house was kept
+by an old woman, a distant relative, called Janet White. Henry
+accompanied him home, and communicated to him his story. Willie took a
+liking for him, and vowed that he would not only shelter him, while he
+had a roof over his head, but that he would defend him against every
+enemy, while he had a hand that he could lift; and, the better to ensure
+his concealment, he proposed that he should pass as his sister's son,
+and not even write to his father to intimate where he was, until the
+persecution against those who had "been _out_ with poor Charlie," was
+past.
+
+In the neighbourhood of Willie's farm, there resided an elderly
+gentleman, named Laird Howison. He was an eccentric but most
+kind-hearted man, of whom many believed and said that his imagination
+was stronger then his reason; and in so saying, it was probable that
+they were not far from the truth. But of that the reader will determine
+as he sees more of the laird. There resided with him a beautiful orphan
+girl, named Helen Marshall, the daughter of the late parish clergyman,
+and to whom he had been left guardian from her childhood. But, as she
+grew up in loveliness before him, she became as a dream of futurity that
+soothed and cheered his existence; and, although he was already on the
+wrong side of fifty, he resolved that, as soon as she was twenty-one,
+he would offer her his hand and fortune. Janet White, the housekeeper
+and relative of Willie Galloway, had nursed Helen in infancy; and the
+lovely maiden was, therefore, a frequent visitor at his house. She there
+met Henry, and neither saw nor listened to him with indifference; and
+her beauty, sense, and gentleness, made a like impression upon him.
+Willie, though a bachelor, had penetration enough to perceive that when
+they met there was meaning in their eyes; and he began to rally
+Henry--saying, "Now, there would be a match for ye!--when the storm has
+blawn owre your head, just tak ye that bonny Scotch lassie hame to
+England wi' ye as yer wife, and ye will find her a treasure, such as ye
+may wander the world round and no find her marrow."
+
+As their intimacy and affection increased, Henry communicated to Helen
+the secret of his birth and situation; and, like a true woman, she loved
+him the more for the dangers to which he was exposed. He had remained
+more than eight months with his friend and protector; and, imagining
+that the persecution against himself, and others who had acted in the
+same cause, was now abated in its fury, he forwarded a letter to his
+father, at Winburn Priory, announcing his intention of venturing home in
+a few days, and begging his forgiveness and protection, until his pardon
+could be procured. He, however, intimated to Willie Galloway, his desire
+to secure the hand of Helen before he left.
+
+"Weel, if she be agreeable," said Willie "--and I hae every reason to
+believe she is--I wadna blame ye for taking that step ava; for her auld
+gowk o' a guardian, Laird Howison, (though a very worthy man in some
+respecks), vows that he is determined to marry her himsel, as soon as
+she is ane and twenty; and, as he is up aboot London at present, ye
+couldna hae a better opportunity. Therefore, only ye and Helen say the
+word, and I'll arrange the business for ye in less than nae time."
+
+The fair maiden consented; a clergyman had joined their hands, and
+pronounced the benediction over them--the ceremony was concluded, but it
+was only concluded, when the two ruffians, who have been already
+mentioned as hired by Norton to search for him and secure his
+apprehension, and who before had met him by the side of the Solway,
+followed by two soldiers, burst into the apartment, crying--"Secure the
+traitor! It is he!--Harry Blackett!"
+
+Helen screamed aloud and clasped her hands.
+
+"Ye lie! ye lie!" cried Willie--"it is my sister's son--meddle wi' him
+wha daur, and us twa will fecht you four, even in the presence o' the
+minister."
+
+So saying, he seized hold of a chair, and raised it to repel them. Henry
+followed his example. The soldiers threateningly raised their fire-arms.
+Willie suddenly swang round the chair with his utmost strength, and
+dashed down their arms. Henry hastily kissed the brow of his fair bride,
+and, rushing through the midst of them, darted from the house, while
+Willie, as rapidly following him, closed the door behind him, and
+holding it fast, cried--"Run, Harry, my lad!--run for bare life, and
+I'll keep them fast here!"
+
+For several days, the soldiers searched the neighbourhood for the
+fugitive; but they found him not, and no one knew where he had fled.
+Within a week, Helen disappeared from Primrose Hall, the seat of her
+guardian, Laird Howison; and the general belief was, that she had set
+out for Cheshire, to the father of her bridegroom, to intercede with him
+to use his influence in his son's behalf. "And," said Willie, "if she
+doesna move him to forgie his son, and do his duty towards him, then I
+say that he has a heart harder than a whin-rock."
+
+But no one knew the object of her departure, nor whither she had gone.
+Laird Howison had not returned; and, after several weeks had passed, and
+Willie Galloway was unable to hear ought of either Helen or Henry, he
+resolved to proceed to Cheshire, to make inquiries after them; and for
+this purpose purchased an entire suit of new and fashionable raiment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+On a beautiful summer morning, an old man, slightly stooping in his
+gait, was slowly walking down a green lane which led in the direction
+from Warrington to Winburn Priory. Behind him, at a rapid pace, followed
+a younger man, of a muscular frame, exceedingly well-dressed, and
+carrying over his arm a thick chequered plaid, like those worn in the
+pastoral districts of Scotland. He overtook the elder pedestrian, and
+accosted him, saying--
+
+"Here's a bonny morning, freend."
+
+"Sir?" said the old man inquiringly, slightly lifting his hat, and not
+exactly comprehending his companion.
+
+"Losh, but he's a mannerly auld body that," thought the other; "I see
+the siller upon this suit o' claes has been weel-wared;" and added
+aloud, "I was observing it's a delightful morning, sir, and as
+delightful a country-side; it wad be a paradise, were it no sae flat."
+
+"Ah, sir!" replied the old man; "but I fear as how the country looks
+like a paradise without its innocence."
+
+"Ye talk very rationally, honest man," said the other, whom the reader
+will have recognised to be Willie Galloway; "and, if I am no mistaen, ye
+maun hae some cause to mak the remark. But, dear me, sir, only look
+round ye, and see the trees in a' their glory, the flowers in a' their
+innocence; or just look at the rowing burn there, wimplin alang by oor
+side, like refined silver, beneath a sun only less glorious than the
+Hand that made it; and see hoo the bits o' fish are whittering round,
+wagging their tails, and whisking back and forrit, as happy as kings!
+Look at the lovely and the cheerfu' face o' a' Nature--or just listen
+to the music o' thae sinless creatures in the hedges, and in the blue
+lift--and ye will say that, but for the inventions and deceitfulness o'
+man's heart, this earth wad be a paradise still. But I tell ye what,
+freend--I believe that were an irreligious man just to get up before
+sunrise at a season like this, and gang into the fields and listen to
+the laverock, and look around on the earth, and on the majesty o' the
+heavens rising, he wadna stand for half-an-hoor until, if naebody were
+seeing him, he would drap doun on his knees and pray."
+
+Much of Willie's sermon was lost on the old man; he, however,
+comprehended a part, and said, "Why, sir, I know as how I always find my
+mind more in tune for the service of the church, by a walk in the
+fields, and the singing of the birds, than by all the instruments of the
+orchestra."
+
+"Orchestra!" said Willie, "what do ye mean?--that's a strange place to
+gather devotion frae!"
+
+"The orchestra of the church," returned the other.
+
+"The orchestra o' the church!" said Willie, in surprise--"what's that? I
+never heard o't before. There's the poopit, and the precentor's desk,
+the pews and the square seats, and doun stairs and the gallery--but ye
+nonplus me about the orchestra."
+
+"Why, our lord of the manor," continued the old man, "is one who cares
+for nothing that's good, and he will give nothing; and as we are not
+rich enough to buy an organ, we have only a bass viol, two tenors, and a
+flute."
+
+"Fiddles and a flute in a place o' worship!" exclaimed Willie.
+
+"Yes, sir," replied the other, marvelling at his manner.
+
+"Weel," returned Willie, standing suddenly still, and striking his staff
+upon the ground, "that beats a'! And will ye tell me, sir, hoo it is
+possible to worship yer Creator by scraping catgut, or blawing wind
+through a hollow stick?"
+
+"Why, master," said the old man, "the use of instruments in worship is
+as old as the times of the prophets, and I can't see why it should be
+given up. But dost thou think, now, that thou couldst go into Chester
+cathedral at twilight, while the organ filled all round about thee with
+its deep music, without feeling in thy heart that thou wast in a house
+of praise. Why, sir, at such a time thou couldst not commit a wicked
+action. The very sound, while it lifted up thy soul with delight, would
+awe thee."
+
+When their controversy had ended, Willie inquired--"Do ye ken a family
+o' the name o' Blackett, that lives aboot this neeborhood?"
+
+"I should," answered the old man; "forty years did I eat of their
+bread."
+
+"Then, after sic lang service, ye'll just be like ane o' the family?"
+replied Willie.
+
+"Alas!" said the other, shaking his head.
+
+"Ye dinna mean to say," resumed Willie, in a tone of surprise, "that
+they hae turned ye aff, in your auld age, as some heartless wretch wad
+sell the noble animal that had carried him when a callant, to a cadger,
+because it had grown howe-backet, and lost its speed o' foot. But I hope
+that young Mr Henry had nae hand in it?"
+
+"Henry!--no! no!" cried the old man eagerly--"bless him! Did you know Mr
+Henry, your honour?"
+
+"I did," said Willie; "and I hae come from Scotland ance errand to see
+him."
+
+"But, sir," inquired the old man, tremulously, "do you know where to
+find him?"
+
+"I expect to find him, by this time, at his father's house."
+
+"Alas!" answered the old domestic, "there has been no one at the priory
+for more than twelve months. I don't know where the old knight is. Henry
+has not been here since he went to Edinburgh, and that is nigh to five
+years gone now."
+
+"Ye dumfounder me, auld man," exclaimed Willie; "but where, in the name
+o' guidness, where's the wife?--where's Mrs Blackett?"
+
+"You will mean your countrywoman, I suppose," said the other.
+
+"To be sure I mean her," said Willie--"wha else could I mean?"
+
+"Ah! wo is me!" sighed his companion, and he burst into tears as he
+spoke, "dost see the churchyard, just before us?--and they have raised
+no stone to mark the spot."
+
+"Dead!" ejaculated Willie, becoming pale with horror, and fixing upon
+his fellow-pedestrian a look of agony--"Ye dinna say--dead!"
+
+"Even so!--even so!" said the old domestic, sobbing aloud.
+
+"And hoo was it?" cried Willie; "was it a fair strae death--or just
+grief, puir thing--just grief?"
+
+"Why, I can't say how it was," answered his informant; "but I wish I
+durst tell all I think."
+
+"Say it!--say it!" exclaimed Willie, vehemently, "what do you mean by,
+if you durst say all you think? If there be the shadow o' foul play, I
+will sift it to the bottom, though it cost me a thousand pounds; and
+there is anither that will gie mair."
+
+"Ah, sir, I am but a friendless old man," replied the other, "that could
+not stand the weight of a stronger arm."
+
+"Plague take their arms!" cried Willie, handling his cudgel, as if to
+shew the strength of his own--"tell what ye think, and they'll have
+strong arms that dare touch a hair o' yer head."
+
+"Well, master," was the reply, "I don't like to say too much to
+strangers, but if thou makest any stay in these parts, I may tell thee
+something; and I fear that wherever poor Henry is, he is in need of
+friends. But perhaps your honour would wish to see her grave?"
+
+"Her grave!" ejaculated Willie--"yes! yes! yes!--her grave!--O misery!
+have I come frae Dumfries-shire to see a sicht like this?"
+
+The old man led the way over the stile, hanging his head and sighing as
+he went. Willie followed him, drawing his sleeve across his eyes, as was
+his custom when his heart was touched, and forgetting the dress of the
+gentleman which he wore, in the feelings of the man.
+
+"The family vault is in yonder corner," said his conductor, as they
+turned across the churchyard.
+
+"Save us, friend!" exclaimed Willie, looking towards the spot, "saw ye
+ever the like o' yon?--a poor miserable dementit creature, wringing his
+hands as though his heart would break!"
+
+"Tis he! 'tis he!" shouted the old man, springing forward with the
+alacrity of youth, "my child!--my dear young master!"
+
+"Oh! conscience o' man!" exclaimed Willie, "what sort o' a dream is
+this? It canna be possible! _Her_ dead, and _him_, oot o' his judgment,
+mourning owre her grave in the garb o' a beggar!"
+
+"Ha! discovered again!" cried Henry fiercely, and starting round as he
+spoke; but immediately recognising the old domestic, on whom time had
+not wrought such a metamorphosis as dress had upon Willie Galloway--"Ha,
+Jonathan! old Jonathan Holditch!" he added, "do I again see the face of
+a friend!" and instantly discovering Willie, he sprang forward and
+grasped his extended hand in both of his.
+
+The old man sat down upon the grave and wept.
+
+"Don't weep, Jonathan," said Henry, "I trust that we shall soon have
+cause to rejoice."
+
+"I wish a' may be richt yet," thought Willie; "I took him to be rather
+dementit at the first glance, and _rejoice_ is rather a strange word to
+use owre a young wife's grave. Puir fellow!"
+
+"Yes, Master Henry," said Jonathan, "I do rejoice that the worst is
+past; but I must weep too, for there be many things in all this that I
+do not understand."
+
+"Nor me either," said Willie; "but ye say ye think more than ye dare
+tell."
+
+"Why is it, Jonathan," continued Henry, "that there is no stone to mark
+my mother's grave? There is room enough in our burial place. Why is
+there nothing to her memory?" he continued, bending his eyes upon her
+sepulchre. "Her _memory_!" he added; "cold, cruel grave; and is memory
+all that is left me of such a parent? Is the dumb dust, beneath this
+unlettered stone--all!--all! that I can now call mother? Has she no
+monument but the tears of her only surviving child?"
+
+"A' about his mother," muttered Willie, "who has been dead for four
+years, and no a word aboot puir Helen! As sure as I'm a living man this
+is beyont my comprehension--I dinna think he can be _a'thegither
+there_!"
+
+Henry turned towards him and said, "I have much to ask, my dear friend,
+but my heart is so filled with griefs and forebodings already, that the
+words I would utter tremble on my tongue; but what of my Helen--tell me,
+what of her?"
+
+"She--she's--weel," gasped Willie, bewildered; "that is--I--I hope--I
+trust--that--oh, losh, Mr Blackett, I dinna ken whare I am, nor what I
+am saying, for my brain is as daized as a body's that is driven owre wi'
+a drift, and rowed amang the snaw! Has there been onybody buried here
+lately?"
+
+"Mr Galloway!--Mr Galloway!" exclaimed Henry, half-choked with
+agitation, and wringing his hand in his, while the perspiration burst
+upon his brow--"in the name of wretchedness--what--what do you mean?"
+
+"Oh, dinna speak to me!" said Willie, waving his hand; "ask that auld
+man."
+
+"Jonathan?" exclaimed Henry.
+
+"I don't know what the gentleman means," said the old man; "but no one
+has been buried here since your honoured mother, and that is four years
+ago."
+
+"And whase grave--whase grave did ye bring me to look at?" inquired
+Willie, eagerly.
+
+"My lady's," answered he.
+
+"Yer leddy's!" returned Willie--"do you mean Mr Blackett's mother?"
+
+"Whom else could I mean?" asked old Jonathan, in a tone of wonder.
+
+"Wha else could you mean!" repeated Willie; "then, be thankit! _she's_
+no dead!--ye say _she's_ no dead!" and he literally leapt for joy.
+
+"Who dead?" inquired the old man, with increased astonishment.
+
+"Wha dead, ye stupid auld body!--did I no say _his wife_, as plain as I
+could speak?"
+
+"_Whose_ wife?" inquired Jonathan, looking from Willie to his master in
+bewilderment.
+
+"Whose wife!" reiterated Willie, weeping, laughing, and twirling his
+stick; "shame fa' ye--ye may ask that noo, after knocking my heart oot
+o' the place o't wi' yer palaver. Whase wife do ye say?--ask Mr Henry."
+
+"Mr Galloway!" interrupted Henry, "am I to understand that you believed
+this to be the grave of my beloved Helen?--or, how could you suppose it?
+Has she left Primrose Hall?--or, has our marriage----Tell me all you
+know, for I wist not what I would ask."
+
+Willie then related to him what the reader already knows--namely, that
+she had left Dumfries-shire, and was supposed to have gone to his
+father's.
+
+"Blessings on the day that these eyes beheld the dear lady, then,"
+exclaimed old Jonathan; "for I could vow that she is under my roof now."
+
+"Under _your_ roof!" cried Henry.
+
+"Was ye doited, auld man, that ye didna tell me that before?" said
+Willie.
+
+"I knew no more of my young master's marriage, until just now, than
+these gravestones do," said Jonathan; "the dear lady who is with us told
+nothing to me. Only my wife told me that she knew she loved our young
+master."
+
+"But why is she lodging with you, Jonathan? I have learned that my
+father is abroad, and is it that he is soon expected home?"
+
+"A fever caused her to be an inmate of my poor roof," answered Jonathan,
+"after she had been rudely driven from the gate as a common beggar. But
+I am no longer thy father's servant--and I wish, for thy sake, I could
+forget he was thy father; for he has done that which might make the
+blessed bones beneath our feet start from their grave. And there is no
+one about the Priory now, but the creatures of the villain Norton."
+
+Henry entreated that the old man would not speak harshly of his father,
+though he had so treated them; and he briefly informed them, that, on
+flying from Scotland to escape his pursuers even at his father's lodge,
+he again met one of the individuals who had hunted him as "Blackett, the
+traitor," and who had attempted to seize him in the hour of his
+marriage--and that even there the cry was again raised against him; and
+a band, thirsting for his blood-money, joined in the pursuit. He had
+fled to the churchyard, and found concealment in the family vault, where
+he had remained until they then discovered him, as, in the early
+morning, he had ventured out.
+
+Willie counselled that there was now small vengeance to be apprehended
+from the persecution of the government; and when Jonathan stated that
+Sir John had married the daughter of Norton, and disinherited Henry by
+denying his marriage with his mother, Willie exclaimed--"I see it a', Mr
+Henry, just as clear as the A, B, C. This rascal, ye ca' Norton, or your
+faither, (forgie me for saying sae,) has employed the villains wha
+hunted for yer life; it has been mair them than the government that has
+been to blame. Therefore, my advice is, let us go and drive the thieves
+out o' the house by force."
+
+Henry, who was speechless with grief, horror, and disgust, agreed to the
+proposition of his friend, and they proceeded to the Priory by a shorter
+road than the lodge.
+
+Henry knocked loudly at the door, which was opened by a man-servant, who
+attempted to shut it in his face; but, in a moment the door was driven
+back upon its hinges, and the menial lay extended along the lobby; and
+Henry, with his sturdy ally, and old Jonathan, rushed in. Alarmed by the
+sound, the other servants, male and female, hurried to the spot; and
+epithets, too opprobrious to be written, were the mildest they applied
+to the young heir, as he demanded admission.
+
+"Then let us gie them club-law for it," cried Willie, "if they will have
+it; and they shall have it to their heart's content, if I ance begin
+it."
+
+Armed with such weapons as they could seize at the moment, the servants
+menacingly opposed their entrance; but Henry, dashing through them,
+rushed towards the stairs, where he was followed by four men-servants,
+two armed with swords, and the others with kitchen utensils.
+
+But Willie, following at their heels, cried--"Come back!" and, bringing
+his cudgel round his head, with one tremendous swoop caused it to rattle
+across the unprotected legs of the two last of the pursuers, and, almost
+at the same instant, before their comrades had ascended five steps from
+the ground, they, from the same cause, descended backwards, rolling and
+roaring over their companions. Within three seconds, all four were
+conquered, disarmed, and unable to rise. As the discomfited garrison of
+the Priory gathered themselves together, (much in the attitude of Turks
+or tailors,) groaning, writhing, and ruefully rubbing their stockings,
+Willie, with the composed look of a philosopher, addressed to them this
+consoling and important information--"Noo, sirs, I hope ye are a'
+_sensibly_ convinced, what guid service a bit hazel may do in a willing
+hand; and if ony o' yer banes are broken, I would recommend ye to send
+for the doctor before the swelling gets stiff about them. But ye couldna
+hae broken banes at a cannier place on a' the leg than just where I gied
+ye the bits o' clinks; they were hearty licks, and would gie them a
+clean snap, so that, in the matter o' six weeks, ye may be on your feet
+again."
+
+Old Jonathan had already followed Henry up stairs; and Willie having
+finished his exhortation, proceeded in quest of them. Henry succeeded in
+obtaining a change of raiment; and having sent for one who had been long
+a tenant upon the estate, he left the house in charge to him, with
+orders that he should immediately turn from it all the creatures of
+Norton, and engage other servants; and he and his friend, Willie,
+proceeded to the house of old Jonathan, where, as the latter supposed, a
+lady that he believed to be the wife of his young master, then was.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+Mrs Holditch (the wife of old Jonathan) was wandering up the lane in
+quest of her husband, wondering at the length of his absence, and
+fretting for his return; for "the sweet lady," as she termed Helen,
+"would not take breakfast without them." She had proceeded about half a
+mile from the cottage, when she was met by none other than Laird Howison
+of Primrose Hall, and the following dialogue took place:--
+
+"Will ye hae the kindness to inform me, ma'am, if the person that used
+to keep the gate of Sir John Blackett lives ony way aboot here?"
+
+"He does, sir," replied she, with low obeisance.
+
+"And, oh!" interrupted he, earnestly, "know ye if there be a young leddy
+frae Scotland stopping there at present--for I have heard that there is?
+Ye'll no think me inquisitive, ma'am; for really if ye kenned what
+motive I hae for asking, ye would think it motive enough."
+
+"There be, your honour," returned she, "and a dear excellent young lady
+she is."
+
+"Oh! if it be her that I mean," said he, "that she is _dear_, indeed, I
+have owre guid reason to ken, and her excellence is written on every
+line o' her beautiful countenance. But, if I'm no detaining ye, ma'am,
+may I just ask her name?"
+
+"She bade us call her Helen, sir," replied she; "we know no other."
+
+"Yes! yes!" cried he, "it's just Helen!--Helen, and nothing else to me!
+Mony a time has that name been offered up wi' my prayers. But I thought,
+ma'am, ye said she bade _you_ call her Helen."
+
+"Yes, your honour," said she; "I be the wife of old Jonathan Holditch,
+and she be staying with us now."
+
+"Bless you!" he exclaimed, "for the shelter which yer roof has afforded
+to the head o' an orphan. But, oh! what like is _your_ Helen? Is her
+neck whiter than the drifted snaw? Does her hair fa' in gowden ringlets,
+like the clouds that curl round the brows o' the setting sun? Is her
+form delicate as the willow, but stately as the young pine? Is her
+countenance beautiful as the light o' laughing day, when it chases
+sickness and darkness together from the chamber o' the invalid? If she
+isna a' this--if her voice isna sweeter than the sough o' music on a
+river--dear and excellent she may be, and they may call her Helen--but,
+oh! she isna my _Helen_!--for there is none in the world like unto
+_mine_. But, no! no!--she is _not mine now_! O Helen, woman! did I
+expect this? Excuse me, ma'am, ye'll think my conduct strange; but, when
+my poor seared-up heart thinks o' past enjoyment, it makes me forget
+mysel'. Do you think your Helen is the same that I hae come to seek?"
+
+"A sweeter and a lovelier lady," said she, "never called Christian man
+father. She had business at Winburn Priory; but my husband says she was
+driven away from the gate like a dog."
+
+"It is her!" exclaimed he, "and she's no been at the Priory, then?"
+
+"No, sir," returned she.
+
+"Nor seen ony o' the Blackett family?" added he, eagerly.
+
+"No, sir; for there be none of them in the neighbourhood," answered she.
+
+"What's this I hear!" cried he:--"Gracious! if I may again hope!--and
+why for no? But how is it that she is stopping wi' you?--wherefore did
+she not return to the home where she has been cherished from infancy,
+and where she will aye be welcome. Has Helen forgot me a'thegither?"
+
+"Alas, sir!" said she; "it was partly grief, I believe, that brought on
+a bad fever, and I had fears the sweet, patient creature would have died
+in my hands. I sat by her bedside, watching night after night; and, oh!
+sir, I daresay as how it was about you that she sometimes talked, and
+wept, and laughed, and talked again, poor thing."
+
+"And did _ye_," he inquired, fumbling with, a pocket book; "did _ye_
+watch owre her? I'm your debtor for that. And ye think she spoke about
+_me_--my name's Howison, ma'am--Thomas Howison of Primrose Hall, in the
+county o' Dumfries. She would, maybe, call me _Thomas_!"
+
+"Mr Howison!" replied the old woman: "yes, your honour, she often
+mentioned such a name--very often."
+
+"Did she really," added he; "did she mention me?--and often spoke about
+me--often? Then she's no forgotten me a'thegither!"
+
+He thrust a bank-note into the hands of Mrs Holditch, which she refused
+to accept, saying that "the dear lady had more than paid her for all
+that she had done already." But, while she spoke, they had arrived
+within sight of the cottage, and he suddenly bounded forward,
+exclaiming--"Oh! haud my heart!" as he beheld Helen, sitting looking
+from the window--"yonder she is! yonder she is! O Helen! Helen!" he
+cried, rushing towards the door--"wherefore did ye leave me?--why hae ye
+forsaken me? But, joy o' my heart, I winna upbraid ye; for I hae found
+ye again."
+
+With an agitated step, she advanced to meet him--she extended her hand
+towards him--she faltered--"My kind, kind benefactor."
+
+He heard the words she uttered--with a glance he beheld the
+marriage-ring upon her finger--he stood still in the midst of his
+transport--his outstretched arms fell motionless by his side--"O Helen,
+woman!" he cried in agony, "do ye really say _benefactor_?--that isna
+the word I wish to hear frae ye. Ye never ca'ed me _benefactor_ before!"
+
+The few words spoken by the old woman had called up his buried hopes;
+but the word _benefactor_ had again whelmed him in despair.
+
+"Oh!" he continued, dashing away the tears from his eyes, "my poor mind
+is flung away upon a whirlwind, and my brain is the sport o' every
+shadow! O Helen! I thought ye had forgotten me!"
+
+"Forgotten you, my kind dear friend!" said she; "I have not, I will not,
+I cannot forget you; and wherefore would you forget that I can only
+remember you as a friend?"
+
+"Poor, miserable, and deluded being that I am," added he; "I expected,
+from what the mistress o' this house told me, that I wouldna be welcomed
+by the cauldrife names o' _friend_ or _benefactor_. Do ye mind since ye
+used to call me _Thomas_?"
+
+"Mr Howison," answered she, "I know this visit has been made in
+kindness--let me believe in parental anxiety. You have not now to learn
+that I am a wife, and you can have heard nothing here to lead you to
+think otherwise. I will not pretend to misunderstand your language. But
+by what name can I call you save that of friend?--it was the first and
+the only one by which I have ever known you."
+
+"No, Helen," cried he, wringing her hand; "there was a time when ye only
+said _Thomas!_ and the sound o' that ae word frae yer lips was a waff o'
+music, which echoed, like the vibrations o' an angel's harp, about my
+heart for hours and for hours!"
+
+"If," added she, "from having been taught by you to call you by that
+name in childhood, when I regarded you as my guardian, and you
+condescended to be my playmate, will you upbraid me with ceasing to use
+it now, when respect to you and to myself demand the use of another? Or
+can you, by any act of mine, place another meaning upon my having used
+it, than obedience to your wishes, and the familiarity of a thoughtless
+girl? And, knowing this, is it possible that the best of men will heap
+sorrow upon sorrow on the head of a friendless and afflicted woman?"
+
+"Oh, dinna say friendless, Helen," cried he; "friendless ye canna be
+while I am in existence. Ye hae torn the scales from my eyes, and the
+first use o' sicht has been to show me that the past has been delusion,
+and that the future is misery, solitary madness, or despair! And hae I
+really a' this time mistaen sweetness for love, and familiarity for
+affection? Do ye really say that it was only familiarity, Helen?"
+
+"The feelings of a sister for a brother," she answered; "of a daughter
+for a father."
+
+"True," said he; "I see it now; I was, indeed, older than your father--I
+didna recollect that."
+
+He sat thoughtful for a few minutes, when Helen, to change the subject,
+inquired after her old nurse, Janet White.
+
+"Poor body," said he, raising his head, "her spirits are clean gone. I
+understand she sits mourning for you by the fire, cowering thegither
+like a pigeon that's lost its mate, or a ewe whose lamb has been struck
+dead by its side. It would wring tears from a heart o' stane to hear her
+lamenting, morning, noon, and night, for her 'dear bairn,' as she aye
+ca'ed ye--rocking her head and chirming owre her sorrow, like a hen bird
+owre its rifled nest. I had her owre at the Hall the day after I cam
+back frae London, and just afore I cam here to seek for ye. But there is
+naething aboot it that she taks delight in noo. And, when I strove to
+amuse her, by taking her through the garden and plantations, (though I
+stood mair in need o' comfort mysel'), she would stand still and lean
+her head against a tree, in the very middle o' some o' the bonniest
+spots, while a tear came rowing down her cheeks, and look in my face wi'
+such a sorrowfu' expression, that a thousand arrows, entering my breast
+at ance, couldna hae caused me mair agony. I felt that I was a puir,
+solitary, and despised being, only cast into the midst o' a paradise,
+that my comfortless bosom might appear the blacker and the more dismal.
+The puir auld body saw what was passing within me, and she shook her
+head, saying, 'Oh, sir! had I seen ye leading my bairn down thir bonny
+avenues as your wife, Janet White would have been a happy woman.' Then
+she wrung her withered hands, and the tears hailed down her cheeks
+faster and faster; while I hadna a word o' consolation to say to her,
+had it been to save my life. For the very chirping o' the birds grew
+irksome, and the young leaves and the silky flowers painful to look
+upon. O Helen! if ye only kenned what we a' suffer on yer account! If ye
+only kenned what it is to have hope spired up, and affection preying
+upon your ain heart for nourishment, ye wadna be angry at onything I
+say."
+
+"Think not it is possible," she replied, while her tears flowed faster
+than her words; "but wherefore feed a hopeless passion, the indulgence
+of which is now criminal?"
+
+"Oh! forgie ye!" he exclaimed, vehemently; "dinna say that, Helen!
+Hopeless it may be, but not _criminal_! That is the only cruel word I
+ever heard frae yer lips! I didna think onybody would hae said that to
+me! Did you really say _criminal_? But, oh! as matters stand, if ye'd
+only alloo me to say anither word or twa anent the subject, and if ye
+wadna just crush me as a moth, and tak pleasure in my agonies--or hae me
+to perish wi' the sunless desolation o' my ain breast--ye'll alloo me to
+say them. They relate to my last consolation--the last tie that links me
+and the world together!"
+
+"Speak," said Helen; "let not me be the cause of misery I can have power
+to prevent."
+
+"Oh, then!" replied he, "be not angry at what I'm going to say; and
+mind, that, on your answer depends the future happiness or misery o' a
+fellow-being. Yes, Helen! upon your word depends life and hope--madness
+and misery; I say life and hope--for, if ye destroy the one, the other
+winna hand lang oot; and I say madness--for, oh! if ye had been a
+witness o' the wild and the melancholy days and nights that I hae
+passed since I learned that ye had left me, and felt my heart burning
+and beating, and my brain loup, louping for ever, like a living
+substance, and shooting and stinging through my head, like stings o'
+fire, till I neither kenned whar I was, nor what I did; but stood still,
+or rushed out in agony, and screamed to the wind, or gripped at the echo
+o' my voice!--I say, if ye had seen this, ye wadna think it strange that
+I made use o' the words. And, now, as ye have heard nothing from----from
+Henry Blackett, from the night that the ceremony o' marriage was
+performed--and if ye should hear nothing o' him for seven years to come,
+ye will then, ye ken, be at liberty--and will ye say that I may hope,
+then? O Helen, woman! say but the word, and I'll wait the seven years,
+as Jacob did for Rachel, and count them but a day if my Helen will bless
+me wi' a smile o' hope!"
+
+As he thus spoke, Mrs Holditch bustled into the room, exclaiming--"O
+sweet lady, here be one coming thee knows--see! see! there be my
+husband, and our own dear young master Henry, come to make us happy
+again!"
+
+"My Henry!" exclaimed Helen, springing towards the door--"where--oh,
+where?".
+
+"Here, my beloved! here!" replied Henry, meeting her on the threshold.
+
+Poor Laird Howison stood dumb, his mouth open, his eyes extended,
+staring on vacancy. He beheld the object of his delirious love sink into
+her husband's arms, and saw no more. He clasped his hands together, and,
+with a deep groan, reeled against the wall. Henry and Helen, in the
+ecstasy of meeting each other, were unconscious of all around, and
+Willie Galloway was the first to observe his countryman.
+
+"Preserve us! you here, too, Mr Howison!" said he. But the features of
+the laird remained rivetted in agony, and betrayed no symptom of
+recognition. The mention of the laird's name by Willie, arrested the
+attention of Henry, and approaching him, he said--"Sir, to you I ought
+to offer an apology."
+
+The unhappy man wildly grasped the hand of Henry, and seizing also
+Helen's, he exclaimed--"It is a' owre now! The chain is forged, and the
+iron is round my soul. But I bless you baith. Tak her! tak her!--and
+hear me, Henry Blackett--as ye would escape wrath and judgment, be kind
+to her as the westlin' winds and the morning dews to the leaves o'
+spring. Let it be your part to clothe her countenance wi' smiles and her
+bosom wi' joy! Fareweel, Helen!--look up!--let me, for the last time,
+look upon your face, and I will carry that look upon my memory to the
+grave!"
+
+She gazed upon him wildly, crying--"Stay!--stay!--you must not leave
+us!"
+
+"Now!--now, it is past!" he cried; "it was a sair struggle, but reason
+mastered it! Fareweel, Helen!--fareweel!"
+
+Thus saying, he rushed out of the house, and Willie Galloway followed
+him; but, although fleet of foot, he was compelled to give up the
+pursuit.
+
+A few minutes after the abrupt and wild departure of the laird, and
+before Helen had recovered from the shock, the ruffians, who, at the
+instigation of Norton, had hunted after Henry to deliver him up to the
+government, and from whom he had already twice escaped, rushed into the
+room, exclaiming--"Secure the traitor!"
+
+Henry sprang back to defend himself, and Willie Galloway, who had
+returned, threw himself into a pugilistic attitude. But Helen, stepping
+between her husband and his pursuers, drew a paper from her bosom, and
+placing it in his hands, said--"My Henry is free! he is pardoned!--the
+king hath signed it!--laugh at the bloodhounds!" And, as she spoke, she
+sank upon his breast. He opened the paper; it was his pardon under the
+royal signature and the royal seal! "My own!--my wife!--my wife!" cried
+Henry, pressing her to his heart, and weeping on her neck.
+
+"That crowns a'!" exclaimed Willie Galloway; "O Helen!--what a lassie ye
+are!"
+
+The ruffians slunk from the room in confusion, and Willie informed them
+that the sooner they were out of sight it would be the better for them.
+
+Helen, on leaving Scotland, had proceeded to London, where, through the
+interest of a friend of Laird Howison's, she gained access to the Duke
+of Cumberland, and throwing herself at his feet, had, through him,
+obtained her husband's pardon, and that pardon she had carried next her
+bosom to his father's house, hoping to find him there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Having divided this tale into chapters, we now come to the
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+
+Henry being now pardoned, Willie Galloway advised that he should take
+his wife to his father's house, and remain there, adding--"Mind ye,
+Maister Henry, that possession is nine points o' law--and if ye be in
+want o' the matter o' five hundred pounds for present use, or for mair
+to prove your birthright at law, I am the man that will advance it, and
+that will leave no stone unturned till I see you righted."
+
+Willie's suggestion was acted upon; and Henry and Helen took up their
+abode in the Priory, where they had been but a few weeks, when he
+obtained information that his father had fallen in a duel, and that his
+adversary was none other than Squire Norton, the father of his then
+wife; but with his dying breath he declared, in the presence of his
+seconds, and invoked them to record it, that his injured son Henry was
+his only and lawful heir.
+
+"That," exclaimed Norton, with a savage laugh over his dying antagonist,
+"it will cost him some trouble to prove!"
+
+The murderer, in the name of a child which his daughter had borne to Sir
+John, had the hardihood to enter legal proceedings to obtain the estate.
+
+Henry applied to the parish of Glencleugh for the register of his
+mother's marriage; but no such record was found. Old Dugald Mackay had a
+dreamy recollection of such a marriage taking place; but he said--"It pe
+very strange that it isna in te pook; hur canna swear to it."
+
+Many thought that the day would be given against Henry, and pitied him;
+but before judgment was pronounced in the case, young Norton was found
+guilty of forgery, and condemned to undergo the just severity of the
+law. Previous to his ignominious death, in the presence of witnesses, he
+confessed the injury he had done to Henry by tearing the leaves from the
+parish register, and directed where they might be found. They were
+found--old Norton fled from the country, and Henry obtained undisputed
+possession of the estate; but on his father's widow and child he settled
+a competency.
+
+Laird Howison's sorrow moderated as his years increased; and when Henry
+and Helen had children, and when they had grown up to run about, he
+requested that they should be sent to him every year, to pull the
+primroses around Primrose Hall; and they were sent. One of them, a girl,
+the image of her mother, he often wept over, and said, he hoped to live
+to love her, as he had loved her mother. Willie Galloway often visited
+his friends in Cheshire, and remained "canny Willie" to the end of the
+chapter.
+
+
+
+
+THE BRIDE OF BRAMBLEHAUGH.[1]
+
+
+It has been stated by the greatest critics the world ever saw--whose
+names we would mention, if we did not wish to avoid interfering with the
+simplicity of our humble annals--that no fictitious character ought to
+be made at once virtuous and unfortunate; and the reason given for it is
+that mankind, having a natural tendency to a belief of an adjustment,
+even in this world, of the claims of virtue and the deserts of vice, are
+displeased with a representation which at once overturns this belief,
+and creates dissatisfaction with the ways of Providence. This may be
+very good criticism, and we have no wish to find fault with it as
+applied to works intended to produce a certain effect on the minds of
+readers; but, so long as Nature and Providence work with machinery whose
+secret springs are hid from our view, and evince--doubtless for wise
+purposes--a disregard of the adjustment of rewards and punishments for
+virtue and vice, we shall not want a higher authority than critics for
+exhibiting things as they are, and portraying on the page of truth, wet
+with unavailing tears, goodness that went to the grave, not only
+unrewarded, but struck down with griefs that should have dried the heart
+and grizzled the hairs of the wicked.
+
+In a little haugh that runs parallel to the Tweed--at a part of its
+course not far from Peebles, and through which there creeps, over a bed
+of white pebbles, a little burn, whose voice is so small, except at
+certain places where a larger stone raises its "sweet anger" to the
+height of a tiny "buller," that the lowest note of the goldfinch drowns
+it and charms it to silence--there stood, about the middle of the last
+century, a cottage. Its white walls and dark roof, with some white roses
+and honeysuckle flowering on its walls, bespoke the humble retreat of
+contentment and comfort. The place went by the name of Bramblehaugh,
+from the sides of the small burn being lined, for several miles, with
+the bramble. The sloping collateral ground was covered with shrubs and
+trees of various kinds, which harboured, in the summer months, a great
+collection of birds--the blackbird, the starling, the mavis, and others
+of the tuneful choir--whose notes rendered harmonious the secluded scene
+where they sang unmolested. The spot is one of those which, scattered
+sparingly over a wild country, woo the footsteps of lovers of nature,
+and, by a few months of their simple charms, regenerate the health,
+while they quicken and gratify the business-clouded fancies of the
+denizens of smoky towns.
+
+The cottage we have now described was occupied by David Mearns, and his
+wife Elizabeth, called, by our national contraction, Betty. These
+individuals earned a livelihood, and nothing more, by the mode in which
+poor cotters in Scotland contrive to spin out an existence; the leading
+feature of which, contentment, the result of necessity, is often falsely
+denominated happiness by those whose positive pleasures, chequered by a
+few misfortunes, are forgotten in the contemplation of a state of life
+almost entirely negative. Difficulties that cannot be overcome deaden
+the energies that have in vain been exerted to surmount them; and, when
+all efforts to better our condition are relinquished, we acquire a
+credit for contentedness, which is only a forced adaptation of limited
+means to an unchangeable end. David Mearns, who had, in his younger
+days, been ruined by a high farm, had learned from misfortune what he
+would not have been very apt to have received from the much-applauded
+philosophy which is said to generate a disposition to be pleased with
+our lot. The bitterness of disappointment, and the wish to get beyond
+the reach of obligations he could not discharge, suggested the remedy of
+a reliance simply on his capability of earning a cotter's subsistence;
+and having procured a cheap lease of the little domicile of
+Bramblehaugh, he set himself down, with the partner of his hopes and
+misfortunes, to eat, with that simulated contentment we have noticed,
+the food of his hard labour, with the relish of health, and to extract
+from the lot thus forced upon him as much happiness as it would yield.
+The cottage and the small piece of ground attached to it, was the
+property of an old man, who, having made a great deal of money by the
+very means that had failed in the hands of David Mearns, had purchased
+the property of Burnbank, lying on the side of the small rivulet already
+mentioned, and, in consequence, it was said, of Betty Mearns bearing the
+same name, (Cherrytrees,) though there was no relationship between them,
+had let to David the small premises at a low rent.
+
+A single child had blessed the marriage of David Mearns and his wife--a
+daughter, called Euphemia, though generally, for the sake of brevity and
+kindliness, called Effie; an interesting girl, who, at the period we
+speak of, had arrived at the age of sixteen years. In a place where
+there were few to raise the rude standard of beauty formed in the minds
+of a limited country population, she was accounted "bonny"--a
+much-abused word, no doubt, in Scotland, but yet having a very fair and
+legitimate application to an interesting young creature, whose blue
+eyes, however little real town beauty they may have expressed or
+illuminated, gave out much tenderness and feeling, accompanied by that
+inexpressible look of pure, unaffected modesty, which is the first, but
+the most difficult gesture of the female manner attempted to be imitated
+by those who are destitute of the feeling that produces it. An
+expression of pensiveness--perhaps the fruit of the early misfortunes of
+her parents operating on the tender mind of infancy, ever quick in
+catching, with instinctive sympathy, the feeling that saddens or
+enlivens the spirits of a mother--was seldom abroad from her
+countenance, imparting to it a deep interest, and, by suggesting a wish
+to relieve the cause of so early an indication of incipient melancholy,
+creating an instant friendship, which subsequent intercourse did not
+diminish.
+
+Walter Cherrytrees, the Laird of Burnbank, a man approaching seventy
+years of age, had a daughter, Lucy, about the same age as Effie Mearns.
+He had lost his wife about fifteen years before; and--though a feeling
+of anxiousness often found its way to his heart, suggesting to his
+vacant mind, as the cure of his listlessness and the balm of his
+bereavement, another wife--he had for a long time been nearly equally
+poised between the hope of Lucy becoming his comfort in his old age, and
+the wish for a tender partner of pleasures which, without participation,
+lose their relish. His daughter, Lucy, was a sprightly, showy girl, who,
+having got a good education, might, with the prospect she had of
+inheriting her father's property, have been entitled to look for a
+husband among the sons of the neighbouring proprietors, if her father's
+secluded mode of life, and plain, blunt manners, had not to a great
+extent limited her intercourse to a few acquaintances, by no means equal
+to him in point of wealth or status, however estimable they might have
+been in other respects. A more pleasant companion to the old Laird of
+Burnbank could not be found, from the one end of Bramblehaugh to the
+other, than David Mearns, his tenant, whose honesty and bluntness, set
+off by a fertility of simple anecdote, had charms for one of the same
+habits of thought and feeling, which all the disadvantages of his
+poverty could not counterbalance. The intimacy of the fathers produced,
+at a very early period, a friendship between the daughters, who,
+notwithstanding, could not boast of the resemblance of thought and
+manners, and community of feeling, which formed the foundation of the
+attachment existing between the parents.
+
+This friendship was not exclusive of some acquaintanceships with the
+neighbouring young men and women, which, however, were in general
+mutual; neither of the two young maidens having formed any intimacy with
+another without, her friend participating in the friendship. Among
+others, Lewis Campbell, the son of a neighbouring farmer, who had been a
+large creditor of David Mearns at the time of his failure, called
+sometimes at the cottage of Bramblehaugh, and was soon smitten with a
+strong love for Effie. They sometimes indulged in long walks by the side
+of the river.
+
+We may anticipate, when we say that the hours spent in these
+excursions--in which the greatest beauties of external nature, and the
+strongest and purest emotions of two loving hearts, acting in
+co-operation and harmony, formed a present and a future such as poets
+dream of, and the world never realizes, but in momentary glimpses--were
+the happiest of these lovers. Effie's inseparable companion, Lucy,
+frequently met them as they sauntered along by the house of Burnbank;
+and the soft breathings of ardent affection were relieved by the gay and
+innocent prattle of the companions, who enjoyed, though in different
+degrees, the conversation and manners of the young lover. The simplicity
+and single-heartedness of Effie were entirely exclusive of a single
+thought unfavourable to an equal openness and frankness on the part of
+her companion, whom she had informed, in her artless way, of the state
+of her affections. But what might not have resulted from a mere
+acquaintanceship between Lucy and Effie's lover, was called forth by the
+pride of the former, whose spirit of emulation, excited by the good
+fortune of her poor friend, suggested a secret wish to alienate the
+affections of Lewis from her companion, and direct them to herself. The
+wish to be beloved, though the mere effect of emulation, is the surest
+of the artificial modes by which love itself is generated in the heart
+of the wisher; and Lucy soon became, unknown for a time to Effie, as
+much enamoured of young Lewis as was her unsuspecting friend.
+
+The first intimation that Effie received of the state of Lucy's feelings
+towards her lover, was from Lewis himself. Sitting at a part of the
+haugh called the Cross Knowe, from the circumstance of an old Romish
+cruciform stone that stood on the top of a gentle elevation--a place
+much resorted to by the lovers--Lewis, unable to conceal a single
+thought or feeling from one who so well deserved his confidence, first
+told her of the perfidy of her friend.
+
+"You are not so well supplied with sweethearts, Effie," he began, "as I
+am; for I can boast of two besides you."
+
+"That speaks little in your favour, Lewie," replied she; "for, if it was
+my wish, I could hae a' the young men o' the haugh makin love to me frae
+mornin to e'en."
+
+"That remark, Effie," said Lewis, "implies that I have courted, or at
+least received marks of affection, from others besides you, while I was
+leading you to suppose that my heart was entirely yours. Now, that is
+not justified by what I said; for one may have sweethearts, and neither
+know nor acknowledge them as such."
+
+"Maybe I am wrang, Lewie," said Effie; "but what was I to think but that
+the twa ither sweethearts ye mentioned were acknowledged by ye? It's no
+in the pooer o' my puir heart to conceive how a young woman could love
+are that neither kenned nor acknowledged her love. But I speak frae my
+ain simple, an' maybe worthless thoughts. The world's wide, an' haulds
+black an' fair, weak an' strong, heigh and laigh; an' wharfore no also
+hearts an' minds as different as their bodies? The birds o' this haugh
+hae only their ain single luves; but they're a' coloured alike that
+belang to ae kind. Would that it had been God's pleasure to mak mankind
+like thae bonny birds!"
+
+"I fear, Effie," replied Lewis, "that a statement of mine, intended to
+be partly in jest, has been construed by you in such a manner as to
+produce to you pain. God is my witness that I am as single-hearted in my
+affection as the birds of this haugh; and gaudier colours, sweeter
+notes, and better scented bowers will never interfere with the love I
+bear to Effie Mearns."
+
+"What meant ye, then, Lewie, by sayin ye had twa sweethearts besides
+Effie Mearns?" said she.
+
+"That you shall immediately know," replied Lewis "and you will think
+more highly of me when I shew you, by my revealing secrets, not indeed
+confided to me, but still secrets, that you have all my heart and the
+thoughts that it contains. The first of my other lovers you will not be
+jealous of, for she is old Lizzy Buchanan, or, as she calls herself,
+Buwhanan, my nurse, who loves me as well as you do, Effie; but the
+other, I fear, may create in you an unpleasant feeling of confidence
+misplaced, and friendship repaid by something like treachery. Surely I
+need say no more."
+
+"Is it indeed sae, Lewie?" said she. "It's lang sin I whispered--and my
+heart beat and my limbs trembled as I did it--in the ear o' Lucy
+Cherrytrees, that my puir, silly thoughts were never aff Lewie Campbell.
+And what think ye she said to me? She said I needna look far ayont
+Bramblehaugh for a bonnier and a brawer lover."
+
+"Then," replied Lewis, "I am not much better off than you are; for she
+told me that your simplicity, she feared, was art, and that your poverty
+made any beauty you had; and she doubted if that bonny face was not a
+great snare for the ruin of a penniless lover."
+
+"Sae, sae," said she, sighing deeply; "and has the fair face o' life's
+friendship put on the looks o' the hypocrite at the very time when
+greater confidence was required? I hae read in Laird Cherrytrees' books
+he is sae kind as lend me, many an example o' fause and faithless
+creatures, baith men and women, o' the world, o' the great cities that
+lie far ayont oor humble sphere; but little did I think that here in
+Bramblehaugh, where our bughts ken nae nicht-thieves, and our hen-roosts
+nae reynards, there was ane, and that ane my friend, wha could smile in
+my face at the very moment she was tryin to ruin me in the eyes o' ane
+wha is dearest to me on earth."
+
+As she thus poured forth her feelings with greater loquacity than she
+generally exhibited--being for the most part quiet and gentle--the tears
+flowed down her cheeks in great profusion, and she sobbed bitterly, in
+spite of all the efforts of Lewis to satisfy her that Lucy's endeavours
+to lessen her in his estimation were entirely fruitless.
+
+"Apprehend nothing, dear Effie, from the discovered treachery of a false
+friend," said he, as he pressed her to his bosom. "It has less power
+with me than the whispers of that gentle burn have on the sleeping
+echoes of the Eagle's Rock that only answers to the voice of the
+tempest."
+
+"It's no that, Lewie," replied she, wiping away her tears, "that gies me
+pain. I hae nae fear o' faith and troth that has been pledged, and
+better than pledged; for I hae seen it i' yer looks, and heard it i' the
+soonds o' yer deep-drawn sighs. Thae tears are for a broken
+friendship--for the return o' evil for guid--for the withered blossoms
+o' a bonny flower I hae cherished and watered, in the hope it wad yield
+me a sweet smell when I kissed its leaves i' the daffin o' youth or the
+kindliness o' age. If it is sae sair to lose a friend, what, Lewie--what
+wad it be to lose a lover?"
+
+"The very existence of great evils, Effie," said he, "makes us happy,
+in the thought that they are beyond our reach."
+
+"But did I no think," said she, "that I was beyond the reach o' the pain
+o' experiencing the fauseness o' Lucy Cherrytrees--the very creature o'
+a' ithers, I hae chosen as my bosom friend--to whom I confided a' my
+thochts and the very secret o' my love?"
+
+"But it is an ill wind that blaws naebody guid, as they say, Effie,"
+said Lewis. "I can better appreciate your goodness, now that I have
+experienced the faithlessness of another."
+
+"An' if I hae lost a friend," replied Effie, "I am the mair sure o' my
+lover. Ye dinna ken, Lewie, how muckle this has raised you even in my
+mind, whar ye hae aye occupied the highest place. Ye hae rejected the
+offered luve o' the braw heiress o' Burnbank, for the humble dochter o'
+David Mearns, wha earns his bread in the sweat o' his brow. Oh! what can
+a puir, penniless cottager's dochter gie in return to the man wha, for
+her sake, turns his back on a big ha', a thoosand braid acres, an' a
+braw heiress?"
+
+"Her simple, genuine, unsophisticated heart," replied Lewis, "with one
+unchangeable, devoted affection beating in its core. Were Burnbank Hall
+as big as the Parliament House, and Burnbank itself longer than the
+lands watered by the Brambleburn, and Lucy Cherrytrees as fair as our
+unfortunate Mary Stuart, I would not give my simple Effie, with no more
+property of her own than the bandeau that binds her fair locks, for Lucy
+Cherrytrees and all her lands."
+
+The two lovers continued their evening walks, indulging in conversations
+which, embracing the subject of their affection, and anticipating the
+pleasures of their ultimate union, realized that fullest enjoyment of
+hope which is said to transcend possession. No notice was taken of their
+mutual sentiments on the subject of Lucy Cherrytrees' affection for
+Lewis, and her unjustifiable attempts to displace her old friend, to
+make room for herself in the heart of the contested object of their
+wishes.
+
+Matters continued in this state for some time, Effie being regularly
+gratified by a visit from Lewis three times a-week. On one occasion a
+whole week passed without any intelligence of her lover. Her inquiries
+had produced no satisfactory explanation of the unusual occurrence; and
+Fancy, under the spell of the genius of Fear, was busy in her vocation
+of drawing dark pictures of coming evil. At last she was told by her
+father, who had procured the intelligence from a friend of George
+Campbell, the father, that young Lewis had been suspected of an
+intention to marry the poor daughter of the cottager, David Mearns, and
+had been despatched, without a minute's premonition, 'to an uncle, who
+was a merchant in Rio de Janeiro. No time had been given to him to write
+to Effie; and care had been taken to prevent him from sending her any
+intelligence while he remained at Liverpool, previous to his departure.
+The statement was corroborated by intelligence to the same effect,
+procured by one of Laird Cherrytrees' servants from one of the servants
+of George Campbell, who told it to Lucy, and who again told it to Effie,
+with tears in her eyes, which she took every care to conceal. The effect
+produced on the mind of Effie Mearns, by this unexpected misfortune, was
+proportioned to its magnitude, and the susceptibility of the feelings of
+the delicate individual on whom it operated. For many days she wept
+incessantly, refusing the ordinary sustenance of a life which she now
+deemed of no importance to herself or to any one else. All attempts at
+comforting a bruised heart were--as they generally are in cases of
+disappointed love--unavailing; and the effects of time seemed only
+apparent in a quieter, though not in any degree less poignant sorrow.
+Every object kept alive the remembrance of the youth who had first made
+an impression on her heart, and whose image was graven on every spot of
+the neighbourhood which had been consecrated by the exchange of a mutual
+passion. The scenes of their wanderings, hallowed as they had been in
+her memory, were now peopled with undefined terrors; and every time that
+she was forced abroad to take that air and exercise which latterly
+seemed indispensable to her existence, her sorrow received an accession
+of power from every tree under which they had sat, and every knowe or
+dell where they had listened to the musical loves of the birds, as they
+exchanged their own in not less eloquent sighs.
+
+The first circumstance that produced any effect on the mind of the
+disconsolate maiden, was a misfortune of another kind, which, realizing
+the old adage, seemed to follow with all due rapidity the footsteps of
+its precursor. Her mother, who sat on one side of the fire, while Effie
+occupied her usual seat in a corner of the cottage in the other, had
+been using all the force of her rude but impressive eloquence to get her
+daughter to adopt the means that were in her power for the amelioration
+of a grief which might render her childless.
+
+"I am gettin auld, Effie," she said, "an' you are the only are I can
+look to for administerin to yer faither an' to me that comfort we hae a
+richt to expect at the hands o' a dochter wha never yet was deficient in
+her duty. Our poverty, which winna be made ony less severe, as ye may
+weel ken, by the income o' years, will mak yer attention to us mair
+necessary; an' it may even be--God meise the means!--that your weak
+hands may yet be required to work for the support o' yer auld parents. I
+hae lang intended to speak to you in this way, and it was only pity for
+my puir heart-broken Effie that put me aff frae day to day, in the
+expectation that either some news wad come frae Lewie, or that ye wad
+get consolation frae anither and a higher source, to support ye for
+trials ye may yet hae to bear up against, for the sake o' them that
+brocht ye into the world. A' ither means hae been tried to get ye to
+determine to live, an' no lay yersel doun to dee, an' they havin failed,
+what can I do but try the last remedy in my pooer--to speak, as I hae
+now dune, to yer guid sense, an' lay afore ye the duties o' a dutifu'
+bairn, which are far aboon the thochts o' a disappointed love. Promise,
+now, my bonny Effie, that ye will try to gie up yer mournin, for the
+sake o' parents whase love for ye is nae less than Lewie Campbell's."
+
+As Betty finished her impressive admonition to Effie, who acknowledged
+its force, and inwardly determined on complying with the request of her
+mother, an unusual noise at the door of the cottage startled her anxious
+ear. It seemed that a number of people were approaching the cottage, and
+the groans of one in deep distress and pain were mixed with the low talk
+of the crowd, who, from those inexpressible indications which the ear
+can catch and analyse ere the mind is conscious of the operation, seemed
+already to sympathise with one to whom they were bearing a grief. Housed
+by that anticipative fear of evil which all unfortunate people feel,
+Betty ran to the door, followed by her daughter, and opened it--to let
+in the mangled body of her husband; who, in felling an oak, on the
+property of Burnbank, had fallen under the weight of the tree, and got
+his leg broken, and one of his arms dislocated at the shoulder-joint. He
+was conveyed, by the kind neighbours, to a bed; and, by the time they
+got him undressed, for the purpose of his wounds being submitted to the
+curative process of the doctor, that individual arrived, and proceeded
+to perform the painful operation of setting the broken bones. The full
+effect of this misfortune to Effie and her mother was for a time
+suspended by the call made upon them to relieve the sufferings of the
+father and husband; and it was not till the bustle ceased, and the
+neighbours (excepting two women, whose services, in addition to those
+of the wife and daughter, might still be required) went away, that they
+felt the full force of the gigantic evil that had befallen them, the
+consequences of which might extend through the remaining years of their
+existence.
+
+A period of no less than eighteen months passed away, and David Mearns
+was still unable to do more than, with assistance, to rise from his bed,
+and sit, during a part of the day, by the fire, or at the window. During
+the whole of this time, he had been tended by his daughter with
+assiduous care. Her filial sympathies, called into active operation by
+the sorrows of her parent, filled up the void that had been made in her
+heart by the departure of her lover; and a new source of grief effected
+(however paradoxical it may seem) a change in the morbid melancholy to
+which she had been enslaved, which, although not for mental health or
+ease, was so much in favour of exertion and remedial exercise, that she
+came to present the appearance of one inclined to endeavour to sustain
+her sorrow, rather than resign herself to the fatal power of an
+irremediable woe. Among the visitors who took an interest in a family
+reduced by one stroke to want and all its attendant evils, Laird
+Cherrytrees evinced the strongest concern for the fate of his friend;
+and, by a timeous contribution of necessary assistance, ameliorated, in
+so far as man could, the unhappy condition of virtue under the load of
+misery. The many visits of the good old laird, and the long periods of
+time he passed by the bedside of the patient, enabled him to see and
+appreciate the devoted attention of Effie to her parent; and often, as
+she flew at the slightest indication of a wish for something to assuage
+pain, or remove the uneasiness produced by the long confinement, he
+would stop the current of his narrative, and fix his eyes on the kind
+maiden, so long as her tender office engaged her attention and feelings
+These long looks, not unaccompanied at times with a deep sigh, were
+attributed, as they well might, to admiration and approbation of so much
+filial affection and devotedness exercised towards one whom the old
+laird respected above all his friends.
+
+The visits of Laird Cherrytrees were at first twice or thrice a-week.
+His infirm body already begun to exhibit the effects of old age,
+prevented him from walking; and such was the anxiety he felt for the
+unhappy patient, that he mounted his old pony, Donald, nearly as frail
+as his master, to enable him to administer consolation so much required.
+He came always at the same hour; Effie, who expected him, was often at
+the door ready to receive him; and, while she held old Donald's head
+till he dismounted, welcomed her father's friend with so much sincerity
+and pleasure, that if she had failed in her ostlership, he would have
+felt a disappointment he would not have liked to express. Even when at a
+distance from the cottage, he strained his eyes to endeavour to catch a
+glimpse of the faithful attendant; and, if he did not see her, the rein
+of Donald was relaxed, and he was allowed to saunter along at his own
+pleasure, or even to eat grass by the roadside, (a luxury he delighted
+in from his having once belonged to a cadger,) so as to give Effie time
+to get to her post.
+
+The three days of the week on which Laird Cherrytrees was in the habit
+of visiting David Mearns, were Monday, Thursday, and Saturday; and he
+seldom came without bringing something to the poor family--either some
+money for old Betty; some preserves, prepared by Lucy, for the invalid;
+or a book, or a flower from Burnbank garden, for Effie. When his
+conversation with David was finished--and every day it seemed to get
+shorter and shorter, though there seemed no lack of either subjects or
+ideas--he commenced to talk with Effie, chiefly on the nature and
+contents of the books he brought her to read; and nothing seemed to
+delight him more than to sit in the large arm-chair by David's bedside,
+and hear Effie discoursing, _ex cathedra_, (on a three-footed stool at
+the foot of the bed, opposite to the Laird's chair,) with her
+characteristic simplicity and good sense, on the subjects he himself had
+suggested. But, notwithstanding all her efforts to appear well-pleased
+in presence of the man who was supporting her family, her train of
+thoughts was often broken in upon by the recollections of Lewis
+Campbell, and she would sit for an hour at a time, with the eyes of the
+Laird fixed on her melancholy face, as if he had been all that time in
+mute cogitation, suggesting some remedy for her sorrow. His ideas and
+feelings seemed to be operated upon by the same power that ruled the
+mind of the maiden; for his face followed, in its changing expressions,
+the mutations of her countenance. Her melancholy seemed to be
+communicated by a glance of her watery eye, as the thought of Lewis
+entered her mind; and when she recovered from her gloomy reverie, a
+corresponding indication of relief lighted up the grey, twinkling orbs
+of the old Laird. This custom of "glowrin," for whole hours at a time,
+on the face of the sensitive girl, at first painful to her, became a
+matter of indifference; and the position and attitudes of the three
+individuals--Betty being generally engaged about the house--undergoing,
+while the Laird was present, no change, came to assume something like
+the natural properties of the parties, as if they had been fixtures, or
+lay figures for the study of a painter.
+
+Every time the Laird came to the cottage, he extended the period of his
+stay, and, latterly, he did not stir till a servant from Burnbank, sent
+by Lucy, came to take him home. It seemed as if he could not get enough
+of "glowrin;" for, latterly, all his occupation, which at first
+consisted of rational conversation, merged in that mute eloquence of the
+eye, or rather in that inebriation of the orb, "drinking of light,"
+which lovers of sights, especially female countenances, are so fond of.
+The visits had been so regular, not a day being ever missed, that, as
+Effie held the stirrup till he mounted Donald, during all which time the
+process of "glowrin" went on as regularly as at the bedside of David,
+she never thought of asking, and he never thought of stating, when he
+would call again. Time had stamped the act of calling with the impress
+of unchangeable custom. The caseless clock of David's cottage was not
+more regular; the only change being that already observed--that the time
+of the Laird's stay gradually and gradually lengthened.
+
+The homage paid by Effie to Laird Cherrytrees was, as may easily be
+conceived, the respect, attention, and kindness of an open-hearted girl,
+filled with gratitude to the preserver of the lives of her and her
+parents. Every evening she offered up, at her bedside, prayers for the
+preservation and happiness of the man but for whose kindness starvation
+might have overtaken the helpless invalid, and not much less helpless
+wife and daughter. In their prayers the "amen" of David and his wife was
+the most heart-felt expression of love and gratitude that ever came from
+the lips of mortal. This feeling, however, did not prevent David Mearns
+and Betty from sometimes indulging, in the absence of Effie (in all
+likelihood giving freedom to her tears, as she sat in some favourite
+retreat of her absent lover,) in some remarks on the extraordinary
+conduct of Laird Cherrytrees. They soon saw through the secret, and
+resolved upon drawing him out; for which purpose Effie was to be called
+away on the occasion of the next visit.
+
+The Laird came as he used to do, took his seat, and resumed his gazing.
+Effie pleased him exceedingly, by an account she gave him of the last
+book he brought to her; and, throwing himself back in the arm chair, he
+seemed, for a time, wrapped in meditation. Effie obeyed, in the
+meantime, her mother's request, to come for a few minutes to the green
+to assist her in her work; and, when the Laird again applied his eyes
+to their accustomed vocation, he was surprised, but not (for once)
+displeased, at her disappearance. A great struggle now commenced between
+some wish and a restraint. He looked round the cottage, and then turned
+his eyes on David; acts which he repeated several times. Incipient
+syllables of words half-formed died away in his struggling throat. He
+moved restlessly in the large chair, and twirled his silver-headed cane
+in his hand. He even rose, went to the door, looked out, came back
+again, and took his seat without saying a word. Holding away his face
+from David, he at last made out a few words, uttered with great
+difficulty.
+
+"She's a fine lassie, Effie," he said.
+
+"A bonnier an' a better never was brocht up in Bramblehaugh, savin yer
+ain Lucy," replied David.
+
+"Hoo auld is she noo?" said the Laird, still holding away his face.
+
+"She will be nineteen come the time," replied David.
+
+"It's a pity she's sae young," rejoined the Laird, with a great
+struggle, and making a noise with his cane, as if he had repented of his
+words, and wished to drown them before they reached the ears of David.
+
+"I dinna think sae, beggin yer Honour's pardon," replied David. "We need
+her assistance, in this trial; an' I'm just thinkin o' some way she
+micht use her hands--an she's willing aneugh, puir cratur--for our
+assistance."
+
+"Are ye no pleased wi' my assistance?" said the Laird, displeased at
+something in David's reply.
+
+"Yer Honour has saved our lives," replied David, feelingly, "an' it wad
+only be because we are ashamed o yer guidness that we wad wish our
+dochter to tak a part o' that burden aff ane wha is under nae obligation
+to serve us."
+
+"If I hae been yer friend, ye hae been mine," said the Laird. "I hae got
+guid advices frae ye; an', even noo, I hae something to ask ye
+concernin mysel, that nae ither man i' the haugh could sae weel answer."
+
+"What is that, yer Honour?" said David.
+
+"What do ye think, David Mearns, I should do," said the Laird, moving
+about in the chair in evident perplexity, "if my dochter Lucy were to
+tak a husband an' leave Burnbank? I carena aboot fa'in into the hands o'
+Jenny Mucklewham, wha, for this some time past, has neither cleaned my
+buckles nor brushed my coat as I wad wish. She says I'm mair fashious;
+but that's a mere excuse."
+
+"I hae seen aulder men marry again," said David, thinking he would
+please the Laird, by giving him such an answer as he was clearly fishing
+for.
+
+"Aulder men, David, man!" replied the Laird, looking down at his person,
+and adjusting his wig. "Did I ask ye onything aboot my age? I wanted
+merely your advice, what I should do in certain circumstances, an' ye
+gie me a comparison for an answer.--Do ye think I should marry?"
+
+"If yer Honour has ony wish in that way, I think ye should," said David.
+
+"I never yet did wrang in following your advice, David Mearns," said the
+Laird. "--She's a fine lassie, Effie."
+
+"Ou, ay," responded David, at a loss what more to say.
+
+"Very fine," again said the Laird, turning his face partially from the
+window, so as the tail of his eye reached David's face, and waiting for
+something more.
+
+David could, however, say nothing. The very circumstance of the Laird's
+wishing him to say something pertinent to the purpose already so broadly
+hinted at, prevented him from touching so delicate a subject; and,
+notwithstanding of another application of the tail of the Laird's eye,
+he was silent.
+
+"Ye hae gien me ae advice, David," said the Laird, in despair of getting
+anything more out of David without a question: "could ye no tell me
+_wha_ I should marry, man?" And having achieved this announcement, he
+rose and walked to the window.
+
+"That's owre delicate a subject for me to gie an advice on, yer Honour,"
+replied David. "The doo lays aside ninety-nine guid straes, an' taks the
+hundredth, though a crooked ane, for its nest. Ye maun judge for
+yersel."
+
+"What say ye to yer ain Effie, then?" said the Laird, relieved at last
+from a dreadful burden.
+
+"If yer Honour likes the lassie, an' she'll tak yer Honour, I can hae
+nae objections," replied David.
+
+The Laird, who seemed twenty years younger after this declaration, took
+David by the hand, and shook it till the pain of his dislocated arm
+almost made him cry.
+
+"Will ye speak to her aboot it. David!" said he, still holding his hand.
+"The best farm o' Burnbank will be your reward. Plead for me, David, my
+best friend. Tell Betty aboot it, and get her to use a mother's pooer.
+If I can trust my een, Effie doesna dislike me. If a' gaes weel, ye may
+hae Ravelrigg, or Braidacre, or Muirfield--onything that's in my pooer
+to gie, David." And the old lover, exhausted by the struggle and
+excitement he had suffered, sank back into the chair.
+
+"I will do my best," replied David. And the old Laird sighed, and
+absolutely groaned with pure, unmixed satisfaction.
+
+At the end of this scene, Effie and her mother came in. The damsel took
+her old seat on the three-footed stool at the foot of the bed; the eyes
+of the Laird sought again her face, where he thought they had a better
+right now to rest. No more was spoken; enough for a day had been said
+and done; and, with a parting look to David, to keep him in remembrance
+of his promise, and a purse of money slipped into the hand of Betty, as
+a solvent of any obstacle that might exist in her mind, the lover went
+to the door to receive Donald from the soft hands of Effie, who, as was
+her custom, had gone out before him, to lead the old cadger to the door,
+and hold the bridle till he with an effort got into the saddle. The only
+difference Effie could observe in his departure this day, was a kind of
+mock-gallant wave of the hand, as he, with more than usual spirit,
+struck his spurless heels into Donald's sides, and tried to rise in the
+saddle, in response to the hobble of the old Highlander.
+
+The Laird had been scarcely out of the house, when David had a communing
+with his wife, in absence of Effie, on the extraordinary intimation made
+by the old lover. Betty was agreeable to the match; but the tear came
+into her eye as she thought of the sacrifice poor Effie was to be called
+upon to make. Neither of them could answer for the consent of Effie,
+whose melancholy, though somewhat ameliorated, was little diminished,
+and whose recollections of Lewis Campbell were as vivid as they were on
+the day of his departure. When she returned from one of her solitary
+rambles, which fed her passion and increased her grief, she was
+delicately told of the intentions of Laird Cherrytrees. The announcement
+of the extraordinary intelligence produced an effect which neither her
+father nor mother could have anticipated. A quick operation of her mind
+placed before her all the affectionate acts of attention she had for
+years been in the habit of applying to the old friend of her father, and
+the preserver of their lives. Gratitude, operating in one of the most
+grateful hearts that ever beat in the bosom of mortal, had produced in
+her an exuberant kindness, a devotedness of a species of affection due
+by a child to its godfather, a playful freedom of the confidence of one
+who relied on the disparity of years for a license from even the
+suspicion of a possibility of any other relation existing between them.
+That now came back upon her, loaded with self-reproach and shame, and
+attributing to her misconstrued attentions the extraordinary passion
+that had taken hold of the heart of the old Laird. She was totally
+unable to make any reply to her parents. The image of Lewis Campbell,
+never absent from her mind, assumed a new form, and swam in the tears
+which flowed from her eyes. The natural contrast between age and youth,
+love and gratitude, assumed its legitimate strength. The first feeling
+of her mind was, that she would suffer the death that had for a time
+been impending over her, and whose finger was already on her breaking
+heart, rather than comply with the wishes of her father and mother. They
+saw the struggle that was in her mind, and abstained from pressing what
+they had suggested. They did not ask her even to give her sentiments;
+but the silent tears that stole down her cheek and dropped in her lap
+from her drooping head, required no spoken commentary to tell them the
+extent of her grief, and the resolution at least of a heart that might
+entirely break, as it appeared to be breaking, but never could forget.
+
+There was little sleep for the eyes of Effie on the succeeding night.
+Her sobs reached the ears of her parents, who, unable to yield her
+consolation, were obliged to leave her to wrestle with her grief;
+sending up a silent prayer to the Author of all good dispensations, that
+He might assuage the sorrow of one who had already, with exemplary
+patience, submitted to the rod of affliction. The sacredness of her
+feelings was too well appreciated by her parents to admit of any offer
+of counsel, where deep-seated affection, the work of mysterious
+instinct, stood in solemn derision of the vulgar ideas of this world's
+expediency. The struggle in her mind arose from the strength of her
+love, and the power of her filial devotion. No part of the attendant
+circumstances or probable consequences of her decision escaped her mind.
+She knew that she never could be happy as the wife of any other
+individual, even of suitable age, than Lewis Campbell. But this
+concerned only herself; and she knew, and trembled as she thought, that
+the result of her decision might be the destitution, the want, perhaps
+the death of her parents; their all depended on the breath of the man
+whom she, by the sign of her finger, might change from a friend to a
+foe; and she might thereby become the destroyer of those who gave her
+being.
+
+The morning came, but brought neither sleep nor relief to the unhappy
+maiden. Her parents seemed inclined not to advert to the subject that
+day, but to let her struggle on with her own thoughts. The hour of the
+Laird's visit approached, and he was already on the road for the home of
+his beloved, whom his ardent fancy pictured standing smiling at the
+door, ready as usual to receive him and lead him into the house.
+Donald--who knew a reverie in his master bettor than he did himself, and
+did not fail to take advantage of it--ambled on with diminished speed.
+The Laird approached the cottage. No Effie was there. His bright visions
+took flight, and were succeeded by a cold shiver, the precursor of a
+gloomy train of ideas, which pictured a refusal and all its attendant
+horrors. He drew up the head of Donald, and even invited him to partake
+of the long grass which grew by the way-side. He counted the moments as
+Donald devoured the food; and, from time to time, lifted his eyes to see
+if Effie was yet at the cottage door. She was not, to be seen--and she
+had not been absent before for many months. His mind was unprepared for
+a refusal; the ground-swell of his previous excited fancy distracted him
+amidst the dead stillness of despair. He looked again, and for the last
+time that day. Effie was not yet there. He turned the head of the
+delighted, and no doubt astonished Donald, and quietly sought again the
+house of Burnbank.
+
+The same procedure was gone through on the succeeding day. Laird
+Cherrytrees again proceeded to the cottage of David Mearns; and, as he
+sauntered along, he thought it impossible that Effie should again be
+absent from her post. He was too good a man, and too conceited a lover,
+as all old lovers are, to allow his mind to dwell on the probable
+operation of necessity and the fear of injuring her father's patron, on
+the mind of the daughter; and yet a lurking, rebellious idea suggested
+that he would rather see Effie at the door, impelled by that cause, than
+absent altogether. His hopes again beat high, and Donald was pricked on
+to the goal of his wishes with an asperity he did not relish so well as
+a reverie. The spot was attained. Effie was still absent. Donald was
+again remitted to the long grass, and all the resources of a lover's
+mind were called up, to enable him to face the evil that awaited him.
+But all was in vain--he found it impossible to proceed.
+
+"I am rejected," he muttered to himself, with a sigh; "a cottager's
+dochter has refused the Laird o' Burnbank; but her cauldness an' cruelty
+mak me like her the mair. Effie Mearns, Effie Mearns! hoo little do ye
+ken what commotion ye hae produced in this puir, burstin heart! But,
+though ye winna hae me, I winna desert yer faither. Hame, Donald, to
+Burnbank." And, as he pulled up the bridle with his left hand, he wiped
+away the tears that had collected in his eyes, and, casting many a look
+back to the cottage, cantered slowly home.
+
+These proceedings of the Laird had been noticed by Betty Mearns from the
+window of the cottage, and she and David were at no loss to guess the
+cause of them. They knew his timid, sensitive disposition, and truly
+attributed his return to his not seeing Effie at the door waiting for
+him as usual. Apprehensions now seized the good mother, that the Laird
+might withdraw his attentions and assistance from the family, the result
+of which would be nothing but misery and ruin; as David's fractured
+limbs were yet far from being healed, and a long period must yet pass
+before he could earn a penny to keep in their lives. These fears were
+increased by a third and a fourth day having passed without a visit
+from the Laird, who had, notwithstanding, been seen reconnoitering as
+usual at a distance from the cottage. Effie herself saw how matters
+stood, and learned, from the looks of her father and mother, sentiments
+they seemed unwilling to declare. She was still much convulsed with the
+struggle of the antagonist duties, wishes, emotions, and fears, that
+rose in her mind; and the apprehensions of her parents, which she
+considered well-founded, added to her sorrow an additional source of
+anguish.
+
+"This house," said David, at last overcome by his feelings, "has become
+mair like an hospital that has lost its mortification than an honest
+man's cottage. Effie sits greetin an' sabbin the hail day, an' you,
+Betty, look forward to starvation, wi' the gruesome face o' despair. I
+am unhappy mysel, besides being an invalid. What is this to end in? What
+are we to do? How are we to live withoot meat, now that Burnbank, guid
+man, has deserted us?"
+
+"There has come naething frae Burnbank for five days," replied Betty;
+"an' the siller I got frae the guid auld man, the last time he was here,
+I payed awa i' the village for necessaries I had taen on afore we got
+that help. Our girnel winna haud oot lang against three mous; an' if
+Laird Cherrytrees bides awa muckle langer, I see naething for it but to
+beg."
+
+The tear started to the eye of David. He looked at Effie. She wept and
+sobbed, and covered her face with her hands.
+
+"Effie, woman," said David, "a' this micht hae been averted if ye had
+just gane to the door, an' welcomed the auld Laird, as ye were wont.
+He's a blate man, though a guid carl; an' he has, nae doot, thocht he
+was unwelcome when yer auld practice o' waitin for him was gien up."
+
+"I tauld her that, David," said Betty, "an' pressed her to gang to the
+door, though it was only to gie the blate Laird a glimpse o' her, whilk
+was a' he wanted to bring him in; but she only sabbed the mair. Unhappy
+hour she first saw that callant, wha may now be dead or married for
+ought she kens!--an yet for his sake maun a hail family dree the dule o'
+this day's misery. Effie, woman, can ye no forget are wha hasna thocht
+ye worth the trouble o tellin ye, by ae scrape o' his pen, whether he be
+i' the land o' the livin!"
+
+A sob was the only reply Effie could make to this appeal.
+
+"I hae tauld Effie," said David, "what wad save us frae the ruin an'
+starvation that stare us i' the face; but my mind's made up to suffer to
+the end, though I should lie here wi' my broken banes, and dree the
+pains o' hunger, rather than force my dochter to marry a man against her
+ain choice. But, O Effie, woman, wad ye see yer puir faither, broken as
+he is baith in mind and body, lie starvin here in his bed, wi' nae mair
+pooer to earn a bite o' bread than the unspeaned bairn, and no mak a
+sacrifice to save him?"
+
+"Ay, faither," replied Effie, "I wad dee to save ye."
+
+"But deein winna save either him or me," said Betty. "Naething will hae
+that effect but yer agreein to be the leddy o' the braw hoose an' braid
+acres o' Burnbank. Wae's me! what a difference between that condition,
+wi' servants at yer nod, an' a' the comforts an' luxuries o' life at yer
+command, an', abune a', the pooer o' makin happy yer auld faither and
+mother, an' this awfu prospect o' dreein the very warst an' last o' a'
+the evils o' life--want an' auld age--ill-matched pair! Effie, woman, my
+bonny bairn, hae ye nae love in yer heart, but for Lewie Campbell? Wad
+ye, for his sake, see a' this misfortune fa' on the heads o' yer
+parents, whom, by the laws o' God an' man, ye are bound to honour,
+serve, and obey?"
+
+It was easier for Effie to say she would die to save her parents, than
+that she would comply with the wish of her mother; but the feeling
+appeal of her parent increased her agony, which induced another paroxysm
+of hysterical sobs--the only answer she could yet make to her mother.
+
+"Effie doesna care for either you or me, Betty," said David, "or she wad
+hae little hesitation aboot marryin a guid, fresh, clean, rich, auld
+man, to save her faither and mother frae poverty and starvation. I see
+nae great sacrifice i' the matter. Her young heart mayna rejoice i' the
+pleasures o' a daft love, but her guid sense will be gratified by a
+feelin o' duty far aboon the vain, frawart freaks o' a silly, giddy,
+youthfu passion. Let her refuse Laird Cherrytrees, an' when Lewie
+Campbell comes hame, the owrecome bread o' the funeral o' her faither
+may grace a waddin bought wi' the price o' his life."
+
+"Dinna speak that way, faither," cried Effie, lifting up her hands; "I
+canna stand that. You said ye wadna force me, an' ye _are_ forcin me.
+Oh, my puir heart, wha or what will support ye when grief for my parents
+turns me against ye? Faither, faither, when I am dead, Laird Cherrytrees
+will be again yer friend. A little time will do't: will ye no wait?"
+
+"Hunger waits only eight days, as the sayin is," replied he, "an ye'll
+live mair than that time, I hope an' trow. I will be dead afore ye,
+Effie, an' ye'll hae the consolation, as ye maybe drap a tear on the
+mossy grey stane that covers the Mearnses i' the kirkyard o' our parish,
+to think, if ye shouldna like to say, in case ye micht be heard--though
+thinkin an' speakin's a' ane to God--that 'that stane was lifted ten
+years suner than it micht hae been, because I liked Lewie Campbell
+better than auld Laird Cherrytrees.'"
+
+"An' it's no likely," said the mother, "that I wad be there to hear
+Effie mak sae waefu a speech. If I binna lyin wi' the Mearns, I'll be
+wi' the Cherrytrees o' Mossnook--nae relations o' the Burnbanks, though
+maybe as guid a family. But, afore I'm mixed wi' the dust o' that auld
+hoose, Effie--an' it mayna be lang--ye may join the twa Cherrytrees, an'
+let the gravestanes o' the Mearns, as weel as the Mossnooks, lie yet a
+score years langer withoot bein moved. It's a pity to disturb the lang
+grass. Its sough i' the nichtwind keeps the bats frae pickin the auld
+banes, an' maybe it may save yer mother's, if ye send her there afore
+her time."
+
+Effie's feelings could no longer withstand these appeals. Her sobbing
+ceased suddenly; and, starting up from her seat, she looked to the old
+clock that stood against the wall of the cottage. She noticed that it
+was upon the hour of the Laird's usual visit.
+
+"It is twelve o'clock, faither," she said, firmly--"this hoor decides
+the fate o' Effie Mearns."
+
+Walking to the door, she placed herself in the position she used to
+occupy when she intended to welcome her father's friend. Now she was to
+welcome a husband. Laird Cherrytrees was, as might have been expected,
+allowing Donald to take his liberty of the road-side, grazing while he
+was busy reconnoitering the cottage. The moment he saw the form of Effie
+standing where he had for several long days wished to see her, he pulled
+up Donald's bridle with the alacrity of youth, and, striking his sides
+with his unarmed heels, made all the speed of a bridegroom to get to his
+bride. The sight of the object he had gazed upon so unceasingly for so
+long a time, and whom he had strained his eyes in vain to see during
+these eventful days, operated like a charm on the old lover. He
+discovered at first sight the red, swollen eyes of Effie; but he was too
+happy in thinking he had been successful, as he had no doubt he had, to
+meditate on the struggle which produced his bliss. Having taken a long
+draught of the fountain of his hopes and happiness, and feasted his eyes
+on the face of the maiden, who attempted to smile through her tears,
+which he did sitting on his horse, and, without speaking a word--for,
+loquacious in politics or rural economy, he was mute in love--he
+dismounted, while Effie, as usual, held the reins. He lost no time in
+getting into his chair, falling back into it like a breathless traveller
+who has at last attained the end of his journey. David and Betty, who
+construed Effie's conduct into a consent, took an early opportunity,
+while she was still at the door, of letting the happy Laird know that
+their daughter, as they conceived, was inclined to the match. The Laird
+received the intelligence as if it had been too much for mortal to bear.
+He was at first beyond the vulgar habit of speech. He sighed, turned his
+eyes in their sockets, groaned, and wrung his hands. On recovering
+himself, he exclaimed----
+
+"Whar is she, Betty? Let me see the dear creature. David, ye'll hae
+Ravelrigg; it's the best o' them a'. Whan is't to be, Betty? Ye maun fix
+the day; an' ye maun brak the thing to Lucy, and to Jenny Mucklewham;
+for I hae nae pooer. Let me see her--let me see the sweet creature this
+instant."
+
+Effie, at the request of her mother, came in and resumed her seat on the
+three-footed stool. Her eyes were still swollen, and she looked
+sorrowfully at her father. The Laird fixed his eyes on her; but his
+loquacity was gone. He had not a word to say; but his "glowrin" was in
+some degree changed, being accompanied by a soft smile of
+self-complacency and contentment, and freed from the nervous
+irritability with which he used to solicit with his eyes a look from the
+object of his affections. His visit this day was shorter than it used to
+be. Next day, Betty was to visit Burnbank, to arrange for the marriage.
+
+Meanwhile, the unfortunate girl resigned herself as a self-sacrifice
+into the hands of her mother. Bound with the silken bands of filial
+affection, she renounced all desire of exercising her own free-will, or
+indulging in those feelings of the female heart which are deemed so
+strong as to demand the sacrifice often of all other earthly
+considerations. The fate of Iphiginia has occupied the pens and tongues
+of pitying mortals for thousands of years. A lovely woman sacrificed for
+a fair wind, doomed to have the blood that mantled in the blushing
+cheeks of beauty sprinkled on the altar of a false religion, is a
+spectacle which the imagination cannot contemplate without a
+participation of the strongest sympathies of the heart; yet there are,
+in the common every-day world we now live in, many a scene in the act of
+being performed, where, though there is no bloodshed and no smoking
+altar exhibited, the sacrifice is not less than that of the Grecian
+victim. Our blessed, holy altar of matrimony is often, by the wayward
+feelings of man--for we here say nothing of vice or corrupt
+conduct--made more cruel than those of Moloch and Chiun. There is many a
+bloodless Iphiginia in those days, whose sufferings are unknown and
+unsung, because confined to the heart that broke over them and concealed
+them in death. The young, tender, and devoted female, who, for the love
+she bears to her parents, consents to intermarry with rich age, to
+embrace dry bones, to extend her sympathies to churlishness, caprice,
+and ill-nature, or, what is worse, to the asthmatic giggle of a
+superannuated love, while all the while her heart, cheated of its
+tribute and swelling with indignation, requires to be watched by her
+with vigilance and firmness, the cruelty of which she herself
+feels--presents a form of self-sacrifice possessing claims on the pity
+of mankind beyond those of the boasted self-immolation of ancient
+devotees.
+
+The silence and dejection of our bride were construed, by her parents,
+into that seemly and becoming sedateness which sensible young women
+think it proper to assume on the eve of so important a change in their
+condition as marriage; while the happy bridegroom had come to that time
+of life when he is pleased with submission, though it be expressed
+through tears. No chemical menstruum has so much power in the
+dissolution of the hardest metals as the self-complacency of an old
+lover has in construing, according to his wishes, the actions, words, or
+looks of the young woman who is destined to be his bride. Silence and
+tears are expressive of happiness as well as of grief; and, so long as
+the desire of the ancient philosopher is uncomplied with by the gods,
+and there is no window to the heart, that organ in the young victim may
+break while the sexagenarian bridegroom is enjoying the imputed silent,
+restrained happiness of the object of his ill-timed affection.
+
+The sadness and melancholy of the apparently-resigned Effie Mearns had
+no effect on the noise and show of the preparations for her marriage
+with her old lover. The marriages of old men are well known to be
+celebrated with higher bugle notes from the trumpet of fame than any
+others. A sumptuous dinner was to be given to the neighbouring lairds,
+and the cotters were to be fed and regaled on the green opposite to the
+mansion. Dancing and music were to add their charms to the gay scene;
+and it was even alleged that the light of a bonfire would lend its
+peculiar aid, in raising the joy of the guests, predisposed to hilarity
+by plenteous potations, to the proper height suited to the conquest of
+the old bridegroom over, at once, a young woman and old Time.
+
+For days previous to the eventful one, Effie Mearns was not heard to
+open her lips. She looked on all the gay preparations for her marriage
+as if they had been the mournful acts of the undertaker employed in
+laying the silver trimming on the coffin lid of a lover. The bedside of
+her sick parent, who was still unable to rise, was the place where she
+sat "shrouded in silence." She heard the conversations of her father and
+mother about the progress of the preparations, without exhibiting so
+much interest as to show that she understood them. Misgivings crossed
+the minds of the old couple, and brought tears to their eyes, as they
+contemplated the animated corpse that sat there, waiting the nod of the
+master of ceremonies, and ready to perform the part assigned to it in
+the forthcoming orgies of mournful joy; but they had gone too far to
+recede, and it was even a subject of satisfaction to them that the
+period of the celebration was so near, for otherwise they might have had
+reason to fear that their daughter would not have survived the
+intermediate time. When the bridegroom called, his ears were alarmed by
+the voices of the parents, who saw the necessity of endeavouring to hide
+the condition of their daughter; and he was satisfied, if he got, free
+and unrestrained, "a feast of the eyes." His love was still expressed by
+silent gazing; for it was too deep in his old heart for either words or
+tears; if, indeed, there was moisture enough in the seat of his
+affection for the suppliance of the _softest_ expression of the soft
+passion.
+
+The eventful day arrived. The marriage was to take place in the cottage,
+where David Mearns still lay confined to bed. The sick man wore a
+marriage favour attached to the breast of his shirt!--for Laird
+Cherrytrees would be contented with no less a demonstration of his
+participation in his unparalleled happiness. The still silent bride
+_submitted_ passively to all the acts of her nimble dressers, whose
+laugh seemed to strike her ears like funeral bells; yet she tried--poor
+victim! to smile, though the clouded beam came through a tear which, by
+its steadfastness, seemed to belong to the orb. The bridegroom came at
+the very instant when he ought to have come--the hand of the clock not
+having had time to leave the mark of notation. He was dressed in the
+style of his earliest days, with cocked hat, laced coat, and a sky-blue
+vest, embroidered in the richest manner; while a new wig, ordered from
+the metropolis, imparted to him the freshness of youth. His cheek was
+flushed with the blood which joy had forced, for a moment, from where it
+was more needed, at the drying fountain of life; and his eye spoke a
+happiness which his parched tongue could not have achieved, without
+causing shame even to himself. Everything was new, spruce, perking,
+self-complacent. The clergyman next came, and all was prepared.
+
+Throughout all this time and all these preparations, not the slightest
+change had been observed on the bride. After she was dressed, she took
+her seat again, silently by the side of her father's sickbed, where she
+sat like a statue. The ceremony was now to commence, and she stood up,
+when required by the clergyman, as if she obeyed the command of an
+executioner. It was noticed that she seemed to incline to be as near as
+possible to her father's bed; and her unwillingness or inability to come
+forward forced the clergyman and the bridegroom some paces from the
+situation they at first held. The ceremony proceeded till it came to the
+part where the consent of the parties is asked. The happy bridegroom
+pronounced his response, quick, sharp, and with an air of conceit, which
+brought a smile to the faces of the parties present. There was now a
+pause for the consent of the bride. All eyes were fixed on her
+death-like face. A severe struggle was going on in her bosom; yet her
+countenance was unmoved, and no one conjectured that she suffered more
+than sensitive females often do in her situation. The clergyman repeated
+his question. There was still a pause--the eyes of all were riveted on
+her. "I _canna_, I _canna_!" at last she exclaimed, in a voice of agony,
+and fell back on the bed--a corpse!
+
+Six months after the death of Effie Mearns, Lucy Cherrytrees was
+married, without faint or swoon, to Lewis Campbell, who returned home,
+in spite of his reported death. The union was against the consent of the
+Laird, who soon died of either a broken heart or old age--no doctor
+could have told which.
+
+[Footnote 1: This story will suggest the remembrance of a popular ballad, but the
+similarity is casual; for the circumstances are here true, if they may
+not be found of every-day occurrence somewhere about the temple of
+Mammon.--ED.]
+
+
+
+
+GLEANINGS OF THE COVENANT.
+
+
+
+
+XIV.--JAMES RENWICK.
+
+
+In the times in which we live, party spirit is carried very far. Many
+honest tradesmen, merchants, and shopkeepers, are ruined by their votes
+at elections. The ordinary intercourse of social life is obstructed and
+deranged. Friends go up to the polling station with friends, but
+separate there, and become, it may be, the most inveterate enemies.
+This, our later reformation of 1832, has cost us much; but our
+sufferings are nothing to those which marked the two previous
+reformations from Popery and Prelacy. In the one instance, fire and
+faggot were the ordinary means adopted for defending political
+arrangements; in the other, the gallows and the maiden did the same
+work, and the boots and the thumbikins acted as ministering engines of
+torture. The whole of society was convulsed; men's blood boiled in their
+veins at the revolting sights which were almost daily obtruding upon
+their attention; and their judgments being greatly influenced by their
+feelings, it is not to be wondered at that they should, in a few
+instances, have overshot, as it were, the mark--have sacrificed their
+lives to the support of opinions which appear now not materially
+different from those which their enemies pressed upon their acceptance.
+It is a sad mistake to suppose that the friends of Presbytery, during
+the fearful twenty-eight years' persecution of Charles and James, died
+in the support of certain doctrines and forms of church government
+merely. With these were, unhappily, or rather, as things have turned
+out, fortunately, combined, political or civil liberty, the
+establishment and support of a supreme power, vested in King, Lords,
+and Commons--instead of being vested, by usurpation, merely in the King
+alone. By avoiding to call Parliaments, and by obtaining supplies of
+money from France and otherwise, the two last of the Stuart Despots had,
+in fact, broken the compact of Government, and had exposed themselves
+all along, through the twenty-eight years of persecution, to
+dethronement for high treason. This was the strong view taken by those
+who fought and who fell at Bothwell Bridge, and this was the view taken
+by nine-tenths of the inhabitants of Scotland--of the descendants and
+admirers of Bruce and Wallace--of Knox and Carstairs. James Renwick, the
+last of the martyrs in the cause of religion and liberty, was executed
+in Edinburgh in his twenty-sixth year. He was a young man of liberal
+education, conducted both at the college of Edinburgh, and Groningen,
+abroad--of the most amiable disposition, and the most unblemished moral
+character--yet, simply because he avowed, and supported, and publicly
+preached doctrines on which, in twelve months after his execution, the
+British Government was based, he was adjudged to the death, and
+ignominiously executed in the presence of his poor mother and other
+relatives, as well as of the Edinburgh public. Mr Woodrow, in his
+history of this man's life, alludes to some papers which he had seen,
+containing notices of Mr Renwick's trials and hair-breadth escapes;
+prior to his capture and execution--which, however, he refrains from
+giving to the public. It so happens that, from my acquaintance with a
+lineal descendent of the last of the Martyrs, I have it in my power, in
+some measure, to supply the deficiency; his own note, or
+memorandum-book, being still in existence, though it never has been, nor
+ever will, probably, be published.
+
+It was in the month of January 1688, that Mr Renwick was preaching,
+after nightfall, to a few followers, at Braid Craigs, in the
+neighbourhood of Edinburgh. The night was stormy--a cold east wind, with
+occasional blasts of snow--whilst the moon, in her second quarter,
+looked out, at intervals, on plaids and bonnets nestled to the leeward
+of rocks and furze. It was a piteous sight to view rational and immortal
+creatures reduced to a state upon the level with the hares and the
+foxes. Renwick discoursed to them from the point of a rock which
+protruded over the lee side of the Craigieknowe. His manner was solemn
+and impressive. He was a young man of about twenty-five years of age;
+and his mother, Elspeth Carson, sat immediately before him--an old woman
+of threescore and upwards--in her tartan plaid and velvet hood. Her son
+had been born to a larger promise, and had enjoyed an excellent academic
+education; and much it had originally grieved the old woman's heart to
+find all her hopes of seeing him minister of her native parish of
+Glencairn, blasted; but his conscience would not allow him to conform;
+and she had followed him in his wanderings and field-preachings, through
+Ayrshire, Renfrewshire, and all along by the Pentland Hills, to
+Edinburgh, where a sister of hers was married, and lived in a
+respectable way on the Castle Hill. This evening, after psalm-singing
+and prayer, Mr. Renwick had chosen for his text these words, in the
+fourth verse of the eighteenth chapter of the book of Revelation--"Come
+out of her, my people." The kindly phrase, "my people," was beautifully
+insisted upon.
+
+"There ye are," said Renwick, stretching out his hand to the darkening
+sleet; "there ye are, a poor, shivering, fainting, despised, persecuted
+remnant, whom the great ones despise, and the men of might, and of war,
+and of blood, cut down with their swords, and rack with their tortures.
+Ye are, like ye'r great Master, despised and rejected of men; but the
+Master whom ye serve, and whom angels serve with veiled faces, and even
+He who created and supports the sun, the moon, and the stars,
+He--blessed be His name!--is not ashamed to acknowledge ye, under all
+your humiliation, as _His_ people. 'Come out of her,' says He, '_my
+people_.' O, sirs, this is a sweet and a loving invitation. Ye are '_His
+people_,' the sheep of His pasture, after all; and who would have
+thought it, that heard ye, but yesterday, denounced at the cross of
+Edinburgh as traitors, and rebels, and non-conformists, as the
+offscourings of the earth, the filth and the abomination in the eyes and
+in the nostrils of the great and the mighty? 'Come out!' says the text,
+and out ye have come--'done ere ye bade, guid Lord!' Ye may truly and
+reverentially say--Here we are, guid Lord; we have come out from the
+West Port, and from the Grassmarket, and from the Nether Bow, and from
+the Canongate--out we have come, because we are thy people. We know thy
+voice, and thy servants' voice, and a stranger and a hireling, with his
+stipend and his worldly rewards, will we not follow; but we will listen
+to him whose reward is with him; whose stipend is Thy divine
+approbation; whose manse is the wilderness; and whose glebe land is the
+barren rock and the shelterless knowe. Come out of _her_. There _she_
+sits," (pointing towards Edinburgh, now visible in the scattered rays of
+the moon,) "there she sits, like a lady, in her delicacies, and her
+drawing-rooms, and her ball-rooms, and her closetings, and her
+abominations. Ye can almost hear the hum of her many voices on the wings
+of the tempest. There she sits in her easy chair, stretching her feet
+downwards, from west to east, from castle to palace! But she has lost
+her first love, and has deserted her covenanted husband. She hath gone
+astray--she hath gone astray!--and He who made her hath denounced
+her--He whose she was in the day of her betrothment, hath said--She is
+no longer mine; 'come out of her, my people'--be not misled by her
+witcheries, and her dalliance, and her smiles--be not terrified by her
+threats, and cruelties, and her murderings--she is drunk, she is
+drunk--and with the most dangerous and intoxicating beverage, too--she
+is drunk with the blood of the saints. When shipwrecked and famishing
+sailors kill each other, and drink the blood, it is written that they
+immediately become mad, and, uttering all manner of blasphemies, expire!
+Thus it is with the 'Lady of the rock'--she is now in her terrible
+blasphemies, and will, by and by, expire in her frenzy. And who sits
+upon her throne?--even the bloody Papist, who misrules these unhappy
+lands--he, the usurper of a throne from which by law he is
+debarred--even the cruel and Papistical _Duke_, whom men, in their folly
+or in their fears, denominate 'KING'--he, too, is doomed--the decree
+hath gone forth, and he will perish with her, because he would not _come
+out_."
+
+"Will he, indeed, Mr Bletherwell? But there are some here who must
+perish first." So said the wily and infuriated Claverhouse, as he poured
+in his men by a signal from the adjoining glen, (where the lonely
+hermitage now stands in its silent beauty,) and in an instant had made
+Renwick, and about ten of his followers--the old woman, his mother,
+included--prisoners. This was done in an instant, for the arrangements
+had been made prior to the hour of meeting, and Claverhouse, attired in
+plaid and bonnet, had actually sat during the whole discourse, listening
+to the speaker till once he should utter something treasonable, when, by
+rising on a rock, and shaking the corners of his plaid, he brought the
+troop up from their hiding-places, amidst the whins and the broom by
+which the glen was at that time covered. Renwick, seeing all resistance
+useless, and indeed forbidding his followers, who were not unprovided
+for the occasion, to fire upon the military, marched onwards, in
+silence, towards Edinburgh. As they passed along by the land now
+denominated "Canaan," they halted at a small public-house kept by a
+woman well known at the time by the nickname of "Red-herrings," on
+account of her making frequent use of these viands to stimulate a desire
+for her strong drink. Over her door-way, indeed, a red-herring and a
+foaming tankard were rudely sketched on a sign-board, (like cause and
+effect, or mere sequence!) in loving unity. The prisoners were
+accommodated with standing-room in Tibby's kitchen; while the soldiers,
+with their leader, occupied the ben-room and the only doorway--thus
+securing their prisoners from all possibility of escape. Refreshments,
+such as Tibby could muster, consisting principally of brandy and ale,
+mixed up in about equal proportions of each, were distributed amongst
+the soldiers--who were, in fact, from their long exposure in the open
+air, in need of some such stimulants; whilst the poor prisoners were
+only watched, and made a subject of great merriment by the soldiers. The
+halt, however, was very temporary; but, temporary as it was, it enabled
+several of the members of the field-meeting to reach Edinburgh, and to
+apprise their friends, and what is termed the mob of the streets, of the
+doings at "Braid Craigs." Onwards advanced the party--soldiers before
+and behind, and their captives in the middle--till they reached the West
+Port, at the foot of the Grassmarket. It was near about ten o'clock, and
+the streets were in a buz with idle 'prentices, bakers' boys,
+shoemakers' lads, &c. The march along the Grassmarket seemed to alarm
+Clavers, for he halted his men, made them examine their firelocks,
+spread themselves all around the prisoners, and, advancing himself in
+front, and on his famous black horse, with drawn sword and holster
+pistols, seemed to set all opposition at defiance. The party had already
+gained the middle of that narrow and winding pass, the West Bow, when a
+waggon, heavily loaded with stones, was hurled downwards upon the party,
+with irresistible force and rapidity--Clavers's horse shied, and escaped
+the moving destruction; but it came full force into the very midst of
+the soldiers, who, from a natural instinct, turned off into open doors
+and side closes; in this they were imitated by the poor prisoners, who
+were better acquainted with the localities of the West Bow than the
+soldiery. In an instant afterwards, a dense and armed mob rushed
+headlong down the street, carrying all before them, and shouting aloud,
+"Renwick for ever! Renwick for ever!" This was taken as a hint by the
+prisoners, who, in an instant, had mixed with the mob; or sunk, as it
+were, through the earth, into dark passages and cellars. "Fire!" was
+Claverhouse's immediate order, so soon as the human torrent had reached
+him; and _fire_ some of the soldiers did, but not to the injury of any
+of the prisoners, but to that of a person--a bride, as it turned
+out--who, in her curiosity or fear, had looked from a window above; she
+was shot through the head, and died instantly. But, in the meantime, the
+rescue was complete--Claverhouse, afraid manifestly of being shot from a
+window, galloped up the brae, and made the best of his way to the
+Castle, there to demand fresh troops to quell what he called an
+insurrection: whilst, in the meantime, the men, after a very temporary
+search or pursuit, marched onwards, with their muskets presented to the
+open windows, in case any head should protrude. But no heads were to be
+seen; and the soldiers escaped to the guard-house (to the Heart of
+Midlothian) in safety. Here, however, a scene ensued of a most
+heart-rending nature. Scarcely had the men grounded their muskets in the
+guard-house, when a seeming maniac rushed upon them with an open knife,
+and cut right and left like a fury. He was immediately secured, but not
+till after many of the soldiers were bleeding profusely. They thrust him
+immediately, bound hand and foot, into the black-hole, to await the
+decision of next morning; but next morning death had decided his
+fate--he had manifestly died of apoplexy, brought on by extreme
+excitement. His mother, who had followed her son when he issued forth
+deprived seemingly of reason, having lost sight of him in the darkness,
+had learned next morning of his fate and situation. She came,
+therefore, with the return of light, to the prison door, and had been
+waiting hours before it was opened. At last Clavers arrived, and ordered
+the maniac to be brought into his presence, and that of the Court, for
+examination. But it was all over; and the distorted limbs and features
+of a young and handsome man were all the mark by which a fond mother
+could certify the identity of an only son. From this poor woman's
+examination, it turned out that her son was to have been married on that
+very day to a young woman whom he had long loved; but that he had been
+called to see her corpse, after she was shot by the soldiery, and had
+rushed out in the frantic and armed manner already described. The poor
+woman, from that hour, became melancholy; refused to take food; and,
+always calling upon the names of her "bonny murdered bairns," was found
+dead one morning in her bed.
+
+In the meantime, James Renwick had made the best of his way down the
+Cowgate, and across, by a narrow wynd, into the Canongate, where a
+friend of his kept a small public-house. He had gone to bed; but his
+wife was still at the bar, and two men sat drinking in a small side
+apartment. He asked immediately for her husband, and was recognised, but
+with a wink and a look which but too plainly spoke her suspicion of the
+persons who were witnesses of his entrance. Hereupon he called for some
+refreshment, as if he had been a perfect stranger, and, seating himself
+at a small table, began to read in a little note-book which he took from
+his side pocket--"four, five, six, seven--yes, seven," said he--"and it
+has cost me seven pounds my journey to Edinburgh." This he said so
+audibly as to be heard by the persons who were sitting in the adjoining
+box, that they might regard him as a stranger, and unconnected with
+Edinburgh. But, as he afterwards expressed it, he deeply repented of the
+attempt to mislead. The Lord, he said, had justly punished him for
+distrusting his power to extricate him, as he had already done, from his
+troubles. The men, after one had accosted him in a friendly tone about
+the weather, or some indifferent subject, took their departure; and Mrs
+Chalmers and he, now joined by the husband, enjoyed one hour's canny
+crack ere bedtime, over some warm repast. The whole truth was made known
+to them; but, though perfectly trustworthy themselves, they expressed a
+doubt of their customers, who were known to be little better than hired
+informers, who went about to public-houses, at the expense of the
+Government, listening and prying if they could find any evidence against
+the poor Covenanters. Next day, even before daylight, the house was
+surrounded by armed men, and Renwick was demanded by name. Mr Chalmers
+did not deny that he was in the house, but said that he came to him as
+to a distant relation, and that he was no way connected with his
+doctrines or opinions. In the meantime, Renwick was aroused, and had
+resolved to sell his life as dearly as possible. He was a young and an
+active man, and trusted, as he owned with great regret afterwards, to
+his strength and activity, rather than to the mercy and the wisdom of
+his Maker. So, rushing suddenly down stairs, and throwing himself,
+whilst discharging a pistol, (which, however, did no harm), into the
+street, he was out of sight in a twinkling; but, in passing along, his
+hat fell off; and this circumstance drew the attention and suspicion of
+every one whom he passed, to his appearance. One foot, in particular,
+pressed hard upon him from behind, and a voice kept constantly crying,
+"Stop thief!--stop thief!" He ran down a blind alley, on the other side
+of the Canongate, and was at last taken, without resistance, by three
+men, one of whom--and it was the one who had all along pursued him--was
+the person who had accosted him last night in the public-house,
+respecting the weather. He was immediately carried to prison, where he
+remained--visited indeed by his mother--till next assizes, when he was
+tried, condemned, and afterwards executed--the Last of the Martyrs!
+
+The conversation which he had with his mother, his public confessions of
+faith, and adherence to the covenanted cause, as well as his last
+address, drowned at the time in the sound of drums--all these are given
+at full length in Woodrow, (the edition of Dr Burns of Paisley), to
+which I must refer the reader who is curious upon such subjects. In this
+valuable work will likewise be found the inscription placed upon a very
+handsome cippus, or monument of stone, erected to his memory. We give it
+to the reader. There is another, if we mistake not, in the Greyfriars of
+Edinburgh, somewhat in the same style. They are both equally simple and
+touching.
+
+ In memory of the late
+ REVEREND JAMES RENWICK,
+ the last who suffered to the death for attachment to the
+ Covenanted Cause of Christ
+ in Scotland.
+ Born near this spot, 15th February, 1662,
+ and executed at the
+ Grassmarket, Edinburgh,
+ 1688.
+ "The righteous shall be in everlasting remembrance."
+ Ps. cxli. and 6.
+ Erected by subscription, 1828.
+
+The late James Hastings, Esq. gave a donation of the ground. The
+subscriptions, amounting to about £100, were collected at large from
+Christians of all denominations; and the gentleman who took the most
+active part in suggesting and carrying through the undertaking, was the
+Rev. Gavin Mowat, minister of the Reformed Presbyterian Congregation at
+Whithorn, and formerly at Scar-brig, in Penpont, Dumfries-shire. The
+monument is placed upon the farm of Knees, at no great distance from the
+farm-house where the martyr was born. It stands upon an eminence, from
+which it may be seen at the distance of several miles down the glen, in
+which the village of Monyaive is situated. It was visited last summer by
+the author of this narrative; when the resolution, which has now been
+very imperfectly fulfilled, was taken.
+
+
+
+
+XV.--OLD ISBEL KIRK.
+
+
+Isbel Kirk lived in Pothouse, Closeburn, in that very house where that
+distinguished scholar, the late Professor Hunter of St Andrew's, was
+born. She had never been married, and lived in a small lonely cottage,
+with no companions but her cat and cricket, which chirped occasionally
+from beneath the hudstone, against which her peat-fire was built. There
+sat old, and now nearly blind, Isbel Kirk, spinning or carding wool,
+crooning occasionally an old Scotch song, or, it might be, one of
+David's psalms, and enjoying at intervals her pipe, a visit from her
+next neighbour, Nancy Nivison, or her champit-potatoes--a luxury which
+the west country, and that alone, has hitherto enjoyed. Two old Irish
+women had settled some time before this on the skirts of the opposite
+brae, where they had built a small turf cabin, and lived nobody could
+well tell how. They were generally understood to make a kind of
+precarious living, by going about the country periodically, giving
+_pigs_ or crockery-ware in exchange for wool. Isbel Kirk was a most
+simple, honest creature, living on little, but procuring that little by
+her industry in spinning sale yarn, weaving garters, and using her
+needle occasionally, to assist the guidwife of Gilchristland in
+shirt-making for a large family. But the M'Dermots were the aversion of
+everybody, and seldom visited even by the guidman of Barmoor, on whose
+farm, or rather on the debatable skirts of it, they had sat down, almost
+in spite of his teeth. He was a humane man; and, though he loved not
+such visitors, yet he tolerated the nuisance, as his wife reckoned them
+skilled in curing children's diseases, and in spaeing the young women's
+fortunes. John Watson pastured sheep, where corn harvests now wave in
+abundance; and his flocks spread about to the doors of the M'Dermots and
+Isbel Kirk. These flocks gradually decreased, and much suspicion was
+attached to his Irish and heathenish neighbours, for they attended no
+place of worship, not even the conformed Curate's; but there was no
+proof against them. At last, a search was suddenly and secretly
+instituted under the authority of the Laird of Closeburn; and, although
+much wool was found, still there were no entire fleeces, nor any means
+left of bringing it home to the M'Dermots.
+
+"Na, na, guidman," said the elder of the two harridans. "Na--ye needna
+stir aboot the kail-pot in that way--ye'll find naething there but a
+fine bit o' the dead braxy I gat frae the guidman o' Gilchristland, for
+helping the mistress wi' her kirn, that wadna mak butter; but there are
+folks that ye dinna suspect, and that are maybe no that far off either,
+wha could very weel tell ye gin they liked whar yer braw gimmer yows
+gang till."
+
+Being pushed to be more particular, they were seemingly compelled at
+last to intimate that auld Isbel Kirk, she and her friend, Nanny
+Nivison, could give an account of the stolen sheep, if they liked. The
+guidman would not credit such allegations; but the old women persisted
+in their averment, and even offered to give the guidman of Barmoor
+occular demonstration of the guilt of the twa _saunts_, as they called
+them. A few days passed, and still a lamb or an old sheep would
+disappear--they melted away gradually, and the guidman began to think
+that his flocks must be bewitched, and that the devil himself must keep
+a kitchen somewhere about the Chaise Craig, over which Archy Tait had
+often seen the _old gentleman_ driving six-in-hand about twelve o'clock
+at night. Returning, therefore, one morning to the M'Dermots, and
+renewing the conversation respecting Isbel Kirk and Nanny Nivison, it
+was agreed that one of the Irish sisterhood should walk over to Isbel's
+with him next forenoon, and that she would give him evidence of the fate
+of his flocks. Isbel was sitting before her door, in the sunshine of a
+fine spring morning, when the guidman and Esther M'Dermot arrived. She
+welcomed them kindly into her small but clean and neat cottage; and,
+with all the despatch which her blindness would permit of, dusted for
+their use an old-fashioned chair, and a round stool, which served the
+double purpose of stool and table. The conversation went on as usual
+about the weather, and the last sufferer in the cause of the Covenant,
+when Esther M'Dermot went into a dark corner, and forthwith drew out
+into the guidman's view, and to his infinite astonishment, a sheep's
+head, which bore the well-known mark of the farm on its ears.
+
+"Look there, guidman," said Esther, "isna that proof positive of the way
+in which your braw hirsel is disposed of? By Jasus and the holy St
+Patrick! and here is a foot too, and twa horns!"
+
+Poor Isbel Kirk could scarcely be made to apprehend the meaning of all
+this--indeed she could scarcely see the evidences of her guilt--and
+assured the guidman, in the most unequivocal manner imaginable, that she
+was innocent as the child unborn; indeed, she said, what should she do
+with dead sheep, or how should she get hold of them, seeing she was old
+and blind, and had not enjoyed a bit of mutton, or any other flesh,
+meat, since the new year?
+
+"Ay," responded old Esther; "but ye hae friends that can help ye; dinna
+I whiles see, after dark, twa tall figures stealing o'er your way frae
+the Whitside linn yonder! I'se warrant they dinna live on deaf nits,
+after lying a' day in a dark and damp cave." Isbel held up her hands in
+prayer, entreating the Lord to be merciful to her and to his ain
+inheritance, and to discomfit the plans of his and her enemies.
+
+"Ye may pray," said Elspat, "as ye like, but ye'll no mak the guidman
+here distrust his ain een, wi' yer praying and yer Whiggery." This last
+suggestion of the nightly visitors staggered Mr Watson not a little; he
+well knew how friendly old Isbel was to the poor Covenanters, and
+brought himself to conclude, under the weighty and conclusive evidence
+before him, that Isbel might have persuaded herself that she was
+rendering God good service by feeding his chosen people with the best of
+his flock. Isbel could only protest her innocence and ignorance of the
+way in which these evidences against her came there; whilst the guidman
+and Esther took their leave--he threatening that the matter should not
+rest where it was, and the old Irish jade pretending to commiserate
+Isbel on the unfortunate discovery.
+
+Next morning, the pothouse was surrounded, and carefully searched by a
+detachment of Lag's men, to whom information of Isbel's harbouring
+rebels had been (the reader may guess how) communicated. Having been
+unsuccessful in their search, they put the poor blind creature to the
+torture, because she would not discover, or, perhaps, could not reveal,
+the retreat of the persecuted people. A burning match was put betwixt
+her fingers, and she was firmly tied to a bedpost, whilst the fire was
+blown into a flame by one of the soldiers. Not a feature in Isbel's
+countenance changed; but her lips moved, and she was evidently deeply
+absorbed in devotional exercise.
+
+"Come, come, old Bleary," said one, "out with it! or we will roast you
+on the coals, like a red herring, for Beelzebub's breakfast."
+
+"Ye can only do what ye're permitted to do," said the poor sufferer,
+now writhing with pain, and suffering all the agonies of martyrdom. "Ye
+may burn this poor auld body, and reduce it to its natural dust; but ye
+will never hear my tongue betray any of the poor persecuted remnant."
+
+It is horrible to relate, but the fact cannot be disputed, that these
+monsters stood by and blew the match till the poor creature's fingers
+were actually burnt off--yet she only once cried for mercy; but, when
+they mentioned the conditions, she fainted; and thus nature relieved her
+from her sufferings. When she came again to herself, she found that they
+had killed the only living creature which she could call companion, and
+actually hung the body of the dead cat around her neck; but they were
+gone, and her hands were untied.
+
+During the ensuing night a watch was set upon poor Isbel's house,
+thinking, as the persecutors did, that they would catch the nightly
+visitants, who were yet ignorant of their friend's sufferings in their
+behalf. The men lay concealed among brackens, on the bank opposite to
+the pothouse, and near to Staffybiggin, the residence of the M'Dermots.
+To their surprise, a figure, about twelve o'clock, came warily and
+stealthily around a flock of sheep which lay ruminating in the hollow.
+It was a female figure, if not the devil in a female garb. They
+continued to keep silent and lie still. At last they saw the whole flock
+driven over and across a thick-set bush of fern. One of the sheep
+immediately began to struggle; but it was manifestly held by the
+foot--in a few instants, two figures were seen dragging it into
+M'Dermot's door. This naturally excited their surprise, and, rushing
+immediately into the hut, they found the two old women in the act of
+preparing in a pit--which, during the day time, was concealed--mutton
+for their own use. The murder was now out. These wretched women had been
+in the habit, for some years, of supplying themselves from the Barmoor
+flocks; the one lying flat down upon her back amongst the furze, and
+the other driving the sheep over her breast. Thus the sister who caught,
+had an opportunity of selecting; and the best of the wedders had thus
+from time to time disappeared.
+
+Poor Isbel Kirk!--her innocence was now fully established; but it was
+too late. Her kind friend Nanny Nivison attended her in her last
+illness, and the guidman of Barmoor paid every humane attention. But the
+ruffians of a mistaken and ill-advised government had deranged her
+nervous system. Besides, the burn never properly healed; it at last
+mortified, and she died almost insensible, either of pain or presence.
+Her soul seemed to have left its frail tabernacle ere life was extinct.
+The example we have here given is taken from that humble source, which
+the historian leaves open to the gleaner. Indeed, the histories of those
+times give but a very imperfect idea of the atrocities of that
+remarkable period. The cottage door must be opened to get at the truth;
+but the stately political historian seldom enters.
+
+
+
+
+XVI.--THE CURLERS.
+
+
+Winter 1684-5 was, like the last, cold, frosty, and stormy. The ice was
+on lake and muir from new year's day till the month of March. Curling
+was then, as it is still, the great winter amusement in the south and
+west of Scotland. The ploughman lad rose by two o'clock of a frosty
+morning, had the day's fodder threshed for the cattle, and was on the
+ice, besom in hand, by nine o'clock. The farmer, after seeing things
+right in the stable and the byre, was not long behind his servant. The
+minister left his study and his M.S., his concordance, and his desk, for
+the loch, and the rink, and the channel-stane. Even the laird himself
+was not proof against the temptation, but often preferred full twelve
+hours of rousing game on the ice, to all the fascinations of the drawing
+or the billiard-room, or the study. Even the schoolmaster was incapable
+of resisting the tempting and animating sound; and, at every peal of
+laughter which broke upon his own and his pupils' ears, turned his eyes
+and his steps towards the window which looked upon the adjoining loch;
+and, at last, entirely overcome by the shout over a contested shot; off
+he and his bevy swarmed, helter-skelter, across the Carse Meadow, to the
+ice. From all accounts which I have heard of it, this was a notable
+amongst many notable days. The factor was never in such play; the master
+greatly outdid himself; the laird played hind-hand in beautiful style;
+and Sutor John came up the rink "like Jehu in time o' need." Shots were
+laid just a yard, right and left, before and behind the tee; shots were
+taken out, and run off the ice with wonderful precision; guards, that
+most ticklish of all plays, were rested just over the hog-score, so as
+completely to cover the winner; inwicks were taken to a hair, and the
+player's stone whirled in most gracefully, (like a lady in a country
+dance), and settled, three-deep-guarded, upon the top of the tee. Chance
+had her triumphs as well as good play. A random shot, driven with such
+fury that the stone rebounded and split in two, deprived the opposite
+side of four shots, and took the game. The sky was blue as indigo, and
+the sun shot his beams over the Keir Hills in penetrating and
+invigorating splendour. Old women frequented the loch with baskets; boys
+and young lads skated gracefully around; the whisky-bottle did its duty;
+and even the herons at the spring-wells had their necks greatly
+elongated by the roaring fun. It was a capital day's sport. Little did
+this happy scene exhibit of the suffering and the misery which was all
+this while perpetrated by the men of violence. Clavers, the
+ever-infamous, was in Wigtonshire with his Lambs; Grierson was lying in
+his den of Lag, like a lion on the spring; Johnstone was on the Annan;
+and Winram on the Doon; whilst Douglas was here, and there, and
+everywhere, flying, like a malevolent spirit, from strath to strath, and
+from hill to dale. The snow lay, and had long been lying, more than a
+foot deep, crisp and white, over the bleak but beauteous wild; the sheep
+were perishing for want of pasture; and many poor creatures were in
+absolute want of the necessaries of life. (The potato, that true friend
+of the people, had not yet made its way to any extent into Scotland).
+Caves, dens, and outhouses were crowded with the persecuted flock. The
+ousted ministers were still lifting up their voice in the wilderness,
+and the distant hum of psalmody was heard afar amongst the hills, and by
+the side of the frozen stream and the bare hawthorn. What a contrast did
+all this present to the fun, frolic, and downright ecstacy of this day's
+sport! But the night came, with its beef and its greens, and its song,
+and its punch, and its anecdote, and its thrice-played games, and its
+warm words, and its half-muttered threats, and its dispersion about
+three in the morning.
+
+"Wha was yon stranger?" said John Harkness to Sandy Gibson, as they met
+next day on the hill. "I didna like the look o' him; an' yet he played
+his stane weel, an' took a great lead in the conversation. I wish he
+mayna be a spy, after a'; for I never heard o' ony Watsons in
+Ecclefechan, till yon creature cast up."
+
+"Indeed," said lang Sandy, "I didna like the creature--it got sae fou
+an' impudent, late at nicht; an' then that puir haverel, Will Paterson,
+cam in, an' let oot that the cave at Glencairn had been surprised, an'
+the auld minister murdered. If it be na the case--as I believe it isna
+hitherto--there was enough said last nicht to mak it necessary to hae
+the puir, persecuted saint informed o' his danger."
+
+"An' that's as true," responded John; "an' I think you an' I canna do
+better than wear awa wast o'er whan the sun gaes down, an' let honest
+Mr Lawson ken that his retreat is known. That Watson creature--didna ye
+tent?--went aff, wi' the curate, a wee afore the lave; they were heard
+busy talking together, in a low tone of voice, as they went hame to the
+manse. I wonder what maks the laird--wha is a perfect gentleman, an' a
+friend, too, o' the Covenanted truth--keep company, on the ice, or off
+it, wi' that rotten-hearted, roupit creature, the curate o' Closeburn?"
+
+"Indeed," replied the other, "he is sae clean daft aboot playing at
+channel-stane, that, I believe, baith him, an' the dominie, an' the
+factor--forby Souter Ferguson--would play wi' auld Symnie himself,
+provided he was a keen and a guid shot! But it will be mirk dark--an'
+there's nae moon--ere we mak Glencairn cave o't."
+
+John Harkness and Sandy Gibson arrived at Monyaive, in Glencairn, a
+little after dark. The cave was about a mile distant from the town; and,
+with the view of refreshment, as well as of concerting the best way of
+avoiding suspicion, they entered a small ale-house kept by an old woman
+at the farther end of the bridge. They were shewn into a narrow and
+meanly-furnished apartment, and called for a bottle of the best beer,
+with a suitable accompaniment of bread and cheese. The landlady,
+by-and-by, was sent for, and was asked to partake of her own beverage,
+and questioned, in a careless and incidental manner, respecting the
+news. She looked somewhat embarrassed; and, fixing her eyes upon a
+keyhole, in a door which conducted to an adjoining apartment, she said,
+in a whisper--
+
+"I ken brawly wha ye are, an maybe, too, what ye're after; but ye hae
+need to be active, lads; for there are those in that ither room that
+wadna care though a yer heads, as well as those o' some ither folks that
+shall be nameless were stuck on the West Port o' Edinbro."
+
+In an instant, the two young farmers were _butt_ the house, and beside
+Tibby Haddow's peat fire. In the course of a short, and, to all but
+themselves, an inaudible conversation, they learned that Lag himself,
+disguised as a common soldier, was in the next room, in close colloquy
+with a person clothed in grey duffle, with a broad bonnet on his head.
+From the description of the person, the two Closeburnians had no manner
+of doubt that the information obtained last night, in regard to the
+existence of a place of refuge in Glencairn, was now in the act of being
+communicated.
+
+"At one o'clock!" said a well-known voice--it was that of Lag, to a
+certainty.
+
+"Yes, at one," responded the stranger, Watson--whose voice was equally
+well-known to the farmers--"at one!" And they parted--the one going
+east, and the other west--and were lost in the darkness of night.
+
+It was now past seven, with a clear, frosty night. What was to be done?
+It was manifest that the cave was betrayed--at least, that the
+_whereabouts_ was known--and it was likewise necessary that this
+information should be conveyed to the poor inmate. But where was he to
+find a refuge, after the cave had been vacated? It struck them, in
+consulting, that if they could get the old woman to be friendly and
+assisting, the escape might be effected before the time evidently fixed
+upon for taking the cave by surprise. This was, however, a somewhat
+dangerous experiment; for, although Tibby M'Murdo was known to be
+favourable--as who amongst the lower classes was not?--to the
+non-conformists, yet she might not choose to run the immense risk of
+ruin and even death, which might result from her knowingly giving
+harbour to a rebel. So, by way of sounding the old woman--who lived in
+the house by herself, her granddaughter, who was at service in the town,
+only visiting her occasionally--they proposed to stay all night in the
+house, as they were in hourly expectation of a wool-dealer who had made
+an appointment to meet them here, but who, owing to the heavy roads, had
+manifestly been detained beyond the appointed time. The old woman had
+various objections to this arrangement; but was at last persuaded to
+make an addition to her fire, to put half-a-dozen bottles of her best
+ale on the table, with a tappit hen, and what she termed "a wee drap o'
+the creature," and to retire to rest about eight o'clock, her usual
+hour, they having already paid for all, and promised not to leave the
+house till she rose in the morning. At this time, about eight o'clock,
+the night had suddenly became dark and cloudy, and there was a strange
+noise up amongst the rocks overhead. It was manifest that there was a
+change of weather fast approaching. At last the snow descended, the wind
+arose, and it became a perfect tempest. Next morning, there were three
+human beings in Tibby's small _ben_, busily employed in discussing the
+good things already purchased, as well as in higgling and bothering
+about the price of wool. The weather, which had been exceedingly
+boisterous all night, had again cleared up into frost, and the
+inhabitants of Monyaive were busied in cutting away the accumulated snow
+from their doors, when in burst old Tibby's granddaughter, and, all at
+once, with exceeding animation, made the following communication:--
+
+"Ay, granny, ye never heard what has taen place this last nicht. I had
+it a' frae Jock Johnston. Ye ken Jock--he's oor maister's foreman, an'
+unco weel acquent wi' the dragoons that lodge in the Spread Eagle. Weel,
+Jock tells me that Lag was here last nicht, in disguise like, an' that
+they had gotten information, frae ane o' their spies like, aboot a cave
+up by yonder where some o' the puir persecuted folks is concealed; an'
+that, aboot ane o'clock o' this morning--an' an awsome morning it
+was--they had marched on, three abreast, through the drift, carrying
+strae alang wi' them an lighted matches; an' that they gaed straight to
+the cave, an' immediately summoned the puir folks to come out and be
+shot; and that they only answered by a groan, which tellt them as
+plainly as could be, that the puir creatures were there; and that they
+immediately set fire to the straes at the mooth o' the cave, and fairly
+smoked them (Jock tells me) to death. Did ye ever hear the like o't?"
+
+"O woman!" responded the grandmother, "but that is fearfu'!--these are
+indeed fearfu' times; there is naebody sure o' their lives for
+half-an-hour thegither, wha doesna gae to hear the fushionless curates!"
+
+At this instant, one of the dragoons drew up his horse at the door,
+asking if a man, such as he described, with a blue bonnet and a grey
+duffle coat, had returned late last night, or rather this morning, to
+bed. Old Tibby answered, in a quavering voice, that the man mentioned
+had left her house about eight o'clock, and had not yet returned. The
+dragoon appeared somewhat incredulous; and, giving his horse to the girl
+to hold, he dashed at once and boldly into the room, where the three
+persons already mentioned were seated. The young farmers questioned
+immediately the propriety of his conduct; but he drew his sword, and
+swore that he would make cats' meat of the first that should lay hold
+upon him. He had no sooner said so, than a man sprang upon him from the
+fireside, and, striking his sword-arm down with the poker, immediately
+secured his person by such means as the place and time presented. The
+fellow roared like a bull, blaspheming and vociferating mightily of the
+crime of arresting a king's soldier in the discharge of his duty. But he
+was hurried into a concealed bed, tied firmly down with ropes and even
+blankets, and made to know that, unless he was silent, he might have to
+pay for his disobedience with his life. When old Tibby saw how things
+were going on, and that her house might suffer by such transactions,
+she sallied forth as fast as her feeble limbs and well-worn staff would
+carry her, exclaiming as she went--"We'll a' be slain--we'll a' be
+slain!--the laird o' Lag will be here--and Clavers will be here--and the
+King himself will be here--an' we'll a' be murdered--we'll a' be
+murdered!" At this moment, the trooper appeared in his regimentals,
+mounted his horse, and was off at full gallop. The granddaughter, now
+relieved from holding the dragoon's horse, followed her grandmother, and
+brought her lamp to the house; but, to their infinite surprise, there
+was nobody there save the very cursing trooper whom she had seen so
+recently ride off. His voice was loud, and his complainings fearful; but
+neither Tibby nor her granddaughter durst go near him, as they were
+fully convinced that he was a devil, and no man, since he had the power
+at once of mounting a horse and flying rather than riding away, and, at
+the same time, of lying cursing and swearing in a press bed in the
+_ben_. At last a neighbour heard the tale, and, being less
+superstitions, relieved the unfortunate prisoner from his rather awkward
+predicament. He swore revenge, and to cut poor old Tibby into two with
+his sword; but he found, upon searching for his weapon, that it was
+absent, as well as his clothes, which had been forcibly stripped from
+him when he was tied--and that without leave--and that he had nothing
+for it but to thrust himself into canonicals--in which garb he actually
+walked home to his quarters, amidst the shouts of his companions, and to
+the astonishment of all the staring villagers.
+
+As he was making the best of his way to hide his disgrace in the Spread
+Eagle, he was told that his commanding officer, Sir Robert Grierson, had
+been wishing to speak with him, for some time past. Upon appearing
+immediately in the presence of authority, he was questioned in regard to
+the mission on which he had been despatched, and was scarcely credited
+when he narrated the treatment which he had met with, and the loss which
+he had sustained. A detachment was immediately despatched in quest of
+the thief, the _wool-merchant_, who had so cleverly supplied himself
+with a passport from the king; and, after our soldier's person had been
+unrobed, and attired for the present in his stable undress, Lag set out
+with a few followers, to examine the cave, in order to be assured of Mr
+Lawson's death. "They may gallop off with our horses," said Lag, in a
+jocular manner, by the way; "but they will not easily gallop off with
+the old choked hound, who has led us so many dances over the hills of
+Queensberry and Auchenleck." At last, they arrived at the mouth of the
+cave, and entered. Black and blue, and severely bruised, lay the dead
+body before them. "Ah, ha!" said Lag, making his boot, as he expressed
+it, acquainted with old Canticle's posteriors. "Ah, ha! my fleet bird of
+the mountain, and we have caught you at last, and caught you
+_napping_--ha, ha! Why don't you speak, old fire and brimstone? What!
+not a word now!--and yet you had plenty when you preached from the Gouk
+Thorn, to upwards of two thousand of your prick-eared, purse-mouthed,
+canting followers. Come, my lads, we have less work to do now; we will
+e'en back to quarters, and drink a safe voyage into the Holy Land, to
+old Dumb-and-flat there!" So saying, he reined up his horse, and was on
+the point of withdrawing the men, when one of them, who had eyed the
+body, which was imperfectly seen in the dark cave, more nearly than the
+rest, exclaimed--"And, by the Lord Harry, and we are all at fault, and
+the game is off, on four living legs, after all--off and away! and we
+standing drivelling here, when we should be many miles off in hot
+pursuit of this cunning fox who has contrived to give us the slip once
+more."
+
+"What means the idiot?" vociferated Grierson.
+
+"Mean!--why, what should I mean, Sir Robert, but that this here piece
+of carrion is no more the stinking corpse of old Closeburn, than I am a
+son of the Covenant!"
+
+It turned out, upon investigation, that this was the body of the
+informer Watson, who had preceded Lag to the cave during the terrible
+drift; had been observed by John Harkness and Sandy Gibson, who were
+then employed in removing Lawson to the small inn; and, after a drubbing
+which disabled him from moving, he had been left the only tenant of the
+cave. When Grierson came, as above mentioned, from the drift and the
+cold, as well as the beating, he was unable to speak; but his groans
+brought his miserable death upon him; and Lawson, by assuming the
+dragoon's garb and steed, was enabled to escape, and to officiate, as
+has been already mentioned in a former paper, for several years before
+his death, in his own church, from which he had been so long and so
+unjustly driven. Thus did it please God to punish the infamous conduct
+of Watson, and to enable his own servant to effect his escape. The
+dragoon's horse was found, one morning at day-light, neighing and
+beating the hoof at old Tibby's door. It soon found an owner, but told
+no stories respecting its late occupant, who was now snugly lodged in
+William Graham's parlour in the guid town of Kendal. Graham and he were
+cousins-german.
+
+
+
+
+XVII.--THE VIOLATED COFFIN.
+
+
+AN effort has, of late, been made to repel the allegations which, for
+past ages, have been made against the infamous instruments of cruelty
+during the twenty-eight years' persecution. The Covenanters have been
+represented as factious democrats, setting at defiance all constituted
+authority, and exposing themselves to the vengeance of law and justice.
+These sentiments are apt to identify themselves with modern politics;
+but we hope we will never see our country again devastated by
+oppression, cruelty, and all the shootings, and headings, and hangings
+of the Stuart despotism repeated. It becomes, therefore, the duty of
+every friend of good and equal government to put his hand to the work,
+and to support those principles under which Britain has flourished so
+long, and every man has sat in safety and in peace under his own vine
+and his own fig-tree. No train of reasoning, or of demonstration,
+however, will suffice for this. The judgment is, in many occasions,
+convinced of error and injustice, whilst the heart and the conduct
+remain the same. There must be something in accordance with the
+decisions of the judgment pressed home upon the feelings. There must be
+vivid pictures of the workings of a system of misrule placed before the
+mind's eye, so that a deep and a human interest may be felt in the
+picture. The reader must open the doors of our suffering peasantry, and
+witness their family and fireside bereavements. He must become their
+companion under the snow-wreath and the damp cave--he must mount the
+scaffold with them, and even listen to their last act and testimony. How
+vast is the impression which a painter can, in this way, make upon the
+spirit of the spectator! Let Allan's famous Circassian slave be an
+instance in point; but the painter is limited to a single point of time,
+and the relation which that bears and exhibits to what has gone before
+or will come after; but the writer of narrative possesses the power of
+shifting his telescope from eminence to eminence--of varying, _ad
+libitum_, time, place, and circumstances--and thus of making up for the
+acknowledged inferiority of written description of narratives to what is
+submitted, as Horace says, "_Oculis fidelibus_," by his vast and
+unlimited power of variety. The means, therefore, by which past
+generations have been made to feel and acknowledge the inhumanities, the
+scandalous atrocities of those blood-stained times, still remain
+subservient to their original and long tried purposes; and it becomes
+the imperious duty of every succeeding age to transmit and perpetuate
+the impressions of abhorrence with which those times were regarded and
+recollected. This duty, too, becomes so much the more necessary, as the
+times become the more remote. The object which is rapidly passed and
+distanced by the speed of the steam-engine, does not more naturally
+diminish in dimensions to the eye, as it recedes into the depths of
+distance, than do the events which, in passing, figured largely and
+impressively, lose their bulk and their interest when removed from us by
+the dim and darkening interval of successive centuries; and the only
+method by which their natural and universal law can be modified, or in
+any degree counteracted, is by a continuous and uninterrupted reference
+to the past--by making what is old, recent by description and
+imagination; and by more carefully tracing and acknowledging the
+connection which past agents and times have, or may be supposed to have,
+upon the present advancement and happiness of man. Had the devotedness
+of the Covenanter and Nonconformist been less entire than it was--had
+the arbitrary desires of a bigoted priesthood and a tyrant prince been
+submitted to--then had the Duke of York been king to the end of his
+days--Rome had again triumphed in her priesthood; and we at this hour,
+if at all awakened from the influence of surrounding advancement to a
+sense of our degradation, had been only enacting bloody Reformation,
+instead of bloodless Reform, and suffering the incalculable miseries
+which our forefathers, centuries ago, anticipated. Nay, more, but for
+the lesson taught us by the friends of the Covenant and the conventicle,
+where had been the great encouragement to resist political oppression in
+all time to come, when the proudly elevated finger may point to the
+record, which said, and still says, in letters indeed of blood--"A
+people resolved to be free, can never be ultimately enslaved." The
+Covenant had its use--and, immense in its own day, and in its immediate
+efforts, it placed William, and law, and freedom on the throne of
+Britain; but that is as nothing in the balance, when compared with the
+less visible and more remote effects of this distinguished triumph:--It,
+throughout all the last century, maintained a firm and unyielding
+struggle with despotism, sometimes indeed worsted, but never altogether
+subdued; and it has, of late years, issued in events and triumphs too
+recent and too agitating to be now fairly and fully discussed. Nor will
+the influence of the Covenant cease to be felt in our land, till God
+shall have deserted her, and left her entirely to the freedom of her own
+will, to the debasing influence of that luxury and corruption which has
+formed the grave of every kingdom that has yet lived out its limited
+period.
+
+These Gleanings of the Covenant have been written under the impression,
+and with the view above expressed; and it is hoped that the following
+narrative, true in all its leading circumstances, and more than true in
+the "vraisemblable," may contribute something to the object thus
+distinctly stated.
+
+The funeral of Thomas Thomson had advanced from the Gaitend to the
+Lakehead. The accompaniment was numerous--the group was denser. Thomas
+had lived respected, and died regretted. He was the father of five
+helpless children, all females, and his wife was manifestly about to be
+delivered of a sixth. Just as the procession had advanced to the house
+of Will Coultart, a troop of ten men rode up. They had evidently been
+drinking, and spoke not only blasphemously, but in terms of
+intimidation.--"Stop, you cursed crew," said the leader. "He has escaped
+law, but he shall not escape justice. Come here, lad;" and at once they
+alighted from their horses, seized the coffin, and opening the lid, were
+about to penetrate the corpse through and through. "Stop a little," said
+John Ferguson, the famous souter of Closeburn; "there are maybe twa at
+a bargain-making;" so saying, he lifted an axe which he took up at a
+wright's door, and dared any one to disturb them in their Christian
+duty. A "pell-mell" took place, in the midst of which poor Ferguson was
+killed. He had two sons in the company, who, seeing how their father had
+been used, rushed upon the dragoons, and were both of them severely
+wounded. In the meantime, Douglas of Drumlanrig came up, and,
+understanding how things went, ordered the soldiers to give in, and the
+wounded men to be taken care off. All this was wondrous well; but what
+follows is not so. The body of Ferguson was carried to Croalchapel; and
+the two sons accompanied it, with many tears. Douglas seemed to feel
+what had happened, and could not avoid accompanying the party home. He
+entered the house of mourning, where there was a dead father, a weeping
+widow, and two wounded sons. He entered, but he saw nothing but Peggy.
+Poor Peggy was an only sister of these lads--an only daughter of her
+murdered father. Douglas was a man of the world! Oh, my God, what a term
+that is! and how much misery and horror does it not contain. Peggy was
+really beautiful; not like Georgina Gordon, or Lady William, or Mrs
+Norton, or Lady Blessington; for her beauty depended in no degree upon
+art. Had you arrayed her in rags, and placed her in a poor's-house, she
+would have appeared to advantage. Peggy, too, (the God who made her
+knows,) was pure in soul, and innocent in act as is the angel Gabriel!
+she never once thought of sinning, as a woman may, and does (sometimes)
+sin; she lived for her father, whom she loved--and for her mother, whom
+she did not greatly dislike. But her mother was a stepmother, and Peggy
+liked her father. Guess, then, her grief, when Peggy saw her father
+murdered, her brothers wounded, and knew the cause thereof. "Lift her,"
+said Douglas to his men, after he had, in seeming humanity, seen the
+corpse and brothers home; "lift her into Red Hob's saddle, and carry
+her to Drumlanrig." No sooner said than done. The weeping, screaming
+girl was lifted into the saddle, and conveyed, per force, to Drumlanrig.
+At that gate there stood a figure clothed in dyed garments. It was the
+elder brother of Peggy, he who had been least injured of the two. He
+stood with his sword in his hand, and dared any one who would conduct
+his sister into the abode of dishonour. Douglas snapped, and then fired
+a pistol at him, but neither took effect. In the meantime, the brother
+was secured, and the sister was carried into the "Blue Room," well known
+afterwards as the infamous sleeping-chamber of old "Q." The not less
+infamous, though ultimately repentant Douglas, advanced into the
+chamber. The poor girl seemed as if she had seen a snake; she shrunk
+from his approach and from his blandishments. She had previously opened
+the window into the green walk; she had taken her resolve, and, in a few
+instants, lay a maimed, almost mangled being, on the beautiful walks of
+Drumlanrig. Douglas was manifestly struck by the incident, but not
+converted. He took sufficient care to have the poor girl conveyed home,
+and to have the brothers provided for, but his hour was not yet come. It
+was not till after his frequent conversations with the minister of
+Closeburn, that he came to a proper sense of his horrible conduct. But
+what was the awful devastation of this family. The poor beauteous flower
+Peggy, who was about to have been married to a farmer's son,
+(Kirkpatrick of Auchincairn,) was by him rejected. He called at the
+house sometime afterwards, with a view to see her; but he came full of
+suspicion, and therefore unwilling to receive the truth. He had heard
+the whole story, and must have known that his Peggy was at least as pure
+in mind as she had been beautiful in person; but he belonged not
+naturally to the noble stock of the family to which he was to have been
+allied, and gave himself up to prejudice. The girl was still in bed, to
+which, from her bruises, she had been confined for months. The meeting
+might have been one which a poet would have gloried in describing, or a
+painter in delineating and embellishing, with hues stolen from the arc
+of Heaven! Alas! it was one only worthy of the pencil of a
+Ribera--fraught with cruelty, and abounding in selfishness and
+dishonour. The girl, as she turned her pale yet beautiful face on him,
+told him the truth, and watched, with tears in her eyes, the effect of
+her narrative on one whose image had never been absent from her mind, if
+indeed it had not supported her in her struggle, and nerved her to the
+purpose which preferred death to dishonour. Her bruises and wounds spoke
+for her, and, to any one but her lover, would have proved that he was a
+part of the object of her sacrifice. It was all to no purpose. The
+eloquence of truth, of love, of nature, were lost upon him; nothing
+would persuade him that the object of his love had not been degraded. He
+turned a cold glance of doubt upon her, and turned to leave the room.
+Peggy rushed out of bed, and, maimed and weak as she was, would have
+stopped him. Her energies failed her--her lover was gone; and her
+mother, roused by the cries of her pain, came and assisted her again
+into bed. Poor Peggy heard no more of Kirkpatrick. She sickened and
+died?--no! far worse!--she became desperate, married a blackguard, and
+lived a drunkard; the sons were banished for firing at Douglas, as he
+passed in his carriage through Thornhill; and the poor mother of the
+whole family became--shall I tell it I--an object of charity! Thus was,
+to my certain knowledge, at least to that of my ancestors, a most
+creditable and well-doing family ruined, root and branch, by the
+persecutors--or, in other words, by those who, without knowing what they
+did, regarded the "Covenant" as an unholy thing, and fought the foremost
+in the ranks of oppression and uniformity.
+
+Now, there is not a word of this in Woodrow, or Burns, or even in the
+MS. of the Advocate's Library; and yet we can assure the reader, that
+the material facts are as true as is the death of Darnley, or the murder
+of Rizzio! God bless you, madam! you have, and can have, and ought to
+have no notion whatever of the united current of _horribility_, which
+ran through the whole ocean of cruelty during these awful and most
+terrific times! May the God that made, the Saviour that redeemed, and
+the Holy Spirit that prepares us for heaven, make us thankful that in
+_those times_ we do not live; and that such men as Woodrow and Burns
+(the first and the last) have been raised up, to vindicate and to
+justify such men as then suffered in their families, or in their
+persons, for the covenanted cause of the Great Head of our Presbyterian
+Church!
+
+
+
+
+THE SURGEON'S TALES.
+
+
+
+
+THE MONOMANIAC.
+
+
+In some of my prior papers, I have had occasion to make some oblique
+references to that disease called _pseudoblepsis imaginaria_--in other
+words, a vision of objects not present. Cullen places it among local
+diseases, as one of a depraved action of the organs contributing to
+vision; whereby, of course, he would disjoin it from those cases of
+madness where a depraved action of the brain itself produces the same
+effect. In this, Cullen displays his ordinary acuteness; for we see many
+instances where there is a fancied vision of objects not present,
+without insanity; and, indeed, the whole doctrine of spirits has
+latterly been founded on this distinction.[2] From the very intimate
+connection, however, which exists between the visual organs and the
+brain itself, it must always be a matter of great difficulty--if indeed,
+in many cases, it be not entirely impossible--to make the distinction
+available; for there are cases--such as that of the conscience-spectre,
+and those that generally depend upon thoughts and feelings of more than
+ordinary intensity--that seem to lie between the two extremes of merely
+diseased visual organs and diseased brains; and, in so far as my
+experience goes, I am free to say that I have seen more cases of
+imaginary visions of distant objects, resulting from some terrible
+excitement of the emotions, than from the better defined causes set
+forth by the medical writers. Among the passions and emotions, again,
+that in their undue influence over the sane condition of the mind, are
+most likely to give rise to the diseased vision of _phantasmata_, I
+would be inclined to place that which usually exerts so much absorbing
+power over the young female heart. The cause lies on the surface. In the
+case of the passions--of anger, revenge, fear, and so forth--the feeling
+generally works itself out; and, in many cases, the object is so
+unpleasant that the mind seeks relief from it, and flies it; while, in
+the emotions of love, there is a morbid brooding over the cherished
+image that takes hold of the fancy; the object is called up by the spell
+of the passion placed before the mind's eye, and held there for hours,
+days, and years, till the image becomes almost a stationary impression,
+and is invested with all the attributes of a real presence. I do not
+feel that I would be justified in saying that I am able to substantiate
+the remark I have now made by many cases falling under my own
+observation; the examples of _monomania_ in sane persons are not very
+often to be met with; and I have heard many of my professional brethren
+say, that they never experienced a single instance in all their
+practice.
+
+The case I am now to detail, occurred within two miles of the town of
+----. The patient was a lady, Mrs C----, an individual of a nervous,
+irritable temperament, and possessed of a glowing fancy, that, against
+her will, brought up by-past scenes with a distinctness that was painful
+to her. She had lately returned from India, whither she had accompanied
+her husband, whom she left buried in a deep, watery grave in the channel
+of the Mozambique. I had been attending her for a nervous ailment, which
+had shattered her frame terribly, while it increased the powers of her
+creative fancy, as well as the sensibility by which the mental images
+were invested with their chief powers over her. She suffered also from a
+tenderness in the _retina_, which forced her to shun the light. How this
+latter complaint was associated with the other, I cannot explain,
+unless upon the principle which regulates the connection between the
+sensibility of the eye and the heated brains of those who labour under
+inflammation of that organ. I was informed by her mother, Mrs L----, as
+well as her sister, that she had come from India a perfect wreck, both
+of mind and body; and, for a period of eighteen months afterwards, could
+scarcely be prevailed upon to see any of her friends--shutting herself
+up for whole days in her room, the windows of which were kept dark, to
+prevent the light, which operated like a sharp sting, from falling upon
+her irritable eyes. It was chiefly with a view to the removal of this
+opthalmic affection, that I was requested to visit her; and I could very
+soon perceive, that the visionary state of her mind was closely
+connected with the habit of dark seclusion to which she was necessitated
+to resort, for the purpose of avoiding the pain produced by the rays of
+the sun. On my first interview, I found her sitting alone in the
+darkened room, brooding over thoughts that seemed to exert a strong
+influence over her; but she soon joined me in a conversation which,
+diverging from the subject of her complaint, embraced topics that
+brought out the peculiarity of her mind--a strong enthusiastic power of
+portraying scenes of grief which she had witnessed, and which, as she
+proceeded, seemed to rise before her with almost the vividness of
+presence; yet, with her, judgment was as strong and healthy as that of
+any day-dreamer among the wide class of mute poets, of whom there are
+more in the world than of philosophers.
+
+I could not detect properly her ailment, and resolved to question her
+mother alone.
+
+"Did you not notice anything peculiar about my daughter?" she said.
+
+"The love of a shaded room, resulting from an irritability in the organs
+of sight, is to me no great rarity," I replied.
+
+"Though her fit has not been upon her," rejoined she, with an air of
+melancholy, "it is not an hour gone since her scream rung shrilly
+through this house, as if she had been in the hands of fiends; and, to
+be plain with you, I left you to discover yourself what may be too soon
+apparent. I fear for her mind, sir."
+
+"I have seen no reason for the apprehension; but her scream, was it not
+bodily pain?"
+
+"I could wish that it had been mere bodily pain; but it was not. You
+have not heard Isabella's history," she continued, in a low, whispering
+tone. "She has experienced what might have turned the brain of any one.
+I discovered something extraordinary in her about six months ago. One
+evening, when the candles were shaded for the relief of her eyes, and I
+and Maria were sitting by her, she stopped suddenly in the midst of our
+conversation, and sat gazing intensely at something between her and the
+wall; pointing out her finger, her mouth open, and scarcely drawing her
+breath. I was terror-struck; for the idea immediately rushed into my
+mind, that it was a symptom of insanity; but I had no time for
+thought--a scream burst from her, and she fell at my feet in a faint.
+When she recovered, she told us that she had seen, in the shaded light
+of the candle, which assumed the blue tinge of the moonlight, the figure
+of a dead body sitting upright in the waters, with the sailcloth in
+which he was committed to the deep wrapped around him, and his pale face
+directed towards her. At the recollection of the vision, she shuddered,
+would not recur to the subject again, but betrayed otherwise no
+wandering of the fancy. Several times since, the same object has
+presented itself to her; and, what is extraordinary, it is always when
+the candle is shaded; yet she exhibits the same judgment, and I could
+never detect the slightest indication of a defect in the workings of her
+mind. I sent for you to treat her eyes, and left it to you to see if
+you could discover any symptoms of a diseased mind."
+
+"Was the object she thus supposes present to her, ever exposed in
+reality to the true waking sense?" said I, suspecting a case of
+_monomania_.
+
+"Did she not tell you?" rejoined she. "Come."
+
+And leading me again into her daughter's darkened apartment, she
+whispered something in her ear, retired, and left us together.
+
+"Your mother informs, me, madam," said I, "that you have seen _what
+exists not_; and I am anxious, from professional reasons, to know from
+yourself whether I am to attribute it to the creative powers of an
+active fancy, or to an affection of the visual organs, that I have read
+more of than I have witnessed."
+
+She started, and I saw I had touched a tender part--probably that
+connected with her own suspicions that her mother and sister deemed her
+insane.
+
+"It was for this purpose, then, that you have been called to see me?"
+she replied, hastily. "It is well; I shall be tested by one who at least
+is not prejudiced. My mother and sister think that I am deranged. I need
+not tell you that I consider myself sane, although I confess that this
+illusion of the sense, to which I am subjected, makes me sometimes
+suspicious of myself. Will you listen to my story?"
+
+I replied that I would; and thus she began:--
+
+Experience, sir, is a world merely to those who live in it--it exists
+not--its laws cannot be communicated to the heart of youth; the
+transfusion of the blood of the aged into the veins of the young to
+produce wisdom, is not more vain than the displacing of the hopes of the
+young mind by the cold maxims of what man has felt, trembled to feel,
+and wished he could have anticipated, that he might have been prepared
+for it. Such has ever been, such is, such will ever be, the history of
+the sons and daughters of Adam. What but the changes into which I--still
+comparatively a young woman--have passed--not, it would almost seem,
+mutations of the same principle, but rather new states of
+existence--could have wrung from a heart, where hope should still have
+lighted her lamp, and illuminated my paths, these sentiments of a dearly
+purchased experience? When I and George Cunningham, my schoolfellow, my
+first and last lover, and subsequently my husband, passed those
+brilliant days of youth's sunshine among the green holms and shaggy
+dells of ----; following the same pursuits--conning the same
+lessons--indulging in the same dreams of future happiness, and training
+each other's hearts into a community of feeling and sentiment, till we
+seemed one being, actuated by the same living principle: in how happy a
+state of ignorance of those changes that awaited me in the world, did I
+exist? I would fall into the hackneyed strain of artificial fiction
+writing, were I to portray the pleasures of a companionship and love
+that had its beginning in the very first impulses of feeling; with a
+view to set off by contrast the subsequent events that awaited us, when
+our happiness should have been realized.
+
+When a woman of sensibility says she loves a man, she has told, through
+a medium that works out the conditions of the responding powers of our
+common nature, the heart, more than all the eulogistic eloquence of the
+tongue could achieve, to show the estimate she forms of the qualities of
+the object of her affections; but when she adds that that love
+originated in the friendship of children, grew with the increase of the
+powers of mind and body, and entered as a part into every feeling that
+actuated the young hearts, she has expressed the terms of an endearment
+so pure, tender, exclusive, and lasting, that it transcends all the
+ordinary forms of the communion of spirits on earth. The attachment is
+different from all others--it stands by itself; and to endeavour to
+conceive its purity and force by any factitious mixture of friendship,
+and the ordinary endearments of limited time and favourable
+circumstances of meeting, would be as vain as all hypothetical
+investigation into the nature of feeling must ever be. I cannot tell
+when I first knew the young man whose name I have mentioned under an
+emotion that shakes my frame; the syllables were a part of my early
+lispings, and I cannot yet think that they are unconnected with a being
+that has now no local habitation upon earth. Our parents were intimate
+neighbours; and the woods and waters of ----, if their voices--sweeter
+than articulated intelligence--could imitate the accents of man, would
+tell best when they wooed us into that communion, which they cherished,
+and witnessed, with an apparent participation of our joy, to open into
+an early affection. The power of mutual objects of pleasure and
+interest, especially if they are a part of the lovely province of
+nature--the rural landscape, secluded and secreted from the eyes of all
+the world besides, with its dells and fountains, birds and flowers--in
+increasing the attachment of young hearts, has been often observed and
+described; but we felt it. These inanimate objects are generally, and
+were to us, not only a tie, but they shared a part of our love, as if in
+some mysterious way they had become connected with, and a part of us.
+The often imputed association of ideas is a poor and inadequate solution
+of this work of nature: it is the effect put for the cause; the common,
+boasted philosophy of man, who invents terms of familiar sound to
+explain secrets eternally hidden from him. If we who felt, as few have
+ever felt, the influence of these green, umbrageous shades--with their
+nut-trees, bushes, flowers, and gowany leas; their singing birds, and
+nests with speckled eggs; their half-concealed fountains of limpid
+water, and running streams, and beds of white pebbles--in nourishing and
+increasing our young loves, could not tell how or why they were invested
+with such power; the philosopher, I deem, may resign the task, and say,
+with a sigh, that it was nature, and nature alone, who did all this; and
+the secret will remain unexplained.
+
+We enjoyed ten years of this intercourse--I calculate from the fifth to
+the fifteenth year of our youth--and every one of these years, as it
+evolved the ripening powers of our minds, so it strengthened the
+mingling affections of our hearts. We became lovers long before we knew
+the sanctions and rights, and duties of pledged faith; we were each
+other's by a troth, a thousand times spoken; exchanged and felt in the
+throbbing embrace, the burning sighs, and the eloquent looks, that were
+but the natural impulses of a feeling we rejoiced in, yet scarcely
+comprehended. My heart, recoiling from the thoughts of after years,
+luxuriates in the memory of these blissful hours; and, were not the
+theme exhausted a thousand times by the eloquence of rapt feeling,
+speaking with the tongue of inspiration, I could dwell on these early
+rejoicings of unsullied spirits for ever.
+
+My dream was not scattered--it was only changed in its form and hues,
+when my youthful betrothed was removed from home, to go through a course
+of navigation to fit him for the service of the sea, to which the
+intentions of his father, and his own early wishes, led him. I could
+have doubted my existence sooner than the faith of his heart; and he was
+only gone to make those preparations for attaining a position in society
+that would enable him to realize those fond and bright prospects we had
+indulged in contemplating among the woods that resounded to pledges
+exchanged in the face of heaven. The first place of his destination was
+London, from whence, for a period of about three years, I heard from him
+regularly by letters, which breathed with an increased warmth the same
+sentiments we had repeated and interchanged so often during the long
+period of our prior intercourse. Some time after this, he sailed to
+India; then were my thoughts first tinged by the changing hues of
+solitude; and my hopes and fears bound to the wayward circumstances of a
+world which had as yet been to me a paradise.
+
+I heard nothing from him for two long years after he left London. A
+portrayment of my thoughts during that period would be a thousand times
+more difficult than for the painter to seize and represent the changing
+hues of the gem that, thrown on a tropic strand, reflects the endless
+hues of the earth and sky. I trembled and hoped by turns but every idea
+and every feeling were so strongly mingled with reminiscences of former
+pleasures, the prospects of future happiness, the fears of a change in
+his affections, or of his death, that I could not pronounce my mind as
+being, at any given moment, aught but a medium of impressions that I
+could not seize or fix, so as to contemplate myself. All I can say is,
+that he was the presiding genius of every emotion with which my heart
+was influenced; and, to those who have loved, that may be sufficient to
+shew the utter devotion of every pulse of my being to the deified image
+enshrined within my bosom. Now came the period of the realizing of my
+dreams. George Cunninghame came back, and married me.
+
+We had scarcely been two months married when my husband, whom I loved
+more and more every day, got, by the influence of powerful friends, the
+command of a large vessel--the _Griffin_--engaged in the trade to India.
+It was arranged that I should accompany him, that, as we had been
+associated from our earliest infancy, (our separation had been only that
+of the body, and interfered not with the union of the immaterial
+essence), we should still be together. In this resolution I rejoiced;
+and, though by nature a coward, my love overcame all my terrors of the
+great deep. The day was fixed for our departure. A lady passenger and
+two servants were to go with us to the Cape, from whose society I
+expected pleasure; and every preparation which love could suggest was
+made to render me happy. We left the Downs on a calm day of December,
+and went down the Channel with a rattling gale from the north. Life on
+board of an Indiaman has been a thousand times described; and, would to
+heaven I had nothing to detail but the ordinary conduct of civilized
+men! Our chief officer was one Crawley, and our second a person of the
+name of Buist--the only individual my husband had no confidence in being
+Hans Kreutz, the steward, a German, who was whispered to have been
+engaged as a maritime venatic, or pirate, in the West Indies: and, if
+any man's character might be detected in his countenance, this
+foreigner's disposition might have been read in lineaments marked by the
+graver of passion. Part of what I have now said may have been the result
+of after experience; yet I could perceive shadowings of evil at this
+time, which I had not the knowledge of human nature to enable me to turn
+to any account.
+
+With a series of gentle breezes and fine weather, we came to the Cape,
+where Mrs Hardy and her two servants were put ashore. One of the
+servants had agreed to accompany me to Madras, and was to have come on
+board again, to join us, before we left Table Bay. Whether she had
+changed her mind, or been detained by some unforeseen cause, I know not,
+but the boat came off without her; and all the information that I could
+get was, that she was not to be found. I trembled to be left on board of
+a vessel without a female companion, and strongly insisted upon George
+to delay his departure until another effort should be made to endeavour
+to find a servant in Cape Town; but, a favourable wind having sprung up
+at that moment, Crawley remonstrated, in his peculiar mode of abject
+petitioning; and my husband, having himself seen the advantage of
+seizing the favourable opportunity for taking and accomplishing the
+passage of the Mozambique, we departed, under a stiff gale; and, in a
+short time, reached the middle of that famous Channel, where the fears
+of the seamen have been so often excited by the reputed cannibalism of
+the natives of Madagascar. At this time I was strangely beset by nightly
+visions of terror, which I could impute to no other cause than the
+stories that George had repeated to me of the wild character of these
+savages. During the day, but more especially during the blue,
+sulphurous, flame-coloured twilight of that region--I often fixed my eye
+on the long, dark, umbrageous coast--followed the ranges of receding
+heights--threaded the deep recesses of the valleys, that seemed to end
+in dark caves, and peopled every haunt with festive savages performing
+their unholy rites over a human victim, destined to form food for
+creatures bearing that external impress of God's finger which marks the
+lords of the creation. Those visions were always connected, in some way,
+with myself; and I could not banish the idea, which clung to me with a
+morbid power of adherence, that I might, alone and unprotected, be cast
+into some of these cimmerian recesses, and be subjected to the
+unutterable miseries of a fate a thousand times worse than death, and
+what might follow death, by the usages of of eaters of human beings.
+There was no cause for any such apprehensions; and I am now satisfied
+that these dark creations of my fancy were in some mysterious way
+connected with a disordered state of my physical economy; but I was not
+then aware of such predisposing causes of mental gloom, and still
+brooded over my imagined horrors, till I drove rest and sleep from my
+pillow, and disturbed my husband with my pictured images of a danger
+that he said was far removed from me. From him I got some support and
+relief; but the faces of the men I saw around me, and especially those
+of Crawley and Kreutz, seemed, to me, rather to reflect a corroboration
+of my fears, than to afford me encouragement and support. The grim
+visions retained their power over me; and, the wind having fallen off
+almost to a dead calm, I found myself fixed in the very midst of the
+scenes that thus nourished and perpetuated them. The depression of mind
+produced by these frightful day-dreams and nightmares, made me sickly
+and weak. I could scarcely take any food; every piece of flesh presented
+to me, reminded me of the feasts of the inhabitants of that dark, dismal
+island that lay stretching before me in the vapours of a tropical
+climate, like a land of enchantment called up by fiends from the great
+deep; the dyspeptic nausea of sickness was the very food of my gloomy
+thoughts; and the co-operative powers of mind and body tended to the
+increase of my misery, till I seemed a victim of confirmed hypochondria.
+
+We were still fixed immovably in the same place: all motive powers
+seemed to have forsaken the elements--the sea was like a sheet of glass,
+the sails hung loose from the masts, and the men lay listless about,
+overcome with heat, and yawning in lethargy. It was impossible to keep
+me below. I required air to keep me breathing, and felt a strange
+melancholy relief from fixing my eyes on the very scene of my terrors.
+Every effort to occupy my mind was vain; and I lay, for hours at a time,
+with my eyes fixed on the shore, piercing the deep, wooded hollows,
+following the faint traces of the savages as they disappeared among the
+thick trees, and investing every naked demon with all the
+characteristics of the followers of the mysterious midnight rites in
+which I conceived they engaged when the hour of their orgies came. I
+often saw individuals--rendered gigantic by the magnifying medium of the
+thick vapour--come down to the beach, and fix their gaze on us for a
+time, and then pace back again to the wooded recesses. Sometimes, when
+unable to sleep, I crept up from the cabin, and sat and surveyed the
+silent scene around me--the hazy moon, throwing her thick beams over the
+calm sea--the dark shadows of unknown birds sailing slowly through the
+air, and uttering at intervals sounds I had never heard before--the
+fires of the inhabitants among the trees on the coast, that sent up a
+long column of red light through the atmosphere, and exhibited the
+flitting bodies of the naked beings as they danced round the objects of
+their rites. It is impossible for me, by any language of which I have
+the power, to convey an adequate conception of my feelings during these
+hours. They were realities to me; and, therefore, whatever may be said
+against fanciful creations, I have a right to claim attention to states
+of the mind and feelings that belong to our nature in certain positions.
+At a late hour one night, I was engaged in those gloomy watchings and
+reveries, when Kreutz came to me, and said the captain had been taken
+suddenly ill. I turned my eyes from the scene along the shore I was
+surveying, and fixed them for a moment on his face, where the light of
+the moon sat in deep contrast with the long bushy hair that flowed round
+his temples. A shudder--that might have been accounted for from the
+state of my mind and the nature of the communication he had made to me,
+but which I instinctively attributed, at the time, to the expression of
+his face--passed over me, and, starting up, I hurried into the cabin off
+the cuddy, where I found George under the grasp of relentless spasms of
+the chest and stomach. He was stretched along on the floor, grasping the
+carpet, which he had wound up into a coil, and vomiting violently into a
+bason which he had hurriedly seized before he fell.
+
+'Good God, Isabella!' he exclaimed, 'what is this? I am dying. That
+villain Cr ----'
+
+And, whether from weakness or prudence, he stopped, with the guttural
+sound of these two letters, Cr, which applied equally to Crawley as to
+Kreutz, and left me in doubt which of them he meant. At this moment
+Buist the mate entered the cabin; and my agitation and the necessity of
+affording relief to the sufferer, took my mind off the fearful subject
+hinted at by the broken sentence I had heard. With the assistance of
+Buist, I got him placed on the bed. There was no doctor on board, and I
+was left to the suggestions of my own mind, for adopting means to save
+him. These were applied, but without imparting any relief. The painful
+symptoms continued, and he got every moment worse. Neither Crawley nor
+Kreutz appeared; and when Buist went out to bring what was deemed
+necessary for the patient, I hung over him, and asked him what he
+conceived to have been the cause of his illness; but my question
+startled him--he looked up wildly in my face; his mind was directed
+towards heaven; and the means of salvation through the redeeming
+influence of a believed divinity of Him who died on the cross, was the
+subject alone on which he would speak. The scene, at this moment, around
+me was extraordinary, and, though I cannot say I had any distinct
+perception of the individual circumstances that combined to make up the
+sum of my horrors, I can now see, as through a dark medium, the
+co-operating elements. There was no candle in the cabin; the light of
+the moon through the windows filling the apartment with a blue glare,
+and tinging his pallid face with its hues. My mind, wrought up by the
+dreamy visions I had indulged in previously, and labouring under a
+disease which imparted to every feeling its own eliminated gloom, saw
+even the darkest circumstances of my condition in a false and unnatural
+aspect. The scenes of our youth and early love; the impressions of the
+religious sentiments he was muttering in broken snatches; the view of
+his approaching death; the dark means by which it was accomplished; my
+condition after he should die, in the power of men I feared; the orgies
+of the natives I had been contemplating; the deep grave, so fearful in
+its dead calmness; and the monsters that revelled in it, to which he
+would be consigned--all flitted through my brain; but with such
+rapidity--driving out, by short energies, the more engrossing thoughts
+concerned in the manner of his recovery--that I could not particularize
+them, while I drew, by some synthetic process of the mind, their general
+attributes, and thus increased the terror of the scene.
+
+Two hours passed, and every moment made it more apparent that my husband
+was posting to death. There was no sound heard throughout the ship
+except the dull tread of the watch; and, at intervals, the whispers of
+Crawley, as he communed stealthily with Buist, who went out of the cabin
+repeatedly, to carry intelligence of the state of the sufferer. For
+about three quarters of an hour he had been raving wildly. The detached
+words he uttered raised, by their electric power, the working of my
+fancy which filled up, by a train of thoughts scarcely more within the
+province of reason, the chain of his wandering ideas. No connected
+discourse on the subject of his illness, though mixed up with all the
+reminiscences of an affection that had lasted since the period of
+infancy, or the prospects that awaited me in the unprecedented position
+in which I was about to be thrown, could have distracted me in the
+manner effected by these insulated vocables, wrung by madness from
+expiring life and reason. They ring in my ears even yet, when the beams
+of the moon shine through the casements; and, even now, I think I see
+that dimly lighted cabin, and my husband lying before me in the agonies
+of death. I became, as if by some secret sympathy, as much deranged as
+himself. As I watched him, I cast rapid looks around me--out upon the
+still deep, in the direction of the fearful island--upon the articles of
+domestic use lying in confusion, and exhibiting dimly-illuminated sides
+and dark shades. It seemed to me some frightful dream; and, when I
+turned my eyes again on the pale face which had been the object of my
+excited fancy for so many years, saw the struggles of expiring nature,
+and heard the wild accents that still came from his parched lips, I
+screamed, and tore my hair in handfuls from my head. In that condition,
+I saw him die; and the increase of my frenzy, produced by that
+consummation of all evils, made me rush out, and forward to the side of
+the ship. I felt all the stinging madness of the resolution to die--to
+fly from the man who, I feared, had murdered him--to escape from that
+island of cannibals, where I thought I would be left by my relentless
+foes, by plunging into the deep, when Crawley, who had heard of his
+demise, seized me, and dragged me back.
+
+This paroxysm was succeeded by a kind of stupor that seized my whole
+mind and body. I sat down on a cot in the side of the cabin, and saw
+Kreutz bring in a light. The glare of it startled me; but it was only as
+a vision that could not awake the sleeper. They proceeded to lay out my
+husband on a table. They undressed him--for his clothes were still on;
+and I saw them take a large sheet, wrap it round him, and pin it firmly
+at all the folds. When their labours were finished, they took each a
+large portion of brandy, and Crawley came forward and offered me a
+portion. I had no power to push it from me. He held it to my mouth; but
+my lips were motionless; and, tossing it off himself, he and the others
+went out of the cabin. No precaution was taken to keep me within; but
+the frenzy that had previously impelled me to self-destruction had
+subsided, and I shuddered at what a few moments before appeared to me to
+be a source of relief. I sat for hours in the position in which they
+left me, gazing upon the dead body before me, but without the energy to
+rise and look at the features of him who had formed the object of my
+earliest devotions, the subject of all my fondest dreams of early youth
+and matured womanhood, now lying there lifeless. I had scarcely, during
+that period, consciousness of any object, but of a long, white figure
+extended on the table, with the moonlight reflected from it. The stupor
+left me--I cannot tell at what hour; and the first movement of living
+energy in my brain was a stinging impulse to rush forward and seize the
+body. I obeyed it, without a power to resist; and, tearing off the
+folds, laid bare the face, which was as placid as I had ever seen it,
+when, watching over him, I used to steal a look of him, during the hours
+of night, as he slept by my side, in the moonlight that stole through
+the cabin-window. In my agony, I clung to him--kissed the cold
+lips--called out 'George! George!'--threw the folds of the sheet over
+the face--again looked round me for some one to comfort me--felt the
+consciousness of my perilous position--and, as a kind of refuge from the
+despair that met me on every hand, withdrew again the folds, and acted
+over again the frenzied parts of a madness that mocked the miseries of
+the inmates of an asylum.
+
+I must have exhausted myself by the excitement into which I was thrown;
+for, some time afterwards, I found myself lying upon the cot, and
+wakening again to a consciousness of all the ills that surrounded me.
+The light of the moon had given place to the dull beams of earliest
+dawn, which were only sufficient to shew me the extended figure on the
+table, and the confusion into which the furniture of the cabin was
+thrown. I heard the sounds of several footsteps in the cuddy. Sounds of
+voices struck my ear; and, rising up, I crawled forward to a situation
+where I could hear the communings from which my fate might be known.
+
+'When the wind starts,' said Crawley--'it will be from the north--we
+should turn and make all speed for Rio, where we may dispose of the
+cargo, and then run the vessel to the West Indies. How do the men feel
+disposed, Kreutz--all braced and steady?'
+
+'All but Wingate and Ryder, who are watched by the others,' replied the
+German. 'These dogs would mutiny, ha! ha!--mein gut friend Buist is
+against their valking the plank; but they must either come in or go out.
+Teufel! no mutineers aboard the Griffin.'
+
+'Right, Hans,' said Crawley. 'Get Murdoch to knock together the
+boards--we will bury him to-morrow; but the wife, man, what is to be
+done with her?'
+
+'Put her ashore, to be sure,' responded Kreutz. 'There is not von
+difficulty there. The natives will be glad of her, and we want her not.
+If this calm were gone, all would be gut and recht. That is the von
+thing only that troubles me.'
+
+'If there is no wind,' said Crawley, 'to carry us out of the channel,
+there is none to bring any one to us.'
+
+At this moment, I thought they heard some movements, produced by a
+nervous trembling that came over me, and forced me to hold by a chair.
+Some whisperings followed. Kreutz went away, and Crawley entered. I had
+just time to retreat to the other side of the body of my husband. His
+manner was now that which was natural to him--harsh and repulsive. He
+ordered me peremptorily to the lower cabin. I had no power to resist, or
+even to speak; but I saw, in the order, the eternal separation of me and
+George; and, rushing forward, I withdrew the covering from his face, to
+take the last look--to imprint the last kiss on his cold lips. The act
+operated like the stirrings of conscience on the cowardly man of blood.
+His averted eye glanced for an instant on the body, and, seizing the
+coverlet, he wrapped up the countenance, and, taking me by the arm,
+hurried me down to the apartment set apart for passengers. This cabin
+was darker than the captain's, from some of the windows having been
+changed into dead lights; and I considered myself pent up in a dungeon.
+Hitherto my feelings had been, in a great measure, the result of
+existing moving circumstances; but now I was left to reflection, in so
+far as that act of the mind could be concerned in the attempt to picture
+the extremities of a fate that seemed as unavoidable as unparalleled.
+The diseased visions that had distracted me before any real evil
+occurred, were changed, from their dreamy, shadowy character, to
+realities. The lengthened trains of images that were required to satisfy
+the cravings of hypochondria, fled; and, in their place, there was one
+general, overwhelming fear, that seemed to engross all my thinking
+energies, and left no power to particularize the visions of danger that
+awaited me among the savages. There was only one presiding, prevailing
+idea that served as the rallying point of my terrors; and that was the
+dead body of George, with the white sheet in which he was swathed, and
+the peculiarly-formed oaken table on which he was placed, and at which
+we used to dine upon all the dainties to be found on board an Indiaman.
+It was the steadfastness of this idea that excluded the images of the
+fearful deep recesses--the Bacchanalian orgies of the savages--their
+anthropophagous rites, their midnight revels; but retained, as it were,
+hanging round it, the fear they had engendered, as a more complex
+feeling. After Crawley had left me, I had thrown myself down on a
+couch--an act of which I retained no consciousness; for afterwards, when
+daylight began to break in through the only window that was not closed
+up, I started to my feet, and did not know, for some time, that I was
+separated from the corpse; the vision of which had, during the interval,
+been so vivid, that it combined the conditions of figure and locality as
+perfectly as if the object had been before me.
+
+On the deck I now heard the sound of several loud voices, and afterwards
+a scuffle, accompanied with the tramping of feet. There was then silence
+for a time; but my ears were stung, on a sudden, by a scream, succeeded
+by a plash, as if some one had been precipitated into the sea. A
+gurgling noise, as if the individual were drowning, followed; and the
+suspicion rushed into my mind, that they had made an example (to terrify
+the others) of one of the men who had rebelled against the authority of
+the mutineers. A silence, as deep as that of death, succeeded, which
+lasted about an hour, at the end of which period the sound of the saw
+and hammer were distinctly heard. I recollected the orders of Crawley,
+for Murdoch, the carpenter, to prepare George's coffin. The knocking
+continued for a considerable time, and produced such an effect upon me
+that the ideas, which had been, as it were, chained up by the freezing
+influence of the prevailing vision of the extended and rolled-up body,
+broke away and careered through my mind with the velocity,
+unconnectedness, and intensity, that belong to certain states of excited
+mania. Images of the past and the future were mixed up in confusion; and
+every succeeding thought stung me with increased pain, till the idea of
+suicide again suggested itself, bringing in its train that which
+destroyed it--the terror of an avenging God, who will pass judgment on
+the takers of their own lives. I started, and sought forgiveness; and,
+for the first time under this agony, felt the soft action of the balm of
+a confided trust in Him who has mercy in endless stores for the good,
+but who poured his fury even upon the house of Israel, for the blood
+they shed upon the land. But, must I confess it, the relief I felt from
+this high source was immediately again lost in the cold shiverings of
+instinctive fear, as I heard the knocking cease, knew the coffin was
+finished, and perceived, from the sounds in the cabin off the cuddy,
+that they were putting the body into the rudely constructed box, with a
+view of burying him in the deep sea.
+
+Some indescribable emotion, at this time, forced me towards the cabin
+window, although the sight of the water was frightful to me. It was
+still and calm as ever, and the light was already sufficient to enable
+me to see far down in its green recesses. I could not take my eye from
+it. There were numerous creatures swimming about in it, some of which I
+had got described to me, but many of them I had never seen before. They
+seemed more hideous to me now than they had ever appeared when, on
+former occasions, I sat and watched their motions. The large
+bull-mouthed shark was there, rolling his huge body in apparent
+lethargy, and turning up his white belly in grim playfulness, as if in
+mockery of my misery. It had a charm about its truculent savageness that
+riveted my attention, while it shook my frame. It was connected in my
+mind with the fate of George's body, which, every moment, I expected to
+hear plash in the sea, in the midst of that shoal of creatures with
+strange forms and ravenous maws. An exacerbation of these sickly
+feelings made me lift my eyes; but it was only to fix them on the not
+less fearful island that lay before in the far distance, and now, in the
+fogs of the morning, through which the red sun struggled to send his
+beams, appeared a huge mass of inspissated vapour lying motionless on
+the surface of the sea. The very indistinctness of this hazy vision
+stimulated my fancy to its former morbid activity, and I saw again the
+mystic wooded ravines, sacred to the rights of cannibalism, of which I
+myself was doomed to be the object.
+
+From this dream I was roused by the loud tread of men's feet over my
+head, as if the individuals were bearing a load that increased the
+heaviness of their steps. I was at no loss for the cause--they were
+carrying the coffin with the body in it to midship, where it was to be
+let down into its watery grave. In a short time afterwards, a gurgling
+of the waters met my ear, and, struggling to the foot of the companion
+ladder, I would have rushed upon deck if my strength would have
+permitted; but I fell upon the steps, and, lying there, heard a cry from
+some of them. I gathered, from the detached words I heard, that the
+bottom of the coffin had given way, from its insufficiency and the
+weight that had been put in it to make it sink; and that the body had
+gone down, while the chest swam on the surface. Several feet were now
+heard rapidly in motion, and the voice of Kreutz, who was running aft,
+fell on my ear.
+
+'Teufel!' I heard him say, 'we shall have that grim corpse when the
+gallenblase--ha!--ha!--the gall bladder has burst, rising like von geist
+from the bottom of the deep sea, and staring at us. Hell take the
+stumper, Murdoch!'
+
+These words, uttered by the German, were followed by some expression
+from Crawley, no part of which I could make out, except the oaths
+directed against the carpenter. The sounds died away; but I heard enough
+to satisfy me of the fact that George's body had been consigned to the
+deep with only the shroud to defend it against the attacks of the
+ravenous creatures I had been contemplating. My mind was again forced,
+and with increased energy, into the train of gloomy meditations
+suggested by what I had heard; and so vivid were the visions that obeyed
+the excited powers of my imagination, that I forgot, as I lay brooding
+over them on the sofa to which I had staggered, the danger that next
+awaited myself. I could not now look at the sea, for I feared to meet
+the fact which would add probation to my imaginations--that the animals
+I had seen there had disappeared to crowd round the prey that had been
+given to them. Yet the actual vision of that dear form, mutilated, torn,
+and devoured, could not, I am satisfied, have produced more insufferable
+agony, than accompanied and resulted from the diseased imaginings in
+which my fancy was engaged. The process that I pictured going on in the
+bottom of the sea, was coloured by hues so sickly, and attended by
+circumstances so distorted and grim, that all natural appearances,
+however harrowing, must have fallen short of the power they exercised
+over me. The positions in which I imagined him to be placed, were varied
+in a greater degree than ever I had seen the human body; the expressions
+of the countenance, though fixed by death, and not likely to be changed,
+became as Protean as the changing postures of the limbs; and the marine
+monsters that gambolled or fought around him for the prize, were
+invested with forms, colours, and attributes, of a kind not limited to
+what I had ever seen in the deep. The only idea that seemed to remain
+stationary, and not liable to the mutations into which all the others
+were every moment gliding, was the colour of the body, which was that of
+the green medium in which he lay. That sickly hue pervaded all parts;
+and even the dark or light colours of the inhabitants of the deep,
+partook, more or less, of the prevailing tint. It seemed to be the
+universal of all particulars, as time or space is the medium or
+condition of existence of all thought and matter; I felt the
+impossibility of any idea being true that did not partake of it; and, so
+strongly was the feeling of the ex-natural that accompanied it, that
+even now I cannot look at anything green without shuddering.
+
+I cannot tell how long I was under the dominion of this train of
+thought. I was, in a manner, torn from it by the entrance of Kreutz with
+some food for me. He growled out a few words of mixed German and
+English, and left it on the table. It is needless to say that I could
+eat nothing. Even before these misfortunes overtook me, my appetite had
+left me; but now I loathed all edibles. After having been roused from
+the train of morbid imaginings in which I had been engaged, and which I
+clung to as if they imparted to me some unnatural satisfaction, I felt
+(and it is a curious fact) a recoiling disinclination to resume the grim
+subject, and even resorted to some imbecile and despairing efforts to
+avoid it. It was not that I expected any relief from forbearing: every
+other subject that could be suggested by my position was equally fraught
+with tears and pains; but that having, as I now suppose, exhausted, for
+the time, the diseased workings, the view of an effort to call up again
+the thoughts that had been as it were supplied by disease, penetrated me
+with a sensation beyond the powers of endurance. For two or three hours
+afterwards, my attention was directed to the proceedings upon deck; but
+I could hear little beyond indistinct mutterings, and occasional sounds
+of the treading of feet over me. The calm, which had lasted for many
+days, still continued; and, until a wind sprung up, no effort could be
+made by the mutineers to retrace their progress through the channel, and
+proceed to their projected destination. At last the shades of night
+began to fall; exhausted nature claimed some relief from her sufferings;
+but the drowsiness that overcame me, was only a medium of a new series
+of imaginings still more grotesque and unnatural than those that had
+haunted me during the day.
+
+When the morning dawned, I expected every moment the execution of the
+purpose I had heard declared by Crawley, to put me ashore on the island;
+and, during moments of more rational reflection, I could not account for
+my not having been disposed of in this way on the previous day. The
+terrors of that destiny were as strong upon me as ever; but, I must
+confess, that the view of real evil, almost unprecedented, as it seemed,
+in its extent and peculiarity, produced feelings entirely different from
+what resulted from the prior musings of my hypochondriac fancy: I would
+not be believed were I to say that the expected reality was not much
+more painful than the sickly vision. The miseries were of different
+kinds, proceeding from different causes, operating upon a mind in two
+different states. There was something in my own power. I was not
+justified in committing suicide as a mode of escape from an affliction
+that God might have seen meet to put upon me; but all my reasonings on
+this subject fled before the view of this next calamity that awaited me.
+An extraordinary thought seized me, that I was not bound to hold life,
+when, through my own body and sensibilities, God's laws were to be
+overturned, and my sufferings were to be made a shame in the face of
+heaven. I secreted a knife in my bosom, and sat in silent expectation of
+the issue. I was again supplied with meat; but, on this occasion,
+Crawley brought it to me--and here began a new evil. He resumed,
+partially, his former dastardly sneaking manner; made love to me;
+offered me the honour of being still a captain's wife, and accompanied
+the offer with, obliquely-hinted threats of a due consequence of my
+rejection of his suit. I spurned him; but I cannot dwell on the details
+of this proceeding. His suit was persisted in for two or three days,
+when, roused to madness, he told me, that next day, if I consented not,
+I would be wedded to the natives of Madagascar. I traced the outline of
+the knife through the covering of my bosom, and defied him.
+
+The next night was clear, and somewhat chill--indications of a cessation
+of the calm. The rudeness of Crawley had had the effect of keeping my
+mind from falling into the grasp of the demon of diseased fantasy; but,
+now my fate was fixed, I had no more to fear from him; and towards
+midnight, I fell again into the train of imaginings that had formerly
+haunted me. I had opened the cabin window for air--having felt a
+suffocating oppression of the chest during the day, proceeding from the
+extreme heat and the confined apartment. My eyes were again fixed in the
+direction of the island. I could see the dark shade of the land lying
+upon the gilded waters. All was still; my thoughts sought again the
+deep--the grave of George, the fancied condition of his body; and, as my
+ideas diverged to the calm scene around, it appeared to me as if all
+nature were dead, and that my own pulsations were the only living
+movements on earth. Lights now began to move along the shore, and then a
+fire blazed up into the firmament. The bodies of the savages flitted
+before it; I had seen the same appearances before; but I was now
+connected with these orgies in a more _real_ manner than formerly. They
+ceased, and my mind again sought the recesses of the green deep, where
+all I loved on earth lay engulfed. My eye at times wandered over the
+surface of the waters; but I feared to look downwards into their bosom.
+My attention was suddenly fixed by an object in the sea. I put up my
+hands and rubbed my eyes. Was I deceived by a fancy? No! a dead body was
+there, not four yards distant from where I sat. It was that of my
+husband, rolled up in the same white sheet in which I had seen him
+extended on the oak table, and with his head raised somewhat above the
+surface, by the weights placed in the shroud having, as I afterwards
+thought, descended to the feet. A part of the sewing had been torn off
+the head, which was bare--the face was openly exposed to me, the moon
+shone upon it; I could perceive the very features, and even the
+lustreless eyes, that seemed fixed on the ship. There was not a breath
+of wind to ruffle the surface of the sea, which shone with a blue lustre
+in the light of the moon; and the body was as motionless as if it had
+been fixed on the earth. I have described, hitherto, what actually
+befell me, with the various states of my mind under extraordinary
+circumstances of pain and depression. My fancies belonged as much to
+nature as the facts which excited and nourished them, and must be
+believed by those who have studied the workings of the mind, even
+unconnected with the principles and facts of pathology. This was,
+however, no vision of the fancy, but a reality resulting from well-known
+physical laws. I sat, fixed immovably, at the window, and felt no more
+power of receding from it, than I formerly had of resigning my musings.
+My eyes were fixed upon that countenance which had been the _beau ideal_
+of love's idolatry--the fairest thing on earth, and the archetype of my
+dreams of heaven. I could not fly from it, horrible as it seemed in its
+blue glare and ghastly expression. I loved it while it shocked me; and
+all my powers of thinking were bound up in freezing terror. I felt the
+hair on my head move as the shrivelling skin became corrugated over my
+temples. That, and the occasional throbbings of my heart, were the only
+motions of any part of my being; but the body I gazed at seemed to be as
+immovable, and its eyes seemed not less steadfastly fixed on me than
+mine were on it.
+
+How long I sat in this position I know not. There was no internal
+impulse that moved me to desist. I could, I thought, have looked for
+ever. Certain fearful objects possess a charm over the mind--and this
+was one of them; but I have sometimes thought that the power lay in
+producing the negative state of mental paralysis; for the instant my
+attention was called to a strange noise upon the deck, I was suddenly
+recalled to a natural sense of the fear it inspired. The sounds I heard
+were a mixture of exclamations and objections, pronounced in tones of
+fear and anger. I turned away my face from the dead body, with a strong
+feeling of repugnance to contemplate it again; and, groping my way to
+the companion-ladder, listened to what was going on above. Kreutz and
+Crawley were in communication.
+
+'There is more than chance in that frightful appearance,' I heard
+Crawley say. 'And this calm too--it will never end. God have mercy on
+us! Is there no man that will undertake to sink the body? I cannot stand
+the gaze of these white balls. See! the face is directed towards me; and
+yet I did not do the deed, though I authorized it. Will no one save me
+from the glare of the grim avenger? I will give twenty gold pieces to
+the man who will remove it to the deep. Go forward, Kreutz, and try if
+you can prevail upon a bold heart to undertake the task!'
+
+'Pho, man!' responded the German--'all von phantasy--anybody would have
+risen in the same way--Teufel! I heed it not von peterpfenning. But the
+men are alarmed, and begin to say that the captain has not got fair
+play. Hush! seize your degen. There is von commotion before the mast.'
+
+I now heard a tumult in the fore part of the vessel and began to
+suspect that the crew had been led to believe that George had died a
+natural death, and had been by some means prevailed upon to work the
+vessel, when the wind rose in another direction, under the command of
+Crawley. The noise increased, and with it the fears of the cowardly
+villain whose conscience had been awakened by such strange means. Kreutz
+had left him to try to pacify the men; and the tones of his
+terror-struck voice continued to murmur around.
+
+'There it still is,' he groaned, as his attention seemed to be divided
+between the sight he contemplated and the tumult, 'gazing steadfastly
+with these lack-lustre eyes for revenge. It is on me they are
+fixed--immovably fixed--as a victim which the spirit that floats over
+the body in that dead light of the moon demands, and will get. There is
+a God above in that blue firmament, who sees all things. I am lost.
+These men obey the call of a power that chooses that grim apparition as
+its instrument to call down destruction on my head. Ha! Kreutz has no
+influence here; the avengers are prepared.'
+
+A step now came rapidly forward, and Kreutz's voice was again heard.
+
+'If you will not try to quell them,' said he, 'all is lost. They swear
+the captain has been murdered, and that verdamt traitor Buist heads them
+on. Donner! shall Hans Kreutz die like one muzzled dog? On with degen in
+hand, and it may not be too late! We have friends among the caitiffs;
+strike down the first man; his blut will terrify them more than that
+staring geist, which is, after all, only von natural body, with no more
+spirit in it than the bones of my grandmutter. Frisch! frisch! auf, man!
+come, come, dash in and strike the first mutineer!'
+
+The cowardly spirit of Crawley was acted upon by the stern German; for I
+heard him cry out--
+
+'Hold there, men! what means this tumult--'sdeath?'
+
+The rest of his words were drowned by the noise; but I heard the sounds
+of his and Kreutz's feet as they rushed forward. In an instant, the
+sound like that of a man falling prostrate on the deck, met my ear; and
+then there rose a yell that rung through every cranny of the ship. All
+seemed engaged in a desperate struggle. The words 'Revenge for our
+captain!' often rose high above all the other sounds. The clanging of
+many daggers followed; several bodies fell with a crash upon the deck,
+and loud groans, as if from persons in the agonies of death, were mixed
+with the cries of those who were struggling for victory. The tramping
+and confusion increased, till all distinct sound seemed lost in a
+general uproar. I got alarmed, and left my station at the foot of the
+companion-ladder; but I knew not whither to fly. I took again my seat at
+the window, as if I felt that there was an opening for me from which I
+might fly from the fearful scene. My agitation had banished from my mind
+for an instant the vision of the body; and I started again with
+increased fear as my eyes fell upon the corpse that had apparently been
+the cause of the uproar. It was still there, as motionless as before;
+yet, I thought, still nearer to me. I saw the features still more
+distinctly than ever, and found my mind again chained down by the charm
+it threw over me. The sounds for a time seemed to come upon my ear from
+a far, far distance, or like those heard in a dream; and like a dreamer,
+too, I struggled to get away from a vision that I at once loved and
+trembled at. The noises on deck seemed as those of the world, and the
+object before me the creation of the fancy that bound my soul, but left
+the sense of hearing open to living sounds. While in this state, I was
+suddenly roused by a rush of several men into the cabin; they held
+daggers in their hands and their countenances were besmeared with blood.
+I looked at them, under the impression that they were my enemies, and
+that the cause of Crawley had triumphed; but I was soon undeceived--they
+told me that both he and Kreutz lay dead upon the deck, and that the
+victorious party were determined to complete the voyage and take the
+ship to Madras. The removal of one evil from a mind borne down by the
+weight of many, only leaves a greater power of susceptibility of the
+pain of what remains. The moment I heard of my own personal safety, I
+recurred again to the subject that affected me more deeply than even the
+fears of being consigned to the natives of the island--the dead body of
+George was still in the waters. The men understood and appreciated my
+sufferings. I again went to the cabin window, and, pointing to the
+corpse, implored Buist, who was present, to get it taken up and buried.
+He replied, that that had already been agreed upon, and orders were
+given to that effect. Several of the men volunteered of themselves to
+assist. A boat was put out, and I watched the solemn process. I saw them
+drag up the body from the sea, and would have flown to the deck to
+embrace once more the dearest object of my earthly affections; but I was
+restrained from motives of humanity. I had reason to suppose that it had
+been dreadfully mutilated, and that was the reason why I was saved the
+pain of the sad sight. That same evening it was consigned again to the
+deep; and with it sunk the bodies of his murderers, Crawley and Kreutz.
+
+Next day, a breeze sprang up, and bore us away from that fatal place. My
+eyes were fixed on it till I could see no longer any traces of that
+island which had caused me so many fears. In a short time, we arrived in
+India, where I remained about two months, and returned again with the
+Griffin to Britain.
+
+"Now, sir," she continued, "all these things are in the course of man's
+doings in this strange world. It is also very natural that I should
+think of him. But a more dreadful effect has followed. I shudder when I
+think of it."
+
+She stopped and looked at me, as if she were afraid to touch upon the
+subject of the visual illusion. I told her that I understood the cause
+of her fears; and having questioned her, I satisfied myself from her
+answers that I had at last discovered a case of true _monomania_, in
+which the patient conceived that she saw, with the same distinctness as
+when she looked from the cabin window of the _Griffin_ the corpse of her
+husband swimming in the sea, with the head and chest above the waters,
+surrounded with the same blue moonlight, and every minute circumstance
+attending the real presence.
+
+I meditated a cure; but I frankly confess that it was my anxious wish to
+witness her under the influence of the fit; and, with that view, I
+purposed waiting upon her repeatedly in the evenings, when, under the
+shaded light of the candle, it generally came over her. I was baffled in
+this for several weeks, chiefly, I presume, from the circumstance of my
+presence operating as an engagement of her mind; but one evening when I
+was sitting with her mother in another room, the sister came suddenly,
+and beckoned me into that occupied by my patient. The door was opened
+quietly and, on looking in, I saw, for the first time, a vision-struck
+victim of this extraordinary disease. She sat as if under a spell, her
+arms extended, her eyes fixed on the imaginary object, and every sense
+bound up in that which contemplated the spectre vision. The fit
+ended with a loud scream; she fell back in her chair, crying
+wildly--"George!--George!" and lay, for a minute or two, apparently
+insensible.
+
+I continued my study of this extraordinary case for a considerable
+period; and, while I administered to her relief, I got her to explain to
+me some things which may be of use to our profession. I need not say
+that I was able to penetrate the dark secret of the seat of either the
+pathology or the metaphysique of the disease. That it was connected with
+the irritability of her nerves, and the affection of the eyes, there can
+be little doubt; because, as she mended in health, the fits diminished
+in number, and latterly went off. I may, however, state that, from all I
+could learn from her, the fit was something of the nature of a
+dream--all the objects around her, at the time, being as much unnoticed
+as if they existed not; and although she was possessed with an absolute
+conviction that the body of her husband was actually at the time
+present, it was precisely that kind of conviction that we feel in a
+vivid dream.
+
+[Footnote 2: HIBBERT'S _Philosophy of Apparitions_; BREWSTER'S _Letters on
+Natural Magic_; SCOTT'S _Letters on Witchcraft_, _&c._]
+
+
+
+
+THE FOUNDLING AT SEA.
+
+
+About the year 1708 or 1710, the good ship _Isabella_, Captain Hardy,
+sailed from the port of Greenock for Bombay, being chartered by the East
+India Company to carry out a quantity of arms and ammunition for the use
+of the Company's forces.
+
+The _Isabella_ carried out with her several passengers; amongst whom
+were a lady, her child--a girl about three years of age--and a
+servant-maid. This lady, whose name was Elderslie, was the wife of a
+lieutenant in the British army, who was then with his regiment at
+Calcutta, whither she was about to follow him; he having written home
+that, as he had been fortunate enough to obtain some semi-civil
+appointments in addition to his military services, he would, in all
+probability, be a residenter there for many years. The lieutenant added
+that, under these circumstances, he wished his "dear Betsy, and their
+darling little Julia, to join him as soon as possible." And this, he
+said, he had the less hesitation in requiring, that the appointments he
+alluded to would render their situation easy and comfortable. It was
+then in obedience to this invitation that Mrs Elderslie and her child
+were now passengers on board the _Isabella_.
+
+For about six weeks the gallant ship pursued her way prosperously--that
+whole period being marked only by alternatives of temporary calms and
+fair winds. The vessel was now off the coast of Guinea; and here an
+inscrutable Providence had decreed that her ill-fated voyage--for it was
+destined to be so, flattering as had been its outset--should terminate.
+A storm arose--a dreadful storm--one of those wild bursts of elemental
+fury which mock the might of man, and hoarsely laugh at his puny and
+feeble efforts to resist their destructive powers. For two days and
+nights the vessel, stript of every inch of canvass, drove wildly before
+the wind; and, on the morning of the third day, struck furiously on a
+reef of rocks, at about half a mile's distance from the shore. On the
+ship striking, the crew--not doubting that she would immediately go to
+pieces, for a dreadful sea was beating over her, and she was, besides,
+every now and then, surging heavily against the rock on which she now
+lay--instantly took to their boats, accompanied by the passengers. All
+the passengers? No, not all. There was one amissing. It was Mrs
+Elderslie. About ten minutes before the ship struck, that unfortunate
+lady, together with two men and a boy, were swept from the deck by a
+huge sea that broke over the stern; sending, with irresistible fury, a
+rushing deluge of water, of many feet in depth, over the entire length
+of the ship. Neither Mrs Elderslie nor any of the unhappy participators
+in her dismal fate were seen again.
+
+In the hurry and confusion of taking to the boats, none recollected that
+there was still a child on board--the child of the unfortunate lady who
+had just perished; or, if any did recollect this, none chose to run the
+risk of missing the opportunity of escape presented by the boats, by
+going in search of the hapless child, who was at that moment below in
+the cabin. In the meantime, the overloaded boats--for they were much too
+small to carry the numbers who were now crowded into them, especially in
+such a sea as was then raging--had pushed off, and were labouring to
+gain the shore. It was a destination they were doomed never to reach.
+Before they had got half-way, both boats were swamped--the one
+immediately after the other--and all on board perished, after a brief
+struggle with the roaring and tumbling waves that were bellowing around
+them.
+
+From this moment, the storm, as if now satisfied with the mischief it
+had wrought, began to abate. In half an hour it had altogether subsided;
+and the waves, though still rolling heavily, had lost the violence and
+energy of their former motion. They seemed worn out and exhausted by
+their late fury.
+
+The crew of the unfortunate vessel had left her, as we have said, in the
+expectation that she would shortly go to pieces; but it would have been
+better for them had they had more confidence in her strength, and
+remained by her; for, strange to tell, she withstood the fury of the
+elements, and, though sorely battered and shaken, her dark hull still
+rested securely on the rock on which she had struck. The wreck of the
+_Isabella_ had been witnessed from the shore by a crowd of the natives,
+who had assembled directly opposite the fatal reef on which she had
+struck. They would fain have gone out in their canoes to the unfortunate
+vessel when she first struck, as was made evident by some unsuccessful
+attempts they made to paddle towards her; but whether with a friendly or
+hostile purpose, cannot be known. On the storm subsiding, however, they
+renewed their attempts. A score of canoes started for the wreck, reached
+it, and, in an instant after, the deck of the unfortunate vessel was
+covered with wild Indians. Whooping and yelling in the savage excitement
+occasioned by the novelty of everything around, they flew madly about
+the deck, scrambled down into the hold, tore open bales and packages,
+and possessed themselves of whatever most attracted their whimsical and
+capricious fancies. While some were thus occupied in the hold, others
+were ransacking the cabin. It was here, and at this moment, that a scene
+of extraordinary interest took place. A huge savage, who was peering
+curiously into one of the cabin beds, suddenly uttered a yell, so
+piercing and unusual, that it attracted the notice of all his wild
+companions; then, plunging his hand into the bed, drew forth, and held
+up to the wondering gaze of the latter, a beautiful little girl of about
+three years old. It was the daughter of the unfortunate Mrs Elderslie.
+The unconscious child had slept during the whole of the catastrophe,
+which had deprived her, first of her parent, and subsequently of her
+protectors, and had only awoke with the shout of the savage who now held
+her in his powerful, but not unfriendly grasp; for he seemed delighted
+with his prize. He hugged the infant in his bosom, looked at it, laughed
+over it, and performed a thousand antics expressive of his admiration
+and affection for the fair and blooming child of which he had thus
+strangely become possessed. The child, for some time, expressed great
+terror of her new protector and his sable companions, calling loudly on
+her mother; but the anxious and eager endearments of the former
+gradually calmed her fears and quieted her cries.
+
+In the meantime, the plunder of the vessel was going on vigorously in
+all directions--above and below, in the cabin and forecastle, till, at
+length, as much was collected as the savages thought their canoes would
+safely carry. These, therefore, were now loaded with the booty; and the
+whole fleet, shortly after, made for the shore.
+
+In one of these canoes was little Julia Elderslie and her new protector,
+who, by still maintaining his friendly charge over her, shewed that he
+meant to appropriate her as a part of his share of the plunder.
+
+On reaching the shore, the kind-hearted savage, as his whole conduct in
+the affair shewed him to be, consigned his little protegée to the care
+of a female--one of the group of women who were on the beach awaiting
+the arrival of the canoes, and who appeared to be his wife.
+
+The woman received the child with similar expressions of surprise and
+delight with those which had marked her husband's conduct on his first
+finding her. She turned her gently round and round, examined her with a
+delighted curiosity, patted her cheeks, felt her legs and arms, and, in
+short, handled her as if she had been some strange toy, or as if she
+wished to be assured that she was really a thing of flesh and blood.
+
+For two days the natives continued their plunder of the wreck. By the
+third, the vessel had been cleared of every article of any value that
+could be carried away; and on this being ascertained, a general division
+of the spoil, accumulated on the shore, took place.
+
+It was a scene of dreadful confusion and uproar, and more than once
+threatened to terminate in bloodshed; but it eventually closed without
+any such catastrophe. The partition was effected, the encampment was
+broken up, and the whole band--men, women, and children, all loaded with
+plunder--commenced their march into the interior; the little Julia
+forming part of the burden of the man who had first appropriated her; a
+labour in which he was from time to time relieved by his wife.
+
+From three to four years after the occurrence of the events just
+related, a Scotch merchant ship, the _Dolphin_ of Ayr, Captain
+Clydesdale, bound for the Cape of Good Hope, while prosecuting her
+voyage, unexpectedly run short of water, in consequence of the bursting
+of a tank, when off the Gold Coast of Africa.
+
+On being informed of the accident, the captain determined on running for
+the land for the purpose of endeavouring to procure a further supply of
+the indispensable necessary of which he had just sustained so serious a
+loss.
+
+The vessel was, accordingly, directed towards the coast, which she
+neared in a few hours; and, finally, entered a small bay, which seemed
+likely to afford at once the article wanted, and a safe anchorage for
+the ship while she waited for its reception.
+
+By a curious chance, the bay which the _Dolphin_ now entered was the
+same in which the _Isabella_ had been wrecked upwards of three years
+before. But of that ill-fated vessel there was now no trace; a
+succession of storms, similar to that which had first hurled her on the
+rocks, had at length accomplished her entire destruction: she had, in
+time, been beaten to pieces, and had now wholly disappeared.
+
+There was then no appearance of any kind, no memorial nor vestige by
+which those on board the _Dolphin_ might learn, or at all suspect that
+the locality they were now in had been the scene of so deep a tragedy as
+that recorded in the early part of our tale.
+
+All unconscious of this, the _Dolphin_ came to within pistol-shot not
+only of the reef, but of the identical spot on which the _Isabella_ had
+been wrecked.
+
+Having come to anchor, a boat, filled with empty watercasks, was
+despatched from the ship for the shore. In this boat was the captain,
+first mate, and a pretty numerous party of men, all well armed, in case
+of any interruption from the natives.
+
+On landing, Captain Clydesdale, the mate, and two men, leaving the
+others in the boat, set out in quest of water. The search was not a
+tedious one. When they had walked about a quarter of a mile inland, the
+gratifying noise of a waterfall struck upon their ears. Following the
+delightful sound, they quickly reached a rocky dell into which a crystal
+sheet of water, of considerable breadth, was falling from a height of
+about fifteen feet; and, after sportively circling about for a moment in
+a deep but clear pool below, sought the channel which conducted to the
+sea, found it, and glided noiselessly away.
+
+Delighted with this opportune discovery, Captain Clydesdale despatched
+one of the men who was along with him to the boat, to order the others
+up with the water casks.
+
+Having seen the people commence the task of filling the latter, the
+captain and mate, each armed with a musket, cutlass, and brace of
+pistols, started for a walk a little farther inland, in order to obtain
+a view of the country. For nearly an hour they wandered on, now scaling
+heights, and now forcing their way through patches of tangled brushwood,
+without meeting with any adventure, or seeing anything at all
+extraordinary. They had now gained the banks of the stream which, lower
+down, formed the cascade at which the water casks were filling; and this
+they proposed to trace downwards, as its banks presented a clear and
+open route, till they should reach the point whence they had started.
+
+While jogging leisurely along this route, the adventurers, by turning a
+projecting rock, suddenly opened a small bight or hollow, sheltered on
+all sides, except towards the river, by the high grounds around it. In
+the centre of this little glen was an Indian encampment! Alarmed at this
+unexpected sight, the captain and mate abruptly halted, and would have
+again retreated behind the projecting rock or knoll which had first
+concealed them, and taken another route, but they perceived they were
+seen by a group of male natives who were lolling on the grass in front
+of the wigwams. On seeing the white men--who now stood fast, aware that
+it was useless to attempt to retreat--the Indians sprang to their feet
+with a loud yell, and rushed towards them. The captain and mate
+instinctively brought down their muskets; for reason would have shown
+them that resistance was equally useless with flight. The hostile
+attitude, however, which they had assumed, had the effect of checking
+the advance of the natives, who suddenly halted, and, to the great
+relief of the captain and mate, made friendly signs of welcome to them.
+
+Confiding in and returning these signs, the latter raised their muskets
+and advanced towards the party, who now also resumed their march towards
+the strangers. They met, when, after some attempts at conversation,
+conducted on the part of the natives with great good-humour, but, on
+both sides, altogether in vain, one of the former suddenly ran off at
+full speed towards the wigwams, into one of which he plunged, and
+instantly reappeared, leading a female child of six or seven years of
+age by the hand. As he advanced towards the captain and mate, he kept
+pointing to the child's face, then to his own, then towards those of the
+strangers, and laughing loudly the while.
+
+With an amazement which they would have found it difficult to express,
+Clydesdale and his companion perceived that the child, now produced, was
+fair, of regular features, smooth hair, and without any trace of African
+origin. Exposure to a tropical sun had deeply embrowned her little
+cheeks; but enough of bloom still remained, as, when coupled with other
+characteristics, left no doubt on the minds of the captain and his mate
+that the child, however it had come into its present situation, was of
+European parentage.
+
+His curiosity greatly excited by this extraordinary circumstance, Mr
+Clydesdale now endeavoured to obtain some account of the child from the
+natives; but he could make little or nothing of the attempted conference
+on this subject. From what, however, he did gather, he came to the
+conclusion--a very accurate one, as the reader may guess--that a
+shipwreck had taken place on the coast, and that the child had been
+saved by the natives.
+
+Believing this to be the case, Captain Clydesdale now became anxious to
+know whether any others had escaped; but could not make himself
+understood. At length one of the savages, of more apt comprehension than
+the others, seemed to have obtained a glimmering of the import of the
+captain's queries, and fell upon an ingenious mode of replying to them.
+Grasping Mr Clydesdale by the arm, he conducted him to a small pool of
+water that was hard by. He then took a piece of bark that was lying on
+the ground, placed about a dozen small pebbles on it, and launched it
+into the pool. Then stooping down, he edged it over, till the stones
+slid, one after the other, into the water, until one only remained.
+Allowing the piece of bark now to right itself, and to float on the
+water, he pointed to the single stone it carried, and then to the child;
+thus intimating, as Mr Clydesdale understood it, and as it was evidently
+meant to signify, that all had perished excepting the little girl.
+
+While this primitive mode of communication was going on, the man who had
+brought the child to Captain Clydesdale had returned to his wigwam, and
+now reappeared, carrying several articles in his hand, which he held up
+to the former. Mr Clydesdale took them in his hand, and found them to
+consist of fragments of a child's dress, made, as he thought, after the
+fashion of those in use in Scotland. On the corner of what appeared to
+be the remains of a little shift, he discovered the initials, J. E. But
+the most interesting relic produced on this occasion, was a small
+locket, containing some rich black hair on one side, and on the other
+the miniature of a young man in a military uniform, with the same
+initials, J. E., engraven on the rim. This locket, the man who brought
+it gave Captain Clydesdale to understand, had been found hanging around
+the neck of the child when first discovered.
+
+Satisfied now, beyond all doubt, of the child's European descent, Mr
+Clydesdale approached her, took her kindly by the hand, and, hoping to
+make something of her own testimony, began to put some questions to her;
+but, to his great disappointment, found that she did not understand him,
+although he spoke to her both in French and English. The little girl, in
+truth, he soon discovered, neither understood nor spoke any language but
+that of the tribe in whose hands she was.
+
+It appeared, however, sufficiently clear to Captain Clydesdale, that a
+shipwreck had taken place on the coast, and that at no very great
+distance of time, and that the child before him had been on board of the
+unfortunate vessel. Various circumstances, too, led him to the belief
+that the ship had been a British one; and in this opinion he was joined
+by the mate.
+
+The result of the Captain's reflections on these points, was a
+determination to take the child to Scotland with him, if he could
+prevail upon her present possessors to part with her, and to take his
+chance of making some discovery regarding her on his return home.
+
+Having come to this resolution, he hastened to make known to the natives
+his wish to have the little girl; and was well pleased to perceive that
+the proposal, which they seemed at once to comprehend, was not received
+with any surprise, far less indignation. Encouraged by this reception of
+his overture, Captain Clydesdale now addressed himself particularly to
+the man who appeared to be the guardian, or, perhaps, proprietor of the
+child, and, unbuckling his cutlass from his side, presented it to
+him--making him, at the same time, to understand that he offered it as
+the price of the little girl. The man demurred. Captain Clydesdale
+pulled a clasp-knife out of his pocket, and made signs that he would
+give that also, provided the locket and fragment of shift, with the
+initials on it, were given along with the child. This addition to the
+first offer had the desired effect. The cutlass and knife were accepted,
+the locket and shift given in exchange, and the little hand of the girl
+placed in Captain Clydesdale's, to signify that she was now his
+property. After some farther interchange of civilities with the natives,
+the captain, his mate, and the little Julia Elderslie--for, we presume,
+the reader has been all along perfectly aware that the child in question
+was no other than that unfortunate little personage--proceeded on their
+way towards the place where the watering party had been left. This spot
+they reached in safety, after about an hour's walking, and found the men
+waiting their return--the casks having been already all filled and
+shipped.
+
+In half an hour after, the boat was alongside the _Dolphin_, and little
+Julia was handed upon deck; and, in less than another hour, the ship was
+under weigh, and prosecuting her voyage to the Cape, where she
+ultimately arrived in safety. During this time, Captain Clydesdale had
+discovered in his Ponakonta--the name given to little Julia by the
+Africans, and by which he delighted to call her--a disposition so docile
+and affectionate, and a manner so gentle and unobtrusive, that he
+already loved her with all the tenderness of a parent, and had secretly
+resolved that he would adopt her as his own, and as such bring her up
+and educate her, if no one possessed of a better right to discharge this
+duty to her should ever appear.
+
+In about six months after the occurrence of the events just related, the
+good ship _Dolphin_ arrived safely at the harbour of Ayr, all well; and
+the little demi-savage, Ponakonta, in high spirits, and already
+beginning to jabber very passable English--an acquisition which still
+more endeared her to her kind-hearted protector, who took great delight
+in listening to her prattle, and in questioning her regarding her life
+amongst the Africans--of which she was now able to give a tolerably
+intelligible account. She had, however, no recollection whatever of the
+shipwreck, nor of any incident connected with it. Some dreamy
+reminiscences, indeed, she had of her mother; but, as might have been
+expected, considering how very young she was when that catastrophe
+happened which had deprived her of her parent, they were too vague and
+indefinite to be of the slightest avail towards throwing any light on
+her parentage.
+
+On arriving at Ayr, Captain Clydesdale's first step, with regard to his
+little charge, was to avail himself of every means he could think of to
+make her singular history, with all its particulars, publicly known, in
+the hope that it might bring some one forward who stood in some
+relationship to her. The worthy man, however, took this step merely as
+one that was right and proper in the case, and not, by any means, from
+any desire to get rid of his little protegée. On the contrary, if truth
+be told, he would have been sadly disappointed had any one appeared to
+claim her. Nothing of this kind occurring, after a lapse of several
+weeks, Captain Clydesdale--who, although pretty far advanced in years,
+was unmarried, and had no domestic establishment of his own, being
+almost constantly at sea--placed little Julia under the charge of some
+female relatives, with instructions to give her every sort of education
+befitting her years; for all of which--boarding, clothing, and
+tuition--he came under an obligation to pay quarterly--giving a handsome
+sum, in the meantime, to account. Having thus disposed of his protegée,
+and satisfied that he had placed her in good hands, which was indeed the
+case, Captain Clydesdale went again to sea--his destination, on this
+occasion, being South America.
+
+The worthy man, however, did not go away before having a parting
+interview with his little Ponakonta, whom he kissed a thousand times,
+nor before he had entreated for her every kindness and attention, during
+his absence, at the hands of those whom he had now constituted her
+guardians. It was upwards of two years before Captain Clydesdale
+returned from this voyage; for it included several trading trips between
+foreign ports; and thus was his absence prolonged.
+
+Great was the good man's delight with the improvement which he found had
+taken place on his little charge since his departure. She now spoke
+English fluently; had made rapid progress in her education; and gave
+promise of being more than ordinarily beautiful. Captain Clydesdale had
+the farther satisfaction of learning that she was a universal
+favourite--her gentle manners and affectionate disposition having
+endeared her to all.
+
+On first casting eyes on her protector, after his return from South
+America, little Julia at once recognised him, flew towards him, flung
+her arms about his neck, and wept for joy--calling him, in muttered
+sounds, her father, her dear father. Deeply affected by the warmth of
+the grateful child's regard, Captain Clydesdale, with streaming eyes,
+took her up in his arms, hugged her to his bosom, and kissed her with
+all the fervour of parental love. Soon after, Captain Clydesdale again
+went to sea; and, by and by, again returned. Voyage after voyage
+followed, of various lengths; and, after the termination of each, the
+worthy man found his interesting protegée still advancing in the way of
+improvement, and still strengthening her hold on the affections of those
+around her.
+
+Time thus passed on, until a period of nine years had slipped away; and
+when it had, Julia Elderslie--who now bore, and had all along, since her
+arrival in Scotland, borne, the name of Maria Clydesdale--was a blooming
+and highly accomplished girl of sixteen.
+
+It was about this period that Captain Clydesdale began to think of
+retiring from the sea, and of settling at home for the remainder of his
+life. He was now upwards of sixty years of age, and found himself fast
+getting incompetent to the arduous duties of his profession.
+Fortunately, he was in a condition, as regarded circumstances, to enable
+him to effect the retirement he meditated. He was by no means rich; but,
+having never married, he had accumulated sufficient to live upon, for
+the few remaining years that might be vouchsafed him.
+
+Part of Captain Clydesdale's little plan, on this occasion, was to rent
+or purchase a small house in the neighbourhood of the village of
+Fernlee, his native place, in the west of Scotland; to furnish it, and
+to take his adopted daughter to live with him as his housekeeper. All
+this was accordingly done; a house, a very pretty little cottage, with
+garden behind, and flower-plot in front, was taken, furnished, and
+occupied by Mr Clydesdale and his protegée. Here, for two years, they
+enjoyed all the happiness of which their position and circumstances were
+capable--and it was a happiness of a very enviable kind. No daughter,
+however deep her love, could have conducted herself towards her parent
+with more tenderness, or with more anxious solicitude for his ease and
+comfort, than did Maria Clydesdale towards her protector. Nor could any
+parent more sensibly feel, or more gratefully mark the affectionate
+attentions of a child, than did Captain Clydesdale those of his Maria.
+
+He doated on her, and to such a degree, that he never felt happy when
+she was out of his sight.
+
+More than satisfied with her lot, Maria sought no other scenes of
+enjoyment than those of her humble home; and coveted no other happiness
+than what she found in contributing to that of her benefactor.
+
+Thus happily, then, flew two delightful years over the old man and his
+adopted child; and, wrapped up in their felicity, they dreamt not of
+reverses. But reverses came; Misfortune found her way even into their
+lonely retirement. Within one week, Captain Clydesdale received
+intelligence of the total loss of two vessels of which he was the
+principal owner, and in which nearly all that he was worth was invested.
+The blow was a severe and unexpected one, and affected the old man
+deeply. Not on his own account, as he told his Maria, with a tear
+standing in his eye, but on hers. "I had hoped," he said, "to leave you
+in independence--an humble one indeed, but more than sufficient to place
+you far beyond the reach of want. But now----" And the old man wrung his
+hands in exquisite agony of grief.
+
+Infinitely more distressed by the sight of her benefactor's unhappiness
+than by the misfortune which occasioned it, Maria flung her arms about
+his neck, and said everything she could think of to assuage his grief
+and to reconcile him to what had happened. Amongst other things, she
+told him that the accomplishments which his generosity had put her in
+possession were more than sufficient to secure her an independence, or,
+at least, the means of living comfortably; and that she would
+immediately make them available for their common support.
+
+"There are a number of wealthy families around us, my dear father," she
+said, "from which I have no doubt of obtaining ample employment. I can
+teach music, drawing, French, sewing, etc.; and will instantly make
+application to the various quarters where I am likely to succeed in
+turning them to account. Besides, father," she continued, "it is
+probable that we shall soon have some great family in Park House; and,
+in such case, I might calculate on obtaining some employment
+there--perhaps enough of itself to occupy all my time."
+
+To all this the old man made no reply--he could make none. He merely
+took the amiable girl in his arms, embraced her, and bade God bless her.
+
+Although the mention by Miss Clydesdale of the particular residence
+above named appears a merely incidental circumstance, and one,
+seemingly, of no great importance, it is yet one, as the sequel will
+shew, so connected with our story, that a particular or two regarding it
+may not be deemed superfluous.
+
+Park House was a large, a magnificent mansion, with a splendid estate
+attached, both of which were, at this moment, in the market. The house
+was within a quarter of a mile of Captain Clydesdale's cottage, and the
+reference in the advertisements to those who wished to see the house and
+grounds, was made to the captain, who, with his usual readiness to
+oblige, had undertaken this duty--a duty which he had already discharged
+towards several visitors--none of whom, however, had become purchasers.
+It was about a week after the period last referred to--namely, that
+marked by the circumstance of Mr Clydesdale's losses--that a gentleman's
+carriage drove up to the little gate which conducted to that worthy
+man's residence. From this carriage descended a tall military-looking
+man, of apparently about sixty years of age, who immediately advanced
+towards the house. Captain Clydesdale, who saw him approaching, hastened
+out to meet him. The latter, on seeing the captain, bowed politely, and
+said--
+
+"Captain Clydesdale, I presume, sir?"
+
+"The same, at your service, sir," replied the honest seaman.
+
+"You are referred, to, sir, I think, as the person to whom those wishing
+to see Park House and grounds should apply."
+
+"I am," replied Mr Clydesdale; "and will be happy to shew them to you,
+sir."
+
+"Thank you," said the visitor. "It is precisely for that purpose I have
+taken the liberty of calling on you. I have some idea of purchasing the
+estate, if I find it to answer my expectations."
+
+"Will you have the goodness to step into the house, sir, for a few
+moments, and I will then be at your service?" said Captain Clydesdale.
+
+The gentleman bowed acquiescence, and, conducted by the former, walked
+into the house, and was ushered into a little front parlour, in which
+Miss Clydesdale was at the moment engaged in sewing. On the entrance of
+the visitor, she rose, in some confusion, and was about to retire, when
+the latter, entreating that he might not be the cause of driving her
+away, she resumed her seat and her work. Having also seated himself, the
+stranger now made some remarks of an ordinary character, by way of
+filling up the interval occasioned by the absence of Captain Clydesdale.
+Many words, however, had he not spoken, nor long had he looked on the
+fair countenance of his companion, when he seemed struck by something in
+her appearance which appeared at once to interest and perplex him. From
+the moment that this feeling took possession of the stranger, he spoke
+no more, but continued gazing earnestly at the downcast countenance of
+Maria Clydesdale; who, conscious of, and abashed by the gaze, kept her
+face close over the work in which she was engaged. From this awkward
+situation, however, she was quickly relieved by the entrance of Captain
+Clydesdale, who came to say that he was now ready to accompany his
+visitor to Park House. The latter rose, wished Miss Clydesdale a good
+morning; accompanying the expressions, however, with another of those
+looks of interest and perplexity with which he had been from time to
+time contemplating her for the last five or ten minutes, and followed
+the captain out of the apartment.
+
+"That interesting and very beautiful young lady whom I saw at your house
+is your daughter, sir, I presume?" said the stranger to Captain
+Clydesdale, as they proceeded together towards Park House.
+
+"Yes, sir, she is: that is, I may _say_ she is; for I have brought her
+up since she was a child; and she has never, at least, not since she was
+five or six years of age, had any other protector than myself. She never
+knew her parents."
+
+"Ah! a foundling," said the gentleman.
+
+"Yes, but under rather extraordinary circumstances. I found her amongst
+the savages of the coast of Guinea."
+
+"On the coast of Guinea!" exclaimed the stranger, in much amazement.
+"Very extraordinary, indeed. What are the circumstances, if I may
+inquire?"
+
+Captain Clydesdale related them as they are already before the reader;
+not omitting to mention the fragment of shift, with the initials on it,
+and the locket with hair and miniature, which he still carefully kept.
+
+On Captain Clydesdale concluding, the stranger suddenly stopped short,
+and, looking at the former with a countenance pale with emotion,
+said--"Good God, sir, what is this? I am bewildered, confounded. I know
+not what to think. It is possible. Yet it cannot be. My name, sir, is
+Elderslie, General Elderslie. I have just returned from the East Indies,
+where I have been for the last seventeen years. Shortly after my going
+out, my wife and child, a daughter, embarked on board the _Isabella_
+from Greenock, to join me at Calcutta. The ship never reached her
+destination; she was never more heard of; but there was a report that
+she was seen, if not bespoken, off the Gold Coast; and from there being
+no trace of her afterwards, it is more than probable that she was
+wrecked on these shores; and, O God! it is probable also, although I
+dare not allow myself to believe it, that this girl is--is my child! Let
+us return, let us return instantly," he added, with increasing
+agitation, and now grasping Captain Clydesdale by the arm, "that I may
+see this locket you speak of. I gave such a trinket to my beloved, my
+unfortunate wife. The initials you mention correspond exactly. My
+child's name was Julia Elderslie; my own Christian name is James; and
+the same initials are thus also on the rim of the locket."
+
+"It is precisely so!" said Captain Clydesdale, with a degree of surprise
+and emotion not less intense than those of the general's. "There _are_
+the initials of J. E. also on the locket; and now that my attention is
+called to the circumstance, there is a strong resemblance between the
+miniature it encloses, and the person now before me."
+
+"Let us hasten to the house, for God's sake! captain," said the general,
+with breathless eagerness, "and have this matter cleared up, if
+possible."
+
+They returned to the house. Captain Clydesdale put the locket and the
+fragment of the little shift, which bore the initials J. E., into the
+hands of the general. He glanced at the latter, examined the former for
+an instant with trembling hands, staggered backwards a pace or two, and
+sank into a chair. It was the identical locket which, some twenty years
+before, he had given to his wife. The miniature it contained, introduced
+into the trinket at a subsequent period, was his own likeness.
+
+"Bring me my child, Captain Clydesdale," said the general, on recovering
+his composure; "for I can no longer doubt that your adopted daughter is,
+indeed, my Julia."
+
+Captain Clydesdale left the apartment, and in a moment returned leading
+in Julia Elderslie, who had hitherto been kept in ignorance of what was
+passing. On her entrance the general rushed towards her, took her by the
+left hand, gently pushed the sleeve of her gown a little way up the
+wrist, saw that the latter exhibited a small brown mole, and
+exclaiming--"The proof is complete; you are--you are my daughter, the
+image of your darling but ill-fated mother," took her in his arms in a
+transport of joy.
+
+The feelings of Julia Elderslie, on this extraordinary occasion, we need
+not describe, they will readily be conceived. Neither need we detain the
+reader with any further detail; seeing that, with the incident just
+mentioned, the interest of our story terminates.
+
+It will be enough now, then, to say, that General Elderslie, who had
+amassed a princely fortune, bought the estate and mansion of Park House.
+That he took every opportunity, and adopted every means he could think
+of, of shewing his gratitude to Captain Clydesdale, for the generous
+part he had acted towards his daughter. That this daughter ultimately
+inherited his entire fortune; the general having never married a second
+time; and that she finally married into a family of high rank and
+extensive influence in the west of Scotland.
+
+
+
+
+THE ASSASSIN.
+
+
+At a late hour of an evening in the beginning of the year 1569, mine
+host of the Stag and Hounds--the principal hostelry of Linlithgow at the
+period referred to--was suddenly called from his liquor--the which
+liquor he was at the moment enjoying with a few select friends who were
+assembled in the public room of the house--to receive a traveller who
+had just ridden up to the door.
+
+Much as Andrew Nimmo--for such was the name of mine host--much, we say,
+as Andrew loved custom, it was not without reluctance that he rose to
+leave his party to attend the duties of his calling on the present
+occasion. He would rather he had not been disturbed; for he was in the
+middle of an exceedingly interesting story, when the summons reached
+him, and was very unwilling to leave it unfinished. But business must be
+attended to; its demands are imperative; and no man, after all, could be
+more sensible of this than mine host of the Stag and Hounds. So, however
+reluctant, from his seat he rose, and, telling his friends he would
+rejoin them presently, hastened out of the apartment.
+
+On reaching the door, Andrew found the traveller had dismounted. He was
+standing by the head of his horse--a powerful black charger--and
+seemingly waiting for some one to relieve him of the animal.
+
+This duty Andrew now performed; he took hold of the bridle, after a word
+or two of welcome to his guest, and asked whether he should put up the
+horse and supper him?
+
+"What else have I come here for?" replied the stranger, gruffly. "Surely
+put him up; but I must see myself to his being properly suppered and
+tended. If we expect a horse to do his duty, we must do our duty by
+him. So lead the way, friend!"
+
+Damped by the uncourteous manner of the traveller, Andrew made no
+further reply than a muttered acquiescence in the justice of the remark
+just made, but instantly led the horse away towards the stable; calling
+out, as he went, on John Ramsay, the ostler, to come out with the
+buet--_i.e._ lantern; for it was pitch dark, and a light, of course,
+indispensable.
+
+With the scrutinizing habits of his calling, mine host of the Stag and
+Hounds had been secretly but anxiously endeavouring to make out his
+customer; to arrive at some idea of his rank and profession, if he had
+any; but the darkness of the night had prevented him from noting more
+than that he was a man of tall stature, and, he thought, of a singularly
+stern aspect.
+
+When Ramsay had brought the light, however, mine host obtained farther
+and better opportunities of pursuing his study of the stranger; and,
+besides having his former remarks confirmed, now discovered that he had
+the appearance of a person of some consideration, his dress being that
+of a gentleman.
+
+"Fine beast that, sir!" adventured mine host, after a silence of some
+time, during which the latter and his guest had been standing together
+overlooking the operation of John Ramsay as he fed and littered the
+animal, whose noble proportions had elicited the remark. "Poorfu' beast,
+sir," continued Mr Nimmo. "I think I hae never seen a better."
+
+"Not often, friend, I daresay," replied the stranger, who was standing
+erect, with folded arms, and carefully marking every proceeding of the
+ostler. "For a long run and a swift, he is the animal for a man to trust
+his life to."
+
+Mine host was startled a little by the turn given to this remark: it
+smelt somewhat, he thought, of the highway; or, at any rate, seemed to
+carry with it a somewhat suspicious sort of reference. He was, however,
+much too prudent a man to exhibit any indication of an opinion so
+injurious to the character of his guest, and, therefore, merely said
+laughingly--
+
+"That he weel believed that if a man war in sic jeopardy as required his
+trusting to horse legs for his life, he wad be safe aneuch on sic a
+beast as that, especially if he got onything o' a reasonable start."
+
+"Yes, give him ten minutes of a start, and there's not a witch that ever
+rode over North Berwick Law on a broomstick that'll throw salt on his
+tail, let alone a horse and rider of flesh and blood!" replied the
+stranger, with a grim smile. "_I'll_ trust my life to him," he added,
+emphatically, "and have no fears for the result."
+
+The tendence on the much prized animal which was the subject of these
+remarks having now been completed, mine host and his guest left the
+stable, and proceeded to the house, which having entered, the former
+ushered the latter into the public room, being the best in the house,
+and the only one fit for the reception, as our worthy landlord deemed
+it, of a personage of the stranger's apparent quality.
+
+The latter at first shewed some reluctance to enter an apartment in
+which there was already so many people assembled; for it was still
+occupied by the company formerly alluded to; but, on being told by mine
+host that he should have a table to himself, in a distant part of the
+room, if he did not wish for society, he expressed himself reconciled to
+the arrangement, and, walking into the apartment, took his place at its
+upper end; then throwing himself down in a chair, having previously laid
+aside his hat, cloak, and sword, he commenced a vigilant but silent
+scrutiny of the party by which the table that occupied the centre of the
+apartment was surrounded. While he was thus employed, the landlord, who
+had gone for a moment about some household business, approached him to
+receive his orders regarding his night's entertainment. The result of
+the conference on this subject, was an order for supper, and for a
+measure of wine to be brought in, in the meantime, until the former
+should be prepared. The landlord bowed, and retired to execute his
+commissions. In a minute after, a pewter measure of claret, with a tall
+drinking glass, stood before the stranger. He filled up the latter from
+the former, drank it off, and again set himself to the task of
+scrutinizing the company before him--a task to which he now added that
+of listening to their conversation, which seemed to be of a nature to
+interest him much, if one might judge from the earnest intensity of his
+look, and the varying but strongly marked expression of countenance with
+which he listened to the various sentiments of the various speakers. The
+subject of the conversation was the Regent Murray--his proceedings,
+government, and character.
+
+"Aweel, folk may say what they like o' the Regent," said one of the
+speakers, "but I think he's managing matters very weel on the whole, and
+I wish we may never hae a waur in his place. He's no a man to be trifled
+wi'; and if he keeps a tight rein hand, he doesna o'erride the strength
+o' his steed. He's a strict, justice-loving man; that I'll say o' him."
+
+"Then ye say mair o' him than I wad, deacon," said another of the party.
+"His strictness I grant ye; but as to his justice, there was unco little
+o't, I think, in his treatment o' his sister: his conduct to that poor
+woman has been most unnatural, most savage, selfish, and unfeelin.
+That's my opinion o't, and it's the opinion o' mony a ane besides me."
+
+"Weel, weel; every are has his ain mind o' thae things, Mr Clinkscales,"
+replied the first speaker; "but for my part, I'll ay ride the ford as I
+find it; that's my creed."
+
+"Has ony o' ye heard," here interposed another of the party, "o' that
+cruel case o' Hamilton's o' Bothwellhaugh? Ane o' the Queen's
+Hamilton's," added the querist.
+
+Some said they had, others that they had not. For the benefit of the
+latter, the speaker explained. He said that Hamilton of Bothwellhaugh
+was one of those who had been forfeited for the part he took at the
+battle of Langside. That the person to whom his property was given by
+the Regent, had turned Hamilton's wife out of her home, unclothed, and
+in a wild and stormy night; and that the poor woman had died in
+consequence of this cruel treatment.
+
+"An' what's Hamilton sayin to that?" inquired one of the party.
+
+"They say he's in an awfu takin about it," replied the first speaker,
+"an' threatenin vengeance, richt an' left; particularly against the
+Regent."
+
+"I think little wonder o't," said another of the party. "It's a shamefu
+business, and aneuch to mak ony man desperate."
+
+"But is't true?" here inquired another.
+
+The reply to this question came from a very unexpected quarter: it came
+from the stranger, who, starting fiercely to his feet, and stretching
+towards the company with a look and gesture of great excitement,
+exclaimed--
+
+"Yes, gentlemen, true it is--true as God is in heaven--true in every
+particular. An eternal monument to the justice and clemency of the
+tyrant Murray. The wife of Bothwellhaugh was turned naked out of her own
+house in a cold and bitter night, and died of bodily suffering and a
+broken heart. She did--she did. But"--and the stranger ground his teeth
+and clenched his fist as he pronounced the word--"there will be a day of
+count and reckoning. The vengeance, the deadly vengeance of a ruined,
+deeply injured, and desperate man, will yet overtake the ruthless,
+remorseless tyrant."
+
+Having thus delivered himself, the stranger again retired to his former
+place, reseated himself, and relapsed into his former silence; although
+the deep and laboured respiration of recent excitement, which he could
+not subdue, might still be distinctly heard even from the farthest end
+of the apartment.
+
+It was some time after the stranger had retired to his place before the
+company felt disposed to resume their conversation. The incident which
+had just occurred, the energy with which the stranger had spoken, and
+the extreme excitement he had evinced, had had the effect of throwing
+them all into that silent and reflective mood which the sudden display
+of anything surprising or interesting is so apt to produce even in our
+merriest and most thoughtless moments.
+
+At length, however, the chill gradually wore off; the conversation was
+resumed, at first in an under tone, and by fits and starts; by and by it
+became more continuous; and, finally, began to flow with all its
+original volume and freedom. No more allusion, however, was made by any
+of the party to the case of Bothwellhaugh. This was a subject to which,
+after what had taken place, none seemed to care about returning. Neither
+did the stranger evince any desire to hold farther correspondence with
+the revellers; but, on the contrary, appeared anxious to avoid it; nay,
+one might almost have supposed that he regretted having obtruded himself
+upon them at all, and that he could have wished that what he had uttered
+in an unguarded moment had remained unsaid. Be this as it may, however,
+he sought no farther intercourse with the party, but having hastily
+despatched the supper which was placed before him, and finished his
+measure of wine, he glided unobserved out of the apartment, and,
+conducted by his host, retired to the sleeping chamber which had been
+appointed for him.
+
+On the following morning, the stranger, who was sojourning at the Stag
+and Hounds, went out to transact, as he told his landlord, some business
+in the town; saying, besides, that he would not probably return till
+evening.
+
+Strongly impressed by the manner and appearance of his guest, and not a
+little awed by his grim and fierce aspect, he of the Stag and Hounds
+could not help following him to the door, when he departed, and
+furtively looking after him as he stalked down the main street of the
+town; and much, as he looked at him, did he marvel what sort of business
+it could be he was going about. This, however, was a point on which the
+worthy man had no means of enlightening himself, and he was therefore
+obliged to be content with the privilege of muttering some expressions
+of the wonder he felt.
+
+In the meantime, the stranger had turned an angle of the street, and
+disappeared--at least from the view of the landlord of the Stag and
+Hounds. Not from ours; for we shall follow and keep sight of him, and
+endeavour to make out what he was so curious to know.
+
+Having passed about half-way down the main street of the town, the
+former suddenly halted before a large unoccupied house, with a balcony
+in front. It was a residence of the Archbishop of St Andrew's. Standing
+in front of this house, the stranger seemed to scan it with earnest
+scrutiny. He looked from window to window with the most cautious and
+deliberate vigilance, and appeared to be noting carefully their various
+heights and positions. While pursuing this inquiry, he might also have
+been frequently observed glancing, from time to time, on either side, as
+if to see that no one was marking the earnestness of his examination of
+the building.
+
+Having apparently completed his survey of the front of the house, the
+stranger passed round to the back part of the building, and proceeded to
+the gate of the garden, which lay behind, and through which only was the
+house accessible on that side. On reaching the gate, the stranger
+paused, looked cautiously around him for a few seconds, when, observing
+no one in sight, he hastily plunged his hand beneath his cloak, drew out
+a key, applied it to the lock, opened the gate, passed quickly in, and
+closed the door cautiously behind him.
+
+With hurried step the intruder now proceeded to the house, drew forth
+another key, inserted it into the lock of the main door, turned it
+round, applied his foot to the latter, pushed it open, and entered the
+building; having previously, as in the former instance, secured the door
+behind him. Ascending the stair in the inside of the house, the
+mysterious visitant now commenced a careful examination of the various
+apartments on the second floor; and at length adopting one--a small
+room, with one window to the front--made it the scene of his future
+operations. These were, the laying on the floor a straw mattress, which
+he dragged from another apartment, and hanging a piece of black
+cloth--which he also found in the lumber-room, from whence he had taken
+the mattress--against the wall of the apartment opposite the window.
+
+Having completed these preparations, the secret workman went up to the
+window, knelt down on the mattress, and levelling a stick, or staff,
+which he found in the apartment, as if it had been a musket, seemed to
+be trying where he might be best situated for firing at an object
+without. This experiment he tried repeatedly; shifting his position from
+place to place, until he appeared to have hit upon one that promised to
+suit his purpose.
+
+This ascertained, he rose from his knees; threw down the staff; glanced
+around the apartment, as if to see that all was right; descended the
+stair; came out of the house, locking the door after him; crossed the
+garden, and passed out at the gate, locking that also before he left,
+and with the same precaution that he had used at entering; that is,
+looking around him to see that no one marked his proceedings.
+
+The guest of the Stag and Hounds now returned to his inn, from which he
+had been absent about two hours. At the door he was met by mine host,
+who, touching his cap, asked if "his honour intended dining at his
+house, as it was now about one of the clock," the general dinner-hour of
+the period.
+
+Without noticing the inquiry of his landlord--
+
+"Be there any armourers in this town of yours, friend?" he said, "where
+I could fit me with some weapons I want."
+
+"Yes, indeed, there be one, and a main good one he is," replied the
+other. "Tom Wilson, I warrant me, will fit your honour with any weapon
+you can desire, from a pistolet to a culverin; from a two-handed sword
+of six feet long, to a dagger like a bodkin. And as for armour, you may
+have anything, everything from head-piece to leg-splent; all of the best
+material, and first-rate workmanship."
+
+"Where is this man Wilson's shop?" inquired the stranger.
+
+"See you, sir," replied the other; "see you yonder projecting corner,
+beyond the palace entrance?"
+
+"I do."
+
+"Well, sir, three doors beyond that, you will find Wilson's shop; and,
+if your honour chooses, you may use my name with him, and he will not
+serve you the worse, or the less reasonably, I warrant me. It is always
+a recommendation to Tom to be a guest at the Stag and Hounds."
+
+Without saying whether or not he would avail himself of the privilege
+offered him of using his name, the mysterious stranger hastened away in
+the direction pointed out to him, and, in half a minute after, he was in
+the workshop of Wilson the armourer.
+
+"Your pleasure, sir," said that person, advancing towards his customer
+from an inner apartment.
+
+"Have you a good store of fire-arms, friend?" inquired the latter.
+
+"Pretty fair, sir; pretty fair," replied the armourer "What description
+may you want?"
+
+"Why, I want a carbine, friend--something of a sure piece--that will
+carry its ball well to the mark. None of your bungling articles, that
+first hang fire, and then throw their shot in every direction but the
+right one. I would have a piece of good and certain execution."
+
+"Here, then, sir, here is your commodity," said the armourer,
+disengaging a short and heavy gun from an arms'-rack that occupied one
+side of the shop. "Here is a piece that I can recommend. It will be the
+fault of the hand or the eye when this barker misses its mark, I warrant
+ye. I'd take in hand myself to smash an egg with it, with single ball,
+at fifty yards distance. I have done it before now with a worse gun."
+
+"I will not require any such feat from the piece as that, friend," said
+Wilson's customer, drily; and having taken the gun in his hand, he began
+to examine the lock, and to see that the piece was otherwise in
+serviceable condition. Being satisfied that it was, he demanded the
+price. It was named. The money was tendered, and accepted, and the
+stranger departed with his purchase; having, however, previously
+received from the armourer, in lieu of luck's-penny, although he offered
+to pay for them, half a dozen balls, and a few charges of powder, to put
+the capability of the gun to immediate trial. This, however, its new
+proprietor did not think necessary; but, instead, returned to the
+archbishop's house with it; and, after loading and priming it, placed it
+in a corner of the apartment, which we have described him as having put
+into so strange a state of preparation.
+
+Leaving the house with the same cautious and stealthy step as before,
+the stranger again returned to his inn; but it was now to leave it no
+more for the night.
+
+"What news stirring, friend?" said he to the landlord.
+
+"Naething, sir," replied he, as he laid the cloth for his dinner; "only
+that the Regent will pass through the town to-morrow. I hear he'll be
+this way about twelve o'clock. The magistrates, I understand, hae gotten
+notice to that effect."
+
+"So," replied the stranger. "Then we shall have a sight."
+
+"A brave sight, sir, for he is to be accompanied by a gallant cavalcade,
+and the trades of the town are to turn out with banners and music to do
+him honour. It will be a stirring day, sir, and I trust a good one for
+my poor house here; for such doings make people as thirsty as so many
+dry sponges."
+
+To these remarks the guest made no reply, but proceeded with his dinner;
+the materials for which having, in the meantime, been brought in, and
+placed on the table by another attendant.
+
+On the following morning, the little town of Linlithgow exhibited a
+scene of unusual bustle. Hosts of idlers were seen gathered here and
+there, along the whole line of the main street; and persons carrying
+trades' banners--as yet, however, carefully rolled up--might be seen
+hurrying in all directions to the various mustering-places of their
+crafts. An occasional discharge of a culverin too; and, as the morning
+advanced, a merry peal of bells heightened the promise of some impending
+event of unusual occurrence. By and by, these symptoms of public
+rejoicing became more and more marked: the groups of idlers increased;
+the banners were unfurled; the firing of the culverins became more
+frequent; and the bells either really did ring, or appeared to ring more
+furiously.
+
+It was when matters thus bespoke the near approach of a crisis--which
+crisis, we may as well say at once, was the advent of the Regent--that
+the mysterious lodger at the Stag and Hounds ordered his horse to be
+brought to the door. The horse was brought; the stranger settled his
+bill; and, saying to his landlord that he would witness the sight from
+horseback more advantageously than on foot, mounted, and rode off in the
+direction of the approaching cavalcade. In this direction, however, he
+did not ride far; for, on gaining the eastern extremity of the town, he
+suddenly wheeled round, and rode back in rear of the line of street,
+until he reached the gate of the garden behind the mansion of the
+Archbishop of St Andrew's, in which the mysterious preparation before
+described had been made.
+
+Having arrived at the gate, he dismounted, opened it, led in his horse,
+and fastened him to a tree close by. This done, he removed the lintel,
+or cross-bar, over the gate. The latter, contrary to his practice on
+former occasions, he now left wide open, and proceeded towards the
+house, into which he disappeared.
+
+In less than a quarter of an hour after, the Regent had entered the
+town. He was on horseback, surrounded by a number of friends, also
+mounted, and followed by a numerous party of armed retainers.
+
+As the cavalcade penetrated into the town, the crowd, which the occasion
+had assembled, gradually became more and more dense, and the progress of
+the Regent and his party consequently more slow; until, at length, they
+were so packed in the narrow street, with the human wedges that were
+forcing themselves around them, that it was with great difficulty they
+could make any forward progress at all.
+
+Becoming impatient with the delay thus occasioned, although carefully
+concealing this impatience, the Regent, who was now directly opposite
+the house of the Archbishop of St Andrew's, kept waving his hand to the
+crowd, as if entreating them not to press so closely, that he might pass
+on with more speed. The crowd endeavoured to comply with the wishes of
+the Regent, but their efforts only added to the confusion, without
+mending the matter in other respects. It was at this moment that all
+eyes were suddenly directed towards the house of the Archbishop of St
+Andrew's, in consequence of a shot being fired from one of the windows.
+When these eyes looked an instant after again towards the Regent, he was
+not to be seen; he had fallen from his horse, mortally wounded: a ball
+had passed through his body. It was Hamilton of Bothwellhaugh who had
+fired the fatal shot.
+
+The friends and retainers of the Regent, seconded by the town's people,
+flew to the house of the archbishop, and endeavoured to force the door,
+in order to get at the murderer but it had been barricaded by the wily
+assassin, and resisted their efforts long enough to allow of his
+escaping from the house, mounting his horse, and darting through the
+garden gate at the top of his utmost speed. He was pursued; but, thanks
+to his good steed, pursued in vain, and subsequently escaped to France;
+having done a deed which the moralist must condemn, but which cannot be
+looked upon as altogether without palliation.
+
+
+
+
+THE PRISONER OF WAR.
+
+
+I had been preserved, through divine mercy, from one of the most
+lingering and fearful deaths. I was rescued, I scarce knew how, after
+the grim king of terror held me in his embrace, and all hope had fled.
+As consciousness returned, my heart thrilled at the recollection of the
+miseries I had endured while floating, a helpless being, on the bosom of
+the ocean.[3] I shuddered to think, while I lay feeble as an infant in
+the cabin of the vessel which was bearing me to my home, and whose
+humane crew had been the means of my deliverance, that I was still at
+the mercy of the winds and waves; but kind nursing, aided by youth and a
+good constitution, quickly brought strength; and I was enabled, after a
+few days, to come upon deck. On my first attempt, when my head rose
+above the deck as I ascended the companion-ladder, and my eyes fell upon
+the boundless waste of waters, a chill of horror shot through my frame.
+Like a lone traveller who had suddenly met a lion in his path, I stood
+paralysed; every nerve and muscle refused to act. I must have fallen
+back into the cabin, had not my hand instinctively clung to their hold
+for a few seconds. I could not withdraw my fixed gaze, while all I had
+suffered rushed upon me like a hideous dream. Slowly my faculties
+returned, when I ascended the deck, where I sat for a few hours. Each
+day after this brought additional strength; so that, before we made
+soundings, I was as strong and cheerful as I had ever been in my life.
+The weather was squally, and I assisted the crew as much as was in my
+power; and, when not so occupied, lay listlessly looking over the ship's
+bows that bravely dashed aside the waves that rolled between me and the
+home I now longed to reach, or walked the deck musing upon the joy my
+return would impart to my over-indulgent parents.
+
+As we neared the shores of Scotland, a circumstance occurred that both
+greatly surprised and alarmed me. This was a sudden change in the
+manners and temper of the crew. Care and anxiety took the place of their
+wonted cheerfulness; the joyous laugh, or snatch of song, no longer
+broke the monotonous hissing of the waves that rippled along the sides
+of the vessel, or the dull whistle of the wind through the rigging. At
+the first appearance of every sail that hove in sight, I could perceive
+every eye turned to it with a look of alarm until she was made out.
+Fearful of giving offence to my benefactors, I made no remark on the
+subject for some time, although I felt disappointed at what I
+saw--attributing it to cowardice; yet they were all stout, young,
+resolute-looking fellows at other times. This scene of alarm, and
+appearance of a wish to skulk below or conceal themselves, had occurred
+twice in the course of the forenoon. After the last ship we encountered
+was made out to be a merchant-brig, I could no longer refrain from
+delivering my sentiments of the greater number of the crew, but
+addressing the mate, said--
+
+"Mr Ross, it is fortunate for us that these strange sails have turned
+out to be British merchantmen. Had they proved to be French privateers,
+we should have made but a poor stand, I fear, notwithstanding our eight
+carronades."
+
+"What makes you think so?" said he.
+
+"Why, there is not a vessel that heaves in sight," said I, "but the men
+look as if they wished themselves anywhere but where they are."
+
+"Avast there, my man!" said he. "What! do you mean to say that they
+would not stand by their guns while there was a chance? Yes, they would,
+and long after; and, if you think otherwise, all I say is, you form
+opinions and talk of what you know nothing about."
+
+Casting an angry look at me--the only one he ever gave--he squirted his
+quid over the bulwarks, and was walking away, when I stopped him.
+
+"If I have given you offence, Mr Ross, nothing was farther from my
+intention. I cannot but observe the alarm caused by every sail that
+heaves in sight until she is made out to be a friend. Now, the little
+time I was at sea, before I fell overboard and was saved by you, every
+sail that hove in sight made the hearts of all on board leap for joy."
+
+"Ho! ho!" and he laughed aloud. "Are you on that tack, my messmate? You
+are quite out in your reckoning, and becalmed in a fog; but I shall soon
+blow it away. There is not a man on board with whom I would not go into
+action with the fullest reliance upon his courage; and, were we to meet
+a French privateer, you would quickly see such a change as would satisfy
+you that my confidence is not misplaced. Every face, that the moment
+before expressed anxiety and alarm, would brighten up with joy; every
+man would stand to his gun as cheerfully as to the helm. It is their
+liberty the poor fellows are afraid of being deprived of by our own
+men-of-war--the liberty to toil for their parents or wives where they
+can get better wages than the Government allows. Danger, in any form,
+they meet undaunted when duty calls; it is for their countrymen they
+quail. Were the smallest sloop-of-war in the British navy to heave in
+sight, and a boat put off from her with a boy of a midshipman and eight
+or ten men, every one on board, who had not a protection, would shake in
+his shoes at her approach; yet, against an enemy, every man would stand
+to his gun until his ship was blown out of the water."
+
+A new and painful feeling came over me as he spoke. I was myself an
+entered seaman, and, of course, liable to impressment; but the idea of
+being taken had never occurred to me. I wondered that it had not, after
+the scenes I had witnessed in the frigate; but my longing for home had
+entirely engrossed my mind. I was, indeed, home-sick, and weary of the
+sea. From this moment, no one on board felt more alarm than I did at the
+sight of a top-royal rising out of the distant waters. My feelings were
+near akin to those of a felon in concealment.
+
+At length we reached the Moray Firth, in the evening, and arrangements
+were made for as many of the crew as could be spared to be landed at
+Cromarty, where the vessel was to put in. This was to avoid the danger
+of impressment in the Firth of Forth. I gave the captain an order upon
+my father for my passage, and the expense he had been at on my account,
+as I was to leave, with the others in the boat, as soon as we were off
+the town, which we hoped to reach in the morning. My anxiety was so
+great that I had kept the deck since nightfall. It was intensely dark;
+nothing broke the gloom but the flashes of light that gleamed for a
+moment upon the waves, as they rippled along the sides of the vessel,
+and the dull rays of the binnacle-lamp before the man at the helm. Bell
+after bell was struck, still I stood at the bows, leaning upon the
+bowsprit, unmindful of the chill wind from under the foretopsail,
+anxiously watching for the first tints of dawn. Tediously as the night
+wore on, I thought, when morning dawned, it had fled far too fast.
+
+The dark clouds began at length to melt away in the east, and the
+distant mountain-tops to rise like grey clouds above the darkness that
+still hid the shores from our view. Gradually the whole face of nature
+began to emerge from the morning mists. We were just off the Sutors of
+Cromarty. My heart leapt for joy at the near prospect of being once more
+on firm ground, and so near home. Several of the crew had now joined
+me, and all eyes were directed to the entrance of the bay. Only a few
+minutes had elapsed in this pleasing hope--for it was still dullish on
+the horizon--when the report of a gun from seaward of us, so near that I
+thought it was alongside, made us start and look round. Each of us
+seemed as if we had been turned into stone by the alarming sound; while,
+so sudden was the revulsion of feeling, in my own case, that my heart
+almost ceased to beat. There, not half-a-league to windward of us, lay a
+frigate, with her sails shaking in the wind, and a boat, well-manned,
+with an officer in her stern, putting off from her.
+
+So completely were we overcome by the sudden appearance of this dreaded
+object, which seemed to emerge from darkness, as the sun's first rays
+fell upon and whitened her sails, that we stood incapable of thought or
+action. The well-manned barge was carried, by the faint breeze and
+impetus of her oars, almost as swift as a gull on the wing. The report
+of the gun brought the captain and mate upon deck before we had
+recovered from our stupor.
+
+"Bear a hand, men!" cried Ross, as he sprung upon deck. "Man the
+tacklefalls! clear the boat! and give them a run for it at least."
+
+Roused by his voice, every nerve was strained, the boat lowered, and we
+in her, ready to push off, when the captain called over the side--
+
+"My lads, do as you think for the best; but it is of no use to try. The
+frigate's boat will be under our stern ere you can gain way."
+
+I stood in the act of pushing off, when the object we were going to
+strain every nerve to avoid swept round the stern, and grappled us. We
+hopelessly threw our oars upon the thwarts, and prepared to reascend the
+vessel, to settle with the captain and bring away our chests. As for
+myself, I had no call to leave the boat. All I possessed in the world
+was upon my person, and half-a-guinea given me by the captain to carry
+me home. The other three were getting their bags and chests ready to
+lower into the boat, having got their wages from the captain, when he
+called me to come on deck. I obeyed; when he said to the midshipman in
+command of the boat--
+
+"Sir, to prevent any unpleasant consequences arising to this poor
+fellow, Elder, here, I shall let you know how he came on board of us. He
+belonged to the _Latona_, and is no deserter, I assure you. Ross, bring
+here our log-book, and satisfy the gentleman if he wishes." Ross obeyed;
+and having examined it, the captain told the wretched state in which I
+had been picked up, and the way in which I had accounted to him for the
+accident. During the recital, he looked hard at me, no muscle of his
+face indicating either pity or surprise. When the captain ceased to
+speak, he only said--
+
+"Well, my lad, you have for once had a narrow escape--you must hold
+better on in future. I shall report to the captain, and get the D from
+before your name. Tumble into the boat, my lads. Good day, captain."
+And, in a few minutes afterwards, I was on board the _Edgar_,
+seventy-four, and standing westwards for the Firth of Forth.
+
+It was strange the change that came over the impressed men, when there
+was no longer any hope of escape. Like true seamen, they bent to the
+circumstance they could not remedy, and were, as soon as they got on
+board, as much at home, and more cheerful, than they had been for many
+days before. As for myself, I took it much to heart, and was very
+melancholy when we entered the Firth and stood up to the roadstead. I
+could hardly restrain my feelings when the city of Edinburgh came in
+sight, and when I thought of the short distance in miles that divided me
+from my parents and home--that home I had left so foolishly in the hopes
+of being back at the conclusion of the war, which I now found was raging
+more furiously, if possible, than when I left, and with much less
+prospect of its termination. I would stand for hours gazing upon the
+White Craig, the eastern extremity of the Pentland Hills, and wish I was
+upon it, until my eyes were suffused with tears. I begged hard for the
+first lieutenant to give me leave to go on shore, if only for
+eight-and-forty hours, to visit my parents; but he refused my request,
+fearful of my not returning. Several of the hands on board, natives of
+Edinburgh, who had been long in the _Edgar_, obtained leave. With one of
+them I sent a letter to my father, who came the following day. It was a
+meeting of sorrow, not unmixed with upbraidings, on his part, for what I
+had done; but we parted with regret--he to do what he could to obtain my
+discharge, I under promise not to act so precipitately in future, if I
+was once more a free agent. What steps were taken I know not, for next
+morning we received orders to sail for the Nore. We had many faces on
+board that looked as long as my own, for there were still several who
+had obtained promise of leave whose turn had not come round. Wallace,
+one of the mess I was in, had not been in his native city for ten years,
+having been all that time voluntarily on board of men-of-war, either at
+home or on foreign stations. He was to have had two days' leave the very
+morning we sailed, and had doomed ten gold guineas, which he had long
+kept for such purpose, to be expended in a blow-out in Edinburgh, among
+his relations and friends. When the boatswain piped to weigh anchor,
+Wallace, who was captain of the foretop, ran to his berth, opened his
+chest, took out his long-hoarded store, and came on deck with it in his
+hand. His looks bespoke rage and disappointment, bordering upon
+insanity. He gazed upon the distant city that shone upon the gently
+swelling hills glancing back the sun's rays, then at the purse of gold
+in his hand. He seemed incapable of speech. A bitter smile curled his
+lip, bespeaking the most intense scorn. I looked on, wondering what he
+meant to do. It was but the scene of a minute. Suddenly raising his
+hand, he threw the purse and gold over the side with all his force,
+exclaiming:--"Go, vile trash! what use have I for you now? The first
+action may lay me low!" Then, as if relieved from some oppressive load,
+he mounted the rattlings to his duty with a smile of satisfaction; and
+we bore away for the Nore, where I was draughted on board the _Repulse_,
+sixty-four, and departed upon a cruise along the coast of Brittany; at
+times lying off Brest harbour, and at others, standing along the coast
+in search of the enemy. Employed in this monotonous duty, month followed
+month, and year after year passed away.
+
+It was now the year 1799. The century was drawing to a close; but the
+interminable war seemed only commencing. I had become almost callous to
+my fate. We were standing along, under a steady breeze, as close in
+shore as we could with safety to the vessel. It was the dog-watch; and I
+had only been a short time turned in when our good ship struck upon some
+sunken rocks with such force that I thought she had gone to pieces.
+Every one in a moment turned out. The night was as dark as pitch, and
+the sea breaking over us, while we lay hard and fast. Everything was
+done to lighten her in vain. She was making water very fast, in spite of
+all our exertions at the pumps. Still there was not the smallest
+confusion on board. Our discipline was as strict, and our officers as
+promptly obeyed, as they were before our accident. As the tide rose, the
+wind shifted, and blew a gale right upon the shore, causing the ship to
+beat violently. Day at length dawned, and there, not one hundred fathoms
+from our deck, lay a rocky and desolate-looking shore. We had been
+forced over a reef of sunken rocks that were not in our charts; and,
+during the darkness, as was supposed, had been carried in-shore by some
+current; but, however it had happened, there we were, in a serious
+scrape, the sea breaking over our decks, and our hold full of water.
+
+Soon after daybreak we could perceive the peasantry crowding down to the
+water's edge. Everything had been done that skill and resolution could
+accomplish, to save the vessel, but in vain. We had nothing before our
+eyes but instant death. The sea ran so high that no boat could live for
+a moment in the broken water between us and the shore. The French
+peasantry were making no effort for our safety, but running about and
+looking on our deplorable situation, with apparently no other feeling
+than that of curiosity. At this time, James Paterson, an Edinburgh lad,
+volunteered to make the attempt to swim to the shore with a log-line,
+and fearlessly let himself over the side. It was, to all appearance, a
+hopeless attempt; for every one felt assured that he would be beat to
+death against the rocks that lined the beach, on which the waves were
+beating with great fury.
+
+It was a period of fearful suspense; yet, dreadful as our situation was,
+there was not the least unnecessary noise on board. All was prompt
+attention and obedience. The weather was extremely cold, and the sea, at
+times, making a complete breach over the ship, which we expected every
+moment to go to pieces. As for myself, I meant to stow below and perish
+with her, rather than to float about, bruised and maimed, and drown at
+last. One half of the crew were only dressed in their shirts and
+trousers, without shoes or stockings, as they had leaped from their
+hammocks. When she struck, we had no leisure to put on more than our
+trousers. Thus we stood, holding on by the nettings, or anything we
+could lay hold of, to prevent our being washed off the decks, with our
+eyes anxiously watching the progress of the brave Paterson, who swam
+like an otter, the boatswain and his mates serving out the line to him.
+We saw him near the rocks, and the people making signs to him. This was
+the point of greatest danger, but, by the aid of the peasants, he
+surmounted it.
+
+Those on the beach gave a shout, which we replied to from the deck. A
+hawser was made fast to the line, and secured on shore. It was not until
+now that we began to hope; and with this hope arose an anxiety on the
+part of every one to save what they could. I strove to reach my chest,
+in which were a pair of new shoes and five guineas, but my efforts, like
+those of the others, were vain; our under decks were flooded several
+inches, and everything was loose and knocking about in the most furious
+manner, from the rolling and pitching of the vessel upon the rocks, so
+that I was but too happy to reach the decks without being crushed to
+death. All I regretted was my shoes; the money I cared not for, and do
+not think I would have taken it, as we expected to be plundered as soon
+as we got to the beach.
+
+After a great deal of fatigue, we all got safe to land, and now the
+plundering began. There were no regular soldiers on the spot, but a
+great many of the peasantry had firelocks and bayonets, and stood over
+us, stripping those of the men, who had them, of their jackets and hats.
+At first, we were disposed to resist, but soon found it to be of no use.
+One of the fellows seized the chain of the watch belonging to one of our
+men, and was in the act of pulling it from the pocket, when the owner,
+Jack Smith, struck him to the ground with a blow of his fist. The next
+moment poor Smith lay a lifeless corpse upon the sand, felled by a
+stroke from the butt end of a musket.
+
+There was no one present who seemed to have or who assumed any
+authority, to whom our officers might appeal for protection; they were
+not more respected than the men; all were searched and robbed as soon as
+they arrived from the wreck. Poor Smith's fate taught us submission,
+even while our bosoms burned with a desire for vengeance. One of my
+messmates said aloud--"I would cheerfully stand before the muzzle of one
+of the old _Repulse's_ thirty-twos, were she charged to the mouth with
+grape well laid, to sweep these French robbers from the face of the
+earth." As for myself, they took nothing from me. I had twopence in the
+pocket of my trousers; when I saw what was going on, I took it out and
+held it in my hand while they searched me. I more than once thought they
+were going to strip me of my nether garments, and give me in exchange a
+pair of their own gun-mouthed rags, which would scarcely have reached my
+knees; for several of them looked at them as if they felt inclined to
+make the exchange; but I escaped, and felt thankful.
+
+We stood for several hours shivering upon the beach without food, fire,
+or water, while the plunderers were busy picking up anything that
+drifted ashore, but still keeping a strict watch over us; at length, the
+chief magistrate of a neighbouring small town arrived, and to him our
+officers complained of the usage we had received. He only shook his
+head, and shrugged his shoulders, when the body of Smith was pointed out
+to him. What could we do? A grave was dug for him on the spot where he
+was murdered, and we were marched off into the interior. It was well on
+in the afternoon before we reached the place where we were to halt. It
+was a small poverty-stricken-like town, with an old ruinous church and
+churchyard, surrounded by high walls, with an iron gate close by. Into
+this chill, desolate place, we were crowded by the soldiers, the gate
+locked upon us, and sentinels placed around the building. Here we
+remained until the evening, when there was served out to every man a
+small loaf, black as mud; yet, black as it was, I never ate a sweeter
+morsel; for neither I nor any of my companions had tasted any food since
+the evening before.
+
+But how shall I express the horror we felt when we found we were to
+remain where we were, in this old, ruined charnel-house of a church,
+which could scarcely contain us all, unless we stood close together. To
+lie down was out of the question; and, although we could, there were
+neither straw, blankets, nor covering of any kind, to screen us from the
+cold. We implored in vain to be removed; but these privations, bad as
+they were, did not annoy us so much as the idea of spending the long
+dark night in such a miserable place. By far the greater number of us
+believed as firmly in the reality of ghosts as we did in our own
+existence; and, of all places in the world, a church and churchyard,
+from time immemorial, have been their favourite haunts, and the terror
+of all who believe in their reality--even those who affect to disbelieve
+in the visits of spirits to this earth, feel sensations which they would
+not choose to own, when in a churchyard, in a dark night, with
+gravestones and crumbling human bones around them. Of all men seamen are
+the most superstitious, and give the most ready credence to ghost
+stories. The unmanning feeling of fear, that had not touched a single
+heart in the extremity of our danger from the storm, was now strongly
+marked in every face, exaggerated by a horror of we knew not what. Fear
+is contagious--we huddled together, and peered fearfully around,
+expecting every moment to see some appalling vision or hear some
+dreadful sound. Our sense of hearing was painfully acute--the smallest
+noise made us start; but our feelings were too much racked to remain
+long at the same intensity--they gradually became more obtuse as the
+night wore on, until we at length began to entertain each other with
+fearful stories of ghosts; feeling a strange satisfaction in increasing
+the gloomy excitement under which we laboured. Had any of us begun a
+humorous story, with the view of diverting our thoughts from their
+present bent, and the circumstances we were in, I am certain he would
+have been silenced in no gentle manner.
+
+We might have been about two hours or less in this state, in the most
+intense darkness--our own whispers being all that we could recognise of
+each other, even although in contact--when a low pleasant murmur
+suddenly fell upon our ears: It was the voice of Dick Bates, who, having
+either been requested, or, moved by his present situation, had, of his
+own accord, commenced singing in an under tone his favourite ballad of
+"Hozier's Ghost." Now, Dick was the best singer in the whole crew, with
+a voice like a singing bird; it was at this moment so low that, had it
+been broad daylight, he would have appeared only to have been breathing
+hard; yet it was at this time distinctly heard by all, and made our
+flesh creep upon our bones, although a strange kind of pleasure was
+mingled with the feeling. We scarcely breathed when he came to the
+lines--
+
+ "With three thousand ghosts beside him,
+ And in groans did Vernon hail--
+ Heed, O heed my fatal story,
+ I am Hozier's injured Ghost."
+
+I thought the whole was present before me, and I could see the scene the
+poet described, and shuddered when he breathed forth--
+
+ "See these ghastly spectres sweeping
+ Mournful o'er this hated wave,
+ Whose pale cheeks are stained with weeping--
+ These were English captains brave.
+
+ "See these numbers pale and horrid!
+ These were once my seamen bold.
+ Lo! each hangs his drooping forehead
+ While his mournful tale is told."
+
+I believe there was not a man in the old church who did not think he saw
+the ghastly train of spectres flitting before his eyes, and who did not
+feel every nerve thrill, and every hair of his head stand on end. Many
+were the tales of superstition and of terror related, until overpowered
+nature sank into sleep; but I have since often reflected that, of all
+the accounts of fearful sights I heard, they were all related at second
+hand, from the authority of others. No one asserted they themselves had
+ever seen anything out of the ordinary course of nature except Bob
+Nelson, and his was calculated to lead a more prejudiced observer
+astray. It was as follows--
+
+"It was during a voyage I made to New York from Greenock, in the brig
+_Cochrane_, that I once saw, with my own eyes, a strange sight, such as
+I hope never to witness again. Our cargo consisted of dry goods, and we
+had several emigrants as passengers; in particular, a family of six in
+the cabin, the husband and wife, with four children; they were wealthy,
+and had sold off their farm stock to purchase land, and settle somewhere
+in America. When they came on board at the quay of Greenock, they were
+accompanied by a great many relations and friends, who took a most
+affectionate leave of them; in particular one old woman, the mother of
+the emigrant's wife. Her wailings were most pitiable; she wrung her
+hands, and stood as if rooted to our decks. I heard her say more than
+once--
+
+"'Mary, I feel I shall never see you more, nor these lovely babes. O why
+will you leave your aged mother to go mourning to her grave?'
+
+"Her daughter looked more like one dead than alive, as she lay sobbing
+upon the breast of her husband, her mother holding one of her hands
+between both of her's. Poor soul, she looked as if her heart was
+breaking, but spoke not; at length, the husband said--
+
+"'O woman, have you no feeling for your daughter?'
+
+"The old woman's grief seemed, all at once, turned into rage: she let
+her daughter's hand drop, and, raising her hands, cursed him for
+depriving her of her daughter; concluding with--
+
+"'But, James, remember what I say; dead or alive, I shall yet see my
+Mary.'
+
+"The poor young woman was carried below in a faint and the old dame was
+conveyed from the deck by the friends, for we were by this time cast
+loose, and leaving our berth. For several days I saw nothing of the
+farmer's family, as they were very sick; but the children had now begun
+to play about the deck, and their father would leave the cabin for a
+short time, once or twice a-day, for his wife remained very ill, and
+confined to her bed. The haglike appearance of the old woman, in her
+rage, had made a great impression on me, and had evidently sunk the
+spirits of the young people; for I often saw, when the husband came on
+deck, that he was much dejected. I felt it strange that the figure of
+the old woman often occurred to my mind when I looked at him; and I
+several times dreamed I saw her in my sleep, as I had seen her in
+Greenock, but her appearance was more pale and hideous, and had so great
+an effect upon me, that I always awoke in an agony, and cursed her from
+my heart.
+
+"About mid-passage we met with westerly gales and rough weather, which
+caused the passengers to keep below for several days, and retarded our
+passage much. It was blowing very hard. It was my turn at the wheel. In
+the midwatch we had occasional showers. The clouds were scudding along
+in immense bodies over the face of the moon, which was just at the full,
+so that we had, at times, bright moonlight for a minute or two, then
+gloom; but the night was not dark. I might have been at the wheel half
+my time or so. My eye was fixed ahead to watch the set of the waves,
+save when I glanced to the compass. I thought I saw something upon the
+bowsprit in the gloom that was not there a moment before. I looked aloft
+to see for a break in the clouds that the moon might shew me more
+distinctly what it was. I looked ahead again, and there it still was,
+but nearer the bows of the vessel. Still I could not make out what it
+was. Soon a burst of moonlight shone forth, and I saw it resembled a
+human figure, but whether man or woman I could not tell, for the moon
+was as suddenly obscured as it had shone forth. I felt very queer; being
+certain it was none of the crew--for the whole watch was aft at the
+time--and I was sure that all the passengers were below, and no one had
+come on deck since the watch had been changed. I looked at the spot
+where I had seen it, and it was gone. I felt the greatest inclination to
+tell what I had seen; but the fear of being laughed at, made me say
+nothing of it at this time; I, however, never wished so much for
+anything in my life as that my spell at the wheel was over, and the
+watch passed. When, at length, I was released, I crept to the foxa, and
+tumbled into my hammock, but could not close an eye for thinking of what
+I had seen.
+
+"Well, my mates, I was then, as I am now, in a pretty mess, and wished
+myself as heartily out of the _Cochrane_ as we all do ourselves out of
+this old foundered hulk of a church. I was fairly aground with fear, and
+felt all of a tremble for the nights I must pass on board before we
+reached New York, where I was determined to leave the brig if I saw any
+more such sights. For a few days the gale continued, sometimes blowing
+very hard, at others more moderate, but nothing uncommon occurred. At
+length it abated, and we had pleasant weather. I began to think I had
+been deceived, and was glad I had not spoken of what I had seen to any
+of the crew. It was the afternoon, towards evening. I was again at the
+wheel. The sun was setting in a bed of clouds, as gaily coloured as a
+ship rejoicing--the colours of all nations floating aloft, from the
+point of her bowsprit to the end of her jib-boom. The four children were
+playing upon deck, laughing and full of joy at being once more relieved
+from their long confinement in the cabin. I looked at their innocent
+gambols and at the beautiful sky by turns, as much as my duty would
+allow, and felt more happy than I had done since we sailed. It was so
+pleasant to look ahead; for every face on deck wore a pleasing and
+happy aspect. I looked again at the children's gambols; but I almost
+dropped at the wheel. My hands and limbs refused to do their office.
+There, before me, close by the children, stood the exact representation
+of the old woman--so stern, so unearthly was her look, that I cannot
+express it; but she was pale as the foam on the crest of a wave. I could
+not call out. I had no power either to move tongue or limb. The yawing
+of the vessel called the attention of the mate to me, who sung out to
+hold her steady. I heard him, but could not obey. My whole faculties
+were engrossed by the fearful vision. My eyes appeared as if they would
+have started out of my head. One of the crew seized the wheel. All
+looked at me with astonishment. I stood rivetted to the spot, pointing
+to where the spectre stood; but no one saw anything but myself. The
+captain was below in the cabin, with the farmer and his wife--the latter
+of whom was known to all the crew to be very ill. As I looked to the
+unearthly figure, attracted by a power I could not resist, the children
+continued their play. The features of the old woman, I thought, relaxed,
+and a sadness came over them, but it was of unearthly expression. The
+figure glided from the children to the cabin-companion, and disappeared
+below, when it as suddenly came again upon deck, accompanied by the
+farmer's wife, pale and wasted. Both gazed upon the children. The young
+woman appeared to wring her hands in great distress, as I had seen her
+before she was carried below; but the old woman hurried her over the
+side of the brig, and I saw no more of them. When they disappeared, my
+faculties returned. I trembled as if I had been in an ague, and the cold
+sweat stood in large drops upon my forehead. The mate and crew thought
+that I had been in a fit, until I told them what I had seen. They looked
+rather serious, but were much inclined to laugh at me. The mate began to
+jaw me a little on my fancies. All had passed in a minute or two.
+Scarce had the mate spoken a dozen of words, when the captain hurried
+upon deck, much affected, and called to one of the female steerage
+passengers to go instantly to the cabin and assist, as he feared the
+farmer's wife was dead. The mate ceased to speak, and the rest of the
+crew looked as amazed as I did at the strange occurrence. The captain
+came to us. When he heard my strange story, he shook his head, and only
+said it was a remarkable occurrence; but I had been deceived by some
+illusion, and commanded us not to speak of it, for distressing the poor
+husband. We resolved to obey him, as we were by this time nearly in with
+the land, and expected to make it next day, which we did; and the poor
+farmer was helped ashore, almost as death-like as the body of his wife,
+which was buried in New York. I sailed several trips afterwards in the
+_Cochrane_, but never saw anything out of the common afterwards in her
+or anywhere else."
+
+The first rays of the rising sun shone upon us all sound asleep, as
+quiet and undisturbed as if we had passed the night under the roofs of
+our fathers' houses; but I was cold, stiff, and sore when I awoke. I had
+passed the night upon a flat gravestone outside of the church, for want
+of room within, without any covering but my shirt and trousers--all I
+had saved from the wreck. There was not a character engraved on the
+stone that was not as distinctly marked on my body. It was of no use
+grumbling or being cast down--we were fairly adrift, and must go with
+the current. It was now that the buoyancy of a sailor's mind burst
+forth. The old church and churchyard resounded with shouts and laughter,
+that made the French sentinels think we had all gone mad. Some were busy
+at leap-frog, others were pursuing each other among the ruins and
+tomb-stones--all were in active exertion for the sake of warmth, and to
+beguile the time; while the French gathered outside wherever they could
+obtain a sight of us, and looked on in amazement at our frolics. I am
+certain they were not without fear for us; for a few of the lads had
+contrived to clamber to the top of the ruins; and were amusing
+themselves by antics, at the hazard of their necks, and throwing small
+pieces of lime at us below. The officer in command called to them to
+come down; but they knew not what he said. Some of them cried out, in
+answer to his call--"Speak like a Christian if you want us to understand
+you, and don't wow like a dog." At this moment, Nick Williams, one of
+our maintop men, had scaled the highest point of the walls, and had, at
+the risk of his life, contrived to perch himself upon the crumbling
+stone, and was huzzaing most vociferously. It was a daring and foolhardy
+feat. A shout of admiration rose from the outside of the walls, when a
+real British cheer answered it from within. Whether the officer was
+enraged at the apparent defiance and disobedience to his commands, I
+know not, but several muskets were fired through the rails of the gate,
+and the balls recoiled from the walls. A shout of rage burst from us;
+and a serious conflict was only prevented by the prudence of the petty
+officers who were among us; for the enraged seamen had begun to collect
+stones from the base of the ruined walls to hurl at the dastardly
+guards, who were shouting, _"Vive la Nation!" "Vive la Republique!"_ Our
+boatswain, who was a cool and resolute old tar, seeing that the storm
+was still on the verge of bursting out--for we looked upon their cries
+as insulting as their balls--by a happy thought, struck up the national
+air, "God save the King," which we sung with an enthusiasm and strength
+of lungs never, I am certain, surpassed before or since. If it had no
+melody, it had a tone and sound equivalent to both. Many who still held
+the stones in their hands, which they had lifted to hurl at the guards,
+struck them together like cymbals, in regular time, to increase the
+noise. The effect was most exhilarating and produced the desired effect
+of turning our angry feeling into good-humour. So pleased were we, that
+we gave them "Rule Britannia" in the same style, until we forgot, in our
+enthusiasm, that we were prisoners, hungry, cold, and naked. Scarce had
+the last loud cadence died away, when the gate was thrown open, and a
+miserable allowance of the same black bread was served out to us, with
+plenty of water, and the gate once more shut against us.
+
+It was very strange that, among more than five hundred of us, not one
+knew a word of French, and there were none of those who entered the
+enclosure could speak a word of English, so that we knew not what those
+who had the power over us meant to do. We conjectured that they intended
+to keep us where we were until we were exchanged; and had already begun
+to canvass the possibility of breaking out of the hated church and yard,
+and making a bold push for our liberty, in the following night, by
+overpowering our guards, seizing their arms, and passing along the
+coast, until we reached some of the small ports, and making prizes of
+all the vessels in it, and setting sail for England. A council was
+actually deliberating in the church, composed of the petty officers and
+a few of our picked hands, when our attention was roused by the sound of
+martial music approaching the churchyard, where it halted, and we were
+soon after turned out, and numbered to the officer in command.
+
+The party who had just arrived consisted of two companies of soldiers of
+the line, regularly clothed and armed, as the French troops were; while
+those under whose charge we had been were only the armed peasantry of
+the neighbourhood. We hoped the change would be for our advantage. We
+saw at once we were going to be conveyed into the interior. Go where we
+must, we felt we could not be worse fed, lodged, or used than we had
+been. No harsh word was used to us by the regular troops; and, before we
+had been a few hours on the road, we understood each other well enough
+by dumb show, and marched on in good humour; we walking in the middle of
+them like a drove of bullocks, as frolicsome as children, singing,
+laughing, and putting practical jokes upon each other, to beguile the
+way. Scarce had we travelled a couple of miles, until my bare feet
+became sore from the small stones and bruises; yet I limped on in the
+best manner I could, and as cheerfully as possible. I was in the front
+as we were on the point of entering a village; the soldiers in file
+enclosing us on either side, and bringing up the rear, so that we could
+not walk faster or slower than they chose. A few hundred yards from the
+entrance of the village, those in front turned round, and pointing to
+the fowls of various kinds that were feeding on the highway before us,
+made signs which we readily understood, and nodded significantly; they
+then drew to each side of the road, and we behind them, leaving a gap in
+the middle of the way like the prongs of a fork closed at the base. The
+ducks, hens, and other fowls became alarmed as we came close upon them,
+and ran for shelter to the vacant space in the middle, when the front
+closed, and all were secured by those in the centre; the poor people,
+their owners, calling in vain for restitution of their property. The
+soldiers would not allow them to come within their ranks; and, at night,
+when we stopped, the former procured wood for us to dress the stolen
+fowls, after having received their proportion. This, I confess, was a
+species of robbery; but we were starved by the allowance of government,
+and we were in an enemy's country, who had plundered the shipwrecked
+mariner cast upon their shores. We thought, therefore, although, of
+course, the reasoning was wrong, that, in appropriating whatever we
+could lay hands upon, we were merely making fair and just reprisals for
+the losses we had sustained at the hands of our captors; but, the truth
+is, we troubled ourselves very little about the right or wrong of the
+matter, for we were lodged either in large empty barns, or ruined
+churches, all the way to Rennes, and could, from hunger, have eaten a
+jackass when we were allowed to rest for the night. Even yet, I remember
+the relish a small piece of a roast pig or fowl had, without either
+bread or salt, at this time, for we were not scrupulous what we lifted
+that would eat, if we could carry it. In one village, five pigs
+disappeared in this manner, and only the great weight of the parent
+prevented her following them. At the time, it had not the appearance of
+theft; there was so much fun in it that it resembled a great hunt, for
+every eye was in quest of game, and all was done so quietly and
+dexterously that there was not the least confusion or noise. We closed
+so rapidly that the prey had no means of escape, nor room to move until
+it was despatched; yet the people, as we passed, were often very kind to
+us, so far as was in their power, for they appeared to be miserably
+poor. When we reached Rennes my feet were so sore, swelled, and cut,
+that I walked with great pain; numbers of us were in the same situation.
+We did not pass straight through the town, but were halted, for some
+time, in the market-place, while the inhabitants came in crowds to gaze
+at the English prisoners; and a miserable sight we were. We might have
+been here about half an hour, when a beautiful young lady came to where
+we were, with a young woman behind her carrying a large basket filled
+with shoes. I thought she had come to sell them, as so many were
+barefoot. I saw her giving them to the men, and hirpled to the spot, and
+looked with an anxious eye at the store which was diminishing fast. I
+had still retained the twopence, and resolved to make an effort to
+obtain a pair, but felt backward, conscious I had no equivalent to give
+for them; holding out my coppers, I pointed to a pair which I thought
+would answer me; I felt ashamed, and looked to the ground, pointing to
+my feet when I had attracted her attention, for she was looking in
+another direction. She took the shoes and gave them to me. I proffered
+my little cash; she gently put my hand aside, and, by a sign, made me
+know that I was welcome to them. I never saw a female so lovely as this
+young lady; her clear, black eyes were swimming in tears, and her face
+covered with blushes; her looks were so mild, so benevolent, she looked
+like an angel sent from heaven to administer to our wants. Never before
+or since have I felt the same sensation so intensely. It was delightful;
+it was painful. I felt a choking in my throat. I could have wept, and
+have found relief in it, but I was surrounded by those who would have
+made sport of my emotion. I retired a few paces to make way for others,
+in silence. I dared not utter a sound, lest my feelings had overpowered
+me, but stood and gazed at the lovely creature until she retired. I felt
+as if everything to be esteemed on earth was concentrated in her person
+and mind. Had I been an admiral I would have gloried in calling her
+mine; had it been necessary I could have faced death or any danger, to
+free her from trouble or grief, with a feeling of joy and exultation.
+Many a time has this fair creature been embodied in my mind's eye, as
+fair and lovely as she was then, but I never saw her again.
+
+Many others of the good inhabitants of Rennes administered to our wants.
+I got, besides the shoes, a substitute for a jacket, and a straw hat
+from an old man. Indeed, we saw in our route scarce any others except
+old men, women, and boys. Women were driving the carts, and working in
+the fields, and doing the work done by the men in Britain. From Rennes
+we were marched to Perche, our final destination, in the same manner as
+we had been from the coast, and lodged in prison; but I found it no
+prison to me: men were so scarce at this time in France that we were
+allowed to work out of prison if we chose, and only visited once a-week
+to pass muster, and receive our allowance--so I soon found a master, or,
+more properly, he found me in prison--a cart and plough-wright residing
+a short distance from town.
+
+Citizen Vauquin, in secret, was a staunch Royalist; but, in his common
+conversation, a Republican. To me he was extremely kind, but our
+communications were very limited, from my want of knowledge of French;
+but I was picking it up with rapidity, and we soon contrived to
+understand each other pretty well.
+
+It was now well on in the spring, and the weather warm and agreeable. I
+was busy at my work, when Vauquin, who was a stout, hale old man, came
+to me; there was something comic in the expression of his countenance,
+joy and vexation seemed by turns to pass over it, and at times to
+struggle for mastery; he looked cautiously around lest any one might
+overhear us, then said--
+
+"Ah, France! beautiful France! these cursed Democrats have dimmed your
+glory, and ruined you! We have lost our fleet in Egypt, and we fly
+before the Germans. What can we have but defeat, while the best blood in
+France either has been shed by her sons, or languishes in obscurity.
+Could we be freed from the ruffians that tyrannize over us in any way
+but this? We have suffered much, and must suffer more, before we see the
+glories of France shine as they once shone in the courts of her kings.
+Ha! Elder, your sailors are the devils that humble France; from your
+riches the seas are covered with your ships, and the brave French,
+plundered by their rulers, have few. What could be done with sixteen
+ships when fifty were upon them?"
+
+Piqued by his national vanity, I replied--
+
+"Had Nelson had half the number, there would have been no fighting."
+
+"Why no fighting, Monsieur?" said he.
+
+"Because they would have run if they could," replied I; "or struck when
+they saw no chance--that's all I have to say on the subject. If you
+please let us change it, my friend."
+
+"By all means," said he, "let us change it. We are a ruined and undone
+people since we lost our King. The great nation are a people without a
+head; and, when a house wants the head, all goes wrong."
+
+"You and I are at one on this point," replied I. "But how comes it that
+you are as democratic as any one in the neighbourhood when politics is
+the subject of discourse? It is not so in Britain. Every man speaks his
+mind; yet we have a king and a kingly government. I was led to believe,
+before I left home, that in France alone there was liberty: for all men
+were equal--freedom and equality being the law of the land."
+
+"O Monsieur Elder!" exclaimed he, "freedom and equality are the worst
+tyranny, as I shall shew you by my sad experience. When all men make the
+law, who is to obey? Better one tyrant than one million; for, when every
+one thinks he is a law-maker, no one thinks of obeying the law farther
+than it pleases himself. Listen to me; and you shall hear the truth as I
+have experienced it, and many thousands in France as well as I:--
+
+"When first the people of France began to give attention to the writers
+and haranguers against the oppression which we, no doubt, suffered, no
+one was more enthusiastic than I was for the removal of the abuses; and
+I thought no sacrifice could be too great to have them removed. I was,
+at the time, carpenter to the great chateau which you see in the
+distance. Our old lord, who was a severe master, had died only a few
+years before, and had not the love of a single peasant in his wide
+domains; but his son was the reverse of his parent--the friend and
+benefactor of every one on his estate; yet he inherited a fund of
+animosity which it would have taken years of his kindness and humanity
+to have obliterated. In this state of matters, the troubles broke out.
+He was on the side of the people, and aided, as far as in him lay, the
+cause of improvement in the state, until the factions in Paris--who,
+ruling the silly multitude, led them to believe that they were ruled by
+them--struck at the root of all good government by insulting and
+imprisoning the King. From this time, he took no active part in the
+commotions, but remained at his chateau. I was his overseer, and managed
+his affairs. I loved him with all my soul, for he was worthy of my love.
+My ideas went still farther than his went, and I felt not displeased
+with anything that had as yet occurred; for I knew the tenacity with
+which the aristocracy clung to their privileges; but the cunning and
+designing men who, under the faint shew of obeying the people, ruled
+them at their will for mischief and disorder, ultimately, by taking the
+life of the King, took the key-stone out of the arch which sheltered the
+people, and brought the whole fabric of civil order about their ears. I
+was confounded at the blindness I had laboured under; and, from that
+hour, my whole ideas changed. But, alas! it was too late; and even those
+that had lent a willing hand trembled at the mischief they had done.
+Benefits are soon forgot; but the remembrance of injuries are indelible.
+Numbers of needy plunderers had arrived from Paris, and overspread these
+peaceful plains like evil spirits, rousing the worst feeling of our
+peasantry into action. As yet, no serious outrage had been committed in
+this quarter; but I too plainly saw that it would not long be deferred.
+I requested my dear master to fly, as many others had done; for blood
+had begun to flow like water in Paris and the provinces--not the blood
+of the guilty, but the blood of the noble and virtuous; for, alas!
+France had become the arena in the remorseless war of poverty against
+property. The whole fabric of social order had been dissolved, and men
+had returned to their original state of barbarism; like jackalls or
+wolves, only banding together when they scented plunder. To be rich or
+nobly born was a crime of the deepest dye, only to be atoned by blood.
+I, with extreme pain, saw the storm gathering, and could only deplore
+it; and what added to my anguish, was, I dared not argue against them;
+for our old and worthy magistrates had been deposed, and others, more in
+the spirit of the times, appointed. As yet, no blood had been shed in
+Perche, but numbers were immured in prison; and, had I given the least
+cause of suspicion, I would have been placed beyond the power of lending
+that aid to the distressed which I was resolved to afford them, or
+perish in the attempt. Several times I had entreated my young lord to
+fly, and avoid the storm; but my entreaties were in vain. He thought far
+too well of his fellow-men.
+
+"At length a rumour reached us that two commissioners were on their way
+to the chateau to sequestrate it for the use of the state: immediately
+there was a violent commotion amongst the people--fearful of losing
+their share of the plunder, all marched in a tumultuous manner to
+assault it. Aware of what might ensue--for blood had begun to flow--I
+got my young lord disguised as one of my workmen, and set to his
+bench--that very one at which you work--and joined the crowd as they
+approached the chateau. To prevent suspicion, no one shouted louder than
+I, 'Down with the Tyrants!'--'Down with the Aristocrats!'--'_Vive la
+Nation!_'--'_Vive la Republique!_' We entered the chateau, which was
+searched in vain for my young lord. It was now that the true spirit of
+the peasantry shewed itself in all its deformity; everything of value
+was in a short time carried off or destroyed; while every quarter
+resounded with execrations and cries for blood--the oppressions of the
+father were alone remembered. How it occurred I have yet to learn, but
+the youthful aristocrat was discovered in my shop; this was a severe
+blow to me, for I was immediately seized by the furious crowd, charged
+by them with the worst of crimes in their eyes, the concealing from them
+a victim of their rage. It was a fearful hour. I expected to have been
+torn to pieces upon the spot. My presence of mind did not forsake me: I
+begged to be heard before the fatal daggers that were brandished around
+reached my heart. I stood firm until a pause of the storm, when I
+appealed to them not for mercy, but for revenge--revenge upon my lord
+before I died. "I have been betrayed," I cried, "by some one. I appeal
+to yourselves for my former love of my country. Let me die, but let it
+be for my country, and let me be revenged upon the tyrants. Fire the
+chateau!--'_Vive la Nation_,' '_A bas les Aristocrats_,' '_Vive la
+Republique_'--and let me die by the light of the stronghold of tyranny
+enveloped in flames."
+
+"I now breathed more freely. Shouts rent the air; for like a weathercock
+is a mob--ever pointing as the last breath of wind blows. '_Vive
+Vauquin!_' resounded from every lip; the chateau was enveloped in
+flames; its owner immersed in a dungeon to await his doom, already fixed
+before the mock forms of justice were gone through. Think not the worse
+of me for the part I acted; every paper and article of plate had been
+concealed for some days before. To save, if possible, his life, no one
+was louder in denouncing my lord than myself, for his having dared to
+conceal himself in my shop. At my return, I began seriously to turn over
+in my mind what steps I was next to pursue for his safety, now rendered
+difficult, almost beyond my power to overcome. I feared not death, nor
+any danger to myself, could my object have been attained by it. There
+was not a moment to be lost; the following day was to have been the day
+of his trial and death. The commissioners had arrived from Paris, and a
+fête was resolved to be got up to welcome them. In a state of anxiety I
+can hardly describe, I bustled about and waited upon the commissioners;
+but my chief object was to ascertain the exact spot where the
+aristocrats were confined. My lord was my chiefest care, for however
+much I had, at the commencement of the revolution, wished for the
+abused power of the nobles to be reduced, I had no wish for their ruin,
+far less their murder; judge my horror when I learned that he was in the
+lower dungeon of the prison, to which there was only one entrance
+through the guard-room, which was constantly filled by the soldiers on
+guard. With a heart void of hope I returned to my home. In an agony of
+mind I threw myself upon my couch, that if possible I might exclude
+every other thought but the one that I wished to fix my whole attention
+upon: while I walked about, I felt like one distracted. At length, I was
+so fortunate as to call to mind having, when a boy, heard my father tell
+that he had assisted my grandfather in securing a door into the lower
+dungeon, that led into another even more loathsome, where the Huguenots
+were wont to be confined in the time of Louis the Fourteenth; this had a
+door which led into the outer court of the prison, the walls of which
+were in the hinder part, ruinous and neglected, as few of the present
+people in authority knew of such a dungeon; the old door having been
+long built up. A faint ray of hope shot through my mind; I started from
+my bed, and, concealing what tools I judged to be necessary, proceeded
+to the jail without being perceived--this was rendered the more easy as
+every one was engaged preparing for the fête. I remained under the
+shelter of the ruined wall until it was quite dark. A voice of mirth and
+revelry sounded in the front of that prison, whose gloomy walls and
+strong iron barred windows might, and no doubt did, enclose hearts more
+sorrowful than mine, but none more anxious. My situation, solitary as it
+was, was full of peril--I might be missed at the fête, and suspicion
+roused if I was so fortunate as to succeed; but I allowed no selfish
+thought to intrude. I was so fortunate as to find the low arched door I
+had heard my father speak of; after considerable labour it yielded to my
+efforts, and I entered the low and noisesome vault which had heard and
+re-echoed the groans of so many victims of tyranny whose only fault was
+adhering to the dictates of their consciences against an intolerant
+priesthood. So baleful was the air I breathed, that I was forced to
+retire, or I had fallen to the damp floor; again I entered, for I heard
+the voice of my lord in prayer, and felt a new sort of assurance arise
+in my mind; there was no distinguishing one object from another, so
+impenetrable was the darkness, and the faint sound appeared to come from
+no particular side of the dungeon. I commenced groping with my hands,
+from the entrance, along the walls; it was a loathsome task, for they
+were damp and ropy, and loathsome reptiles ever and anon made me
+withdraw my fingers; still I groped on. At length I succeeded; the door
+was forced to yield to my skill and efforts; all that divided me from
+him I sought was the strong planks and plaster. I struck a sharp single
+blow upon it, and paused--the voice of my master had ceased from the
+commencement of my work upon the second door. It was a period of intense
+anxiety, lest he should alarm his guards, if any of them had been in his
+dungeon. To my first signal no answer was made: he knew not that he had
+a friend so near, willing to sacrifice everything for his rescue. I
+struck a second blow, and again listened; I heard him utter a faint
+exclamation of surprise, and all was again still. The third time I
+struck, and I heard a movement on the other side: the plaster was
+struck, piercing a small hole, and we were enabled to communicate. I
+found he was alone in his dismal dungeon. It was agreed that I was to
+return in two hours with a disguise for him, after I had appeared at the
+fête; and, in the meantime, I loosened the fastening so as he could
+easily force it away should any thing happen to prevent my return; and,
+these arrangements being made, I took my departure, in the same stealthy
+manner in which I had reached him.
+
+"With my heart still anxious but more at ease, I joined the festive
+throng, and, joining in the dance for a short time, then retired, got
+all ready, returned, with a view to relieve my lord from his dungeon,
+and had the unspeakable pleasure to see him beyond its walls, dressed as
+a peasant girl. Our parting was brief but sincere, my wishes for his
+safety were equal to the extent of my love, but I have never heard of
+him since; whether he went for La Vendee, or joined the allied army, I
+never knew. As soon as I saw him safe out of the town, I returned to the
+joyous group, and was among the last to leave it. My share in the escape
+of my noble master was never even suspected; but from this time I have
+wished the fall of the tyrants that have ruled France with a rod of
+iron, and for the return of our King and nobility, until which time we
+can never hope for tranquillity. I am not displeased at what can assist
+in aiding their overthrow but I feel, as a true Frenchman, humbled at
+every defeat our brave forces sustain. I love the beautiful fields of
+France and all her sons, but I hate the demagogues who at present rule
+her destinies."
+
+Had I not been an exile against my will, I never had been more happy in
+my life than I was at this time. I, no doubt, was a prisoner of war; but
+it was only in name. I never saw my prison but once a-week, when I
+appeared at the muster to receive my jail allowance, and returned to
+citizen Vauquin's in a few hours after, or strayed where I chose within
+the proscribed distance. Our visits to the prison always gave rise to an
+afternoon of merriment and pleasure--a meeting of friends. Not one of us
+wished to escape, or desired an exchange.
+
+I was always a fortunate fellow. The four months I was here I improved
+much in my drawing, and found the instructions of poor Walden of the
+utmost service to me; and I was much benefited by a relation of
+Vauquin's, who had studied the arts at Paris. It was thus I spent my
+evenings; but I was never as yet allowed to enjoy my good fortune long.
+We were ordered to be marched to the coast at Saint Malos, where a
+cartel was to be in readiness to receive us. I bade adieu to my kind
+friend, Citizen Vauquin, not without regret, and set out for the coast.
+There was not a trace of pleasure at our release among us; we had no
+cause, at least nine-tenths of us. For, as Bill Wates had foretold, off
+Jersey we were brought too by the _Ramillies_, and crowded on board her.
+The greater part were draughted to other men-of-war, but in her I
+remained until she was paid off, at the peace.
+
+[Footnote 3: See "The Man-of-war's Man."]
+
+
+
+
+WILLIE WASTLE'S ACCOUNT OF HIS WIFE.
+
+ "Sic a wife as Willie had!
+ I wadna gie a button for her."
+ BURNS.[4]
+
+
+"It was a very cruel dune thing in my neebor, Robert Burns, to mak a
+sang aboot my wife and me," said Mr William Wastle, as he sat with a
+friend over a jug of reeking toddy, in a tavern near the Bridge-end in
+Dumfries where he had been attending the cattle market; "I didna think
+it was neebor-like," he added; "indeed it was a rank libel upon baith
+her and me; and I took it the worse, inasmuch as I always had a very
+high respect for Maister Burns. Though he said that I 'dwalt on Tweed,'
+and that I 'was a wabster,' yet everybody kenned wha the sang was aimed
+at. Neither did my wife merit the description that has been drawn o'
+her; for, though she was nae beauty, and hadna a face like a wax-doll,
+yet there were thousands o' waur looking women to be met wi' than my
+Kirsty; and to say that her mither was a 'tinkler,' was very
+unjustifiable, for her parents were as decent and respectable people, in
+their sphere o' life, as ye would hae found in a' Nithsdale. Her faither
+had a small farm which joined on with one that I took a lease o', when I
+was about one-and-twenty. Kirsty was about three years aulder; and,
+though not a bonny woman, she was, in many respects, as ye shall hear in
+the coorse o' my story, a very extraordinary one. I was in the habit o'
+seeing her every day, and as I sometimes was working in a field next to
+her, I had every opportunity o' observing her industry, and that, frae
+mornin' till nicht, she was aye eident. This gave me a far higher
+opinion o' her than if I had seen her gaun about wi' a buskit head; and
+often, at meal-times, I used to stand and speak to her owre the dyke.
+But, after we had been acquainted in this manner for some months, when
+the cheerfu' summer weather came in, and the grass by the dyke-sides was
+warm and green, and the bonny gowans blossomed among it, I louped owre
+the dyke, and we sat doun and took our dinners together. I couldna have
+believed it possible that a bit bare bannock and a drap skim milk wad
+gang doun sae deliciously, but never before had I partaken o' onything
+that was sae pleasant to the palate. One day I was quite surprised, when
+I found that my arm had slipped unconsciously round her waist, and,
+drawing her closer to my side, I seighed, and said--'O Kirsty, woman!'
+
+"She pulled away my hand from her waist, and looking me in the face,
+said--'Weel, Willie, man, what is't?'
+
+"'Kirsty,' said I, 'I like ye.'"
+
+"'I thocht as meikle,' quoth she, 'but could ye no hae said sae at
+ance.'"
+
+"'Perhaps I could, dear,' said I; 'but ye ken true love is aye blate;
+however, if ye hae nae objections, I'll gang yont, after fothering time
+the micht, and speak to yer faither and mither; and if they hae nae
+objections, and ye have yer providin' ready, wi' yer guid-will and
+consent, I shall gie up oor names, and we shall be cried on Sabbath
+first.'
+
+"'Oh,' said she, 'I haena lived for five-and-twenty years without
+expectin' to get a guidman some day; and I hae had my providin' ready
+since I was eighteen, an' a' o' my ain spinnin' and bleachin', an' the
+lint bocht wi' what I had wrocht for; so that I am behauden to naebody.
+My faither and mither have mair sense than to cast ony obstacle in the
+way o' my weelfare; and, as ye are far frae bein' disagreeable to me, if
+we are to be married, it may as weel be sune as syne, and we may be
+cried on Sunday if ye think proper.'
+
+"'O Kirsty, woman!' cried I, and I drew my arm round her waist again,
+'ye hae made me as happy as a prince! I hardly ken which end o' me is
+upmost!'
+
+"'Na, Willie,' said she, 'there is nae necessity for ony nonsensical
+raptures, ye ken perfectly weel that yer head is upmost, though I hae
+heard my faither talk about some idiots that he ca's philosophers, who
+say that the world whirls roond aboot like a cart-wheel on an axle-tree,
+and that ance in every twenty-four hours our feet are upmost, and our
+head downmost; but it will be lang or onybody get me to believe in sic
+balderdash! As to yer being happy at present, it shall be nae faut o'
+mine if ye are not aye sae; and if ye be aye as I would wish ye to be,
+ye will never be unhappy.'
+
+"Such, as near as I can recollect, is not only the history, but the
+exact words o' oor courtship. Her faither and mither gied their consent
+without the slightest hesitation. I remember her faither's words to me
+were--'Weel, William, frae a' that I hae seen o' ye, ye appear to be a
+very steady and industrious young man, and ane that is likely to do weel
+in the world. I hae seen, also, wi' great satisfaction, that ye are very
+regular in yer attendance upon the ordinances; there hasna been a
+Sabbath, since ye cam to be oor neebor, that I hae missed ye oot o' yer
+seat in the kirk. Frae a' that I hae heard concernin' ye, also, ye hae
+always been a serious, sober, and weel-behaved young man. These things
+are a great satisfaction to a faither when he finds them in the lad that
+his dochter wishes to marry. Ye hae my consent to tak Kirsty; and,
+though I say it, I believe ye will find her to mak as industrious,
+carefu', and kind a wife, as ye would hae found if ye had sought through
+a' broad Scotland for ane. I will say it, however, and before her face,
+that there are some things in which she takes it o' her mother, and in
+which she will hae her ain way. But this is her only faut. I'm sure
+ye'll ne'er hae cause to complain o' her wasting a bawbee, or o' her
+allowing even the heel o' a kebbuck to gang to unuse. It is needless for
+me to say mair; but ye hae my full and free consent to marry when ye
+like.'
+
+"Then up spoke the auld guidwife, and said--'Weel, Willie, lad, if you
+and Kirsty hae made up yer minds to mak a bargain o' it, I am as little
+disposed to oppose yer inclinations as her faither is. A guid wife, I
+sincerely believe, ye will find her prove to ye; and though her faither
+says that in some things she will be like me, and have her ain way, let
+me tell ye, lad, that is owre often necessary for a woman to do, wha is
+striving everything in her power for the guid o' her husband and the
+family, and sees him, just through foolishness, as it were, striving
+against her. Ye are strange beings you men-folk to deal wi'. But ye
+winna find her a bare bride, for she has a kist fu' o' linen o' her ain
+spinnin', that may serve ye a' yer days, and even when ye are dead,
+though ye should live for sixty years.'
+
+"I thought it rather untimeous that the auld woman should hae spoken
+aboot linen for oor grave-claes, before we were married; and I suppose
+my countenance had hinted as much, for Kirsty seemed to hae observed it,
+and she said--'My mother says what is and ought to be. It is aye best
+to be provided for whatever may come; and as Death often gies nae
+warning, I wadna like to be met wi' it, and to hae naething in the house
+to lay me out in like a Christian.'
+
+"I thought there was a vast deal o' sense and discretion in what she
+said; and though I didna like the idea o' such a premature providing o'
+winding-sheets, yet, after she spoke, I highly approved o' her prudence
+and forethought.
+
+"It was on a Monday afternoon, about three weeks after the time I have
+been speaking o', that Kirsty, wi' her faither, and mother, and another
+young lass, an acquaintance o' hers, that was to be best-maid, cam yont
+to my house for her and me to be married. I had sent for ane o' my
+brothers to be best-man, and he was with me waiting when they came. She
+was not in the least discomposed, but behaved very modestly. In a few
+minutes the minister arrived, when the ceremony immediately began, and
+within a quarter of an hour she was mine, and I was hers, for the term
+o' oor natural lives.
+
+"From the time that I took the farm, I had no kind o' dishes in the
+house, save a wooden bowie or twa, four trenchers, three piggins, and
+twa bits o' tin cans, that I had bought from a travelling tinker for
+twopence a-piece, and which Kirsty afterwards told me, were each a
+halfpenny a-piece aboon their value. I dinna think that I had tasted tea
+aboon a dozen times in the whole course o' my life; but, as it was
+coming into general use, I thought it would look respectfu' to my bride,
+before her faither and mother, if I should hae tea upon oor marriage
+day, and I could ask the minister to stop and tak a dish wi' us. I
+thought it would gie a character o' respectability to oor wedding.
+Therefore, on the Saturday afore the marriage, I went to Dumfries, and
+bought half a dozen o' bonny blue cups and saucers. I never durst tell
+Kirsty how meikle I gied for them. It was with great difficulty that I
+got them carried hame without breaking. I also bought two ounces o' the
+best tea, and a whole pound o' brown sugar.
+
+"I had a servant lassie at the time, the doohter o' a hind in the
+neighbourhood; she was necessary to me to do the work about the house,
+and to milk twa kye that I kept, to mak the cheese, and a part o' the
+day to help the workers out wi' the bondage.
+
+"'Lassie,' said I, when I got hame; 'do ye ken hoo to mak tea?'
+
+"'I'm no very sure,' said she; 'but I think I do. I ance got a cup when
+I wasna weel, frae the farmer's wife that my faither lives wi'. I'll
+try.'
+
+"'Here, then,' says I; 'tak care o' thir, and see that ye dinna break
+them, or it will mak a breaking that ye wouldna like in your quarter's
+wages.' So I gied her the cups and saucers to put awa carefully into the
+press.
+
+"'O maister,' says she; 'but noo, when I recollect, ye'll need a
+tea-kettle, and a tea-pat, and a cream-pat, and teaspoons.'
+
+"'Preserve me!' quoth I, 'the lassie is surely wrang in the head! Hoo
+mony articles o' _tea_ and _cream_ hae ye there? The parritch kettle
+will do as weel as a tea-kettle--where can be the difference? Your
+tea-pats I ken naething aboot, and as for a cream-pat, set down the
+cream-bowie; and as for spoons, ye fool, they dinna sip tea--they drink
+it--just sirple it, as it were, oot o' the saucer.'
+
+"'O sir,' said she; 'but they need a little spoon to stir it round to
+mak the sugar melt--and that is weel minded, ye'll also require a
+sugar-basin.'
+
+"'Hoots! toots! lassie,' cried I, 'do ye intend to ruin me? By yer
+account o' the matter, it would be almost as expensive to set up a tea
+equipage, as a chariot equipage. No, no; just do as the miller's wife o'
+Newmills did.'
+
+"'And what way micht that be, sir?' inquired she.
+
+"'Why,' said I, 'she took such as she had, and she never wanted! Just
+ye tak such as ye have--cogie, bowie, or tinniken, never ye mind--show
+ye your dexterity.'
+
+"'Very weel, sir,' said she; 'I'll do the best I can.'
+
+"But, just to exemplify another trait in my wife's character, I will
+tell ye the upshot o' my cups and saucers. I confess that I was in a
+state of very considerable perturbation; not only on account o' what the
+lassie had told me about the want o' a tea-kettle, tea-pat, and so
+forth, but also that, including the minister, there were seven o' us,
+while I had but six cups; and I consoled mysel by thinking that, as
+Kirsty and I were now _one_, she might drink oot o' the cup and I wad
+tak the saucer, so that a cup and saucer would serve us baith; and I was
+trustin to the ingenuity o' the lassie to find substitutes for the other
+deficiencies, when she came ben to where we were sitting, and going
+forward to Kirsty, says she--'Mistress, I have had the twa ounces o' tea
+on boiling in a chappin o' water, for the last twa hoors--do ye think it
+will be what is ca'ed _masked_ noo?'
+
+"'Tea!' said my new-made wife, wi' a look o' astonishment; 'is the
+lassie talking aboot _tea_? While I am to be in this house--and I
+suppose that is to be for my life--there shall nae poisonous foreign
+weed be used in it, nor come within the door, unless it be some drug
+that a doctor orders. Take it off the fire, and throw the broo awa. My
+certes! if young folk like us were to begin wi' sic extravagance, where
+would be the upshot? Na, na, Willie,' said she, turning round to me,
+'let us just begin precisely as we mean to end. At all events, let us
+rather begin meanly, than end beggarly. I hae seen some folk, no aboon
+oor condition in life, mak a great dash on their wedding-day; and some
+o' them even hire gigs and coaches, forsooth, to tak a jaunt awa for a
+dozen o' miles! Poor things! it was the first and last time that ony o'
+them was either in gig or coach. But there shall be nae extravagance o'
+that kind for me. My faither and mither care naething about tea, for
+they hae never been used to it, and I'm sure that our friends here care
+as little; and, asking the minister's pardon, I am perfectly sure and
+certain, that tea can be nae treat to him, for he has it every day, and
+it will be standing ready for him when he gangs hame. The supper will be
+ready by eight o'clock, and those who wish it, may tak a glass o'
+speerits in the meantime--as it isna every day that they are at my
+wedding.'
+
+"Her faither and mother looked remarkable proud and weel-pleased like at
+what she said, just as if they wished to say to me--'There's a wife for
+ye!' But I thought the minister seemed a good deal surprised, and in a
+few minutes he took up his hat, wished us much joy, and went away. For
+my part, I didna think sae much aboot my bride's lecture, as I rejoiced
+that she thereby released me from the confusion I should have
+experienced in exposing the poverty o' my tea equipage.
+
+"It was on the very morning after oor marriage, and just as I was gaun
+oot to my wark--'Willie,' says she, 'I think we should single the
+turnips in the field west o' the hoose the day. The cotters' twa bondage
+lasses, and me, will be able to manage it by the morn's nicht.'
+
+"'O, my dear,' quoth I, 'but I hae nae intention that ye should gang out
+into the fields to work, noo that ye are my wife. Let the servant-lass
+gang out, and ye can look after the meat.'
+
+"'Her! the idle taupie!' said she, 'we hae nae mair need for her than a
+cart has for a third wheel. Mony a time it has grieved me to observe her
+motions, when ye were out o' the way--and there would she and the other
+twa wenches been standing, clashing for an hour at a time, and no
+workin' a stroke. I often had it in my mind to tell ye, but only I
+thought ye might think it forward in me, as I perceived ye had a
+kindness for me. But I can baith do all that is to do in-doors, and
+work out-by also, and at the end o' the quarter she shall leave.'
+
+"'Wi' a' my heart,' says I, 'if ye wish it;' for it struck me she micht
+be a wee thocht jealous o' the lassie; 'but there is no the sma'est
+necessity for you working out in the fields; for though she leaves, we
+can get a callant at threepence a-day, that would just do as muckle
+out-work as she does, and ye would hae naething to attend to but the
+affairs o' the hoose.'
+
+"'O William!' replied she, 'I'm surprised to hear ye speak. Ye talk o'
+threepence a-day just as if it were naething. Hoo mony starving families
+are there, that threepence a-day would mak happy? It is my maxim never
+to spend a penny unless it be laid out to the greatest possible
+advantage. Ye should always keep that in view, every time ye put yer
+hand in your pocket. He that saves a penny has as mony thanks, in the
+lang run, as he that gies it awa. Threepence a-day, not including the
+Sabbath, is eighteenpence a-week; noo, you that are a scholar, only
+think how much that comes to in a twelvemonth. There are fifty-twa weeks
+in the year--that is fifty-twa shillings; and fifty-twa sixpences
+is--how much?'
+
+"'Twenty-six shillings, my dear,' said I, for I was quite amused at her
+calculation--the thing had never struck me before.
+
+"'Weel,' added she, 'fifty-two shillings and twenty-six shillings, put
+that together, and see how much it comes to.'
+
+"'Oh,' says I, after half a minute's calculation, 'it will just be three
+pounds, eighteen shillings, to a farthing.'
+
+"'Noo,' cried she, 'only think o' that!--three pounds eighteen shillings
+a-year; and ye would throw it away, just as if it were three puffs o'
+breath! Now, William, just listen to me and tak tent--that is within twa
+shillings o' four pounds. It would far mair than cleed you and me, out
+and out, frae head to foot, from year's end to year's end. But at
+present the wench's meat and wages come to three times that, and
+therefore I am resolved, William, that while I am able to work, we shall
+neither throw away the one nor the other. It is best that we should
+understand each other in time: therefore, I just tell ye plainly, as I
+said yesterday, that as I wish to end, I mean to begin. This very day,
+this very morning and hour, I go out wi' the bondage lassies to single
+the turnips; and, at the end o' the quarter, the lazy taupie
+butt-a-house maun walk aboot her business.'
+
+"'Weel, Kirsty, my darling,' says I, 'your way be it. Only I maun again
+say, that I had no wish or inclination whatever to see you toiling and
+thinning turnips beneath a burning sun, or maybe taking them up and
+shawing them, when the cauld drift was cutting owre the face keener than
+a razor.'
+
+"'Weel, William,' quoth she, 'it is needless saying any more words about
+it--it is my fixed and determined resolution.'
+
+"'Then, hinny,' says I, 'if ye be absolutely resolved upon that, it is
+o' no manner o' use to say ony mair upon the subject, of course--your
+way be it.'
+
+"So the servant lassie was discharged accordingly, and Kirsty did
+everything hersel. Wet day and dry day, whatever kind o' wark was to be
+done, there was she in the middle o' it, by her example spurring on the
+bondagers. Even when we began to hae a family, I hae seen her working in
+the fields wi' an infant on her back; and I am certain that for a dozen
+o' harvests, while she was aye at the head o' the shearers, there was
+aye our bairn that was youngest at the time, lying rowed up in a blanket
+at the foot o' the rig, and playing wi' the stubble to amuse itsel.
+
+"There were many that said that I was entirely under her thumb, and that
+she had the maister-skep owre me. But that was a grand mistake, for she
+by no means exercised onything like maistership owre me; though I am
+free to confess, that I at all times paid a great degree o' deference to
+her opinions, and that she had a very particular and powerfu' way o'
+enforcing them. Yet, although I was in no way cowed by her, there wasna
+a bairn that we had, from the auldest to the youngest, that durst play
+_cheep_ before her. She certainly had her family under great subjection,
+and their bringing up did her great credit. They were allowed time to
+play like ither bairns--but from the time that they were able to make
+use o' their hands, ye would hardly hae found it possible to come in
+upon us, and seen ane o' them idle. All were busy wi' something; and no
+ane o' them durst hae stepped owre a prin lying on the floor, without
+stooping doun to tak it up, or passed onything that was out o' its place
+without putting it right. For I will say for her again, that, if my
+Kirsty wasna a bonny wife, she was not only a thrifty but a tidy ane,
+and keepit every ane and every thing tidy around her.
+
+"She was a strange woman for abhorring everything that was new-fangled.
+She was a most devout believer in, and worshipper o' the wisdom o' oor
+ancestors. She perfectly hated everything like change; and as to
+onything that implied speculation, ye micht as weel hae spoken o'
+profanation in her presence. She said she liked auld friends, auld
+customs, auld fashions; and was the sworn enemy o' a' the innovations on
+the practices and habits that had been handed doun frae generation to
+generation. I dinna ken if ever she heard the names Whig or Tory in her
+life; but if Tory mean an enemy o' change, then my Kirsty certainly was
+a Tory o' the very purest water.
+
+"I dinna suppose that she believed there was such a word as
+_improvement_ in the whole Dictionary. She would hae allooed everything
+to stand steadfast as Lot's wife, for ever and for ever. But, however,
+just to gie ye a specimen or twa o' her remarkable disposition:--I think
+it was about sixteen years after we were married, that I took a tack o'
+an adjoining farm, which was much larger than the ane we occupied. I was
+conscious it would require every penny we had scraped thegither, and
+that we had saved, to stock it. My wife was by no means favourable to my
+taking it. She said we kenned what we had done, but we didna ken what we
+might do; and it was better to go on as we were doing, than to risk oor
+a'. I acknowledge that there was a vast deal o' truth in what she said;
+but, however, I saw that the farm was an excellent bargain, and I was
+resolved to tak it, say what she might; and therefore, though she was
+said to domineer owre me, yet, just to prove to every person round about
+that I was not under a wife's government, I did tak it. I had not had it
+twa years, when I began to find that thrashing wi' the flail would never
+answer. Often, when the markets were on the rise, and when I could hae
+turned owre many pounds into my ain pocket, I found it was a'thegither
+impossible for me to get my corn thrashed in time to catch the markets
+while they were high; and I am certain that, in the second year that I
+had the new farm, I lost at least a hundred pounds frae that cause
+alone--that is, I didna get a hundred pounds that I micht hae got, and
+that was much the same as losing it oot o' my pocket. Thrashing machines
+at that period were just beginning to come into vogue, but there was a
+terrible outcry against them; and mony a ane said that they were an
+invention o' the Prince o' Darkness; for my part I wish he would
+never do mair ill upon the earth, than invent sic things as
+thrashing-machines. Hooever, I saw plain and clearly the advantage that
+the machine had owre the flail, and I was determined to hae ane. But
+never did I see a woman in such a steer as the mention o' the thing put
+Kirsty in! She went perfectly wild aboot it.
+
+"'What, William!' she cried, 'what do ye talk aboot?' Losh me, man, have
+ye nae mair sense?--have ye nae discretion whatever? Will ye really rush
+upon ruin at a horse-race? Ye talk aboot getting a machine! How, I ask
+ye, how do ye expect that ever ye could prosper for a single day after,
+if ye were to throw oor twa decent barn-men oot o' employment, and their
+families oot o' bread? I just ask ye that question, William. Does na the
+proverb say--'Live and let live;' and hoo are men to live, if, by an
+invention o' the Enemy o' mankind, ye tak work oot o' their hands, and
+bread oot o' their mouths?"
+
+"'Dear me, Kirsty!' said I, 'hoo is it possible that a woman o' your
+excellent sense can talk such nonsense? Ye see very weel that, if I had
+had a machine, I micht hae made a hundred pounds mair than I did by last
+year's crops--that, certainly, would hae been a good turn to us--and,
+tak my word for it, it is neither in the power nor in the nature o' the
+Evil One to do a guid turn to onybody.'
+
+"'Willie,' quoth she, 'ye talk like a silly man--like a very silly man,
+indeed. If the Enemy o' mankind hadna it in his power to do for us what
+we tak to be for oor guid, hoo in the warld do ye think he could tempt
+us to our hurt? I say, that thrashing-machines are an invention o' his,
+and that they are ane o' the instruments he is bringing up for the ruin
+o' this country. It is him, and him alone, that is putting it into your
+head to buy ane o' his infernal devices, in order that he may not only
+ruin you, baith soul and body, by filling ye wi' a desire o' riches, an'
+making ye the oppressor and the robber o' the poor, but that, through
+your oppression and robbery, he may ruin them also, and bring them to
+shame or the gallows!'
+
+"'Forgie me, Kirsty,' said I, 'what in a' the world do ye mean? Hoo is
+it possible that ye can talk aboot me as likely to be either an
+oppressor or a robber o' the poor? I'll declare there never was a beggar
+passed either me or my door, that ever I saw, but I gied him something.
+I'm sure, guidwife, ye baith ken better o' me, and think better o' me
+than to talk sae.'
+
+"'Yes, William,' said she, 'I did think better o' ye; but I noo see
+distinctly that the Enemy is leading ye blindfolded to your ruin. First,
+through the pride o' your heart, he tempted ye to tak this big farm,
+that, as ye thocht, ye might hasten to be rich; and now he is seducing
+ye to buy ane o' his diabolical machines for the same end, and in order
+that ye may not only deprive honest men and their families o' bread,
+but, belike, rather than starve, tempt them to steal! And what ca' ye
+that but oppressing and robbing the poor? Hooever, buy a machine!--buy
+ane, and ye'll see what will be the upshot! If ye dinna repent it, say
+I'm no your wife.'
+
+"I confess her words were onything but agreeable to me, and they rather
+set me a hesitating hoo to act. Hooever my mind was bent upon buying the
+machine. I had said to several o' my neebors that I intended to hae ane
+put up; and I was convinced that, if I drew back o' my word, it would be
+said that my wife wouldna let me get it, and I would be made a general
+laughing-stock--and that was a thing that I held in greater dread than
+even my wife's lectures, severe as they sometimes were; therefore,
+reason or nane, I got a machine put up. It caused a very general outcry
+amongst a' the 'datal' men and their wives for miles round. At ae time I
+even thocht that they would mob me and pull it to pieces. But all their
+clamour was a mere snaw-flake fa'ing in the sea, compared wi' the
+perpetual dirdum that Kirsty rang in my ears about it. She actually
+threatened that judgments would follow, and I didna ken a' what. But, on
+the morning o' the day that I yoked the horses into it, and began to
+thrash wi' it for the first time I declare to you that she took the six
+bairns wi' her, and absolutely went to her faither's, vowing to work for
+them until the blood sprang from her finger-ends, rather then live wi' a
+man that would be guilty o' such madness and iniquity.
+
+"But having heard before dinner-time that I had had to employ a woman at
+sixpence a-day to feed into the machine she came back as fast as her
+feet could carry her, wi' a' the bairns behint her, and ordering the
+stranger away, began to feed the machine hersel', and the bairns carried
+her the sheaves.
+
+"I saw that out o' a spirit o' pure wickedness, she was distressing
+hersel' far beyond what there was the sma'est occasion for. It was as
+clear as day, that indignation was working in her heart, like barm
+fermenting in a bottle, and just about half an hour before we were to
+leave off thrashing for the nicht, she was seized with a very alarming
+pain in the breast. I saw and said it was a hysterical affection, and
+was altogether the consequence o' the passion that she had given way to
+on account o' the unlucky machine. She, however, denied that there were
+such diseases in existence as either hysterical or nervous affections.
+They were sham disorders, she said, that cam into the country wi' tea
+and spirit-drinking; and she assuredly was free from indulging in either
+the ane or the other. But she grew worse and worse, and was at last
+obliged to sit down upon some straw on the barn-floor. I ventured
+forward to her, and said--'Kirsty, woman, ye had better gang awa into
+the house. Ye will do yersel' mair ill by sittin there, for there is a
+current o' air through the loft, which, after you being warm with
+working, may gie ye your death o' cauld. Rise up, dear, and gang awa
+into the house, and try if a glass o' usquebae will do ye ony guid.'
+
+"Maister Burns, the poet, has said--
+
+ 'She has an ee, she has but _ane_;'
+
+but, certes, had he seen the look that she gied me as I then spoke to
+her, he would hae been satisfied that she had _twa_! I saw it was o' nae
+manner o' use for me either to offer advice or to express sympathy. The
+wife o' an auld man that was called John Neilson, and who for several
+years had been our barn-man, came into the machine-loft at the time, and
+wi' a great deal o' concern she asked my wife what was like the matter
+wi' her. Now this auld Peggy Neilson had the reputation, for miles
+round, o' being an extraordinary _skilly_ woman. There wasna a bairn in
+the parish took a sair throat, or got a burnt foot, or a cut finger, or
+took a _dwam_ for a day or twa, but its mother said--'I maun hae Peggy
+Neilson spoken to aboot that bairn, before it be owre late.' Kirsty,
+therefore, told her hoo she was affected, when the other, wi' the
+confidence o' a doctor o' medicine brought up at the first college in
+the kingdom, said--'Then, ma'am, if that be the way ye feel, there is
+naething in the warld sae guid for ye as a blast o' the pipe. I aye
+carry a tinder-box and flint and steel wi' me, and ye are welcome to a
+whuff o' my cutty.'
+
+"Now, Kirsty was a bitter enemy to baith smoking and snuffing in
+general; but she had great faith in the skill o' Peggy Neilson, and wad
+far rather hae done whatever she advised than followed the prescription
+o' the best doctor in a' the land. She took the auld woman's pipe,
+therefore, and began to blaw through a spirit o' pain and perverseness
+at the same moment. As I anticipated, it soon made her dizzy in the
+head, and she had to be led to the house. Hooever, in a short time, the
+pain she had been suffering was greatly abated, though whether the
+smoking contributed towards removing it or not, I dinna pretend to say.
+Just as she had been taen to the house, we were dune wi' thrashing for
+the day, and I was very highly gratified wi' the day's wark.
+
+"But I was very tired, and as soon as I had had my sowens I went to bed.
+I several times thought, and remarked it, that there was a sort o' burnt
+smell about.
+
+"'Ay,' said Kirsty, who by this time was a great deal better; 'they who
+will use the engines o' forbidden agents maun expect to smell them, as
+in the end they will feel them.'
+
+"Being conscious it was o' nae use to reason wi' her, for she in general
+had the better o' me in an argument, I tried to compose mysel' to
+sleep. But it was in vain to think o' closing my een, for the smell o'
+burning grew stronger and stronger, and I was rising again,
+saying--'There is something burning aboot somewhere, and I canna rest
+until I hae seen what it is.'
+
+"'Nor let other folk rest either,' said Kirsty.
+
+"Just at that moment, oor eldest dochter, who was as perfect a picture
+o' beauty as ever man looked upon wi' eyes o' admiration, and who being
+alarmed by the smell, as well as me, had gane oot to examine from what
+it proceeded came running oot o' breath, crying--'Faither! faither!-the
+barn and everything is on fire!'
+
+"'O goodness!' cried I, as I threw on part o' my claes in the twinkling
+o' an ee; 'what wretch can hae been sae wicked as to do it!'
+
+"'It's a judgment upon ye,' said Kirsty, 'for having such a thing about
+the place, after a' the admonitions ye had against it. I said ye would
+see what would be the upshot, and it hasna been lang o' coming.'
+
+"'O ye tormenter o' my life!' cried I, as I ran oot o' the house; 'it's
+your handy-work!'
+
+"'Mine!' exclaimed she. 'O ye heartless man that ye are, how dare ye
+presume either to say or think sic a thing!' and she followed me out.
+
+"The whole stackyard was black wi' smoke--it was hardly possible to
+breathe--and a great sheet o' fire, like the mouth o' a fiery dragon,
+was rushing and roaring out at the barn-door. I didna ken what to do; I
+was ready to rush head foremost into the middle o' the flames, as if
+that I could hae crushed them out wi' the weight o' my body; and I am
+persuaded that I would hae darted right into the machine loft, where the
+flames were bursting through the very tiles, as frae the mouth o' a
+volcano, had not my wife, and our eldest daughter Janet, flewn after me
+and held me in their arms, the one crying--'Be calm, William--do
+naething rashly--let us see to save what can be saved;' and the other
+saying--'Faither! faither! dinna risk your life.'
+
+"Now, there was a hard frost owre the entire face o' the ground, and
+there wasna a drop o' water to be got within a quarter o' a mile; and
+the whole o' my year's crop, with, the exception o' what had that day
+been thrashed, was in the stackyard. I shouted at the pitch of my voice
+for assistance, but the devouring flames soon roared louder than I did.
+Kirsty, wi' her usual presence o' mind, began to clear away the straw
+from around the barn, to prevent the fire from spreading, and she called
+upon the bairns and me to follow her example. She also ordered a laddie
+to set the horses out o' the stables, and the nowt oot o' the
+'courtine,' and drive them into a field, where they would be oot o'
+danger. A' our neighbours round aboot, in a short time arrived to our
+assistance; but a' our combined efforts were unavailing. The wood wark
+o' the machine was already on fire--the barn roof fell in, and up flew
+such a volley o' smoke and firmament o' fire as man had never witnessed.
+The sparks ascended in millions upon millions; and as they poured down
+again like a shower o' fire, every stack that I had broke into a blaze,
+and the whole produce o' my farm, corn, straw, and hay became as a
+burning fiery furnace. It became impossible for ony living thing to
+remain in the stackyard. From end to end, and round and round, it was
+one fierce and awful flame. The heat was scorching, and the dense smoke
+was baith blinding and suffocating. Every person was obliged to flee
+from it. The very cattle in the field ran about in confusion, and moaned
+wi' terror, and the horses neighed wi' fright, and pranced to and fro. I
+stood at a distance, as motionless as a dead man, gazing wi' horror upon
+the terrific scene o' desolation, beholding the destruction o' my
+property--the burning up, as I may say, o' a' my prospects. The teeth in
+my head chattered thegither, and every joint in my body seemed oot o'
+its socket; and the raging o' destruction in the stackyard was naething
+to the raging o' misery in my breast; and especially because I coudna
+banish frae my brain the awfu' thought that the hand o' the wife o' my
+bosom had lighted the conflagration. While I was standing in this state
+o' speechless agony, and some around about me were pitying me, while
+others in whispers said--'He had nae business to get a thrashing
+machine, and the thing woudna hae happened,' Kirsty came forward to me,
+and takin' me by the hand, said--'William, dinna be silly--appear like a
+man before folk. Our loss is nae doubt great, but in time we may get
+ower it; and be thankfu' that it is nae waur than it is like to be--for
+your wife and bairns are spared to ye, and we have escaped unskaithed.'
+
+"'Awa, ye descendant o' Judas Iscariot!' cried I; 'dinna speak to me!'
+
+"'William,' said she, calmly, 'what infatuation possesses ye,
+man?--dinna mak a fool o' yoursel'.'
+
+"'Awa wi' ye!' cried I, perfectly shaking wi' rage.
+
+"'Dear me!' I heard a neighbour remark to another; 'how gruffly he
+speaks to Kirsty! I aye thought that she had the upperhand o' him, but
+it doesna appear by his manner o' speaking to her.'
+
+"Distracted, wretched, and angry as I was, I experienced a sort o'
+secret pleasure at hearing the observation. I had shewn them that I
+wasna a slave tied to my wife's apron-strings, as they supposed me to
+be. Kirsty left me wi' a look that had baith scorn and pity in it. But
+oor auldest lassie, my bonny fair-haired Janet--to look upon whose face
+I always delighted beyond everything on earth--came running forward to
+me; and throwing her arms about my neck, sobbed wi' her face upon my
+breast, and softly whispered--'Dinna stand that way, faither, a' body is
+looking at ye; and dinna speak harshly to my poor mother--she is
+distressed enough without you being angry wi' her.' I bent my head upon
+my bairn's shouther, and the tears ran doun my cheeks.
+
+"By this time, everything was oot o' the house; and the fire was
+prevented from reaching it, chiefly through the daring exertions o' a
+hafflins laddie, whose name was James Patrick, who was the son o' a
+neebor farmer, and who, though no aboon seventeen years o' age, I
+observed was very fond o' oor bonny Janet; for I had often observed the
+young creatures wandering in the loaning thegither; and when ye
+mentioned the name o' the ane before the other, the blood rose to their
+face.
+
+"Next morning, the stackyard, barn, byres, and stables, presented a
+fearful picture o' devastation. There was naething to be seen but the
+still smoking heaps o' burnt straw and roofless buildings, wi' wreck and
+ruin to the richt hand and to the left. Some thought that the calamity
+would knock me aff my feet, and cause me to become a broken man--and I
+thought myself that that would be its effect. But Kirsty was determined
+that we should never sink while we had a finger to wag to keep us aboon
+the water. Cheap as she had always maintained the house, she now keepit
+it at almost no expense whatever. For more than two years, nothing was
+allowed to come into it but what the farm produced, and what we had
+within ourselves, neither in meat nor in claething.
+
+"But though I witnessed all her exertions, nothing could satisfy my mind
+that she was not the cause o' the destruction o' the machine, and
+through it o' all that was in and about the stackyard. The idea haunted
+me perpetually, and rendered me miserable, and I could not look upon my
+wife without saving to mysel--'Is it possible that she could hae been
+guilty o' such folly and great wickedness.' I was the more confirmed in
+my suspicion, because she never again mentioned the subject o' the
+machine in my hearing, neither would she allow it to be spoken aboot by
+ony ane else.
+
+"What gratified me maist, during the years that we had to undergo
+privation, was the cheerfulness wi' which all the bairns submitted to
+it; and I couldna deny that it was solely to her excellent manner o'
+bringing them up. Our Janet, who was approaching what may be called
+womanhood, was now talked o' through the hale country-side for her
+beauty and sweet temper; and it pleased me to observe, that, during our
+misfortune, the attentions o' James Patrick (through whose skilful
+exertions oor house was saved frae the conflagration) increased. It was
+admitted, on all hands, that a more winsome couple were never seen in
+Nithsdale.
+
+"Oor auldest son, David, who was only fifteen months younger than his
+sister, had also grown to be o' great assistance to me. Before he was
+seventeen he was capable o' man's work, which enabled me to do with a
+hind less than I had formerly employed. My landlord, also, was very
+considerate; and, the first year after the burning, he gave me back the
+half o' the rent, which I, with great difficulty, had been able to
+scrape thegether. But when I went hame, and, in the gladness o' my
+heart, began to count down the money upon the table before Kirsty and
+the bairns, and to tell them how good the laird had been--'Tak it up,
+William!' cried she, 'tak it up, and gang back wi' it--he would consider
+it an obligation a' the days o' our lives. I will be beholden to neither
+laird nor lord! nor shall ony ane belonging to me--sae, tak back the
+money, for it isna ours!'
+
+"'Bless me!' thought I, 'but this is something very remarkable. This is
+certainly another proof that she really is at the bottom o' the
+fire-raising. It is the consciousness o' her guilt that makes her
+shudder at and refuse the kind kindness o' the laird.'
+
+"'It is braw talking, Kirsty,' said I, 'but I see nae necessity for
+persons that hae been visited wi' a misfortune such as we met wi', and
+wha hae suffered sae much on account o' it, to let their pride do them
+an injury or exceed their discretion. Consider that we hae a rising
+family to provide for.'
+
+"'Consider what ye like,' quoth she, 'but, if ye accept the siller,
+consider what will be the upshot. Ye would hae to be hat in hand to him
+at all times and on all occasions. Yer very bairns would be, as it were,
+his bought slaves. No, William, tak back the money--I order ye!'
+
+"'Ye _order_ me!' cried I, 'there's a guid ane!--and where got ye
+authority to order me. If ye will hae the siller taen back, tak it back
+yersel.'
+
+"Without saying another word, she absolutely whipped it off the table,
+every plack and bawbee, into her apron; and, throwing on her rockelay
+and hood, set aff to the laird's wi' it, where, as I was afterwards
+given to understand, she threw it down upon his table wi' as little
+ceremony as she had sweept it aft' mine.
+
+"Ye may weel imagine that baith my astonishment and vexation were very
+considerable. I had seen a good deal o' Kirsty, but the act o' taking
+back the siller crowned a'!
+
+"'Losh!' said I, in the pure bitterness o' my spirit, 'that caps
+a'!--that is even worse than destroying the machine, wi' the stacks and
+stabling into the bargain!'
+
+"'What do ye mean about destroying the machine, faither?' inquired Janet
+and David, almost at the same instant--'who do ye say destroyed it?'
+
+"'Naebody,' said I, angrily, 'naebody!'--for I found I had said what I
+ought not to hae said.
+
+"'Really, faither,' said Janet, 'whatever it may be that ye think and
+hint at, I am certain that ye do my mother a great injustice if ye
+harbour a single thought to her prejudice. It may appear rather
+proud-spirited her takin back the siller, though I hae na doubt, in the
+lang run, but we'll a' approve o' it.'
+
+"'That is exactly what I think, too,' said David.
+
+"'Oh, nae dout!' said I, 'nae dout o' that!--for she has ye sae learned,
+that everything she does, or that ony o' ye does, is always right; and
+whatever I do must be wrang!' and I went oot o' the house in a pet,
+driving the door behind me, and thinking about the machine and the loss
+o' the siller.
+
+"Hooever, I am happy to say, that although Kirsty did tak back the money
+to the laird and leave it wi' him, yet, as I have already hinted to ye,
+through her frugal management, within a few years we got the better o'
+the burning. But there is a saying, that some folk are no sooner weel
+than they're ill again--and I'm sure I may say that at that time. I no
+sooner got the better o' the effects o' ae calamity, until another
+overtook me. Ye hae heard what a terrible dirdum the erecting o'
+toll-bars caused throughout the country, and upon the Borders in
+particular. Kirsty was one o' those who cried oot most bitterly against
+them. She threatened, that if it were attempted to place ane within ten
+miles o' oor farm, she would tear it to pieces with her ain hands.
+
+"'Here's a bonny time o' day, indeed!' said she, 'that a body canna gang
+for a cart-load o' coals or peats, or tak their corn, or whatever it may
+be, to the market, but they must pay whatever a set o' Justices o' the
+Peace please to charge them for the liberty o' driving along the road.
+Na, na! the roads did for our faithers before us, and they will do for
+us. They went alang them free and without payment, and so will we; for I
+defy any man to claim, what has been a public road for ages, as his
+property. Only submit to such an imposition, and see what will be the
+upshot. But, rather than they shall mak sic things in this
+neighbourhood, I will raise the whole countryside.'
+
+"Unfortunately in this, as in everything else, she verified her words. A
+toll-bar was erected within half-a-mile o' oor door Kirsty was clean
+mad about it. She threatened not only to break the yett to pieces, but
+to hang the toll-keeper owre the yett-post if he offered resistance. I
+thought o' my machine, and said little; and the more especially because
+every ane, baith auld and young, and through the whole country, so far
+as I could hear, were o' the same sentiments as Kirsty. There never was
+onything proposed in this kingdom that was mair unpopular. And, I am
+free to confess, that, with regard to the injustice o' toll-bars, I was
+precisely o' the same way o' thinkin' as my wife--only I by no means
+wished to carry things to the extremes that she wished to bring them to.
+
+"I ought to tell ye, that our laird was more than suspected o' being the
+principal cause o' us having a toll-bar placed so near us, so that we
+could neither go to lime, coals, nor market, without gaun through it. I
+was, therefore, almost glad that my wife had taken back the siller to
+him, lest--as I was against raising a disturbance about the matter--folk
+should say that my hands and tongue were tied wi' the siller which he
+had given me back; for, if I didna wish to be considered the slave o' my
+wife, as little did I desire to be thought the tool o' my landlord. But,
+ae day, I had been in at Dumfries in the month o' July, selling my wool;
+I had met wi' an excellent market, and a wool-buyer from Leeds and I got
+very hearty thegether. He had bought from me before; and, on that day,
+he bought all that I had. I knew him to be an excellent man, though a
+keen Yorkshireman--and, ye ken, that the Yorkshire folk and we Scotchmen
+are a gay tight match for ane anither--though I believe, after a', they
+rather beat us at keeping the grip o' the siller; but as I intended to
+say, I treated him, and he treated me, and a very agreeable day we had.
+I recollect when he was pressing me to hae the other gill, I sang him a
+bit hamely sang o' my ain composing. Ye shall hear it.
+
+ Nay, dinna press, I winna stay,
+ For drink shall ne'er abuse me;
+ It's time to rise and gang away--
+ Sae neibors ye'll excuse me.
+
+ It's true I like a social gill,
+ A friendly crack wi' cronies;
+ But I like my wifie better still,
+ Our Jennies an' our Johnnies.
+
+ There's something by my ain fireside--
+ A saft, a haly sweetness;
+ I see, wi' mair than kingly pride,
+ My hearth a heaven o' neatness
+
+ Though whisky may gie care the fling,
+ It's triumph's unco noisy;
+ A jiffy it may pleasure bring,
+ But comfort it destroys aye.
+
+ But I can view my ain fireside
+ Wi' a' a faither's rapture;--
+ Wee Jenny's hand in mine will slide,
+ While Davy reads his chapter.
+
+ I like your company and yer crack,
+ But there's ane I loo dearer,
+ Ane wha will sit till I come back,
+ Wi' ne'er a ane to cheer her.
+
+ A waff o' joy comes owre her face
+ The moment that she hears me;
+ The supper--a' thing's in its place,
+ An' wi' her smiles she cheers me.
+
+However, I declare to you, it was very near ten o'clock before I left
+the house we are sitting in at present, and put my foot in the stirrup.
+But, as my friend Robin says--
+
+ 'Weel mounted on my grey mare Meg,'
+
+I feared for naething; and, though I had sixteen lang Scots miles to
+ride, I thought naething aboot it; for, as he says again--
+
+ 'Kings may be great, but I was glorious,
+ Owre a' the ills o' life victorious!'
+
+But, just as I had reached within about half a mile o' the toll-bar
+that had been erected near my farm, I saw a sort o' light rising frae
+the ground, and reflected on the sky. My heart sank within me in an
+instant. I remembered the last time I had seen such a light. I thought
+o' my burning stackyard, o' my ruined machine, and o' Kirsty! My first
+impulse was to gallop forward, but a thousand thoughts, a thousand fears
+cam owre me in an instant; and I thought that evil tidings come quick
+enough o' their ain accord, without galloping to meet them. As I
+approached the toll-bar, the flame and the reflection grew brighter and
+brighter; and I heard the sound o' human voices, in loud and discordant
+clamour. My forebodings told me, to use Kirsty's words, what would be
+the upshot. I hadna reached within a hundred yards o' the bar, when,
+aboon a' the shouting and the uproar, I heard her voice, the voice o' my
+ain wife, crying--'Mak him promise that it shall ne'er be put up
+again--mak him swear to it--or let his yett gang the gaet o' the
+toll-yett!'
+
+"In a moment all that I had dreaded I found to be true. At the sound o'
+her voice, hounding on the enraged multitude, (though I didna altogether
+disapprove o' what they were doing,) I plunged my spurs into my horse,
+and galloped into the middle o' the outrageous crowd, crying--'Kirsty! I
+say, Kirsty! awa hame wi' ye! What right or what authority had ye to be
+there?'
+
+"'Hear him! hear him!' cried the crowd, 'Willie has turned a toll-bar
+man, and a laird man, because the Laird once offered him the half o' his
+rent back again! Never mind him, Kirsty!--we'll stand yer friends!'
+
+"'I thank ye, neighbours,' said she, 'but I require nae body to stand as
+friends between my guidman and me. I ken it is my duty to obey him, that
+is, when he is himsel', and comes hame at a reasonable time o' nicht;
+but not when he is in a way that he doesna ken what he's saying, as he
+is the nicht.'
+
+"'Weel done, Mistress Wastle!' cried a dozen o' them; 'we see ye hae the
+whip-hand o' him yet!'
+
+"'The mischief tak ye!' cried I, 'for a wheen ill-mannered scoundrels;
+but I'll let every mother's son and dochter among ye ken whase hand the
+whip is in!'
+
+"And, wi' that, I began to lay about me on every side; but, before I had
+brought the whip half-a-dozen o' times round my head, I found that the
+horse was out from under me; and there was I wi' my back upon the
+ground, while, on the one side, was a heavy foot upon my breast, and, on
+the other, Kirsty threatening ony ane that would injure a hair o' her
+husband's head; and my son David and James Patrick rushing forward,
+seized the man by the throat that had his foot upon my breast, and, in
+an instant, they had him lying where I had lain; for they were stout,
+powerfu' lads.
+
+"But when I got upon my feet, and began to recover from the surprise
+that I had met wi', there did I see the laird himsel, standing trembling
+like an ash leaf in the middle o' the unruly mob--and, as ringleader o'
+the whole, my wife Kirsty shaking her hand in his face, and endeavouring
+to extort from him a promise, that there never should be another
+toll-bar erected upon his grounds, while he was laird!
+
+"'Kirsty!' I exclaimed, 'what are ye after? Are ye mad?'
+
+"'No, William!' cried she, 'I am not mad, but I am standing out for our
+rights against injustice; and sorry am I to perceive that, at a time
+when everybody is crying out and raising their hand against the
+oppression that is attempted to be practised upon them, my guidman
+should be the only coward in the countryside.'
+
+"'William Wastle!' said the terrified laird, whom some o' them were
+handling very roughly, (and principally, I must confess, at the
+instigation o' Kirsty,) 'I am glad to see that I have one tenant upon my
+estate who is a true man; and I ask your protection.'
+
+"'Such protection as I can afford, sir,' said I, 'ye shall have; but,
+after the rough handling winch I have experienced this very moment, I
+dout it is not much that is in my power to afford ye.'
+
+"'Get yer faither awa to his bed, bairns!' cried my wife, as I was
+driving my way through the crowd to the assistance o' the laird; and
+I'll declare, if my son David, and James Patrick, didna actually come
+behind me, and, lifting me aff my feet, carried me shouther-high a' the
+way to my bedroom; and, in spite o' my threats, expostulations, and
+commands, locked me into it.
+
+"Weel, thought I, as I threw myself down upon the bed, without taking
+aff my claes, (partly because I found my head wanted ballast to tak them
+aff,) I said unto mysel--'This comes o' having a wise and headstrong
+wife, and bairns o' her way o' bringing up. But if ever I marry again
+and hae a family, I shall ken better how to act.'
+
+"Notwithstanding all that I had undergone and witnessed, in the space o'
+ten minutes, I fell fast asleep; and the first thing that I awoke to
+recollect--that is, to be conscious o'--was my daughter Janet rushing to
+my bedside, and crying--'Faither! faither! my mother is a prisoner!--my
+poor dear mother, and James Patrick also!--and I heard the laird saying
+that they would baith be transported, as the very least that could
+happen them for last night's work, which I understand will be punished
+more severely than even highway robbery!'
+
+"I awoke like a man born to a consciousness o' horror, and o' naething
+but horror. All that I had seen and heard and encountered on the night
+before, was just as a dream to me, but a dismal dream I trow.
+
+"'Where is yer mother?' I gasped, 'or what is it that ye are saying,
+hinny? and--where is James Patrick?'
+
+"'Oh!' cried my darling daughter, 'before this time they are baith in
+Dumfries jail, for pu'ing down and burning the toll-yetts, and
+threatening the life o' the laird. But everybody says it will gang
+particularly hard against my mother and poor James; for, though every
+one was to blame, they were what they ca' ringleaders.'
+
+"I soon recollected enough o' the previous night's proceedings to
+comprehend what my daughter said. I hurried on my claes, and awa I flew
+to Dumfries. But I ought to tell ye, that the laird's servants had
+ridden in every direction for assistance; and having got three or four
+constables, and about a dozen o' the regular military, all armed wi'
+swords and pistols, they made poor Kirsty and James Patrick, wi' about a
+dozen others, prisoners, and conveyed them to Dumfries jail.
+
+"When I was shewn into the prison, Kirsty and James, and the whole o'
+them, were together. 'O Kirsty, woman!' said I, in great distress,
+'could ye no hae keepit at hame while my back was turned! Why hae ye
+brought the like o' this upon us? I'm sure ye kenned better! _Was the
+destruction o' the machine and the stackyard no a warning to ye!_'
+
+"'William,' answered she, 'what is it that ye mean?--is this a time to
+cast upon me yer low-minded suspicions? Had ye last nicht acted as a
+man, we micht hae got the laird to comply wi' our request; but it is
+through you, and such as you, that everything in this unlucky country is
+gaun to destruction; and sorry am I to say that ill o' ye--for a kind, a
+good, and a faithfu' husband hae ye been to me, William.'
+
+"'O sir!' said James Patrick, coming forward and taking me by the hand,
+'may I just beg that ye will tak my respects to yer dochter Janet; and,
+I hope, that whatever may be the issue o' this awkward affair, that she
+will in no way look down upon me, because I happen to be as a sort o'
+prisoner in a jail.' My heart rose to my mouth, and I hadna a word to
+say to either my wife or him.
+
+"'Weel," said I, as I left them, 'I must do the best I can to bring
+baith o' ye aff; and, to accomplish it, the best lawyers in a' Scotland
+shall be employed.'
+
+"But to go on--at a very great expense, I, and the faither o' James
+Patrick, had employed the very principal advocates that went upon the
+Dumfries circuit; and they tauld us that we had naething to fear, and
+that we might keep ourselves quite at ease.
+
+"I was glad that my son David hadna been seized and imprisoned, as weel
+as his mother and James Patrick, for he also had been ane o' the
+ringleaders in the breaking doun and burning o' the toll-bars, and in
+the assault upon the laird. But he escaped apprehension at the time, and
+I suppose they thought that they had enough in custody to answer the
+ends o' justice and the law, and, therefore, he was permitted to remain
+unmolested.
+
+"Now, sir, comes the most melancholy part o' my story. I had a quantity
+o' wool to deliver to the Yorkshire buyer, I hae already mentioned, upon
+a certain day. My son David was to drive the carts wi' it to Annan. It
+was sair wark, and he had but little sleep for a fortnight thegether. It
+caused him to travel night and day, load after load. Now, I needna tell
+ye, that at that period the roads were literally bottomless. The horse
+just went plunge, plunging, and the cart jerking, now to ae side, and
+now to another, or giein a shake sufficient to drive the life out o' ony
+body that was in it. Now, the one wheel was on a hill, and the other in
+a hollow; or, again, baith were up to the axle-tree in mud, or the horse
+half-swimming in water! And yet people cried out against toll-bars! But,
+as I hae been telling ye, my son David had driven wool to Annan for a
+fortnight, and he was sair worn out. The roads were in a dreadful
+state--worse than if, now-a-days, ye were to attempt to drive through a
+bog.
+
+"Ae night, when he was expected hame, his sister Janet, and mysel' sat
+lang up waiting upon him, and wondering what could be keeping him, when
+a stranger rode up to the door, and asked if 'one Mr William Wastle
+lived there?' I replied 'Yes!' And, oh! what think ye were his tidings,
+but that my name had been seen upon the carts, that the horses had stuck
+fast in the roads, and that my son David, who had fallen from the
+shafts, had either been killed, or drowned among the horses' feet!
+
+"I thought his brothers and sisters, and especially Janet, would have
+gane oot o' their judgment. As for me, a' the trials I had had were but
+as a drap in a bucket when compared wi' this!
+
+"But, after I had mourned for a night, the worst was to come. Hoo was I
+to tell his poor imprisoned mother!--imprisoned as she wis for opposing
+the very thing that would hae saved her son's life!
+
+"Next day I went to Dumfries; but I declare that I never saw the light
+o' the sun hae sic a dismal appearance. The fields appeared to me as if
+I saw them through a mist. Even distance wasna as it used to be. I was
+admitted into the prison, but I winna--oh no! I canna repeat to ye the
+manner in which I communicated the tidings to his mother! It was too
+much for her then--it would be the same for me now! for naething in the
+whole coorse o' my life ever shook me so much as the death o' my poor
+David. But I remember o' saying to her, and I declare to you upon the
+word o' a man, unthinkingly--'O Kirsty, woman! had we had toll-bars,
+David might still hae been living!'
+
+"'William, William!' she cried, and fell upon my neck, 'will ye kill me
+outright!' And, for the first time in my life, I saw the tears gushing
+down her cheeks. Those tears washed away the very remembrance o' the
+machine, and the burning o' the stacks. I pressed her to my heart, and
+my tears mingled wi' hers.
+
+"I believe it was partly through our laird that baith Kirsty and James
+Patrick were liberated without being brought to a trial. Her
+imprisonment, and the death o' our son, had wrought a great change upon
+my wife; and I think it was hardly three months after her being set at
+liberty, that we were baith sent for to auld John Neilson the barnman's,
+whose wife Peggy lay upon her death-bed. When we approached her bedside,
+she raised herself upon her elbow, and said--'The burning o' yer barn
+and stackyard has always been a mystery--hear the real truth from the
+words o' a dying and guilty woman. Yer machine had thrown my husband out
+o' employment, and when yer wife there gied me back the pipe, a whuff o'
+which I said would do her good, _I let the burning dottle drap among the
+straw_--nane o' ye observed it--ye were a' leaving the barn. Now, ye ken
+the cause--on my death-bed I make the confession.'
+
+"I declare I thought my heart would hae louped out o' my body. I pressed
+my wife, against whom I had harboured such vile suspicions, to my
+breast. She saw my meaning--she read my feelings.
+
+"'William,' said she, kindly, 'if ye hae onything on yer mind that ye
+wish to forget, so hae I; let us baith forget and forgie!'
+
+"I felt Kirsty's bosom heaving upon mine, and I was happy.
+
+"Within six months after this, James Patrick and our dochter Janet were
+married; and an enviable couple they then were, and such they are unto
+this day. And, as for my Kirsty, auld though she is, and though the sang
+says--
+
+ 'I wadna gie a button for her,'
+
+auld, I say, as she is, and wi' a' her faults, I would gie a' the
+buttons upon my coat for her still, and a' the siller that ever was in
+my pouch into the bargain."
+
+[Footnote 4: Mr Allan Cunningham, in his Life of Burns, states the
+following particulars respecting Willie's wife:--viz., that "He was a
+farmer, who lived near Burns, at Ellisland. She was a very singular
+woman--tea, she said, would be the ruin of the nation; sugar was a sore
+evil; wheaten bread was only fit for babes; earthenware was a
+pickpocket; wooden floors were but fit for thrashing upon; slated roofs,
+cold; feathers good enough for fowls. In short, she abhorred change: and
+whenever anything new appeared--such as harrows with iron teeth--'Ay!
+ay!' she would exclaim, 'ye'll see the upshot!' Of all modern things she
+disliked china most--she called it 'burnt clay,' and said 'it was only
+fit for haudin' the broo o' stinkin' weeds,' as she called tea. On one
+occasion, an English dealer in cups and saucers asked so much for his
+wares, that he exasperated a peasant, who said, 'I canna purchase, but I
+ken ane that will. Gang there,' said he, pointing to the house of
+Willie's wife, 'dinna be blate or burd-moothed; ask a guid penny--she
+has the siller!' Away went the poor dealer, spread out his wares before
+her, and summed up all by asking a double price. A blow from her
+crummock was his instant reward, which not only fell on his person, but
+damaged his china. 'I'll learn ye,' quoth she, as she heard the saucers
+jingle, 'to come wi' yer brazent English face, and yer bits o' burnt
+clay to me!' She was an unlovely dame--her daughters, however, were
+beautiful."--ED.]
+
+
+
+
+THE STONE-BREAKER.
+
+
+If any of our readers had had occasion to go out, for a couple of miles
+or so, on the road leading from Edinburgh to the village of Carlops, any
+time during the summer of the year 1836, they would have seen a little
+old man--very old--employed in breaking metal for the roads. The exact
+spot where _we_ saw him, was at the turn of the eastern shoulder of the
+Pentland Hills; but the nature of his employment rendering him somewhat
+migratory, he may have been seen by others in a different locality. In
+the appearance of the old stone-breaker, there was nothing particularly
+interesting--nothing to attract the attention of the passer-by--unless
+it might be his great age. This, however, certainly was calculated to do
+so; and when it did, it must have been accompanied by a painful feeling
+at seeing one so old and feeble still toiling for the day that was
+passing over him; and toiling, too, at one of the most dreary,
+laborious, and miserable occupations which can well be conceived. Had
+the old man no children who could provide for the little wants of their
+aged parent, without the necessity of his still labouring for them--who
+could secure him in that ease which exhausted nature demanded? It
+appeared not. Perhaps it was a spirit of independence that nerved his
+weak arm, and kept him toiling so far beyond the usual term of human
+capability. Probably the proud-spirited old man would break no bread but
+that which he had earned by the sweat of his brow and the labour of his
+hands. Perhaps it was so. At any rate, this we know, that, at the early
+hour of five in the morning, as regularly as the morning came, the old
+stone-breaker had already commenced his monotonous labour. But this was
+not all. He had also, by this early hour, walked upwards of four
+miles--for so far distant was the scene of his occupation from the place
+of his residence, Edinburgh. He must, therefore, have left home between
+three and four o'clock, and this was his daily round, without
+intermission, without variation, and without relaxation. A bottle of
+butter-milk and a penny loaf formed each day's sustenance. His daily
+earnings, labouring from five in the morning till six at night, averaged
+about ninepence! Hear ye this, ye who ride in emblazoned carriages! Hear
+ye this, ye loungers on the well-stuffed couch!--and hear it, ye
+revellers at the festive board, who have never toiled for the luxuries
+ye enjoy! Hear it, and think of it! But of this person we have other
+things to tell; and to these we proceed.
+
+One morning, just after he had commenced the labours of the day, a young
+man, of about four or five and twenty years of age, accosted him, wished
+him a good morning, and seated himself on the heap of broken metal on
+which the old man was at work, and did so seemingly with the intention
+of entering into conversation with him. This was a proceeding to which
+the latter was much accustomed, it being a frequent practice with the
+humbler class of wayfarers. The advances of the stranger, therefore, in
+the present instance, did not for a moment interrupt his labours, or
+slacken his assiduity. He hammered on without raising his head, even
+while returning the greetings that were made him.
+
+"A delightful view from this spot," said the young man, breaking in upon
+a silence which had continued for some time after the first salutations
+had passed between them.
+
+"Yes," said the old man, drily; and, continuing his operations, he again
+relapsed into his usual taciturnity; for, in truth, he was naturally of
+a morose and uncommunicative disposition. Undeterred by his cold,
+repulsive manner, the stranger again broke silence, and said, with a
+deep-drawn sigh--
+
+"How I envy these little birds that hop so joyously from spray to spray!
+Their life is a happy one. Would to God I were one of them!"
+
+The oddness of the expressions, and the earnestness with which they were
+pronounced, had an effect on the labourer which few things had. They
+induced him to pause in his work, to raise his head, and to look in the
+face of the speaker, which he did with a smile of undefinable meaning.
+It was the first full look he had taken of him, and it discovered to him
+a countenance open and pleasing in its expression, but marked with deep
+melancholy, and telling, in language not to be misunderstood, a tale of
+heart-sickness of the most racking and depressing kind.
+
+"Has your lot been ill cast, young man, that ye envy the bits o' burds
+o' the air the freedom and the liberty that God has gien them?" said the
+old man, eyeing the stranger scrutinizingly, with a keen, penetrating
+grey eye, that had not even yet lost all its fire.
+
+"It has," replied the latter. "I have been unfortunate in the world. I
+have struggled hard with my fate, but it has at length overwhelmed me."
+
+The old man muttered something unintelligibly, and, without vouchsafing
+any other reply, resumed his labours. After another pause of some
+duration, which, however, he had evidently employed in _thinking_ on the
+declaration of unhappiness which had just been made him--
+
+"Some folly o' your ain, young man, very likely," said he, carelessly,
+and still knapping the stones, whose bulk it was his employment to
+reduce.
+
+"No," replied the young man, blushing; but it was a blush which he who
+caused it did not see. "I cannot blame myself."
+
+"Nae man does," interposed the stone-breaker; "he aye blames his
+neighbours."
+
+"Perhaps so," rejoined the stranger; "but you will allow that it is
+perfectly possible for a man to be unfortunate without any fault on his
+own part."
+
+"I hae seldom seen't," replied the ungracious and unaccommodating old
+man; and he hammered on.
+
+"Well, perhaps so," said the youth; "but I hope you will not deny that
+such things _may_ be."
+
+"Canna say," was the brief, but sufficiently discouraging rejoinder.
+
+"Then let us drop the subject," said the stranger, smilingly. "Each will
+still judge of the world by his own experience. But, methinks, your own
+case, my friend, is a hard enough one. To see a man of your years
+labouring at this miserable employment, is a painful sight. Your debt to
+fortune is also light, I should believe."
+
+"I hae aye trusted mair to my ain industry than to fortune, young man. I
+never pat it in her power to jilt me. I never trusted her, and
+therefore, she has never deceived me; so her and me are quits." And the
+old man plied away with his long, light hammer.
+
+"Yet your earnings must be scanty?"
+
+"I dinna compleen o' them."
+
+"I daresay not; but will you not take it amiss my offering this small
+addition to them?" And he tendered him a half-crown piece. "I have but
+little to spare, and that must be my apology for offering you so
+trifling a gift."
+
+The man here again paused in his operations, and again looked full in
+the face of the stranger, but without making any motion towards
+accepting the proffered donation.
+
+"I thocht ye said ye war in straits, young man," he said, and now
+resting his elbow on the end of his hammer.
+
+"And I said truly," replied the former, again colouring.
+
+"Then hoo come ye to be sportin yer siller sae freely? I wad hae thocht
+ye wad hae as muckle need o' a half-croon as I hae?"
+
+"Perhaps I may," replied the stranger; "but that's not to hinder me from
+feeling for others, nor from relieving their distresses so far as I
+can."
+
+"Foolish doctrine, young man, an' no' for this warl. It's nae wunner
+that ye're in difficulties. I guessed the faut was yer ain, and noo I'm
+sure o't. Put up yer half-croon, sir. I dinna tak charity."
+
+"I hope, however, I have not offended you by the offer? It was well
+meant."
+
+"Ou, I daresay--I'm no the least offended; but tak an auld man's advice,
+an' dinna let yer feelins hae the command o' yer purse-strings,
+otherwise ye'll never hae muckle in't."
+
+And the churlish old stone-breaker resumed his labours, and again
+relapsed into taciturnity. Silent as he was, however, it was evident
+that he was busily thinking, although none but himself could possibly
+tell what was the subject of his thoughts; but this soon discovered
+itself. After a short time, he again spoke--
+
+"What may the nature an' cause o' yer defeeculties be, young man, an' I
+may speer?" he said--"and I fancy I may, since ye hae been sae far free
+on the subject o yer ain accord."
+
+"That's soon told," replied the stranger. "Three years ago, an aunt,
+with whom I was an especial favourite, left me two hundred and fifty
+pounds. With this sum I set up in business in Edinburgh in the
+ironmongery line, to which I was bred. My little trade prospered, and
+gradually attained such an extent that I found I could not do without an
+efficient assistant, who should look after the shop while I was out on
+the necessary calls of business. In this predicament I bethought me of
+my brother, who was a year older than myself, and accordingly sent for
+him to Selkirkshire, where he resided with our father, assisting him in
+his small farming operations; this being the business of the latter. My
+brother came; and, for some time, was everything I could have
+wished--sober, regular, and attentive; and we thus got on swimmingly.
+This, however, was a state of matters which was not long to continue.
+When my brother had about completed a year with me, I began to perceive
+a gradual falling off in his anxiety about the interests of our little
+business. I remonstrated with him on one or two occasions of palpable
+neglect; but this, instead of inducing him to greater vigilance, had the
+effect only of rendering him more and more careless. But I did not then
+know the worst. I did not then know that, in place of aiding, he was
+robbing me. This was the truth, however. He had formed an infamous
+connection with a woman of disreputable character, and the consequence
+was the adoption of a regular system of plunder on my little property,
+to answer the calls which she was constantly making on my unfortunate
+relative.
+
+"About this time I took ill, and, not suspecting the integrity of my
+brother, although aware of his carelessness, I did not hesitate to trust
+him with the entire conduct of my affairs. Indeed, I could not help
+myself in this particular; he best knowing my business, and being,
+besides, the natural substitute for myself in such a case. For three
+months was I confined, unable to leave my own room; and, when I did come
+out, I found myself a ruined man. In this time, my brother had
+appropriated almost every farthing that had been drawn to his own
+purposes; and had, moreover, done the same by some of my largest and
+best outstanding accounts; and, to sum up all, he had fled, I knew not
+whither, on the day previous to that on which I made my first appearance
+in my shop after my recovery. That is about ten days since."
+
+"Did the rascal harry ye oot an' oot?" here interposed the old
+stone-breaker, knapping away with great earnestness.
+
+"No; there was a little on which he could not lay his hands--some
+considerable accounts which are payable only yearly; there was also some
+stock in the shop; but these, of course, are now the property of my
+creditors."
+
+"But could ye no get a settlement wi' them, an' go on?" inquired the
+other, still knapping away assiduously. "I'm sure if you stated your
+case, your creditors wadna be owre hard on ye."
+
+"Perhaps they might not; but there is one circumstance that puts it out
+of my power to make any attempt at arrangement. There is one bill of
+fifty pounds, due to a Sheffield house, on which diligence has been
+raised, and on which I am threatened with instant incarceration. In
+truth, it is this proceeding that has brought me here so early this
+morning. I expected to have been taken in my bed, as the charge was out
+yesterday, and I am here to keep out of the way of the messengers. I am
+thus deprived of the power of helping myself--of taking any steps
+towards the adjustment of my affairs."
+
+"An' could ye do any guid, think ye, if that debt wur paid, or in some
+way arranged?" inquired the other.
+
+"I think I could;" said the party questioned. "My good outstanding debts
+are yet considerable, and so is the stock in the shop; so that, had a
+little time been allowed me, I could have got round. But all that is
+knocked on the head, by the impending diligence against me. That settles
+the matter at once, by depriving me of the necessary liberty to go about
+my affairs."
+
+"It's a pity," said the man, drily. "Wha's the man o' business in
+Edinburgh that thae Sheffield folk hae employed to prosecute ye? What
+ca' ye him?"
+
+"Mr Langridge."
+
+"Ou ay, I hae heard o' him. An will he no gie ye ony indulgence?"
+
+"He cannot. His instructions are imperative, otherwise he would, I am
+convinced; for he is an excellent sort of man, and knows all about me
+and my affairs. Indeed, so willing was he to have assisted me, that,
+when the bill was first put into his hands, he wrote to his clients,
+strongly recommending lenient measures and bearing testimony, on his own
+knowledge, to the hardship of my case; but their reply was brief and
+peremptory. It was to proceed against me instantly, and threatening him
+with the loss of their business if he did not. For this uncompromising
+severity they assigned as a reason, their having been lately 'taken in,'
+as they expressed it, to a large extent, by a number of their Scotch
+customers. So Mr. Langridge had no alternative but to do his duty, and
+let matters take their course."
+
+"True," replied the monosyllabic stone-breaker. It was all he said, or,
+if he had intended to say more, which, however, is not probable, no
+opportunity was afforded him; for at this moment three labouring men of
+his acquaintance, who were on their way to their work, came up and began
+conversing. On this interruption taking place, the young man rose,
+wished him a good morning, which was merely replied to by a slight nod,
+and went his way.
+
+At this point in our story, we change the scene to the writing chambers
+of Mr. Langridge, and the time we advance to the evening of the day on
+which our tale opens.
+
+It will surprise the reader to find our old stone-breaker, still wearing
+the patched and threadbare clothes, the battered and torn hat, and the
+coarse, strong shoes, which had never rejoiced in the contact of
+blacking brush, in which he prosecuted his daily labours, ringing the
+door-bell of Mr Langridge's house, about eight o'clock in the evening.
+It will still more surprise him, perhaps, to find this man received,
+notwithstanding the homeliness, we might have said wretchedness, of his
+appearance, by Mr Langridge himself with great courtesy, and even with a
+slight air of deference.
+
+On his entering the apartment in which that gentleman was, the latter
+immediately rose from his seat, and advanced, with extended hand,
+towards him.
+
+"Ah, Mr Lumsden," he exclaimed, "how do you do? I hope I see you well.
+Come, my dear sir, take a chair." And he ran with eager civility for the
+convenience he named, and placed it for the accommodation of his
+visiter.
+
+When the old man was seated--
+
+"Well, my dear sir," said Mr Langridge, "I am sorry to say that _your
+rents_ have not come so well in this last half-year as usual. We are
+considerably short." And the man of business hurried to a large green
+painted tin box, that stood amongst some others on a shelf, and bore on
+its front the name of Lumsden, and from this drew forth what appeared to
+be a list or rent roll, which he spread out on the table. "We are
+considerably short," he said. "There's six or eight of your folks who
+have paid nothing yet, and as many more who have made only partial
+payments."
+
+"Ay," said the man, crustily, "what's the meanin' o' that? Ye maun just
+screw them up, Mr Langridge; for I canna want my siller, and I winna
+want it. Hae thae folk Thamsons, paid yet?"
+
+"Not a shilling more than you know of," replied Mr Langridge.
+
+"Weel, then, Mr Langridge, ye maun just tak the necessary steps to
+recover; for I'm determined to hae my rent. I'm no gaun to aloo mysel'
+to be ruined this way. They wadna leave me a sark to my back, if I wad
+let them. Ye maun just sequestrate, Mr Langridge--ye maun just
+sequestrate, an' we'll help oorsels to payment, since they winna help
+us."
+
+"Oh, surely, surely, my dear sir. All fair and right. But I would just
+mention to you, that though, latterly, they have been dilatory payers--I
+would say, shamefully so--they are yet decent, honest, well-meaning
+people, these Thomsons; and that, moreover, there is some reason for
+their having been so remiss of late, although it is, certainly, none
+whatever why you should want your rent."
+
+"No, I fancy no," here interposed the other, with a triumphant chuckle.
+
+"No, certainly not," went on Mr Langridge, who seemed to know well how
+to manage his eccentric client; "but only, I would just mention to you,
+that the _reason_ of the dilatoriness of the Thomsons, is the husband's
+having been unable, from illness, to work for the last three months, and
+that, in that time, they have also lost no less than two children. It is
+rather a piteous case."
+
+"An' what hae I to do wi' a' that?" exclaimed the other, impatiently.
+"What hae I to do wi' a' that, I wad like to ken? Am I to be ca'ed on to
+relieve a' the distress in the world? That wad be a bonny set o't. Am I
+to be robbed o' my richts that others may be at ease? That I winna, I
+warrant you. See that ye recover me thae folk's arrears, Mr Langridge,
+by hook or by crook, and that immediately, though ye shouldna leave them
+a stool to sit upon. That's _my_ instructions to _you_."
+
+"And they shall be obeyed, Mr Lumsden," replied the man of
+business--"obeyed to the letter. I merely mentioned the circumstance to
+you, in order that you might be fully apprized of everything relating to
+your tenants, which it is proper you should know."
+
+"Weel, weel, but there's nae use in troublin' me wi' thae stories. I
+dinna want to be plagued wi' folk makin' puir mouths. There's aye a
+design on ane's pouch below't. By the bye, Mr Langridge," continued he,
+after a momentary pause, "hae ye a young chield o' an airnmonger in your
+hauns enow about some bill or anither that he canna pay."
+
+"The name?" inquired Mr Langridge, musingly.
+
+"Troth that I cannot tell you; for I never heard it, and forgot to
+speer."
+
+"Let me see--oh, ay--you will mean, I dare say, a young man of the name
+of John Reid, poor fellow?"
+
+"Very likely," said the client; "Is he a young man, an airnmonger to
+business, and hae ye diligence against him enow on a fifty pound bill,
+due to a Sheffield hoose?"
+
+"The same," replied Mr Longridge. "These are exactly the circumstances.
+How came you, Mr Lumsden," he added, smilingly, "to be so well informed
+of them?"
+
+"I'll maybe explain that afterwards; but, in the meantime, will ye tell
+me what sort o' a lad this Mr Reid is? Is he a decent, weel-doin' young
+man?"
+
+"Remarkably so," replied Mr Langridge, "remarkably so, Mr Lumsden. I can
+answer for that; for I have known him now for a good while, and have had
+many opportunities of estimating his character."
+
+"Then hoo cam he into his present difficulties?"
+
+"Through the misconduct of a brother--entirely through the misconduct of
+a brother." And Mr Langridge proceeded to give precisely the same
+account of the young man's misfortunes, and of the present state of his
+affairs, that he himself had given to the old stone-breaker, as already
+detailed to the reader. When he had concluded--
+
+"It seems to me rather a hard sort o' case," said the client. "But could
+you no help him a wee on the score o' lenity?"
+
+"I would willingly do it if I could; but it's not in my power. My
+instructions are peremptory. I dare not do it but with a certainty of
+losing the business of the pursuers, the best clients I have."
+
+"Naething, then, 'll do but payin' the siller, I suppose?" said the
+other.
+
+"Nothing, nothing, I fear. My clients seem quite determined. They are
+enraged at some smart losses which they have lately sustained in
+Scotland, and will give no quarter."
+
+"Then I suppose if they _war_ paid, they would be satisfied," said the
+stone-breaker.
+
+"Ha, ha, ha! Mr Lumsden, no doubt of _that_," exclaimed Mr Langridge,
+laughing. "That would settle the business at once."
+
+"I fancy sae," said the other, musingly. Then, after a pause--"An' think
+ye the lad wad get on if this stane were taen frae aboot his neck?"
+
+"I have no doubt of it--not the least," replied Mr Langridge, "for I
+have every confidence in the young man's industry and uprightness of
+principle. But he has no friend to back him, poor fellow: no one to help
+him out of the scrape."
+
+"Ye canna be quite sure o' that, Mr Langridge," said the old man. "What
+if I hae taen a fancy to help him mysel?"
+
+"You, Mr Lumsden!--you!" exclaimed Mr Langridge in great surprise. "What
+motive on earth can you have for assisting him?"
+
+"I didna say that I meant to assist him--I only asked ye, what if I took
+a fancy to do't?"
+
+"Why, to that I can only say that, if you have, he is all right, and
+will get his head above water yet. But you surprise me, Mr Lumsden, by
+this interest in Reid. May I ask how it comes about?"
+
+"I'll tell you a' that presently, but I'll first tell you that I _do_
+mean to assist the young man in his straits. I'll advance the money to
+pay that bill for him. Will ye see to that, then, Mr Langridge? Put me
+doon for the amount oot o' the funds in your hauns, and stay further
+proceedins."
+
+Mr Langridge could not express the surprise he felt on this
+extraordinary intimation from a man who, although there were some good
+points in his character, notwithstanding of the outward crust of
+churlishness in which it was encased, he never believed capable of any
+very striking act of generosity. Mr Langridge, we say, could not
+express the surprise which this unlooked-for instance of that quality
+in Mr Lumsden inspired, nor did he attempt it; for he justly considered
+that such expression would be offensive to the old man, as implying a
+belief that he had been deemed incapable of doing a benevolent thing. Mr
+Langridge, therefore, kept his feelings, on the occasion, to himself,
+and contented himself with promising compliance, and venturing a
+muttered compliment or two, which, however, were ungraciously enough
+received, on the old man's generosity.
+
+"But whar's the young man to be fand?" inquired the latter.
+
+"Why, that I cannot well tell you," replied Mr Langridge; "for I was
+informed, in the course of the day, by the messengers whom I employed to
+apprehend him, that he had left his lodging early in the morning, no
+doubt in order to avoid them, and they could not ascertain where he had
+gone to."
+
+"Humph, that's awkward," replied the client. "I wad like to find him."
+
+"I fear that will be difficult," replied Mr Langridge; "but I will call
+off the bloodhounds in the meantime, and terminate proceedings."
+
+"Ay, do sae, do sae. But can we no get haud o' the lad ony way?"
+
+At this moment, a rap at the door of the apartment in which was Mr
+Langridge and his client, interrupted further conversation on the
+subject.
+
+"Come in," exclaimed the former.
+
+The door opened, and in walked two messengers, with Reid a prisoner
+between them. We leave it to the reader to conceive the latter's
+surprise, on beholding his acquaintance of the morning, the old
+stone-breaker, seated in an arm-chair in Mr Langridge's writing-chamber.
+But while he looked this surprise, he also seemed to feel acutely the
+humiliation of his position. After a nod of recognition, he said, with
+an attempt at a smile, and addressing himself to the old man--
+
+"You see they have got me after all, my friend. But it was my own doing.
+On reflection, I saw no use in endeavouring to avoid them, and gave
+myself up, at least, threw myself in their way, in order to encounter
+the worst at once, and be done with it."
+
+"I daresay ye was richt, after a'," replied the stone-breaker; "it was
+the best way. Mr Langridge," he added, and now rising from his seat,
+"wad ye speak wi' me for a minnit, in another room?"
+
+"Certainly, Mr Lumsden," replied Mr Langridge.
+
+"Will we proceed with the prisoner?" inquired one of the messengers.
+
+"No, remain where you are a moment, till I return;" and Mr Langridge led
+the way out of the apartment, followed by the old stone-breaker. When
+they had reached another room, and the door had been secured--
+
+"Noo, Mr Langridge, anent what I was speaking to ye about regarding this
+young man wha has come in sae curiously upon us, juist whan we were
+wanting him--I dinna care to be seen in the matter, sae ye maun juist
+manag't for me yersel."
+
+"Had ye no better enjoy the satisfaction of your own good deed in
+person, Mr Lumsden, by telling Mr Reid of the important service you
+intend doing him?"
+
+"I'll do naething o' the kind," replied the old stone-breaker, testily.
+"I dinna want to be bothered wi't. Sae juist pay ye his bill and
+charges, Mr Langridge, an' keep an e'e on his proceedins afterwards, an'
+let me ken frae time to time hoo he's gettin on."
+
+With these instructions Mr Langridge promised compliance; and, on his
+having done so, the stone-breaker proposed to depart; but, just as he
+was about doing so, he turned suddenly round to his man of business,
+and said--
+
+"About the Tamsons, Mr Langridge, ye needna, for a wee while, tak thae
+staps again them that I was speakin aboot. Let them alane a wee till
+they get roun a bit."
+
+"I'll do so, Mr Lumsden," replied the worthy writer, who, the reader
+will observe, had accomplished his generous purpose dexterously. He knew
+his man, and acted accordingly.
+
+"What's their arrears, again?" inquired the other.
+
+"Half-a-year's rent--£3, 17s.," replied Mr Langridge.
+
+"Ay, it's a heap o' siller--no to be fan at every dyke side. An' then,
+there's this half-year rinning on, an' very near due. That'll mak--hoo
+much?"
+
+"Just £7, 14s. exactly, Mr Lumsden."
+
+"Ay, exactly," replied the latter, who had been making a mental
+calculation of the amount, and had arrived, although more slowly than
+his experienced lawyer, at the same result. "A serious soom," added the
+client.
+
+"No trifle, indeed, Mr Lumsden," said Mr Langridge; "but it's safe
+enough. They're honest people."
+
+"Ye'r aye harpin on that string," replied the stone-breaker, surlily;
+"but what signifies their honesty to me, if they'll no pay me my rent?"
+
+"True, very true," said the law agent. "That's the only practical
+honesty."
+
+"See you an' get thae arrears, at ony rate, oot o' them, _if_ ye can, Mr
+Langridge; an', if ye canna, I suppose we maun juist want them. Ye
+needna push owre hard for them either, since they're in the state ye
+say. But ye'll surely mak the present half-year oot o' them. That maun
+be paid. Mind _that_, at ony rate, maun be paid, Mr Langridge." And
+saying this, he placed his old tattered hat, which he had hitherto held
+in his hand, on his head, and left the house.
+
+On his departure, Mr Langridge hastily entered the apartment in which,
+he had left the messengers with their prisoner.
+
+"We're just waiting marching orders, Mr Langridge," said the latter, on
+his entering, and making an attempt at playfulness, with which his
+spirit but ill accorded. "My friends here are getting tired of their
+charge, and anxious to be relieved of him."
+
+"Are they so, Mr Reid?" replied Mr Langridge, smiling.
+
+"Why, then, we had best relieve them at once." Then turning to the
+principal officer--"Quit your prisoner, Maxwell--the debt is settled. Mr
+Reid, you are at liberty."
+
+The blood rushed to poor Reid's face, and then withdrew, leaving it as
+pale as death, and yet he could express no part of the feelings which
+caused these violent alternations. At length--
+
+"Mr Langridge," he said, "what is the meaning of this? How do I come to
+be liberated?"
+
+"By the simplest and most effectual of all processes, Mr Reid," replied
+the worthy writer, smiling; "by the payment of the debt."
+
+"But _I_ have not paid the debt, Mr Langridge. I _could_ not pay the
+debt."
+
+"No; but somebody else might. The short and the long of it is, Mr Reid,
+that a _friend_ has come forward, and settled the claim on which
+diligence was raised against you. The bill, with interest and all
+expenses, _is_ paid, and you are again a free man."
+
+Again overwhelmed by his feelings, which were a thousand times more
+eloquently expressed by a flood of silent tears than they could have
+been by the most carefully rounded periods, it was some time before the
+young man could pursue the conversation, or ask for the further
+information which he yet intensely longed to possess. On recovering from
+the burst of emotion which had, for the moment, deprived him of the
+power of utterance--
+
+"And _who_, pray, Mr Langridge, is this friend--this friend indeed?"
+
+"Why, I do not know exactly whether I am at liberty to tell you, Mr
+Reid," replied Mr Langridge. "The friend you allude to declined
+transacting this matter personally with you, which seems to imply that
+he did not care that you should know who he was; yet, as he certainly
+did not expressly forbid me to disclose him, and as I think it but right
+that you should know to whom you are indebted, I will venture to tell
+you. Had you some conversation, at an early hour this morning, with an
+old stone-breaker, on the highway side, about three or four miles from
+town?"
+
+"I had. The old man that was sitting here when I came in."
+
+"The same. Well, what would you think if _he_ should have been the
+friend in question? Would you expect from his manner, that he _would_ do
+such a thing? or, from his appearance and occupation, that he could?"
+
+"Certainly not--certainly not. The old man--the poor old man, to whom I
+offered half-a-crown--who works for ninepence a-day--who never saw me in
+his life before this morning--who knows nothing of me! Impossible, Mr
+Langridge--impossible; he cannot be the man. You do not say that he is?"
+
+"But I do though, Mr Reid, and that most distinctly. It is he, and no
+other, I assure you, who has done you this friendly service."
+
+"Then, if it be so, I know not what to say to it, Mr Langridge. I can
+say nothing. I trust, however, I shall not be found wanting on the score
+of gratitude. I can say no more. But will you be so good as inform me,
+if you can, how the good man has come to do me so friendly a service?
+Who on earth, or what is he?"
+
+"Sit down, sit down, Mr Reid, and I'll answer all your questions--I'll
+tell you all about him," replied Mr Langridge.
+
+Mr Reid having complied with this invitation, the latter began:--
+
+"The history of the old stone-breaker, my good sir, is a very short and
+a very simple one. It contains no vicissitude, and to few, besides
+ourselves, would be found possessing any particular interest. Your
+friend was, in his youth, a soldier, and served, I believe, in the
+American war. At his return home on the conclusion of that war, he was
+discharged, still a young man, and shortly after married a woman with a
+fortune" (smilingly) "of some five-and-twenty or thirty pounds. With
+this sum the thrifty pair purchased two or three cows, and commenced the
+business of cowfeeders. They prospered; for they were both saving and
+industrious, and, in time, realized a considerable sum of money, which
+they went on increasing. This they invested in house property from time
+to time, till their possessions of this kind became very valuable.
+
+"For upwards of forty years they continued in this way, when Mrs Lumsden
+died, leaving her husband a lonely widower; for they had no children. On
+the death of the former, the latter, who was now an old man, and unequal
+to conducting, alone, the business in which his wife's activity and
+industry had hitherto aided him, sold off his cows, and proposed to live
+in retirement on the rents of his property; and this he did for some
+time. Accustomed, however, to a life of constant labour and exertion,
+the old man soon found the idleness on which he had thrown himself,
+intolerably irksome. He became miserable from a mere want of having
+something to do. While in this state of ennui, chancing one day to
+stroll into the country, (this is what he told me himself,) he saw some
+labouring men knapping stones by the way-side; and strange as the fancy
+may seem, he was instantly struck with a desire of taking to this
+occupation. He did so, and has, from that day to the present, now
+upwards of ten years, pursued it with as much assiduity as if it was
+his only resource for a subsistence. He has, as I already told you, no
+family of his own; neither has he, I believe, any relation living; or,
+if there be, they must be very remote; and, as he strictly confines his
+expenditure to his daily earnings as a stone-breaker--some ninepence
+a-day, I believe--his wealth is rapidly increasing, and is, at this
+moment, no trifle, I assure you. Now, my good sir, when I tell you that
+I am the law agent of this strange, eccentric person, and that I manage
+all his business for him, I have told you everything about him that is
+worth mentioning."
+
+"There is just one thing, Mr Langridge," said Mr Reid, who had been an
+attentive listener to the tale just told him, "that wants explanation:
+can you give me the smallest shadow of a reason for the part he has
+acted towards me?"
+
+"Nay, there you puzzle me; I cannot. It appears as unaccountable to me
+as to you, although I have known Mr Lumsden now for upwards of fifteen
+years."
+
+"Did you ever know him do a thing of this kind before?"
+
+"Never! and I must say candidly, that, although he is by no means
+deficient in kindness of heart, notwithstanding his rough exterior, I
+did not believe him capable of such an act of generosity."
+
+"It is an extraordinary matter," said Mr Reid; "and although I can have
+but little right to inquire into the _motives_ for an act by which I am
+so largely benefited--it seems ungracious to do so--yet would I give a
+good round sum, if I had it to spare, to know the real cause of this
+good man's friendship towards me."
+
+"Why, that I suspect neither you nor I shall ever know. I question much,
+indeed, if the principal actor in this affair himself could give a
+reason for what he has done. It seems to me just one of those odd and
+unaccountable things which eccentric men, like Mr Lumsden, will
+sometimes do; and with this solution of the mystery, and the benefit it
+has produced to you, I rather think, Mr Reid, you must be content. I
+would, however, add, in order to redeem Mr Lumsden's act of generosity
+from the character of a mere whim, that your case was one eminently
+calculated to excite any latent feeling of benevolence which he might
+possess; and that your manner and appearance--no flattery--are equally
+well calculated to second a claim so established. Yourself, and your
+peculiar circumstances, in short, had chanced to touch the right chord
+in a right man's breast, and hence the response on which we are
+speculating."
+
+Having thus discussed the knotty point of the old stonebreaker's sudden
+act of generosity, Mr Langridge invited Mr Reid to put his affairs into
+his hands, promising that they should have the advantage, on his part,
+of something more than mere professional zeal. This friendly invitation
+the latter gladly accepted, and shortly after consigned all his business
+matters to the care of the worthy writer, who exerted himself in behalf
+of his client with an efficiency that soon placed the latter once more
+in the way of well-doing. And well he did; having subsequently realised
+a very handsome independency. In the success of the young man, no one
+rejoiced more than the old stone-breaker, who frequently visited him in
+his shop; sometimes merely for the purpose of seeing him; at others, to
+purchase some of those little articles of ironmongery which the due
+preservation of his dwelling-house property demanded. Let us state, too,
+that, amongst his purchases, were, at different times, the hammer-heads
+which he used in his occupation of stone-breaking.
+
+In their first transaction in this way, there was something curiously
+characteristic of the old man's peculiarities of temper. Mr Reid, not
+yet perfectly aware of these peculiarities, declined, for some time,
+putting any price on a couple of hammer-heads which his friend had
+picked out. He would have made him a present of them; and, to the
+latter's inquiry as to their price, replied, evasively, and laughing
+while he spoke, that he would tell him that afterwards.
+
+"I tak nae credit, young man," said the stone-breaker, crustily, "tell
+me enow their cost." And he pulled out a small greasy leathern purse,
+and was undoing its strings, when Mr Reid laid his hand on his arm to
+prevent him, at the same time telling him that he would do him a favour
+by accepting the hammer-heads in a present. "What is such a trifle
+between you and me, Mr Lumsden--you to whom I owe everything?"
+
+"You owe me a great deal mair than ye're ever likely to pay me, at ony
+rate, young man, if this be the way ye transact business," replied the
+other, with evident signs of displeasure. "Tell me the price o' thae
+hammer-heads at ance, an' be dune wi't. I hae nae broo o' folk that
+fling awa their guids as ye seem inclined to do."
+
+Mr Reid blushed at the reproof, but, seeing at once how the land lay,
+with regard to his customer's temper, he now plumply named the price of
+the hammers, sevenpence each.
+
+"Sevenpence!" exclaimed the old man. "I'll gie ye nae such price.
+Doonricht robbery! I can get them as guid in ony shop in the toon for
+saxpence ha'penny. If ye like to tak that price for them, ye may hae't.
+If no, ye can keep them."
+
+Mr Reid, now knowing his man somewhat better than he did at first,
+demurred, but at length agreed to the abatement, and the transaction was
+thus brought to a close.
+
+We need hardly add, that the £50 advanced by the old man to Mr Reid were
+subsequently repaid; but the call is more imperative on us to state,
+that, on the former's death, which took place about two years after, the
+latter found himself named in his will for a very considerable sum. One,
+somewhat larger, was bequeathed by the same document to Mr Langridge.
+The remainder was appropriated to various charities. And here, good
+reader, ends the story of the Stone-Breaker.
+
+
+
+
+LAIRD RORIESON'S WILL.
+
+
+In the little town of Maybole there lived, some fifty years ago or more,
+an old man of the name of George Rorieson, more commonly called Laird
+Rorieson. He had been a kind of general merchant, or trafficker in any
+kind of commodities which he thought would yield him a profit; and, by
+dint of great sagacity, had made some very fortunate hits, and realised
+a large sum of money. Having begun the world with a penny, he was
+emphatically the maker of his own fortunes--a circumstance he was very
+proud of, and loved to sound in the ears of certain individuals who
+envied him his riches. Having amassed his money by an accumulation of
+small sums, for a long course of years, he had gradually become narrower
+and narrower, as his wealth increased; and, by the time he arrived at
+the age of sixty, his penurious feelings had become so strong and
+deeprooted that he could scarcely afford himself the means of a
+comfortable subsistence.
+
+It is almost needless to say that Laird Rorieson never had courage or
+liberality of sentiment sufficient to give him an impulse towards
+matrimony; and truly it was alleged that he never oven looked on
+womankind with any feelings different from those with which he
+contemplated his fellow-creatures generally; and these had always some
+connection, one way or another, with making profit of them. But, though
+he had no wife, he had a good store of nephews and nieces--somewhere
+about twenty--all poor enough, God knows! but all as hopeful as brides
+and bridegrooms of a great store of wealth and bliss being awaiting them
+on the death of Uncle Geordie.
+
+The affection which these twenty nephews and nieces shewed to Uncle
+George was remarkable; but, somehow or another, the good uncle hated
+them mortally, and, the bitterer he became, the more loving they
+waxed--so that it was very wonderful to see so much human love and
+sympathy thrown away upon an old churl who could have seen all the
+devoted creatures at the devil.
+
+It was indeed alleged that this crabbed miser had no love for any one,
+all his affection being expended upon his money-bags: but we are bound
+to say that this is not quite the truth; for there was a neighbour of
+the name of Saunders Gibbieson, a bachelor, for whom the Laird really
+felt some small twinges of human kindness. Saunders Gibbieson was as
+true a Scotchman as ever threw the pawkie glamour of a twinkling grey
+eye over the open face of an English victim. He was, as already said, a
+bachelor; but unlike his friend Geordie, he loved the fair sex, and
+vowed he would marry the bonniest lass o' Maybole the moment he was able
+to sustain her "in bed, board, and washing." He had scraped together a
+few pounds, maybe to the extent of a hundred or two, and looked forward
+to making himself happy at no very distant period. He was a famous hand
+at a political argument; and there was not a man in Maybole who could
+touch him at driving a bargain.
+
+As already said, Geordie had a kind of feeling towards Saunders, and
+there can be no doubt that Saunders had as strong an affection for the
+"auld rich grub," as he called him in his throat, as ever had any of the
+twenty nephews and nieces already alluded to. In the evenings he often
+went in and sat with him; and, by dint of curious jokes, "humorous
+lees," and political anecdotes, he contrived to wile, for a few minutes,
+the creature's heart from his money-bags, and unbend his puckered cheeks
+and lips into a species of compromise between a laugh and a grin. It was
+no wonder, then, that Geordie had a kind of liking for Saunders--seeing
+he got value in amusement from him, without so much cost as even a
+piece of old dry cheese, of a waught of thin ale. On the other hand, it
+was difficult to see how Saunders could love the laird; and, indeed, it
+was a matter of gossip what could induce a man so much in request as
+Saunders Gibbieson to take so much pains in pouring into the "leather
+lugs" of an old miser the precious jokes that would have set the biggest
+table in Maybole in a roar.
+
+Now the time came when Laird Rorieson began to feel the first touches of
+that big black angel who loves to hug so fondly the sons of men. He was
+ill--he was indeed very ill--and it would have done any man's heart good
+to see the kindness and sympathy which his twenty nephews and nieces
+paid him. Every hour one or other of them was calling at his house; and
+his ears were regaled by the sympathetic tones which their love for
+their dear uncle wrung from their tender hearts. Oh, it was beautiful to
+behold! Such things do credit to our fallen nature. But the old grub
+loved it not; and it was even said he cursed and swore in the very faces
+of the kind creatures, just as if they had had an eye on the heavy
+coffers of gold that lay in his house. This kindness on the part of his
+nephews and nieces was thus converted into a kind of poison; for every
+time they called, their uncle got into such a passion that his remaining
+strength was well-nigh worn out. But he had still enough left to sign
+his name; and the ungrateful creature resolved upon leaving all his gold
+to found an hospital. He sent for a man of the law, and had a
+consultation with locked doors, and all things seemed in a fair way for
+the poor nephews and nieces being sacrificed for ever.
+
+This circumstance came to the ears of Saunders Gibbieson, who had not
+been an unattentive spectator of the extraordinary proceedings going on
+in the house of his neighbour. As soon as he heard the news, he retired
+and meditated, and communed with himself three hours on matters of deep
+concernment to him and the generations that might descend from him. The
+result of all this study was a resolution alike remarkable for its
+eccentricity and sagacity; but Saunders' spirit dipped generally so deep
+in the wells of wisdom that there was no wonder it should come forth
+drunk, as it were, with the golden policy of cunning.
+
+Now, all of a sudden, Saunders grew (as he said) very ill--as ill
+indeed, or nearly as ill, as Laird Rorieson himself, but, so full was he
+of brotherly love towards his neighbour, that his sudden illness did not
+prevent him calling upon the latter one night, when there seemed to be
+no great chance of their being disturbed by any of the sympathetic
+nephews and nieces. He found Geordie very weakly, and sat down by the
+bedside, to pour the balm of his friendship and consolation into the
+sick man's ear. The Laird received him kindly, and as was his custom,
+Saunders got him into a pleasant humour, by telling him something of a
+curious nature that had occurred, or had been supposed by Saunders to
+have occurred, during the day. He then began the more important part of
+his work.
+
+"You are ill, Laird," said he; "but I question muckle if ye're sae ill
+as I am myself. For a long time I've been in a dwinin way, and, though I
+hae kept up a fair appearance and good spirits, I've been gradually
+getting thinner and weaker. I fear I'm in a fair way for anither warld."
+
+"I'm sorry to hear't," replied the Laird. "It's a sad thing to dee." And
+he shook as he uttered the word.
+
+"Ay, an' it's a sad thing," said Saunders, "to be tormented in your
+illness, wi' thae cursed corbies o' puir relations. The moment I began
+to complain I've been tormented wi' a host o' nephews and nieces, wha
+come and stare into my hollow een, as if they would count the draps o'
+blude that are yet left in my heart."
+
+"Ay, ay, are you in that plight too, Saunders?" groaned the Laird. "The
+ravens have been croaking owre me for twa lang years. They come and
+perch on the very bedposts, they croak, they whet their nebs, they look
+into my face, and peer into my very heart. It's dreadful--and there's
+nae remedy. I've tried to terrify them awa; but they come aye back
+again. They've worn me fairly out."
+
+"I've had many a meditation on the subject, Laird," said Saunders; "and,
+between you and me, if there's a goose quill in a' Scotland, I'll hae a
+shot at them. I haena muckle i' the warld--a thousand or twa maybe, hard
+won, Geordie, as a' gowd is in thae hard times; but the deil a plack o't
+they'll ever touch."
+
+"Ye'll be to found an hospital?" said the Laird.
+
+"Na, na," answered Saunders. "I'll found nae beggar's palace. I've
+studied political economy owre lang to be ignorant o' the bad effects o'
+public charities. They relax the sinews o' industry, and mak learned
+mendicants. Besides, wha thanks the founder o' an hospital for his
+charity? Nane!--nane! A puff or twa in the newspapers about Gibbieson's
+mortification would be the hail upshot o' my reward; and sensible folk
+would set me doun as an auld curmudgeon, wha hadna heart to love and
+benefit a friend."
+
+"There's some truth in that," muttered the Laird. "It's a pity a body
+canna tak his gear wi' him. Sair hae I toiled for it, and, oh! it's
+miserable! cruel! cruel! that I should be obliged to leav't to a
+thankless warld! But what are ye to do wi'fc, Saivjders?"
+
+"Indeed, I'm just to leave it a' to you, Laird," said Saunders. "I have
+lang liked ye wi' a' the luve o' honest, leal friendship; and, after
+muckle meditation, I canna fix on a mortal creature wha is mair deservin
+o't than you, my guid auld freend. You have a fair chance o' recovering;
+I have nane. Ye may enjoy my gear lang after the turf has grown
+thegither owre my grave; and God bless the gift!"
+
+"Kind, guid man!" cried the Laird, in a voice evincing strong emotion,
+either of love or greed. "That _is_ kindness--ay, very different frae
+the friendship o' my sisters' and brothers' bairns. After a', I believe
+yer richt, Saunders--an hospital has nae gratitude; and what have we to
+do wi' a cauld and heartless warld?"
+
+"There's just ae difficulty I hae," said Saunders. "The will's written
+and signed; but I dinna weel ken whar to lay it; for, when I'm dead,
+thae deevils o' corbies may smell the bit paper and put it in the fire.
+Maybe you would tak the charge o't for me, Laird."
+
+"Ou ay," answered the Laird. "I'll keep it. The deil o' are o' them will
+get it oot o' my clutches."
+
+"Weel, weel, my dear friend," said Saunders. "I'll put it into a tin
+box; the key ye'll find, after my breath's out, in the little cupboard
+that's at the foot o' my bed--ye ken the place. They can mak naething o'
+the key without the box; and, if you canna find the key, you can force
+the box open. Oh, I would like to see you reading the will in the midst
+o' the harpies."
+
+"That's weel arranged, Saunders; ye can set about it as soon as you
+like."
+
+"I intend to do it instantly, Laird," replied the man. "I'll about it
+this moment." And he rose and went out of the house.
+
+In a short time, Saunders returned, holding in his hand a small tin box.
+He laid it down upon the table, and, taking out a small key, opened it,
+and took out a paper, entitled--"Last Will and Testament."
+
+"There it is, my good friend," he said; and, replacing the paper in the
+box, he locked it and placed it in an escritoire pointed out by the
+Laird. He then went away.
+
+Next day, the lawyer came to carry into effect the charitable resolution
+of Laird Rorieson; but he found that a great change had taken place upon
+the old man's sentiments. He was now adverse to a mortification, and
+said he was resolved upon leaving his fortune to one whom he considered
+to be a _real friend_, and, indeed, the only real friend he had upon
+earth. The lawyer was surprised when he ascertained that this friend was
+Saunders Gibbieson; but it was not his province to object--so he
+departed straightway to carry into effect the new resolution of the
+testator.
+
+Two days afterwards, the Laird sent a message to Saunders to come and
+speak with him. Saunders obeyed; walking in to him slowly, and
+apparently with great effort, as if he had been labouring under a strong
+disease.
+
+"I have been thinking again and again, Saunders," said the Laird, "o'
+yer great kindness. You are the first man that ever left me a farthing.
+The warld has rugged aff me since ever I had a feather to pick. Nane has
+ever offered me either a bite or a sup. You are the only friend I've
+ever met upon earth."
+
+"I hae only obeyed the dictates o' my heart," replied Saunders; "and I
+am glad I have dune it, for I feel mysel very weakly, and fear the clock
+o' this world's time will be wound up wi' me in a very short period."
+
+"Maybe no so sune as ye think, Saunders," replied the Laird. "But my
+purpose is executed. Saunders, you are my heir. Hand me that box there."
+
+Saunders took up a small mahogany box that lay on the table, and handed
+it to him.
+
+"Here," continued the Laird, taking out a paper; "here is my will. It's
+a' in your favour, Saunders--lands, houses, guids, and chattels,
+heritable and moveable. Say naething; you are my heir. Ha! ha! let the
+corbies croak. You've dune me a guid service; I winna be ahint ye. Tak
+the box into yer ain keeping. I'll keep the key. Awa wi't this instant.
+Ha! ha! let the corbies croak."
+
+Saunders obeyed. He carried the box into his own house, placed it in his
+cupboard, locked the door, and put the key into his pocket.
+
+In about a month afterwards, old Laird Rorieson departed this life. On
+the day of his death, his nephews and nieces were in great commotion,
+and there was a terrible running to and fro, and much whispering, and
+wondering, and gossiping--all on the great subject of the death of Uncle
+Geordie. On the day of his funeral, they were all collected, to see
+whether there was any will. They, of course, wished that there should be
+none, because they, being his heirs, would succeed to all, if there was
+no disposition of the old man's effects. By some means, Saunders
+Gibbieson contrived to be present along with the expectants. Perhaps he
+was allowed to be among them in the character of a witness; but indeed,
+so certain were the nephews and nieces of having succeeded in their
+efforts to please the dear old man, that they could afford to allow the
+presence of any number of witnesses who could vouch for the sacred
+gravity of their countenances, and the deep sorrows of their bereaved
+hearts. Nor was Saunders less under the affection of lugubriousness
+himself; so that it was altogether one of those beautiful sights so
+often witnessed on such melancholy occasions, where every indication of
+selfishness is banished, and nothing can be observed save that Christian
+solemnity which proveth that "the devil hath been cast out of the heart
+of man, even when he did appear to be strong." The nephews and the
+nieces looked at Saunders, and Saunders looked at them, and so solemn
+were these looks, that though the writer was searching about for a will,
+no one seemed to care whether he found one or not. It has been said that
+"the heart of man is deceitful above all things;" but of a surety the
+adage could not have been spoken there, except with the determination to
+get it disproved for once in the world, and the blessed object of
+shewing to us sons of the seed of Abraham that we are not so wicked as
+we are called.
+
+At length the ominous little box was laid hold of and broken open,
+amidst a pretty nonchalance, and lo! there was indeed a paper, bearing
+the fearful word "Will," and the faces of the heirs turned as pale as
+the paper itself. It was opened; but it was a fair, clean sheet of
+paper, and not a drop of ink had stained its purity. "All safe, all
+safe," muttered the heirs.
+
+"Here is another box," said Saunders Gibbieson, holding up the mahogany
+one; "let us try it." And he opened it, and took out Geordie's will. The
+writer read it aloud. Saunders was sole heir to all the old miser's
+possessions, amounting to £10,000. No one could tell the reason why
+there were two papers marked "Will," and one of them a blank sheet; and
+Saunders, simple man, did not trouble himself to give any explanation.
+
+
+END OF VOL. XVIII.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Transcriber's Notes: Hyphen variations left as printed
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of
+Scotland Volume 18, by Alexander Leighton
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WILSON'S TALES OF THE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 39759-8.txt or 39759-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/9/7/5/39759/
+
+Produced by David Clarke, Mary Meehan and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/39759-8.zip b/39759-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..05aa71f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39759-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/39759-h.zip b/39759-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..320e4e7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39759-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/39759-h/39759-h.htm b/39759-h/39759-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6455342
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39759-h/39759-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,11521 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<!-- $Id: header.txt 236 2009-12-07 18:57:00Z vlsimpson $ -->
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of Scotland Vol 18, by Alexander Leighton.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+
+body {
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+}
+
+ h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 {
+ text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+p {
+ margin-top: .75em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .75em;
+}
+
+hr {
+ width: 33%;
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 2em;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+table {
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+}
+
+ins {
+ text-decoration:none;
+ border-bottom: thin dotted gray;
+}
+.tnote {
+ border: dashed 1px;
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ padding-bottom: .5em;
+ padding-top: .5em;
+ padding-left: .5em;
+ padding-right: .5em;
+}
+
+.pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
+ /* visibility: hidden; */
+ position: absolute;
+ left: 92%;
+ font-size: smaller;
+ text-align: right;
+} /* page numbers */
+
+
+.blockquot {
+ margin-left: 5%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+}
+
+
+.bb {border-bottom: solid 2px;}
+
+.bl {border-left: solid 2px;}
+
+.bt {border-top: solid 2px;}
+
+.br {border-right: solid 2px;}
+
+.bbox {border: solid 2px;}
+
+.center {text-align: center;}
+
+.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+.u {text-decoration: underline;}
+
+.caption {font-weight: bold;}
+
+
+/* Images */
+.figcenter {
+ margin: auto;
+ text-align: center;
+}
+
+/* Footnotes */
+.footnotes {border: dashed 1px;}
+
+.footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;}
+
+.footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;}
+
+.fnanchor {
+ vertical-align: super;
+ font-size: .8em;
+ text-decoration:
+ none;
+}
+
+/* Poetry */
+.poem {
+ margin-left:10%;
+ margin-right:10%;
+ text-align: left;
+}
+
+.poem br {display: none;}
+
+.poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;}
+
+.poem span.i0 {
+ display: block;
+ margin-left: 0em;
+ padding-left: 3em;
+ text-indent: -3em;
+}
+
+.poem span.i2 {
+ display: block;
+ margin-left: 2em;
+ padding-left: 3em;
+ text-indent: -3em;
+}
+
+.poem span.i4 {
+ display: block;
+ margin-left: 4em;
+ padding-left: 3em;
+ text-indent: -3em;
+}
+
+ </style>
+ </head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of
+Scotland Volume 18, by Alexander Leighton
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
+
+
+Title: Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of Scotland Volume 18
+ Historical, Traditionary, & Imaginative.
+
+Author: Alexander Leighton
+
+Release Date: May 22, 2012 [EBook #39759]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WILSON'S TALES OF THE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Clarke, Mary Meehan and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/tp.jpg" alt=""/>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+
+<h1>Wilson's</h1>
+<h1>Tales of the Borders</h1>
+<h2>AND OF SCOTLAND.</h2>
+
+<div class="center">
+<br />
+<h4>HISTORICAL, TRADITIONARY, &amp; IMAGINATIVE.</h4>
+
+WITH A GLOSSARY.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+REVISED BY
+<h2>ALEXANDER LEIGHTON,</h2>
+<i>One of the Original Editors and Contributors.</i>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+VOL. XVIII.
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+LONDON:<br />
+WALTER SCOTT, 14 PATERNOSTER SQUARE,<br />
+AND NEWCASTLE-UPON-TYNE.<br />
+1884.
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="Table of Contents">
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">Page</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Thomas of Chartres</span>,</td><td align="right">(<i>Hugh Miller</i>),</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Fugitive</span>,</td><td align="right">(<i>John Mackay Wilson</i>),</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_33">33</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Bride of Bramblehaugh</span>,</td><td align="right">(<i>Alexander Leighton</i>),</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_63">63</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Gleanings of the Covenant</span>,</td><td align="right">(<i>Professor Thomas Gillespie</i>)&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left" style = "padding-left:20px">XIV. <span class="smcap">James Renwick</span>,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_95">95</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left" style = "padding-left:20px">XV. <span class="smcap">Old Isbel Kirk</span>,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><a href="#OLD_ISBEL_KIRK">105</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left" style = "padding-left:20px">XVI. <span class="smcap">The Curlers</span>,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><a href="#THE_CURLERS">110</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left" style = "padding-left:20px">XVII. <span class="smcap">The Violated Coffin</span>,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><a href="#THE_VIOLATED_COFFIN">119</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Surgeon's Tales</span>,</td><td align="right">(<i>Alexander Leighton</i>)&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left" style = "padding-left:20px"><span class="smcap">The Monomaniac</span>,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_127">127</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Foundling at Sea</span>,</td><td align="right">(<i>Alexander Campbell</i>),</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Assassin</span>,</td><td align="right">(<i>Alexander Campbell</i>),</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_178">178</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Prisoner of War</span>,</td><td align="right">(<i>John Howell</i>),</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_191">191</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Willie Wastle's Account of His Wife</span>,</td><td align="right">(<i>John Mackay Wilson</i>),</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_223">223</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Stone-breaker</span>,</td><td align="right">(<i>Alexander Campbell</i>),</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_255">255</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Laird Rorieson's Will</span>,</td><td align="right">(<i>Alexander Leighton</i>),</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_276">276</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
+<h2>WILSON'S</h2>
+<h2>TALES OF THE BORDERS</h2>
+<h3>AND OF SCOTLAND.</h3>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>THOMAS OF CHARTRES.</h2>
+
+
+<p>One morning, early in the spring of 1298, a small Scottish
+vessel lay becalmed in the middle of the Irish Channel,
+about fifteen leagues to the south of the Isle of Man.
+During the whole of the previous night, she had been borne
+steadily southward, by a light breeze from off the fast receding
+island; but it had sunk as the sun rose, and she
+was now heaving slowly to the swell, which still continued
+to roll onward, in long glassy ridges from the north. A
+thick fog had risen as the wind fell&mdash;one of those low sea
+fogs which, leaving the central heavens comparatively clear,
+hangs its dense, impervious volumes around the horizon;
+and the little vessel lay as if imprisoned within a circular
+wall of darkness, while the sun, reddened by the haze,
+looked down cheerily upon her from above. She was a
+small and very rude-looking vessel, furnished with two lug-sails
+of dark brown, much in the manner of a modern
+Dutch lugger; with a poop and forecastle singularly high,
+compared with her height in the waist; and with sides
+which, attaining their full breadth scarcely a foot over the
+water, sloped abruptly inwards, towards the deck, like the
+wall of a mole or pier. The parapet-like bulwarks of both
+poop and forecastle were cut into deep embrasures, and
+ran, like those of a tower, all around the areas they enclosed,
+looking down nearly as loftily on the midships as <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
+on the water. The sides were black as pitch could render
+them&mdash;the sails scarcely less dark; but, as if to shew
+man's love of the ornamental in even the rudest stage of
+art, a huge misshapen lion flared in vermillion on the
+prow, and over the stern hung the blue flag of Scotland,
+with the silver cross of St Andrew stretching from corner
+to corner.</p>
+
+<p>From eight to ten seamen lounged about the decks.
+They were uncouth-looking men, heavily attired in jerkins
+and caps of blue woollen, with long, thick beards, and
+strongly-marked features. The master, a man considerably
+advanced in life&mdash;for, though his eye seemed as bright as
+ever, his hair and beard had become white as snow&mdash;was
+rather better dressed. He wore above his jerkin a short
+cloak of blue which confessed, in its finer texture, the
+superiority of the looms of Flanders over those of his own
+country; and a slender cord of silver ran round a cap of
+the same material. His nether garments, however, were
+coarse and rude as those of his seamen; and the shoes he
+wore were fashioned, like theirs, of the undressed skin of
+the deer, with the hair still attached; giving to the foot
+that brush-like appearance which had acquired to his countrymen
+of the age, from their more polished neighbours,
+the appellation of rough-footed Scots. Neither the number,
+nor the appearance of the crew, singular and wild as
+the latter was, gave the vessel aught of a warlike aspect;
+and yet there were appearances that might have led one to
+doubt whether she was quite so unprepared for attack or
+defence as at the first view might be premised. There ran
+round the butt of each mast a rack filled with spears, of
+more knightly appearance than could have belonged to a
+few rude seamen&mdash;for of some of these the handles were
+chased with silver, and to some there were strips of pennon
+attached; and a rich crimson cloak, with several pieces of
+mail, were spread out to the morning sun, on one of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
+shrouds.</p>
+
+<p>The crew, we have said, were lounging about the deck,
+unemployed in the calm, when a strong, iron-studded door
+opened in the poop, and a young and very handsome man
+stepped forward.</p>
+
+<p>"Has my unfortunate cloak escaped stain?" he said to
+the master. "Your sea-water is no brightener of colour."</p>
+
+<p>"It will not yet much ashame you, Clelland," said the
+master, "even amid the gallants of France; but, were it
+worse, there is little fear, with these eyes of yours, of being
+overlooked by the ladies."</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, now, Brichan, that's but a light compliment from
+so grave a man as you," said Clelland. "You forget how
+small a chance I shall have beside my cousin."</p>
+
+<p>"Not jealous of the Governor, Clelland, I hope?" said
+the old man, gaily. "Nay, trust me, you are in little
+danger. Sir William is perhaps quite as handsome a man
+as you, and taller by the head and shoulders; but, trust me,
+no one will ever think of him as a pretty fellow. He stands
+too much alone for that. Has he risen yet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Risen!&mdash;he has been with the chaplain for I know not
+how long. Their Latin broke in upon my dreams two hours
+ago. But what have we yonder, on the edge of that bank
+of fog! Is it one of the mermaidens you were telling me
+of yesterday?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nay," said the master, "it is but a poor seal, risen to
+take the air. But what have we beyond it? By heavens
+I see the dim outline of a large vessel, through the fog!
+and yonder, not half a bow-shot beyond, there is another!
+Saints forbid that it be not the English fleet, or the ships
+of Thomas of Chartres! Clelland, good Clelland, do call
+up the Governor and his company!"</p>
+
+<p>Clelland stepped up to the door in the poop, and shouted
+hastily to his companions within&mdash;"Strange sails in
+sight!&mdash;supposed enemies&mdash;it were well to don your armours."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
+And then turning to a seaman. "Assist me, good fellow,"
+he said, "in bracing on mine."</p>
+
+<p>"Thomas of Chartres, to a certainty!" exclaimed the
+master&mdash;"and not a breath to bear us away! Would to
+heavens that I were dead and buried, or had never been
+born!"</p>
+
+<p>"Why all this ado, Brichan?" said Clelland, who, assisted
+by the sailor, was coolly buckling on his mail. "It was
+never your wont before, to be thus annoyed by danger."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not for myself I fear, noble Clelland," said the
+master, "if the Governor were but away and safe. But,
+oh, to think that the pride and stay of Scotland should fall
+into the merciless hands of a pirate dog! Would that my
+own life, and the lives of all my crew, could but purchase
+his safety!"</p>
+
+<p>"Take heart, old man," said Clelland, with dignity.
+"Heaven watches over the fortunes of the Governor of
+Scotland; nor will it suffer him to fall obscurely by the
+hands of a mere plunderer of merchants and seamen.&mdash;Rax
+me my long spear."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, the Governor himself stepped forward from
+the door in the poop, enveloped from head to foot in complete
+armour. He was a man of more than kingly presence&mdash;taller,
+by nearly a foot, than even the tallest man
+on deck, and broader across the shoulders by full six inches;
+but so admirably was his frame moulded, that, though his
+stature rose to the gigantic, no one could think of him as a
+giant. His visor was up, and exhibited a set of high
+handsome features, and two of the finest blue eyes that
+ever served as indexes to the feelings of a human soul.
+His chin and upper lip were thickly covered with hair of
+that golden colour so often sung by the elder poets; and
+a few curling locks of rather darker shade escaped from
+under his helmet. A man of middle stature and grave
+saturnine aspect, who wore a monk's frock over a coat of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
+mail, came up behind him.</p>
+
+<p>"What is to befall us now, cousin Clelland?" said the
+Governor. "Does not the truce extend over the channel,
+think you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, these are not English enemies, noble sir," replied
+the master. "We have fallen on the fleet of the infamous
+Thomas of Chartres."</p>
+
+<p>"And who is Thomas of Chartres?" asked the Governor.</p>
+
+<p>"A cruel and bloodthirsty pirate&mdash;the terror of these
+seas for the last sixteen years. Wo is me!&mdash;we have
+neither force enough to fight, nor wind to bear us away!"</p>
+
+<p>"Two large vessels," said the Governor, stepping up to
+the side, "full of armed men, too; but we muster fifty,
+besides the sailors; and, if they attempt boarding us, it
+must be by boat. Is it not so, master? The calm which
+fixes us here, must prevent them from laying alongside and
+overmastering us."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, yes, noble sir," said the master; "but we see only
+a part of the fleet."</p>
+
+<p>"Were there ten fleets," exclaimed Clelland, impatiently,
+"I have met with as great odds ashore&mdash;and here comes
+Crawford."</p>
+
+<p>The door in the poop was again thrown open, and from
+forty to fifty warriors, in complete armour, headed by a tall
+and powerful-looking man, came crowding out, and then
+thronged around the masts, to disengage their spears. They
+were all robust and hardy-looking men&mdash;the flower apparently
+of a country side; and the coolness and promptitude
+with which they ranged themselves round their leader,
+to wait his commands, shewed that it was not now for the
+first time they had been called on to prepare for battle.
+They were, in truth, tried veterans of the long and bloody
+struggle which their country had maintained with Edward&mdash;men
+who, ere they had united under a leader worthy to
+command them, had resisted the enemy individually, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+preserved, amid their woods and fastnesses, at least their
+personal independence. Such a party of such men, however
+great the odds opposed to them, could not, in any circumstances,
+be deemed other than formidable.</p>
+
+<p>"We are not born for peace, countryman," said the
+Governor&mdash;"war follows us even here. Meanwhile, lie
+down, that the enemy mark not our numbers. That foremost
+vessel is lowering her boat, and yonder tall man in
+scarlet, who takes his seat in the bows, seems to be a leader."</p>
+
+<p>"It is Thomas of Chartres, himself," said the master.
+"I know him well. Some five-and-twenty years ago, we
+sailed together from Palestine."</p>
+
+<p>"And what," asked the Governor, "could have brought
+a false pirate there?"</p>
+
+<p>"He was no false pirate then," replied the master, "but
+a true Christian knight; and bravely did he fight for the
+sepulchre. But, on his return to France, where he had
+been pledged to meet with his lady-love, he fell under the
+displeasure of the King, his master; and, ever since, he has
+been a wanderer and a pirate. You will see, as he approaches,
+the scallop in his basnet; and be sure he will be
+the first man to board us."</p>
+
+<p>"Excellent," exclaimed the Governor, gaily; "we shall
+hold him hostage for the good behaviour of his fleet. Mark
+me, cousin Crawford. His barge shoves off, and the men
+bend to their oars. He will be here in a twinkling. Do
+you stand by our good Ancient&mdash;would there were but
+wind enough to unfurl it!&mdash;and the instant he bids us
+strike, why, lower it to the deck; but be as sure you hoist
+it again when you see him fairly aboard. And you, dear
+Clelland, do you take your stand here on the deck beside
+me, and see to it, when I am dealing with the pirate, that
+you keep your long spear between us and his crew. It
+will be strange if he boast of his victory this bout."</p>
+
+<p>The men, at the command of their leader, had prostrated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
+themselves on the deck, while his two brethren in arms,
+Crawford and Clelland, stationed themselves at his bidding&mdash;the
+one on the vessel's poop, directly under the pennon,
+the other at his side in the midships. The pirate's barge,
+glittering to the sun with arms and armour, and crowded
+with men, rowed lustily towards them; but, while yet a
+full hundred yards away, a sudden breeze from the west
+began to murmur through the shrouds, and the bellying
+sails swelled slowly over the side.</p>
+
+<p>"Heaven's mercy be praised!" exclaimed the master,
+"we shall escape them yet. Lay her easy to the wind,
+good Crawford&mdash;lay her easy to the wind, and we shall
+bear out through them all."</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, cousin, nay," said the Governor, his eyes flashing
+with eagerness, "the pirate must not escape us so. Lay
+the vessel to. Turn her head full to the wind. And you,
+captain, draw off your men to the hold. We must not lose
+our good sailors; and these woollens of yours will scarcely
+turn a French arrow. Nay, 'tis I who am master now"&mdash;for
+the old man seemed disposed to linger. "I may
+resign my charge, perhaps, by and by; but you must obey
+me now."</p>
+
+<p>The master and his sailors left the deck. The barge of
+the pirate came sweeping onward till within two spears'
+length of the vessel, and then hailed her with no courtly
+summons of surrender. "Strike, dogs, strike! or you shall
+fare the worse!" It was the pirate himself who spoke,
+and Crawford, at his bidding, pulled down the Ancient.
+The barge dashed alongside. Thomas of Chartres, a very
+tall and very powerful man, seized hold of the bulwark
+rail with one hand, and bearing a naked sword in the
+other, leaped fearlessly aboard, within half a yard of where
+the Governor stood, half-concealed by the shrouds and the
+bulwarks. In a moment the sword was struck down, and
+the intruder locked in the tremendous grasp of the first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
+champion of his time. Crawford hoisted the Ancient, yard-high,
+to the new-risen breeze; while Clelland struck his
+long spear against the pirate who had leaped on the gunwale
+to follow his leader, with such hearty good-will that
+the steel passed through targe and corselet, and he fell back
+a dead man into the boat. In an instant the concealed
+party had sprung from the deck, and fifty Scottish spears
+bristled over the gunwale, interposing their impenetrable
+hedge between the pirate crew and their leader. For a
+moment, the latter had striven to move his antagonist; but,
+powerful and sinewy as he was, he might as well have
+attempted to uproot an oak of an hundred summers.
+While yet every muscle was strained in the exertion, the
+Governor swung him from off his feet, suspended him at
+arm's length for full half a moment in the air, and then
+dashed him violently against the deck. A stream of blood
+gushed from mouth and nostril, and he lay stunned and
+senseless where he fell. Meanwhile, the crew of the barge,
+taken by surprise, and outnumbered, shoved off a boat's
+length beyond reach of the spears, and then rested on their
+oars.</p>
+
+<p>"He revives," said the warrior in the monk's frock,
+going up to the fallen pirate. "Reiver though he be, he
+has fought for the holy sepulchre, and has worn golden
+spurs."</p>
+
+<p>"I will deal with him right knightly," said the Governor.
+"Yield thee, Sir Thomas of Chartres," he continued, bending
+over the prisoner, and holding up a dagger to his face&mdash;"yield
+thee true hostage for the good conduct of thy
+fleet&mdash;or shall I call the confessor?"</p>
+
+<p>"I yield me true hostage," said the fallen man. "But
+who art thou, terrible warrior, that o'ermasterest De Longoville
+of France as if he were a stripling of twelve summers?
+Art Wallace, the Scottish Champion!"</p>
+
+<p>"Thou yieldest, De Longoville," said the Governor, "to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+Sir William Wallace of Elderslie. But how is it that I
+meet, in the infamous Thomas of Chartres, that true soldier
+of the Cross, De Longoville? I have heard minstrels sing
+of thy deeds against the Saracen, Sir Knight, while I was
+yet a boy; and yet here art thou now, the dread of the
+wandering sailor and the merchant&mdash;a chief among thieves
+and pirates."</p>
+
+<p>"Alas! noble Wallace, thou sayest too truly," said Sir
+Thomas; "but yet wouldst thou deem me as worthy of
+pity as of censure, didst thou but know all, and the remorse
+I even now endure. For a full year have I determined
+to quit this wild, unknightly mode of life, and go a pilgrim
+as of old; not to fight for the sepulchre&mdash;for the battles of
+the Cross are over&mdash;not to fight, but to die for it. But I
+accept, noble champion, this my first defeat on sea, as a
+message from heaven. Accept of me as true soldier under
+thee, and I will fight for thee in thy country's quarrel, to
+the death."</p>
+
+<p>"Most willingly, brave De Longoville," said the Governor,
+as he raised him from the deck; "Scotland needs
+sorely the use of such swords as thine."</p>
+
+<p>"And deem not her cause less holy," said the monk&mdash;for
+monk he was, the well-known Chaplain Blair&mdash;"deem
+not her cause less holy than that of the sepulchre itself;
+nor think that thou shalt eradicate the stain of past dishonour
+less surely in her battles. The cause of justice,
+De Longoville, is the cause of God, contend for it where
+we may."</p>
+
+<p>Wallace returned to De Longoville the sword of which
+he had so lately disarmed him; and the pirate admiral,
+on learning that the champion was bound for Rochelle,
+issued orders to his fleet, which, now that the mist rose,
+was found to consist of six large vessels, to follow close
+in their wake. The breeze blew steadily from the north-west,
+and the ships went careering along, each in her own<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
+long furrow of white, towards the port of their destination;
+the pirate vessels keeping aloof full two bowshots from the
+Scotsman&mdash;for so De Longoville had ordered, to prevent
+suspicion of treachery. He had set aside his armour,
+and now appeared to his new associates as a man of noble
+and knightly bearing, tall and stalwart as any warrior
+aboard, save the Governor; and, though his hair was
+blanched around his temples, and indicated the approach of
+age, the light step and quick sparkling eye gave evidence
+that his vigour of frame still remained undiminished. He
+sat apart, with the Governor and his two kinsmen, Clelland
+and Crawford, in the cabin under the poop. It was a rude,
+unornamented apartment, as might be expected, from the
+general appearance of the vessel; but the profusion of
+arms and pieces of armour which hung from the sides,
+glittering to the light that found entrance through a casement
+in the deck, bestowed on the place an air of higher
+pretension. A table with food and wine was placed before
+the warriors.</p>
+
+<p>"It is now twenty-six years, or thereby," said De Longoville,
+"since I quitted Palestine for France, with the good
+Louis. I had fought by his side on the disastrous field of
+Massouna, and did all that a man of mould might to rescue
+him from the Saracens, when he fell into their hands,
+exhausted by his wounds and his sore sickness. But that
+day was written a day of defeat and disaster to the soldiers
+of the Cross. Nor need I say how I took my stand, with
+the best of my countrymen, on the walls of Damietta, and
+maintained them for the good cause, despite of the assembled
+forces of the Moslem, until we had bought back our
+king from captivity, by yielding up the city we defended
+for his ransom. It is enough for a disgraced man and a
+captive to say that my services were not overlooked by those
+whose notice was most an honour; and that, ere I embarked
+for France, I received the badge of knighthood from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
+hand of the good Louis himself.</p>
+
+<p>"You all know of how different a character Charles of
+Anjou was from his brother the king. I had returned from
+the crusade rich, only in honour, and found the lady of my
+affections under close thrall by her parents, who had resolved
+that she should marry Loithaire, Lord of Languedoc.
+I knew that her heart was all my own; but I knew, besides,
+that I must become wealthy ere I could hope to compete
+for her with a rival such as Loithaire; and the good Pope
+Nicholas having made over the crown of the Two Sicilies to
+Charles of Anjou, in an evil hour I entered the army with
+which Charles was to wrest it from the bastard Manfred&mdash;having
+certain assurance, from the tyrant himself, that, if
+he succeeded, I should become one of the nobles of Sicily.
+We encountered Manfred at Beneventura, and the bastard
+was defeated and slain. But I must blush, as a knight, for
+the honour of knighthood&mdash;as a Frenchman, for the fair fame
+of my country&mdash;when I think of the cruelties which followed.
+Not the worst tyrants of old Rome could have surpassed
+Charles of Anjou in his butcheries. The blood
+plashed under the hoofs of his charger as he passed through
+the cities of his future kingdom; and, when he had borne
+down all opposition, 'twould seem as if, in his eagerness
+to destroy all who might resist, he had also determined
+to extirpate all who could obey. But his policy proved as
+unsound as 'twas cruel and unjust, as the terrible <i>Eve of the
+Vespers</i> has since shown. The Princes of Germany, headed
+by the chivalrous Conradine of Swabia, united against us in
+the cause of the people. But the arms of France were
+again triumphant; the confederacy was broken, and the gallant
+Conradine fell into the hands of Charles. It was I,
+warriors of Scotland! to whom he surrendered; and I had
+granted him, as became a knight, an assurance of knightly
+protection. But would that my arms had been hewn off at
+the shoulders when I first beat down his sword, and intercepted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
+his retreat! The infamous Charles treated my
+knightly assurance with scorn; and&mdash;can you credit such
+baseness, noble Wallace!&mdash;he ordered Conradine of Swabia&mdash;a
+true knight, and an independent prince&mdash;for instant
+execution, as if he were a common malefactor. My blood
+boils, even now, when I recall that terrible scene of injustice
+and cruelty. The soldiers of France crowded round the
+scaffold; and I was among them, burning with shame and
+rage. Ere Conradine bent him to the executioner, he took
+off his glove, and throwing it amongst us, adjured us, if we
+were not all as dead to honour as our leader, to bear it to
+some of his kinsmen, who would receive it as a pledge of
+investiture in his rights, and as beqeathing the obligation
+to revenge his death. Will you blame me, noble Wallace!
+that, Frenchman as I was, I seized the glove of Conradine,
+and fled the army of Charles; and that, ere I returned to
+France, I delivered it up to Pedro of Arragon, the near
+kinsman of the last Prince of Swabia?</p>
+
+<p>"My king and friend, the good Louis, had sailed from
+France for Palestine, on his last hapless voyage, ere I had
+executed my mission. On my return to France, however,
+I found a galley of Toulon on the eve of quitting port, to
+join with his fleet, then on the coast of Africa, and, snatching
+a hurried interview with the lady of my affections,
+maugre the vigilance of her relatives, I embarked to fight
+under Louis, as of old, for the blessed sepulchre. We
+landed near Tunis, and saw the tents of France glittering
+to the sun. But all was silent as midnight, and the royal
+standard hung reversed over the pavilion of the good Louis.
+He had died that morning of the plague; and his base and
+cruel brother, the false Charles of Anjou, sat beside the
+corpse. I felt that I had fallen among my enemies; for
+though the young King was there, he was weak and inexperienced,
+and open to the influence of his uncle. The first
+knight I met, as I entered the camp, was Loithaire of Languedoc&mdash;now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
+the wily friend and counsellor of Charles.
+There were lying witnesses suborned against me, who accused
+me of the most incredible and unheard-of practices;
+and of these Loithaire was the chief. 'Twas in vain I demanded
+the combat, as a test of my innocence. The combat
+was denied me; my sword was broken before the assembled
+chivalry of France; my shield reversed; and sentence
+was passed that I should be burnt at a stake, and my
+ashes scattered to the four winds of heaven. But it was
+not written that I should perish so. Scarce an hour before
+the opening of the day appointed for my execution, I broke
+from prison, assisted by a brother soldier, whose life I had
+saved in Palestine, and escaped to France.</p>
+
+<p>"I was a broken and ruined man. But how wondrous
+the force of true affection! My Agnes knew this; and yet,
+knowing all, she contrived to elude her guardians, and fled
+with me to the sea-shore, where we embarked, in a ship of
+Normandy, for the south of Ireland. From that hour De
+Longoville has fought under no banner but his own. I
+renounced, in my anger, my allegiance to my country-nay,
+declared war with the sovereign who had so injured me.
+The years passed, and desperate and dishonoured men like
+myself came flocking to me as their leader, till not Philip
+himself, or my old enemy Charles, had more kingly
+authority on land than De Longoville on the sea. But let
+no man again deceive himself as I have done. I had reasoned
+on the lax morality and doubtful honour of kings,
+and asked myself why I might not, as the admiral and prince
+of my fleet, achieve a less guilty, though not less splendid
+glory than the bastard William of Normandy, or Edward of
+England, or my old enemy Charles of Anjou. But I have
+long since been taught that what were high achievements
+and honourable conquest in the admiral of a hundred vessels,
+is but sheer piracy in the captain of six. I can trust, however,
+that the last days of De Longoville may yet be deemed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
+equal to the first; and that the middle term of his life may
+be forgiven him for its beginning and its close. Not a
+month since, I carried my wife and daughter to France,
+and took final leave of them, with the purpose of setting
+out on my pilgrimage to Palestine. That intention, noble
+Wallace! is now altered; and I must again seek them out,
+that they may accompany me to Scotland."</p>
+
+<p>"The foul stain of treason, brave Longoville, must be removed,"
+said the Governor. "Charles of Anjou has long
+since gone to his account: does the Lord of Languedoc still
+survive!"</p>
+
+<p>"He still lives," replied the admiral; "his years do not
+outnumber my own."</p>
+
+<p>"Then must he either retract the vile calumny, or grant
+you the combat. The young Philip has pledged his knightly
+word, when he solicited the visit I am now voyaging to pay
+him, that he would grant me the first boon I craved in person,
+should it involve the alienation of his fairest province.
+That boon, brave De Longoville, will, at least, present you
+with the means of regaining your fair fame."</p>
+
+<p>De Longoville knelt on the cabin floor, and kissed the
+hand of the Governor. The conversation glided imperceptibly
+to other and lighter matters; time passed gaily in the recital
+of stories of chivalrous endurance or exploit; and the gale,
+which still blew steadily from the north-west, promised a
+speedy accomplishment of their voyage. For four days
+they sailed without shifting back or lowering sail; and, on
+the morning of the fifth, cast anchor in the harbour of
+Rochelle.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of the second day after their arrival, a
+single knight was pricking his steed through one of the
+glades of the immense forest which, at this period, covered
+the greater part of the province of Poitiers. He had been
+passing, ever since morning, through what seemed an interminable
+wilderness of wood&mdash;here clustered into almost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
+impenetrable thickets shagged with an undergrowth of
+thorn, there opening into long bosky glades and avenues
+that seemed, however, only to lead into recesses still more
+solitary and remote than those that darkened around him.
+During the early part of the day, the sun had looked down
+gaily among the trees, checkering the sward below with a
+carpeting of alternate light and shadow; and the knight,
+a lover of falconry and the chase, had rode jocundly on
+through the peopled solitude; ever and anon grasping his
+spear, with the eager spirit of the huntsman, as the fawn
+started up beside his courser, and shot like a meteor across
+the avenue, or the wild boar or wolf rustled in the neighbouring
+brake. Towards evening, however, the eternal
+sameness of the landscape had begun to fatigue him; the
+sun, too, had disappeared, long before his setting, in a veil
+of impenetrable vapour, mottled with grey, ponderous
+clouds, betokening an approaching storm; and the horseman
+pressed eagerly onward, in the hope of reaching, ere
+its bursting, the hostelry in which he had purposed to pass
+the evening. He had either, however, mistaken his way or
+miscalculated his distance; for after passing dell and
+dingle, glade and thicket, in monotonous succession, for
+hours on hours, the forest still seemed as dense and unending,
+and the hostelry as distant as ever. A brown and
+sleepy horror seemed to settle over the trees as the evening
+darkened; the thunder began to bellow in long peals, far to
+the south, and a few heavy drops to patter from time to
+time on the leaves, giving indication of the approaching
+deluge. The knight had just resigned himself to
+encounter all the horrors of the storm, when, on descending
+into a little bosky hollow, through which there
+passed a minute streamlet, he found himself in front
+of a deserted hermitage. It was a cell, opening, like an
+Egyptian tomb, in the face of a low precipice. A rude
+stone-cross, tapestried with ivy, rose immediately over the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
+narrow door-way.</p>
+
+<p>"The saints be praised!" exclaimed the knight, leaping
+lightly from his horse. "I shall e'en avail myself of the
+good shelter they have provided. But thou, poor Biscay,"
+he continued, patting his steed, "wouldst that thou wert
+with thy master, mine host of the Three <i>Fleurs de Lis!</i>&mdash;there
+is scant stabling for thee here. This way, however,
+good Biscay&mdash;this way. Thou must bide the storm as thou
+best may'st in yonder hollow of the rock." And, leading
+the animal to the hollow, he fastened him to the stem of a
+huge ivy, and then entered the hermitage.</p>
+
+<p>It consisted of one small rude apartment, hewn, apparently
+with immense labour, in the living rock. A seat
+and bed of stone occupied the opposite sides; and in the
+extreme end, fronting the door, there was a rude image of
+the Virgin, with a small altar of mouldering stone, placed
+before it. The evening was oppressively sultry, and, taking
+his seat on the bedside, the knight unlaced and set aside
+his helmet, exhibiting to the fast-dying light, the brown
+curling hair and handsome features of our old acquaintance
+Clelland&mdash;for it was no other than he. The thunder
+began to roll in louder and longer peals, and the lightning
+to illumine, at brief intervals, every glade and dingle without,
+and every minute object within; when a loud scream
+of dismay and terror, blent with the infuriated howl of
+some wild animal, rose from the upper part of the dell, and
+Clelland had but snatched up his spear and leaped out into
+the storm, when a young female, closely pursued by an
+enormous wolf, came rushing down the declivity, in the
+direction of the hermitage; but, in crossing the little stream,
+overcome apparently by fatigue and terror, she stumbled
+and fell. To interpose his person between the poor girl
+and her ravenous pursuer was with Clelland the work of
+one moment; to make such prompt and efficient use of his
+spear that the steel head passed through and through the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
+monster, and then buried itself in the earth beneath, was
+his employment in the next. The black blood came spouting
+out along the shaft, crimsoning both his hands to the
+wrists; and the transfixed savage, writhing itself round on
+the wood in its mortal agony, and gnashing its immense
+fangs, just uttered one tremendous howl that could be
+heard even above the pealing of the thunder, and then
+belched out his life at his feet. He raised the fallen girl,
+who seemed for a moment to have sunk into a state of
+partial swoon, and, disengaging his good weapon from
+the bleeding carcass, he supported her to the hermitage in
+the rock.</p>
+
+<p>She was attired in the garb of a common peasant of the
+age and country; but there was even yet light enough to
+shew that her beauty was of a more dignified expression
+than is almost ever to be found in a cottage&mdash;exquisite in
+colour and form as that which we meet with in the latter,
+may often be. There was a subdued elegance, too, in her
+few brief, but earnest expressions of gratitude to her deliverer,
+that consorted equally ill with her attire. On
+entering the hermitage, she knelt before the altar, and
+prayed in silence; while Clelland took his seat on the stone
+couch where he had before placed his helmet, leaving to
+his new companion the settle on the opposite side. Meanwhile
+the storm without had increased tenfold. The thunder
+rolled overhead, peal after peal, without break or pause;
+so that the outbursting of every fresh clap was mingled
+with the echoes in which the wide-spread forest had replied
+to the last. At times, the opposite acclivity, with
+all its thickets, seemed as if enveloped in an atmosphere
+of fire&mdash;at times one immense seam of forked lightning
+came ploughing the pitchy gloom of the heavens, from
+the centre to the horizon. The wild beasts of the forest
+were abroad. Clelland could hear their fierce howlings
+mingled with the terrific bellowings of the heavens. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
+dead sultry calm was suddenly broken. A hurricane went
+raging through the woods. There was a creaking, crackling,
+rushing sound among the trees, as they strained and
+quivered to the blast; and a roaring, like that of some huge
+cataract, showed that a waterspout had burst in the upper
+part of the dell, and that the little stream was coming down
+in thunder&mdash;a wide and impetuous torrent. Clelland's
+fair companion still remained kneeling before the altar.
+'Twould seem as her prayer of thanks for her great deliverance
+had changed into an earnest and oft-reiterated petition
+for still further protection.</p>
+
+<p>In a pause of the storm, the frightful howlings of a flock
+of wolves were heard rising from over the hermitage, as if
+hundreds had assembled on its roof of rock. Clelland
+sprung from his seat, and, grasping his spear, stood in the
+doorway.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall have to bide siege," he said to his companion.
+"I knew not that these fierce creatures mustered so thickly
+here."</p>
+
+<p>"Heaven be our protection!" said the maiden. "They
+fill every recess of the forest. I had left my mother's this
+evening for but an instant&mdash;'twas in quest of a tame fawn&mdash;when
+the monster from whose murderous fangs you
+delivered me, started up between me and my home; and I
+had to fly from instant destruction into the thick of the
+forest."</p>
+
+<p>"And so your place of residence is quite at hand?" said
+Clelland. "In the course of a long day's journey, I have
+not met with a single human habitation."</p>
+
+<p>"The hermitage," replied the maiden, "is but a short
+half-mile from my mother's&mdash;would that we were but safe
+there!"</p>
+
+<p>As she spoke, the howling of the wolves burst out again,
+in frightful chorus, from above, and at least a score of the
+ravenous animals came leaping down over the rock, brushing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+in their descent the ivy and the underwood. Clelland
+couched his spear, so that nothing could enter by the narrow
+doorway without encountering its sharp point. But
+the wolves came not to the attack; and their yells and
+howlings from the hollow of the rock, blent with the terrified
+snortings and pawings of poor Biscay, shewed that
+they were bent on an easier conquest, and bulkier, though
+less noble prey. The animal, in his first struggle, broke
+loose from his fastenings, and went galloping madly past;
+and an intensely bright flash of lightning, that illumined
+the whole scene of terror without, shewed him in the act
+of straining up the opposite bank, with a huge wolf fastened
+to his lacerated back, and closely pursued by full
+twenty more.</p>
+
+<p>It was, in truth, a night of dread and terror. Towards
+morning, however, the storm gradually sunk into a calm
+as dead as that which had preceded it, and a clear, starry
+sky looked down on the again silent forest. The maiden,
+now that there was less of danger, was rendered thoroughly
+unhappy by thoughts of her mother. She had left her, she said,
+but for an instant&mdash;left her solitary in her dwelling;
+and how must she have passed so terrible a night! Clelland
+strove to quiet her fears. There was a little cloud in the
+east, he said, already reddening on its lower edge; in an
+hour longer, it would be broad day, and he could then conduct
+her to her mother's.</p>
+
+<p>"You have not always worn such a dress as that which
+you now wear," he continued; "nor have you spent all your
+days on the edge of the forest. Does your father still live?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a pause for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"I am a native of France," she at length said; "but I
+have passed most of my time in other countries. My
+father, in fulfilment of a vow, is now bound on a pilgrimage
+to Palestine."</p>
+
+<p>"And may I not crave your name?" asked Clelland.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"My name," she replied, "is Bertha de Longoville.
+Brave and courtly warrior, but for whose generous and
+knightly daring I would have found yester-evening a
+horrid tomb in the ravenous maw of the wolf, do not, I
+pray you, ask me more. A vow binds me to secrecy for
+the time."</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, fear not, gentle maiden," said Clelland, "that
+what you but wish to keep secret, I shall once urge you to
+reveal. But hear me, lady, and then judge how far I am
+to be trusted. You are the only daughter of Sir Thomas
+de Longoville, once a true soldier of the blessed Cross, but,
+in his latter days, less fortunate in his quarrels. Your
+father is now in France, and in two weeks hence will be
+in Paris."</p>
+
+<p>"Saints and angels!" exclaimed the maiden, "he has
+fallen into the hands of his enemies!"</p>
+
+<p>"Not so, lady; he is among his best friends. The
+knightly word of Sir William Wallace of Elderslie, who
+never broke faith with friend or enemy, is pledged for his
+safe-keeping. With my kinsman, he is secure of at least
+safety&mdash;perhaps even of grace and pardon. But the day
+has broken, maiden; suffer me to conduct you to your
+mother's."</p>
+
+<p>They left the hermitage together, and ascended the side of
+the dell. As they passed the hollow in the rock, a bright
+patch of blood caught the eye of Clelland.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, poor Biscay!" he exclaimed; "there is all that
+now remains of him; and how to procure another steed in
+this wild district, I know not. My kinsman will be at
+Paris long ere his herald gets there. Well, there have
+been greater mishaps. Yonder is the carcass of the wolf
+I slew yester-evening, half eaten by his savage companions."</p>
+
+<p>The morning, we have said, was calm and still; but the
+storm of the preceding night had left behind it no doubtful
+vestiges of its fury. The stream had fallen to its old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
+level, and went tinkling along its channel, with a murmur
+that only served to shew how complete was the silence; but
+the banks were torn and hollowed by the recent torrent,
+and tangled wreaths of brushwood and foliage lay high on
+the sides of the dell. The broken and ragged appearance
+of the forest gave evidence of the force of the hurricane.
+The fallen trees lay thick on the sides of the more exposed
+acclivities&mdash;some reclining like spears, half bent to the
+charge, athwart the spreading boughs of such of their neighbours
+as the storm had spared; others lay as if levelled by
+the woodman, save that their long flexile roots had thrown
+up vast fragments of turf, resembling the broken ruins of
+cottages. And, in an opening of the wood, a gigantic oak,
+the slow growth of centuries, lay scattered over the soil, in
+raw and splintery fragments, that gave strange evidence
+of the irresistible force of the agent employed in its destruction.
+The trees opened as they advanced, and they
+emerged from the forest as the first beams of the sun had
+begun to glitter on the topmost boughs. A low, moory
+plain, walled in by a range of distant hills, and mottled
+with a few patches of corn, and a few miserable cottages,
+lay before them. A grey detached tower, somewhat resembling
+that of an English village church, rose on the
+forest edge, scarce a hundred yards away.</p>
+
+<p>"Yonder tower, Sir Knight," said the maiden, "is the
+dwelling of my mother. Alas! what must she not have
+endured during the protracted horrors of the night!"</p>
+
+<p>"There is, at least, joy waiting her now," said Clelland;
+"and all will soon be well."</p>
+
+<p>They approached the tower. It was a small and very
+picturesque erection, of three low stories in height, with
+projecting turrets at the front corners, connected by a hanging
+bartizan, over which there rose a sharp serrated gable,
+to the height of about two stories more. A row of circular
+shot-holes, and a low, narrow door-way, were the only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+openings in the lower storey&mdash;the few windows in the
+upper, long and narrow, and scarce equal in size to a
+Norman shield, were thickly barred with iron. The building
+had altogether a dilapidated and deserted appearance;
+for the turrets were broken-edged and mouldering, and
+some of the large square flags had slidden from off the
+stone roof, and lay in the moat, which, from a reservoir, had
+degenerated into a quagmire, mantled over with aquatic
+plants, and with, here and there, a bush of willow springing
+out from the sides. A single plank afforded a rather
+doubtful passage across; and the iron-studded door of the
+fortalice lay wide open. Clelland hung back as the maiden
+entered.</p>
+
+<p>"My daughter! my Bertha!" exclaimed a female voice
+from within; "and do you yet live! and are you again restored
+to me!"</p>
+
+<p>The Knight entered, and found the maiden in the embrace
+of her mother.</p>
+
+<p>"That I still live," said Bertha, "I owe it to this brave
+and courtly knight. But for his generous daring, your
+daughter would have found strange burial in the ravenous
+maw of a wolf."</p>
+
+<p>The mother turned round to Clelland, and grasped his
+mailed hand in both hers.</p>
+
+<p>"The saints be your blessing and reward!" she exclaimed;
+"for I cannot repay you. God himself be your reward!&mdash;for
+earth bears no price adequate to the benefit. You have
+restored to the lonely and the broken in spirit her only stay
+and comfort."</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, madam," said Clelland, "I would have done as
+much for the meanest serf; for Bertha de Longoville I
+could have laid down my life."</p>
+
+<p>The mother again grasped his hand. She was a tall and
+a still beautiful woman, though considerably turned of forty,
+and though she yet bore impressed on her countenance no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
+unequivocal traces of the distress of the night. She told
+them of her sufferings; and was made acquainted in turn
+with the frightful adventure in the hermitage, and, more
+startling still, with the resolution of her husband to confront
+his calumniators at the court of France.</p>
+
+<p>"We must set out instantly on our journey to Paris,
+Bertha," said the matron; "your father, in his imminent
+peril, must not lack some one, at least to comfort, if not to
+assist him."</p>
+
+<p>"Nay," said Clelland, "ere your setting out, you must
+first take rest enough, to recover the fatigues and watching
+of the night. And, besides, how could two unprotected
+females travel through such a country as this? Hear me,
+lady: I was hastening to Paris in advance of my party;
+but now that I have missed my way and lost my good
+steed, they will be all there before me. It matters but
+little. My kinsman can well afford wanting a herald. I
+shall cast myself on your hospitality for the day; and,
+to-morrow, should you feel yourself fully recovered, you
+shall set out for Paris, under such convoy as I can afford
+you."</p>
+
+<p>Both ladies expressed their warmest gratitude for the
+kind and generous offer; and there was that in the thanks
+of the younger which Clelland would have deemed price
+sufficient for a service much less redolent of pleasure than
+that he had just tendered. She was in truth one of the
+loveliest women he had ever seen; tall and graceful, and
+with a countenance exquisite in form and colour. But,
+with all of the bodily and the material that constitutes
+beauty, it was mainly to expression, that index of the soul,
+that she owed her power. There was a steady light in the
+dark hazel eye, joined to an air of quiet, unobtrusive self-possession,
+which seemed to sit on the polished and finely
+formed forehead, that gave evidence of a strong and equable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+mind; while the sweet smile that seemed to lurk about the
+mouth, and the air of softness spread over the lower part of
+the face, shewed that there mingled with the stronger traits
+of her character the feminine gentleness and sweetness of disposition,
+so fascinating in the sex. A little girl from one
+of the distant cottages entered the building with a milking
+pail in her hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, my good Annette," said the matron, "you left me
+by much too soon yester-evening; but it matters not now.
+You must busy yourself in getting breakfast for us&mdash;meanwhile,
+good Sir Knight, this way. The tower is a wild
+ruin, but all its apartments are not equally ruinous."</p>
+
+<p>They ascended, by a stair hollowed in the thickness of
+the wall, to an upper story. There was but one apartment
+on each floor; so that the entire building consisted but of
+four, and the two closet-like recesses in the turrets. The
+apartment they now entered was lined with dark oak; a
+massy table of the same material occupied the centre; and
+a row of ponderous stools, like those which Cowper describes
+in his "Task," ran along the wall. An immense
+chimney, supported by two rude pillars of stone, and piled
+with half-charred billets of wood, projected over the floor;
+the lintel, an oblong tablet about three feet in height, was
+roughened by uncouth heraldic sculptures of merwomen
+playing on harps, and two knights in complete armour
+fronting each other as in the tilt-yard. The windows were
+small and dark, and barred with iron; and through one of
+these that opened to the east, the morning sun, now risen
+half a spear's length over the forest, found entrance, in a
+square slanting rule of yellow light, which fell on the floor
+under a square recess in the opposite wall. The little girl
+entered immediately after the ladies and Clelland, bearing
+fire and fuel; a cheerful blaze soon roared in the chimney;
+and, as the morning felt keen and chill after the recent
+storm, they seated themselves before it. An hour passed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
+in courtly and animated dialogue, and then breakfast was
+served up.</p>
+
+<p>The younger lady would fain have prolonged the conversation&mdash;for
+it had turned on the struggles of the Scots, and
+the wonderful exploits of Wallace&mdash;had not her mother
+reminded her that they stood much in need of rest to
+strengthen them for their approaching journey. They both,
+therefore, retired to their sleeping apartments in the turrets;
+while the knight, providing himself with a bow and a few
+arrows, sallied out into the forest. The practice in woodcraft,
+which he had acquired under his kinsman, who, in
+his reverses, could levy on only the woods and moors, stood
+him in so good stead, that, when dinner-time came round,
+a noble haunch of venison and two plump pheasants smoked
+on the board. But Bertha alone made her appearance.
+Her mother, she said, still felt fatigued, and slightly indisposed;
+but she trusted to be able to join them in the course
+of the evening.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing Clelland had so anxiously wished for,
+when spending the earlier part of the day in the wood, as
+some such opportunity of passing a few hours with Bertha.
+And yet, now that the opportunity had occurred, he scarce
+knew how to employ it. The radiant smile of the maiden&mdash;her
+light, elegant form, and lovely features&mdash;had haunted
+him all the morning; and he wisely enough thought there
+could be but little harm in frankly telling her so. But,
+now that the fair occasion had offered, he found that all his
+usual frankness had left him, and that he could scarce say
+anything, even on matters more indifferent. And, what
+seemed not a little strange, too, the maiden was scarcely
+more at her ease than himself, and could find not a great
+deal more to say. Dinner passed almost in silence; and
+Bertha, rising to the square recess in the wall, drew from it
+a flagon filled with wine, which she placed before her guest
+and a vellum volume, bound in velvet and gold.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"This," she said, "is a wonderful romaunt, written by a
+countryman of yours, of whom I have heard the strangest
+stories. Can you tell me aught regarding him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" said the knight, taking up the volume, "the book
+of Tristram. I am not too young, lady, to have seen the
+writer&mdash;the good Thomas of Erceldoune."</p>
+
+<p>"Seen Thomas of Erceldoune! Thomas the Rhymer!"
+exclaimed the lady. "And is it sooth that his prophecies
+never fail, and that he now lives in Elf-land?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, lady, the good Thomas sleeps in Lauderdale, with
+his fathers. But we trust much to his prophecies. They
+have given us heart and hope amid our darkest reverses.
+He predicted the years of oppression and suffering which,
+through the death of our good Alexander, have wasted our
+country; but he prophesied, also, our deliverance through
+my kinsman, Sir William of Elderslie. We have already
+seen much of the evil he foresaw, and much, also, of the
+good. Scotland, though still threatened by the power of
+Edward, is at this moment free."</p>
+
+<p>"I have long wished," said Bertha, "to see those warriors
+of Scotland whose fame is filling all Europe. And now that
+wish is gratified&mdash;nay, more than gratified."</p>
+
+<p>"You see but one of her minor warriors," said Clelland;
+"but at Paris you shall meet with the Governor himself.
+Your father, Bertha, should he succeed in clearing his fair
+fame&mdash;and I know he will&mdash;sets out with us for Scotland.
+Will not you and the lady your mother also accompany
+us?"</p>
+
+<p>"I had deemed my father bound on a pilgrimage to the
+holy sepulchre," said Bertha.</p>
+
+<p>"But he has since thought," said Clelland, "how much
+better it were to live gloriously fighting in a just quarrel
+beside the first warrior of the world, than to perish obscurely
+in some loathsome pesthouse of the Far East. I myself
+heard him tender his services to my kinsman."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Then be sure," said Bertha, "my mother and I will
+not be separated from him. Might one find in Scotland,
+Sir Knight, some such quiet tower as this, where two defenceless
+women may bide the issue of the contest?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why defenceless, lady? There are many gallant swords
+in Scotland that would needs be beaten down ere you could
+come to harm. And why not now accept of Clelland's?
+Scotland has greater warriors and better swords; but, trust
+me, lady, she cannot boast of a truer heart. Accept of me,
+lady, as your bounden knight."</p>
+
+<p>A rich flush of crimson suffused the face and neck of the
+maiden, as she held out her hand to Clelland, who raised
+it respectfully to his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"I accept of thee, noble warrior," she said, "as true and
+faithful knight, seeing that thy own generous tender of service
+doth but second what Heaven had purposed, when, in
+my imminent peril in the wood, it sent thee to my rescue.
+Trust me, warrior, never yet had lady knight whom she respected
+more."</p>
+
+<p>Clelland again raised her hand to his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"I have a sister, lady," he said, "whose years do not outnumber
+your own. She lives lonely, since the death of my
+mother, in the home of my fathers&mdash;a tower roomier and
+stronger than this, and on the edge of a forest nearly as
+widely spread. You will be her companion, lady, and her
+friend; and your mother will be mistress of the mansion.
+On the morrow, we set out for Paris."</p>
+
+<p>The style in which the party travelled was sufficiently
+humble. Four small and very shaggy palfreys were provided
+from the neighbouring cottages: the ladies and Clelland
+were mounted on three of these; and the fourth, led
+by a hind, carried the luggage of the party. Before setting
+out, the lady had entrusted to the charge of the knight, a
+small, but very ponderous casket of ebony.</p>
+
+<p>"It needs, in these unsettled times," she said, "some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
+such person to care for it; and Bertha and I would fare all
+the worse for wanting it."</p>
+
+<p>The journey was long and tedious, and the daily stages
+of the party necessarily short. Their route lay through a
+wild, half-cultivated country, which seemed to owe much
+to the hand of nature, but little to that of man. There was
+an ever-recurring succession, day after day, of dreary, wide-spreading
+forests, with comparatively narrow spaces between,
+which, from the imperfect and doubtful traces of industry
+which they exhibited, seemed as if but lately reclaimed
+from a state of nature. Groups of miserable serfs, bound
+to the soil even more rigidly than their fellow-slaves the
+cattle, were plying their unskilful and unproductive labours
+in the fields. They passed scattered assemblages of dingy
+hovels, with here and there a grim feudal tower rising in
+the midst&mdash;giving evidence, by the strength of its defences,
+of the insecurity and turbulence of the time. The travellers
+they met with were but few. Occasionally a strolling
+troubadour or harper accompanied them part of the way,
+on his journey from one baronial castle to another. At
+times, they met with armed parties of travelling merchants,
+bound for some distant fair; at times with disbanded artisans,
+wandering about in quest of employment; soldiers in
+search of a master; or pilgrims newly returned from Palestine,
+attired in cloaks of grey, and bearing the scallop in
+their caps. The hind, their attendant, bore in his scrip,
+from stage to stage, their provisions for the day; and their
+evenings were passed in some rude hostelry by the way-side.
+The third week had passed, ere, one evening on the
+edge of twilight, they alighted at the hostel of St Denis, and
+ascertained, from mine host, that they were now within
+half a stage of Paris.</p>
+
+<p>The hostel was crowded with travellers; and the ladies
+and Clelland, for the early part of the evening, were fain to
+take their places in the common room beside the fire. A<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
+young and handsome troubadour, whose jemmy jerkin, and
+cap of green, edged with silver, shewed that he was either
+one of the more wealthy of his class, or under the patronage
+of some rich nobleman, and who had courteously risen to
+yield place to Bertha, had succeeded in reseating himself
+beside the knight.</p>
+
+<p>"The hostel swarms with company," said Clelland, addressing
+him&mdash;"pray, good minstrel, canst tell me the occasion?
+Is there a fair holds to-morrow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Sir Knight," said the minstrel, "I should rather
+ask of thee, seeing thy tongue shews thee to be a Scot.
+Dost not know that thy countryman, the brave Wallace of
+Elderslie, is at court, and that all who can, in any wise,
+leave their homes for a season, are leaving them, to see
+him? It is not once in a lifetime that such a knight may be
+looked at. And, besides, have you not heard that the combat
+comes on to-morrow?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard of nothing," said Clelland; "my route
+has lain, of late, through the remoter parts of the country.
+What combat?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Thomas de Longoville, so long a true soldier of the
+cross&mdash;so long, too, a wandering pirate&mdash;has defied to
+mortal combat, Loithaire of Languedoc; and our fair
+Philip, through the intercession of Wallace, has granted
+him the lists."</p>
+
+<p>Both the ladies started at the intelligence; and the elder,
+wrapping up her face in her mantle, bent her head well
+nigh to her knee.</p>
+
+<p>"And how, good minstrel," said Bertha, in a voice tremulous
+from anxiety, "how is it thought the combat will go?"</p>
+
+<p>"That rests with Heaven, fair lady," said the minstrel.
+"Loithaire is known far and wide, as a striker in the lists;
+but who has not also heard of De Longoville, and his wars
+with the fierce Saracen? Many seem to think, too, that
+he has been foully injured by Loithaire. That soul of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+knightly honour, the good Lord Jonville, has already renewed
+his friendship with him, as his friend and comrade
+in the battles of Palestine, and will attend him to-morrow
+in the lists."</p>
+
+<p>"May all the saints reward him!" ejaculated the elder
+lady.</p>
+
+<p>"And at what hour, Sir Minstrel," asked the knight,
+"does the combat come on?"</p>
+
+<p>"At the turn of noon," replied the minstrel, "when the
+shadow first veers to the east. I go to Paris, to find new
+theme for a ballad, and to see the good Wallace, who is
+himself the theme of so many."</p>
+
+<p>The travellers were early on the road. With all their
+haste and anxiety, however, they saw the sun climbing towards
+the middle heavens, while the city was yet several
+miles distant. They spurred on their jaded palfreys, and
+entered the suburbs about noon. What was properly the
+city of Paris in this age, occupied one of the larger islands
+of the Seine, and was surrounded by a high wall, flanked
+at the angles by massy towers, and strengthened by rows
+of thickly-set buttresses; but, on either side the river, there
+were immense assemblages of the dirtiest and meanest
+hovels that the necessities of man had ever huddled together.
+The travellers, however, found but little time for
+remark in passing through. All Paris had poured out her
+inhabitants, to witness the combat, and they now crowded
+an upper island of the Seine, which the chivalry of the age
+had appropriated as a scene of games, tournaments, and
+duels. Clelland and the ladies had but reached the opposite
+bank, when a flourish of trumpets told them that the combatants
+had taken their places in the lists, and were waiting
+the signal to engage.</p>
+
+<p>"No further, ladies, no further," said the knight, "or we
+shall entangle ourselves in the outer skirts of the crowd,
+and see nothing. This way; let us ascend this eminence,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
+and the scene, though somewhat distant, will be all before
+us."</p>
+
+<p>They ascended a smooth green knoll, the burial mound
+of some chieftain of the olden time, that overlooked the
+river. The island lay but a short furlong away. They
+could look over the heads of the congregated thousands into
+the open lists, and see the brilliant assemblage of the beauty
+and gallantry of France, which the fame of De Longoville
+and his opponent, and the singular nature of their quarrel,
+had drawn together. The sun glanced gaily on arms and
+armour, on many a robe of rich embroidery and many
+a costly jewel, and high over the whole, the oriflame of
+France, so famous in story, waved its flames of crimson and
+gold to the breeze. Knights and squires traversed the area,
+in gay and glittering confusion; and at either end there sat
+a warrior on horseback, as still and motionless as if sculptured
+in bronze. The champion at the northern end was
+cased from head to foot in sable armour, and beside him,
+under the blue pennon of Scotland, there stood a group of
+knights, who, though tall and stately as any in the lists,
+seemed lessened almost to boys in the presence of a gigantic
+warrior in bright mail, who, like Saul among the people,
+raised his head and shoulders over the proud crests of the
+assembled chivalry of France.</p>
+
+<p>"Yonder, ladies&mdash;yonder is my kinsman," exclaimed
+Clelland; "yonder is Wallace of Elderslie; and the champion
+beside him is Sir Thomas de Longoville."</p>
+
+<p>There was a second flourish of trumpets. Bertha flung
+herself on her knees on the sward, and raised her hands to
+her eyes. Her mother almost fainted outright.</p>
+
+<p>"Nay," said Clelland, "that is but the signal to clear the
+lists; the knights hurry behind the palisades, and the champions
+are left alone. Fear not, dearest Bertha!&mdash;there is a
+God in heaven, and&mdash;&mdash;Ah, there is the third flourish!
+The champions strike their spurs deep into their chargers;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
+and see how they rush forward, like thunder clouds before a
+hurricane! They close!&mdash;they close!&mdash;hark to the crash!&mdash;their
+steeds are thrown back on their haunches! Look up,
+Bertha! look up!&mdash;your father has won&mdash;he has won!
+Loithaire is flung from his saddle, the spear of De Longoville
+has passed through hauberk and corslet; I saw the
+steel head glitter red at the felon's back. Look up, ladies!
+look up!&mdash;De Longoville is safe; nay, more&mdash;restored to the
+honour and fair fame of his early manhood. Let us hasten
+and join him, that we may add our congratulations to those
+of his friends."</p>
+
+<p>Why dwell longer on the story of Thomas de Longoville?
+No Scotsman acquainted with Blind Harry need be told how
+frequent and honourable the mention of his name occurs in
+the latter pages of that historian. Scotland became his adopted
+country, and well and chivalrously did he fight in her battles;
+till, at length, when well nigh worn out by the fatigues
+and hardships of a long and active life, the decisive victory
+at Bannockburn gave him to enjoy an old age of peace and
+leisure, in the society of his lady, on the lands of his son-in-law.
+Need we add it was the gallant Clelland who stood
+in this relation to him? The chosen knight of Bertha had
+become her favoured lover, and the favoured lover a fond
+and devoted husband. Of the Governor more anon. There
+was a time, at least, when Scotsmen did not soon weary of
+stories of the Wight Wallace.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
+<h2>THE FUGITIVE.</h2>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER I.</h3>
+
+
+<p>When Prince Charles Edward, at the head of his hardy
+Highlanders, took up his head-quarters in Edinburgh, issuing
+proclamations and holding levees, amongst those who
+attended the latter was a young Englishman, named Henry
+Blackett, then a student at the university, and the son of a
+Sir John Blackett of Winburn Priory, in Cheshire. His
+mother had been a Miss Cameron, a native of Inverness-shire,
+and the daughter of a poor but proud military officer.
+From her he had imbibed principles or prejudices in favour
+of the house of Stuart; and when he had been introduced
+to the young adventurer at Holyrood, and witnessed the
+zeal of his army, his enthusiasm was kindled&mdash;there was a
+romance in the undertaking which pleased his love of enterprise,
+and he resolved to offer his sword to the Prince,
+and hazard his fortunes with him. The offer was at once
+graciously and gratefully accepted, and Henry Blackett was
+enrolled as an officer in the rebel army.</p>
+
+<p>He followed the Prince through prosperity and adversity,
+and when Charles became a fugitive in the land of his
+fathers, Henry Blackett was one of the last to forsake him.
+He, too, was hunted from one hiding-place to another; like
+him whom he had served, he was a fugitive, and a price
+was set upon his head.</p>
+
+<p>As has been stated, he imbibed his principles in favour
+of the house of Stuart from his mother; but she had been
+dead for several years. His father was a weak man&mdash;one
+of whom it may be said that he had no principles at all;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
+but being knighted by King George, on the occasion of his
+performing some civic duty, he became a violent defender
+of the house of Brunswick, and he vowed that, if the law
+did not, he would disinherit his son for having taken up
+arras in defence of Charles. But what chiefly strengthened
+him in this resolution, was not so much his devotion for
+the reigning family, as his attachment to one Miss Norton,
+the daughter of a Squire Norton of Norton Hall. She was
+a young lady of much beauty, and mistress of what are
+called accomplishments; but, in saying this much, I have
+recorded all her virtues. Her father's character might be
+summed up in one brief sentence&mdash;he was a deep, designing,
+needy villain. He was a gambler&mdash;a gentleman by
+birth&mdash;a knave in practice. He had long been on terms of
+familiarity with Sir John Blackett&mdash;he knew his weakness,
+and he knew his wealth, and he rejoiced in the attachment
+which he saw him manifesting for his daughter, in the hope
+that it would be the means of bringing his estates within
+his control. But the property of Sir John being entailed,
+it consequently would devolve on Henry as his only surviving
+son. He, therefore, was an obstacle to the accomplishment
+of the schemes on which Norton brooded; and
+when the latter found that he had joined the army of the
+young Chevalier, he was chiefly instrumental in having his
+name included in the list of those for whose apprehension
+rewards were offered; and he privately, and at his own expense,
+employed spies to go in quest of him. He also endeavoured
+to excite his father more bitterly against him.
+Nor did his designs rest here&mdash;but, as he beheld the fondness
+of the knight for his daughter increase, he, with the
+cunning of a demon, proposed to him to break the entail;
+and when the other inquired how it could be done, he replied&mdash;"Nothing
+is more simple; deny him to be your heir&mdash;pronounce
+him illegitimate. There is no living witness of
+your marriage with his mother. The only document to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
+prove it is some thumbed leaf in the register of an obscure
+parish church in the Highlands of Scotland; and we can
+secure it."</p>
+
+<p>To this most unnatural proposal the weak and wicked old
+man consented; and I shall now describe the means employed
+by Norton to become possessed of the parish register
+referred to.</p>
+
+<p>Squire Norton had a son who was in all respects worthy
+of such a father&mdash;he was the image of his mind and person.
+In short, he was one of the <i>things</i> who, in those days, resembled
+those who in our own call themselves <i>men of the
+world</i>, forsooth! and who, under that name, infest and corrupt
+society&mdash;making a boast of their worthlessness&mdash;poisoning
+innocence&mdash;triumphing in their work of ruin&mdash;and laughing,
+like spirits of desolation, over the daughter's misery and
+disgrace, the father's anguish, the wretched mother's tears,
+and the shame of a family, which they have accomplished.
+There are such creatures, who disgrace both the soul and the
+shape of man, who are mere shreds and patches of debauchery&mdash;sweepings
+from the shops of the tailor, the milliner, and
+the hair-dresser&mdash;who live upon the plunder obtained under
+false pretences from the industrious&mdash;who giggle, ogle, pat
+a snuff-box, or affect to nod in a church, to be thought sceptics
+or fine gentlemen. One of such was young Norton;
+and he was sent down to Scotland to destroy the only proof
+which Henry Blackett, in the event of his being pardoned,
+could bring forward in support of his legitimacy.</p>
+
+<p>He arrived at a lonely village in Inverness-shire, near
+which the cottage formerly occupied by Major Cameron, the
+grandfather of Henry, was situated; and of whom he found
+that few of the inhabitants remembered more than that
+"there lived a man." Finding the only inn that was in the
+village much more cleanly and comfortable than he had
+anticipated, he resolved to make it his hotel during his residence,
+and inquired of the landlady if there were any one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+in the village with whom a gentleman could spend an evening,
+and obtain information respecting the neighbourhood.</p>
+
+<p>"Fu' shurely! fu' shurely, sir!" replied his Highland
+hostess&mdash;"there pe te auld tominie."</p>
+
+<p>"Who?" inquired he, not exactly comprehending her
+Celtic accent.</p>
+
+<p>"Wha put te auld tominie?" returned she; "an' a tiscreet,
+goot shentleman he pe as in a' te toun."</p>
+
+<p>"The dominie?&mdash;the dominie?" he repeated, in a tone of
+perplexity.</p>
+
+<p>"Oigh! oigh! te tominie," added she, "tat teaches te pits
+o' pairns, an' raises te psalm in te kirk."</p>
+
+<p>He now comprehended her meaning; and from her coupling
+the dominie's name with the kirk, believed that he
+might be of use to him in the accomplishment of his object,
+and desired that he might be sent for.</p>
+
+<p>"Oigh!" returned she, smiling, "an' he no pe lang, for
+he like te trappie unco weel."</p>
+
+<p>Within five minutes, Dugald Mackay, precentor, teacher,
+and parish-clerk of Glencleugh, entered the parlour of Mrs
+Macnab. Never was a more striking contrast exhibited in
+castle or in cottage. Here stood young Norton, bedecked
+with all the foppery of an exquisite of his day; and there
+stood Dugald Mackay, his thick bushy grey hair falling on
+his shoulders, holding in his hand a hat not half the size of
+his head, which had neither been made nor bought for him,
+and which had become brown with service, and was now
+stitched in many places, to keep it together. Round it was
+wrapped a narrow stripe of crape browner than itself, and
+over all winded several yards of gut and hair-line, with hooks
+attached, betokening his angling propensities. Dugald was
+a thickset old man, with a face blooming like his native
+heather. His feet were thrust into immense brogues, as
+brown as his hat, and their formidable patches shewed that
+their wearer could use the <i>lingle</i> and <i>elshun</i>, although his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
+profession was to "teach the young idea how to shoot."
+He wore tartan hose&mdash;black breeches, fastened at the knees
+by silver gilt buckles, and much the worse for the wear, while,
+from the accumulation of ink and dust, they might have
+stood upright. His vest was huge and double-breasted, its
+colour not recognised by painters; and his shoulders were
+covered by a very small tartan coat, the tails of which
+hardly reached his waist. Such was Dugald Mackay; and
+the youth, plying him with the bottle, endeavoured to ascertain
+how far he could render him subservient to his
+purpose.</p>
+
+<p>"You appear fond of angling," said Norton.</p>
+
+<p>"Fond o' fishing?" returned the man of letters; "ou ay;
+ou ay!&mdash;hur hae mony time filt te creel o' te shentlemen
+frae Inverness, for te sixpence, and te shilling, and te pig
+crown, not to let tem gaun pack wi' te empty pasket. And
+hur will teach your honour, or tress your honour's hooks,
+should you be stopping to fish. Here pe goot sport to your
+honour," continued he, raising a bumper to his lips.</p>
+
+<p>The other, glad to assign a plausible pretext for his visit,
+said that he had come a few days for the sake of fishing, and
+inquired how long his guest had been in the neighbourhood.</p>
+
+<p>"Hur peen schulemaister and parish-clerk in Glencleugh
+for forty year," replied Dugald.</p>
+
+<p>"Parish-clerk!" said Norton, eagerly, and checking himself,
+continued&mdash;"that is&mdash;in the church you mean, you
+raise the tunes?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ou ay, hur nainsel' pe precenter too," answered
+Dugald; "put hur be schulemaister and parish-clerk into
+te pargain."</p>
+
+<p>"And what are your duties as parish-clerk?" inquired
+the other, in a tone of indifference.</p>
+
+<p>"Ou, it pe to keep te pooks wi' te marriages, te christenings,
+and te deaths. Here pe to your honour's very goot
+luck again," said he, swallowing another bumper.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Thus the holder of the birch and parish chronicler began
+to help himself to one glass after another, until the candles
+began to dance reels and strathspeys before him. At length
+the angler, expressing a wish to see such a curiosity as the
+matrimonial and baptismal register of a hamlet so remote,
+out sallied Dugald, describing curved lines as he went, and
+shortly returned, bearing the eventful quartos under his
+arm. Norton looked through them, laughing, jesting, and
+professing to be amused, and his eye quickly fell upon the
+page which he sought. Dugald laughed, drank, and talked,
+until his rough head sank upon his breast, and certain nasal
+sounds gave notice that the schoolmaster was abroad. In a
+moment, Norton transferred the leaf which contained the
+certificate of Lady Blackett's marriage, from the volume to
+his pocket. His father had ordered him to destroy it; but
+the son, vicious as the father, determined to keep it, and to
+hold it over him as an instrument of terror to extort money.
+The dominie being roused to take one glass more by way of
+a night-cap, was led home, as usual, by Mrs Macnab's servant-of-all-work,
+who carried the volumes.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly after this, the marriage between Sir John Blackett
+and Miss Norton took place; her father rejoiced in the
+success of his schemes, and Henry was disinherited and
+disowned.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+
+
+<p>While the latter events which we have recorded in the
+last chapter were taking place, Henry Blackett, the rebel
+soldier, was a fugitive, flying from hiding-place to hiding-place,
+seeking concealment in the mountains and in the
+glens, in the forest and crowded city, assuming every disguise,
+and hunted from covert to covert. A reward was
+not offered for his apprehension, in particular by government,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
+but he was included amongst those whom loyal subjects
+were forbidden to conceal; and two emissaries, sent
+out by Norton, sought him continually, to deliver him up.
+Ignorant of his father's marriage, or of the villain's part he
+had acted towards him, though conscious of his anger at
+his having joined Prince Charles, he was wandering in
+Dumfries-shire, by the shores of the Solway, disguised as a
+sailor, and watching an opportunity to return home, when
+the hunters after his life suddenly sprang upon him, exclaiming&mdash;"Ha!
+Blackett, the traitor!&mdash;the five hundred
+pounds are ours!"</p>
+
+<p>Armed only with the branch of a tree, which he carried
+partly for defence, and as a walking-stick, he repelled them
+with the desperate fierceness of a man whose life is at stake.
+One he disabled, and the other being unable to contend
+against him singly, permitted him to escape. He rushed
+at his utmost speed across the fields for many miles, avoiding
+the highways and public paths, until he sank panting
+and exhausted on the ground. He had not lain long in
+this situation when he was discovered by a wealthy farmer,
+who was known in the neighbourhood by the appellation of
+"canny Willie Galloway."</p>
+
+<p>"Puir young chield," said Willie, casting on him a look
+of compassion, "ye seem sadly distressed. Do ye think I
+could be o' ony service to ye? From yer appearance, ye
+wadna be the waur o' a nicht's lodging, and I can only
+say that ye are heartily welcome to't."</p>
+
+<p>Henry had been so long the object of pursuit and persecution,
+that he regarded every one with suspicion; and
+starting to his feet and grasping the branch firmer in his
+hand, he said&mdash;"Know you what you say?&mdash;or would you
+betray the wretched?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is o' nae manner o' use gripping your stick," said
+Willie, calmly, "for I'm allooed to be a first-rate cudgel-player&mdash;the
+best atween Stranraer and Dumfries. But, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
+to kennin' what I said, I was offerin' ye a nicht's lodgings;
+and as to betrayin' the wretched, I wadna see a hawk strike
+doon a sparrow, not a spider a midge, if I could prevent
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"You seem honest," said Henry; "I am miserable, and
+will trust you."</p>
+
+<p>"Be thankit," answered the other; "I dare to say I'm
+as honest as my neebors; and, as ye seem in distress, I
+will be very happy to serve ye, if I can do't in a creditable
+way."</p>
+
+<p>Willie Galloway was a bachelor of five and forty, and
+his house was kept by an old woman, a distant relative,
+called Janet White. Henry accompanied him home, and
+communicated to him his story. Willie took a liking for
+him, and vowed that he would not only shelter him, while
+he had a roof over his head, but that he would defend him
+against every enemy, while he had a hand that he could
+lift; and, the better to ensure his concealment, he proposed
+that he should pass as his sister's son, and not even write
+to his father to intimate where he was, until the persecution
+against those who had "been <i>out</i> with poor Charlie," was
+past.</p>
+
+<p>In the neighbourhood of Willie's farm, there resided an
+elderly gentleman, named Laird Howison. He was an
+eccentric but most kind-hearted man, of whom many believed
+and said that his imagination was stronger then his reason;
+and in so saying, it was probable that they were not far from
+the truth. But of that the reader will determine as he sees
+more of the laird. There resided with him a beautiful
+orphan girl, named Helen Marshall, the daughter of the late
+parish clergyman, and to whom he had been left guardian
+from her childhood. But, as she grew up in loveliness before
+him, she became as a dream of futurity that soothed and
+cheered his existence; and, although he was already on the
+wrong side of fifty, he resolved that, as soon as she was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
+twenty-one, he would offer her his hand and fortune. Janet
+White, the housekeeper and relative of Willie Galloway,
+had nursed Helen in infancy; and the lovely maiden was,
+therefore, a frequent visitor at his house. She there met
+Henry, and neither saw nor listened to him with indifference;
+and her beauty, sense, and gentleness, made a like impression
+upon him. Willie, though a bachelor, had penetration
+enough to perceive that when they met there was meaning
+in their eyes; and he began to rally Henry&mdash;saying, "Now,
+there would be a match for ye!&mdash;when the storm has blawn
+owre your head, just tak ye that bonny Scotch lassie hame
+to England wi' ye as yer wife, and ye will find her a treasure,
+such as ye may wander the world round and no find
+her marrow."</p>
+
+<p>As their intimacy and affection increased, Henry communicated
+to Helen the secret of his birth and situation;
+and, like a true woman, she loved him the more for the
+dangers to which he was exposed. He had remained more
+than eight months with his friend and protector; and, imagining
+that the persecution against himself, and others who
+had acted in the same cause, was now abated in its fury, he
+forwarded a letter to his father, at Winburn Priory, announcing
+his intention of venturing home in a few days,
+and begging his forgiveness and protection, until his pardon
+could be procured. He, however, intimated to Willie Galloway,
+his desire to secure the hand of Helen before he left.</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, if she be agreeable," said Willie "&mdash;and I hae
+every reason to believe she is&mdash;I wadna blame ye for taking
+that step ava; for her auld gowk o' a guardian, Laird
+Howison, (though a very worthy man in some respecks),
+vows that he is determined to marry her himsel, as soon as
+she is ane and twenty; and, as he is up aboot London at
+present, ye couldna hae a better opportunity. Therefore,
+only ye and Helen say the word, and I'll arrange the business
+for ye in less than nae time."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The fair maiden consented; a clergyman had joined their
+hands, and pronounced the benediction over them&mdash;the
+ceremony was concluded, but it was only concluded, when
+the two ruffians, who have been already mentioned as hired
+by Norton to search for him and secure his apprehension,
+and who before had met him by the side of the Solway,
+followed by two soldiers, burst into the apartment, crying&mdash;"Secure
+the traitor! It is he!&mdash;Harry Blackett!"</p>
+
+<p>Helen screamed aloud and clasped her hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye lie! ye lie!" cried Willie&mdash;"it is my sister's son&mdash;meddle
+wi' him wha daur, and us twa will fecht you four,
+even in the presence o' the minister."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he seized hold of a chair, and raised it to repel
+them. Henry followed his example. The soldiers threateningly
+raised their fire-arms. Willie suddenly swang round
+the chair with his utmost strength, and dashed down their
+arms. Henry hastily kissed the brow of his fair bride, and,
+rushing through the midst of them, darted from the house,
+while Willie, as rapidly following him, closed the door behind
+him, and holding it fast, cried&mdash;"Run, Harry, my lad!&mdash;run
+for bare life, and I'll keep them fast here!"</p>
+
+<p>For several days, the soldiers searched the neighbourhood
+for the fugitive; but they found him not, and no one knew
+where he had fled. Within a week, Helen disappeared from
+Primrose Hall, the seat of her guardian, Laird Howison;
+and the general belief was, that she had set out for Cheshire,
+to the father of her bridegroom, to intercede with him to
+use his influence in his son's behalf. "And," said Willie,
+"if she doesna move him to forgie his son, and do his duty
+towards him, then I say that he has a heart harder than a
+whin-rock."</p>
+
+<p>But no one knew the object of her departure, nor whither
+she had gone. Laird Howison had not returned; and, after
+several weeks had passed, and Willie Galloway was unable
+to hear ought of either Helen or Henry, he resolved to proceed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
+to Cheshire, to make inquiries after them; and for this
+purpose purchased an entire suit of new and fashionable
+raiment.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>CHAPTER III.</h3>
+
+
+<p>On a beautiful summer morning, an old man, slightly
+stooping in his gait, was slowly walking down a green lane
+which led in the direction from Warrington to Winburn
+Priory. Behind him, at a rapid pace, followed a younger
+man, of a muscular frame, exceedingly well-dressed, and
+carrying over his arm a thick chequered plaid, like those
+worn in the pastoral districts of Scotland. He overtook the
+elder pedestrian, and accosted him, saying&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Here's a bonny morning, freend."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir?" said the old man inquiringly, slightly lifting his
+hat, and not exactly comprehending his companion.</p>
+
+<p>"Losh, but he's a mannerly auld body that," thought the
+other; "I see the siller upon this suit o' claes has been
+weel-wared;" and added aloud, "I was observing it's a delightful
+morning, sir, and as delightful a country-side; it
+wad be a paradise, were it no sae flat."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, sir!" replied the old man; "but I fear as how the
+country looks like a paradise without its innocence."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye talk very rationally, honest man," said the other,
+whom the reader will have recognised to be Willie Galloway;
+"and, if I am no mistaen, ye maun hae some cause
+to mak the remark. But, dear me, sir, only look round ye,
+and see the trees in a' their glory, the flowers in a' their innocence;
+or just look at the rowing burn there, wimplin
+alang by oor side, like refined silver, beneath a sun only less
+glorious than the Hand that made it; and see hoo the bits
+o' fish are whittering round, wagging their tails, and whisking
+back and forrit, as happy as kings! Look at the lovely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
+and the cheerfu' face o' a' Nature&mdash;or just listen to the
+music o' thae sinless creatures in the hedges, and in the blue
+lift&mdash;and ye will say that, but for the inventions and deceitfulness
+o' man's heart, this earth wad be a paradise still.
+But I tell ye what, freend&mdash;I believe that were an irreligious
+man just to get up before sunrise at a season like this, and
+gang into the fields and listen to the laverock, and look
+around on the earth, and on the majesty o' the heavens
+rising, he wadna stand for half-an-hoor until, if naebody
+were seeing him, he would drap doun on his knees and
+pray."</p>
+
+<p>Much of Willie's sermon was lost on the old man; he,
+however, comprehended a part, and said, "Why, sir, I know
+as how I always find my mind more in tune for the service
+of the church, by a walk in the fields, and the singing of the
+birds, than by all the instruments of the orchestra."</p>
+
+<p>"Orchestra!" said Willie, "what do ye mean?&mdash;that's a
+strange place to gather devotion frae!"</p>
+
+<p>"The orchestra of the church," returned the other.</p>
+
+<p>"The orchestra o' the church!" said Willie, in surprise&mdash;"what's
+that? I never heard o't before. There's the poopit,
+and the precentor's desk, the pews and the square seats, and
+doun stairs and the gallery&mdash;but ye nonplus me about the
+orchestra."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, our lord of the manor," continued the old man,
+"is one who cares for nothing that's good, and he will give
+nothing; and as we are not rich enough to buy an organ,
+we have only a bass viol, two tenors, and a flute."</p>
+
+<p>"Fiddles and a flute in a place o' worship!" exclaimed
+Willie.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," replied the other, marvelling at his manner.</p>
+
+<p>"Weel," returned Willie, standing suddenly still, and
+striking his staff upon the ground, "that beats a'! And
+will ye tell me, sir, hoo it is possible to worship yer Creator
+by scraping catgut, or blawing wind through a hollow stick?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Why, master," said the old man, "the use of instruments
+in worship is as old as the times of the prophets, and
+I can't see why it should be given up. But dost thou think,
+now, that thou couldst go into Chester cathedral at twilight,
+while the organ filled all round about thee with its deep
+music, without feeling in thy heart that thou wast in a
+house of praise. Why, sir, at such a time thou couldst not
+commit a wicked action. The very sound, while it lifted up
+thy soul with delight, would awe thee."</p>
+
+<p>When their controversy had ended, Willie inquired&mdash;"Do
+ye ken a family o' the name o' Blackett, that lives aboot this
+neeborhood?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should," answered the old man; "forty years did I
+eat of their bread."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, after sic lang service, ye'll just be like ane o' the
+family?" replied Willie.</p>
+
+<p>"Alas!" said the other, shaking his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye dinna mean to say," resumed Willie, in a tone of
+surprise, "that they hae turned ye aff, in your auld age, as
+some heartless wretch wad sell the noble animal that had
+carried him when a callant, to a cadger, because it had
+grown howe-backet, and lost its speed o' foot. But I hope
+that young Mr Henry had nae hand in it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Henry!&mdash;no! no!" cried the old man eagerly&mdash;"bless
+him! Did you know Mr Henry, your honour?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did," said Willie; "and I hae come from Scotland
+ance errand to see him."</p>
+
+<p>"But, sir," inquired the old man, tremulously, "do you
+know where to find him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I expect to find him, by this time, at his father's house."</p>
+
+<p>"Alas!" answered the old domestic, "there has been no
+one at the priory for more than twelve months. I don't
+know where the old knight is. Henry has not been here
+since he went to Edinburgh, and that is nigh to five years
+gone now."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Ye dumfounder me, auld man," exclaimed Willie;
+"but where, in the name o' guidness, where's the wife?&mdash;where's
+Mrs Blackett?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will mean your countrywoman, I suppose," said
+the other.</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure I mean her," said Willie&mdash;"wha else could
+I mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! wo is me!" sighed his companion, and he burst
+into tears as he spoke, "dost see the churchyard, just
+before us?&mdash;and they have raised no stone to mark the
+spot."</p>
+
+<p>"Dead!" ejaculated Willie, becoming pale with horror,
+and fixing upon his fellow-pedestrian a look of agony&mdash;"Ye
+dinna say&mdash;dead!"</p>
+
+<p>"Even so!&mdash;even so!" said the old domestic, sobbing
+aloud.</p>
+
+<p>"And hoo was it?" cried Willie; "was it a fair strae
+death&mdash;or just grief, puir thing&mdash;just grief?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I can't say how it was," answered his informant;
+"but I wish I durst tell all I think."</p>
+
+<p>"Say it!&mdash;say it!" exclaimed Willie, vehemently, "what
+do you mean by, if you durst say all you think? If there
+be the shadow o' foul play, I will sift it to the bottom,
+though it cost me a thousand pounds; and there is anither
+that will gie mair."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, sir, I am but a friendless old man," replied the
+other, "that could not stand the weight of a stronger
+arm."</p>
+
+<p>"Plague take their arms!" cried Willie, handling his
+cudgel, as if to shew the strength of his own&mdash;"tell what
+ye think, and they'll have strong arms that dare touch a
+hair o' yer head."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, master," was the reply, "I don't like to say too
+much to strangers, but if thou makest any stay in these
+parts, I may tell thee something; and I fear that wherever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
+poor Henry is, he is in need of friends. But perhaps your
+honour would wish to see her grave?"</p>
+
+<p>"Her grave!" ejaculated Willie&mdash;"yes! yes! yes!&mdash;her
+grave!&mdash;O misery! have I come frae Dumfries-shire to see
+a sicht like this?"</p>
+
+<p>The old man led the way over the stile, hanging his head
+and sighing as he went. Willie followed him, drawing his
+sleeve across his eyes, as was his custom when his heart
+was touched, and forgetting the dress of the gentleman
+which he wore, in the feelings of the man.</p>
+
+<p>"The family vault is in yonder corner," said his conductor,
+as they turned across the churchyard.</p>
+
+<p>"Save us, friend!" exclaimed Willie, looking towards
+the spot, "saw ye ever the like o' yon?&mdash;a poor miserable
+dementit creature, wringing his hands as though his heart
+would break!"</p>
+
+<p>"Tis he! 'tis he!" shouted the old man, springing forward
+with the alacrity of youth, "my child!&mdash;my dear
+young master!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! conscience o' man!" exclaimed Willie, "what sort
+o' a dream is this? It canna be possible! <i>Her</i> dead, and
+<i>him</i>, oot o' his judgment, mourning owre her grave in the
+garb o' a beggar!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ha! discovered again!" cried Henry fiercely, and
+starting round as he spoke; but immediately recognising
+the old domestic, on whom time had not wrought such a
+metamorphosis as dress had upon Willie Galloway&mdash;"Ha,
+Jonathan! old Jonathan Holditch!" he added, "do I again
+see the face of a friend!" and instantly discovering Willie,
+he sprang forward and grasped his extended hand in both
+of his.</p>
+
+<p>The old man sat down upon the grave and wept.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't weep, Jonathan," said Henry, "I trust that we
+shall soon have cause to rejoice."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish a' may be richt yet," thought Willie; "I took<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
+him to be rather dementit at the first glance, and <i>rejoice</i> is
+rather a strange word to use owre a young wife's grave.
+Puir fellow!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Master Henry," said Jonathan, "I do rejoice that
+the worst is past; but I must weep too, for there be many
+things in all this that I do not understand."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor me either," said Willie; "but ye say ye think
+more than ye dare tell."</p>
+
+<p>"Why is it, Jonathan," continued Henry, "that there
+is no stone to mark my mother's grave? There is room
+enough in our burial place. Why is there nothing to her
+memory?" he continued, bending his eyes upon her sepulchre.
+"Her <i>memory</i>!" he added; "cold, cruel grave; and
+is memory all that is left me of such a parent? Is the dumb
+dust, beneath this unlettered stone&mdash;all!&mdash;all! that I can
+now call mother? Has she no monument but the tears of
+her only surviving child?"</p>
+
+<p>"A' about his mother," muttered Willie, "who has been
+dead for four years, and no a word aboot puir Helen! As
+sure as I'm a living man this is beyont my comprehension&mdash;I
+dinna think he can be <i>a'thegither there</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Henry turned towards him and said, "I have much to
+ask, my dear friend, but my heart is so filled with griefs
+and forebodings already, that the words I would utter
+tremble on my tongue; but what of my Helen&mdash;tell me,
+what of her?"</p>
+
+<p>"She&mdash;she's&mdash;weel," gasped Willie, bewildered; "that
+is&mdash;I&mdash;I hope&mdash;I trust&mdash;that&mdash;oh, losh, Mr Blackett, I
+dinna ken whare I am, nor what I am saying, for my brain
+is as daized as a body's that is driven owre wi' a drift, and
+rowed amang the snaw! Has there been onybody buried
+here lately?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr Galloway!&mdash;Mr Galloway!" exclaimed Henry, half-choked
+with agitation, and wringing his hand in his, while
+the perspiration burst upon his brow&mdash;"in the name of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
+wretchedness&mdash;what&mdash;what do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dinna speak to me!" said Willie, waving his hand;
+"ask that auld man."</p>
+
+<p>"Jonathan?" exclaimed Henry.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know what the gentleman means," said the old
+man; "but no one has been buried here since your honoured
+mother, and that is four years ago."</p>
+
+<p>"And whase grave&mdash;whase grave did ye bring me to look
+at?" inquired Willie, eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"My lady's," answered he.</p>
+
+<p>"Yer leddy's!" returned Willie&mdash;"do you mean Mr
+Blackett's mother?"</p>
+
+<p>"Whom else could I mean?" asked old Jonathan, in a
+tone of wonder.</p>
+
+<p>"Wha else could you mean!" repeated Willie; "then,
+be thankit! <i>she's</i> no dead!&mdash;ye say <i>she's</i> no dead!" and he
+literally leapt for joy.</p>
+
+<p>"Who dead?" inquired the old man, with <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'increassd'">increased</ins> astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>"Wha dead, ye stupid auld body!&mdash;did I no say <i>his wife</i>,
+as plain as I could speak?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Whose</i> wife?" inquired Jonathan, looking from Willie
+to his master in bewilderment.</p>
+
+<p>"Whose wife!" reiterated Willie, weeping, laughing,
+and twirling his stick; "shame fa' ye&mdash;ye may ask that
+noo, after knocking my heart oot o' the place o't wi' yer
+palaver. Whase wife do ye say?&mdash;ask Mr Henry."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr Galloway!" interrupted Henry, "am I to understand
+that you believed this to be the grave of my beloved
+Helen?&mdash;or, how could you suppose it? Has she left
+Primrose Hall?&mdash;or, has our marriage&mdash;&mdash;Tell me all you
+know, for I wist not what I would ask."</p>
+
+<p>Willie then related to him what the reader already knows&mdash;namely,
+that she had left Dumfries-shire, and was supposed
+to have gone to his father's.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Blessings on the day that these eyes beheld the dear
+lady, then," exclaimed old Jonathan; "for I could vow that
+she is under my roof now."</p>
+
+<p>"Under <i>your</i> roof!" cried Henry.</p>
+
+<p>"Was ye doited, auld man, that ye didna tell me that
+before?" said Willie.</p>
+
+<p>"I knew no more of my young master's marriage, until
+just now, than these gravestones do," said Jonathan; "the
+dear lady who is with us told nothing to me. Only my
+wife told me that she knew she loved our young master."</p>
+
+<p>"But why is she lodging with you, Jonathan? I have
+learned that my father is abroad, and is it that he is soon
+expected home?"</p>
+
+<p>"A fever caused her to be an inmate of my poor roof,"
+answered Jonathan, "after she had been rudely driven from
+the gate as a common beggar. But I am no longer thy
+father's servant&mdash;and I wish, for thy sake, I could forget
+he was thy father; for he has done that which might make
+the blessed bones beneath our feet start from their grave.
+And there is no one about the Priory now, but the creatures
+of the villain Norton."</p>
+
+<p>Henry entreated that the old man would not speak
+harshly of his father, though he had so treated them; and
+he briefly informed them, that, on flying from Scotland to
+escape his pursuers even at his father's lodge, he again met
+one of the individuals who had hunted him as "Blackett,
+the traitor," and who had attempted to seize him in the
+hour of his marriage&mdash;and that even there the cry was again
+raised against him; and a band, thirsting for his blood-money,
+joined in the pursuit. He had fled to the churchyard,
+and found concealment in the family vault, where he
+had remained until they then discovered him, as, in the
+early morning, he had ventured out.</p>
+
+<p>Willie counselled that there was now small vengeance to
+be apprehended from the persecution of the government;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
+and when Jonathan stated that Sir John had married the
+daughter of Norton, and disinherited Henry by denying his
+marriage with his mother, Willie exclaimed&mdash;"I see it a',
+Mr Henry, just as clear as the A, B, C. This rascal, ye ca'
+Norton, or your faither, (forgie me for saying sae,) has employed
+the villains wha hunted for yer life; it has been
+mair them than the government that has been to blame.
+Therefore, my advice is, let us go and drive the thieves out
+o' the house by force."</p>
+
+<p>Henry, who was speechless with grief, horror, and disgust,
+agreed to the proposition of his friend, and they proceeded
+to the Priory by a shorter road than the lodge.</p>
+
+<p>Henry knocked loudly at the door, which was opened by
+a man-servant, who attempted to shut it in his face; but,
+in a moment the door was driven back upon its hinges, and
+the menial lay extended along the lobby; and Henry, with
+his sturdy ally, and old Jonathan, rushed in. Alarmed by
+the sound, the other servants, male and female, hurried to
+the spot; and epithets, too opprobrious to be written, were
+the mildest they applied to the young heir, as he demanded
+admission.</p>
+
+<p>"Then let us gie them club-law for it," cried Willie, "if
+they will have it; and they shall have it to their heart's
+content, if I ance begin it."</p>
+
+<p>Armed with such weapons as they could seize at the moment,
+the servants menacingly opposed their entrance; but
+Henry, dashing through them, rushed towards the stairs,
+where he was followed by four men-servants, two armed
+with swords, and the others with kitchen utensils.</p>
+
+<p>But Willie, following at their heels, cried&mdash;"Come back!"
+and, bringing his cudgel round his head, with one tremendous
+swoop caused it to rattle across the unprotected legs
+of the two last of the pursuers, and, almost at the same
+instant, before their comrades had ascended five steps from
+the ground, they, from the same cause, descended backwards,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+rolling and roaring over their companions. Within
+three seconds, all four were conquered, disarmed, and unable
+to rise. As the discomfited garrison of the Priory
+gathered themselves together, (much in the attitude of
+Turks or tailors,) groaning, writhing, and ruefully rubbing
+their stockings, Willie, with the composed look of a philosopher,
+addressed to them this consoling and important information&mdash;"Noo,
+sirs, I hope ye are a' <i>sensibly</i> convinced,
+what guid service a bit hazel may do in a willing hand;
+and if ony o' yer banes are broken, I would recommend ye
+to send for the doctor before the swelling gets stiff about
+them. But ye couldna hae broken banes at a cannier place
+on a' the leg than just where I gied ye the bits o' clinks;
+they were hearty licks, and would gie them a clean snap,
+so that, in the matter o' six weeks, ye may be on your feet
+again."</p>
+
+<p>Old Jonathan had already followed Henry up stairs; and
+Willie having finished his exhortation, proceeded in quest
+of them. Henry succeeded in obtaining a change of raiment;
+and having sent for one who had been long a tenant
+upon the estate, he left the house in charge to him, with
+orders that he should immediately turn from it all the creatures
+of Norton, and engage other servants; and he and his
+friend, Willie, proceeded to the house of old Jonathan,
+where, as the latter supposed, a lady that he believed to be
+the wife of his young master, then was.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Mrs Holditch (the wife of old Jonathan) was wandering
+up the lane in quest of her husband, wondering at the
+length of his absence, and fretting for his return; for "the
+sweet lady," as she termed Helen, "would not take breakfast<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
+without them." She had proceeded about half a mile
+from the cottage, when she was met by none other than
+Laird Howison of Primrose Hall, and the following dialogue
+took place:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Will ye hae the kindness to inform me, ma'am, if the
+person that used to keep the gate of Sir John Blackett lives
+ony way aboot here?"</p>
+
+<p>"He does, sir," replied she, with low obeisance.</p>
+
+<p>"And, oh!" interrupted he, earnestly, "know ye if there
+be a young leddy frae Scotland stopping there at present&mdash;for
+I have heard that there is? Ye'll no think me inquisitive,
+ma'am; for really if ye kenned what motive I hae for
+asking, ye would think it motive enough."</p>
+
+<p>"There be, your honour," returned she, "and a dear excellent
+young lady she is."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! if it be her that I mean," said he, "that she is
+<i>dear</i>, indeed, I have owre guid reason to ken, and her excellence
+is written on every line o' her beautiful countenance.
+But, if I'm no detaining ye, ma'am, may I just ask
+her name?"</p>
+
+<p>"She bade us call her Helen, sir," replied she; "we
+know no other."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! yes!" cried he, "it's just Helen!&mdash;Helen, and
+nothing else to me! Mony a time has that name been
+offered up wi' my prayers. But I thought, ma'am, ye said
+she bade <i>you</i> call her Helen."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, your honour," said she; "I be the wife of old
+Jonathan Holditch, and she be staying with us now."</p>
+
+<p>"Bless you!" he exclaimed, "for the shelter which yer
+roof has afforded to the head o' an orphan. But, oh!
+what like is <i>your</i> Helen? Is her neck whiter than the
+drifted snaw? Does her hair fa' in gowden ringlets, like
+the clouds that curl round the brows o' the setting sun?
+Is her form delicate as the willow, but stately as the young
+pine? Is her countenance beautiful as the light o' laughing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
+day, when it chases sickness and darkness together
+from the chamber o' the invalid? If she isna a' this&mdash;if
+her voice isna sweeter than the sough o' music on a river&mdash;dear
+and excellent she may be, and they may call her
+Helen&mdash;but, oh! she isna my <i>Helen</i>!&mdash;for there is none in
+the world like unto <i>mine</i>. But, no! no!&mdash;she is <i>not mine
+now</i>! O Helen, woman! did I expect this? Excuse me,
+ma'am, ye'll think my conduct strange; but, when my poor
+seared-up heart thinks o' past enjoyment, it makes me forget
+mysel'. Do you think your Helen is the same that I
+hae come to seek?"</p>
+
+<p>"A sweeter and a lovelier lady," said she, "never called
+Christian man father. She had business at Winburn
+Priory; but my husband says she was driven away from the
+gate like a dog."</p>
+
+<p>"It is her!" exclaimed he, "and she's no been at the
+Priory, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir," returned she.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor seen ony o' the Blackett family?" added he,
+eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir; for there be none of them in the neighbourhood,"
+answered she.</p>
+
+<p>"What's this I hear!" cried he:&mdash;"Gracious! if I may
+again hope!&mdash;and why for no? But how is it that she
+is stopping wi' you?&mdash;wherefore did she not return to
+the home where she has been cherished from infancy, and
+where she will aye be welcome. Has Helen forgot me
+a'thegither?"</p>
+
+<p>"Alas, sir!" said she; "it was partly grief, I believe,
+that brought on a bad fever, and I had fears the sweet,
+patient creature would have died in my hands. I sat by
+her bedside, watching night after night; and, oh! sir, I
+daresay as how it was about you that she sometimes
+talked, and wept, and laughed, and talked again, poor
+thing."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"And did <i>ye</i>," he inquired, fumbling with, a pocket
+book; "did <i>ye</i> watch owre her? I'm your debtor for
+that. And ye think she spoke about <i>me</i>&mdash;my name's Howison,
+ma'am&mdash;Thomas Howison of Primrose Hall, in the
+county o' Dumfries. She would, maybe, call me <i>Thomas</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr Howison!" replied the old woman: "yes, your
+honour, she often mentioned such a name&mdash;very often."</p>
+
+<p>"Did she really," added he; "did she mention me?&mdash;and
+often spoke about me&mdash;often? Then she's no forgotten
+me a'thegither!"</p>
+
+<p>He thrust a bank-note into the hands of Mrs Holditch,
+which she refused to accept, saying that "the dear lady had
+more than paid her for all that she had done already." But,
+while she spoke, they had arrived within sight of the
+cottage, and he suddenly bounded forward, exclaiming&mdash;"Oh!
+haud my heart!" as he beheld Helen, sitting looking
+from the window&mdash;"yonder she is! yonder she is! O
+Helen! Helen!" he cried, rushing towards the door&mdash;"wherefore
+did ye leave me?&mdash;why hae ye forsaken me?
+But, joy o' my heart, I winna upbraid ye; for I hae found
+ye again."</p>
+
+<p>With an agitated step, she advanced to meet him&mdash;she
+extended her hand towards him&mdash;she faltered&mdash;"My kind,
+kind benefactor."</p>
+
+<p>He heard the words she uttered&mdash;with a glance he beheld
+the marriage-ring upon her finger&mdash;he stood still in the
+midst of his transport&mdash;his outstretched arms fell motionless
+by his side&mdash;"O Helen, woman!" he cried in agony,
+"do ye really say <i>benefactor</i>?&mdash;that isna the word I wish to
+hear frae ye. Ye never ca'ed me <i>benefactor</i> before!"</p>
+
+<p>The few words spoken by the old woman had called up
+his buried hopes; but the word <i>benefactor</i> had again whelmed
+him in despair.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" he continued, dashing away the tears from his
+eyes, "my poor mind is flung away upon a whirlwind, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
+my brain is the sport o' every shadow! O Helen! I thought
+ye had forgotten me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Forgotten you, my kind dear friend!" said she; "I
+have not, I will not, I cannot forget you; and wherefore
+would you forget that I can only remember you as a friend?"</p>
+
+<p>"Poor, miserable, and deluded being that I am," added
+he; "I expected, from what the mistress o' this house told
+me, that I wouldna be welcomed by the cauldrife names o'
+<i>friend</i> or <i>benefactor</i>. Do ye mind since ye used to call me
+<i>Thomas</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr Howison," answered she, "I know this visit has
+been made in kindness&mdash;let me believe in parental anxiety.
+You have not now to learn that I am a wife, and you can
+have heard nothing here to lead you to think otherwise.
+I will not pretend to misunderstand your language. But
+by what name can I call you save that of friend?&mdash;it
+was the first and the only one by which I have ever known
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"No, Helen," cried he, wringing her hand; "there was
+a time when ye only said <i>Thomas!</i> and the sound o' that ae
+word frae yer lips was a waff o' music, which echoed, like
+the vibrations o' an angel's harp, about my heart for hours
+and for hours!"</p>
+
+<p>"If," added she, "from having been taught by you to
+call you by that name in childhood, when I regarded you
+as my guardian, and you condescended to be my playmate,
+will you upbraid me with ceasing to use it now, when respect
+to you and to myself demand the use of another? Or
+can you, by any act of mine, place another meaning upon
+my having used it, than obedience to your wishes, and the
+familiarity of a thoughtless girl? And, knowing this, is it
+possible that the best of men will heap sorrow upon sorrow
+on the head of a friendless and afflicted woman?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dinna say friendless, Helen," cried he; "friendless
+ye canna be while I am in existence. Ye hae torn the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
+scales from my eyes, and the first use o' sicht has been to
+show me that the past has been delusion, and that the future
+is misery, solitary madness, or despair! And hae I really
+a' this time mistaen sweetness for love, and familiarity for
+affection? Do ye really say that it was only familiarity,
+Helen?"</p>
+
+<p>"The feelings of a sister for a brother," she answered;
+"of a daughter for a father."</p>
+
+<p>"True," said he; "I see it now; I was, indeed, older than
+your father&mdash;I didna recollect that."</p>
+
+<p>He sat thoughtful for a few minutes, when Helen, to
+change the subject, inquired after her old nurse, Janet
+White.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor body," said he, raising his head, "her spirits are
+clean gone. I understand she sits mourning for you by the
+fire, cowering thegither like a pigeon that's lost its mate, or
+a ewe whose lamb has been struck dead by its side. It
+would wring tears from a heart o' stane to hear her lamenting,
+morning, noon, and night, for her 'dear bairn,' as she
+aye ca'ed ye&mdash;rocking her head and chirming owre her sorrow,
+like a hen bird owre its rifled nest. I had her owre
+at the Hall the day after I cam back frae London, and just
+afore I cam here to seek for ye. But there is naething
+aboot it that she taks delight in noo. And, when I strove
+to amuse her, by taking her through the garden and plantations,
+(though I stood mair in need o' comfort mysel'), she
+would stand still and lean her head against a tree, in the
+very middle o' some o' the bonniest spots, while a tear came
+rowing down her cheeks, and look in my face wi' such a
+sorrowfu' expression, that a thousand arrows, entering my
+breast at ance, couldna hae caused me mair agony. I felt
+that I was a puir, solitary, and despised being, only cast
+into the midst o' a paradise, that my comfortless bosom
+might appear the blacker and the more dismal. The puir
+auld body saw what was passing within me, and she shook<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
+her head, saying, 'Oh, sir! had I seen ye leading my bairn
+down thir bonny avenues as your wife, Janet White would
+have been a happy woman.' Then she wrung her withered
+hands, and the tears hailed down her cheeks faster and faster;
+while I hadna a word o' consolation to say to her, had it
+been to save my life. For the very chirping o' the birds
+grew irksome, and the young leaves and the silky flowers
+painful to look upon. O Helen! if ye only kenned what
+we a' suffer on yer account! If ye only kenned what it is
+to have hope spired up, and affection preying upon your
+ain heart for nourishment, ye wadna be angry at onything
+I say."</p>
+
+<p>"Think not it is possible," she replied, while her tears
+flowed faster than her words; "but wherefore feed a hopeless
+passion, the indulgence of which is now criminal?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! forgie ye!" he exclaimed, vehemently; "dinna say
+that, Helen! Hopeless it may be, but not <i>criminal</i>! That
+is the only cruel word I ever heard frae yer lips! I didna
+think onybody would hae said that to me! Did you really
+say <i>criminal</i>? But, oh! as matters stand, if ye'd only alloo
+me to say anither word or twa anent the subject, and if ye
+wadna just crush me as a moth, and tak pleasure in my
+agonies&mdash;or hae me to perish wi' the sunless desolation o'
+my ain breast&mdash;ye'll alloo me to say them. They relate to
+my last consolation&mdash;the last tie that links me and the
+world together!"</p>
+
+<p>"Speak," said Helen; "let not me be the cause of misery
+I can have power to prevent."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, then!" replied he, "be not angry at what I'm going
+to say; and mind, that, on your answer depends the future
+happiness or misery o' a fellow-being. Yes, Helen! upon
+your word depends life and hope&mdash;madness and misery; I
+say life and hope&mdash;for, if ye destroy the one, the other winna
+hand lang oot; and I say madness&mdash;for, oh! if ye had been
+a witness o' the wild and the melancholy days and nights<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
+that I hae passed since I learned that ye had left me, and
+felt my heart burning and beating, and my brain loup, louping
+for ever, like a living substance, and shooting and stinging
+through my head, like stings o' fire, till I neither kenned
+whar I was, nor what I did; but stood still, or rushed out
+in agony, and screamed to the wind, or gripped at the echo
+o' my voice!&mdash;I say, if ye had seen this, ye wadna think it
+strange that I made use o' the words. And, now, as ye
+have heard nothing from&mdash;&mdash;from Henry Blackett, from the
+night that the ceremony o' marriage was performed&mdash;and if
+ye should hear nothing o' him for seven years to come, ye
+will then, ye ken, be at liberty&mdash;and will ye say that I may
+hope, then? O Helen, woman! say but the word, and I'll
+wait the seven years, as Jacob did for Rachel, and count
+them but a day if my Helen will bless me wi' a smile o'
+hope!"</p>
+
+<p>As he thus spoke, Mrs Holditch bustled into the room,
+exclaiming&mdash;"O sweet lady, here be one coming thee knows&mdash;see!
+see! there be my husband, and our own dear young
+master Henry, come to make us happy again!"</p>
+
+<p>"My Henry!" exclaimed Helen, springing towards the
+door&mdash;"where&mdash;oh, where?".</p>
+
+<p>"Here, my beloved! here!" replied Henry, meeting her
+on the threshold.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Laird Howison stood dumb, his mouth open, his
+eyes extended, staring on vacancy. He beheld the object
+of his delirious love sink into her husband's arms, and saw
+no more. He clasped his hands together, and, with a deep
+groan, reeled against the wall. Henry and Helen, in the
+ecstasy of meeting each other, were unconscious of all
+around, and Willie Galloway was the first to observe his
+countryman.</p>
+
+<p>"Preserve us! you here, too, Mr Howison!" said he. But
+the features of the laird remained rivetted in agony, and
+betrayed no symptom of recognition. The mention of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
+laird's name by Willie, arrested the attention of Henry, and
+approaching him, he said&mdash;"Sir, to you I ought to offer an
+apology."</p>
+
+<p>The unhappy man wildly grasped the hand of Henry, and
+seizing also Helen's, he exclaimed&mdash;"It is a' owre now!
+The chain is forged, and the iron is round my soul. But I
+bless you baith. Tak her! tak her!&mdash;and hear me, Henry
+Blackett&mdash;as ye would escape wrath and judgment, be kind
+to her as the westlin' winds and the morning dews to the
+leaves o' spring. Let it be your part to clothe her countenance
+wi' smiles and her bosom wi' joy! Fareweel,
+Helen!&mdash;look up!&mdash;let me, for the last time, look upon
+your face, and I will carry that look upon my memory to
+the grave!"</p>
+
+<p>She gazed upon him wildly, crying&mdash;"Stay!&mdash;stay!&mdash;you
+must not leave us!"</p>
+
+<p>"Now!&mdash;now, it is past!" he cried; "it was a sair
+struggle, but reason mastered it! Fareweel, Helen!&mdash;fareweel!"</p>
+
+<p>Thus saying, he rushed out of the house, and Willie Galloway
+followed him; but, although fleet of foot, he was
+compelled to give up the pursuit.</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes after the abrupt and wild departure of
+the laird, and before Helen had recovered from the shock,
+the ruffians, who, at the instigation of Norton, had hunted
+after Henry to deliver him up to the government, and from
+whom he had already twice escaped, rushed into the room,
+exclaiming&mdash;"Secure the traitor!"</p>
+
+<p>Henry sprang back to defend himself, and Willie Galloway,
+who had returned, threw himself into a pugilistic
+attitude. But Helen, stepping between her husband and
+his pursuers, drew a paper from her bosom, and placing it
+in his hands, said&mdash;"My Henry is free! he is pardoned!&mdash;the
+king hath signed it!&mdash;laugh at the bloodhounds!" And,
+as she spoke, she sank upon his breast. He opened the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
+paper; it was his pardon under the royal signature and
+the royal seal! "My own!&mdash;my wife!&mdash;my wife!" cried
+Henry, pressing her to his heart, and weeping on her neck.</p>
+
+<p>"That crowns a'!" exclaimed Willie Galloway; "O
+Helen!&mdash;what a lassie ye are!"</p>
+
+<p>The ruffians slunk from the room in confusion, and Willie
+informed them that the sooner they were out of sight it
+would be the better for them.</p>
+
+<p>Helen, on leaving Scotland, had proceeded to London,
+where, through the interest of a friend of Laird Howison's,
+she gained access to the Duke of Cumberland, and throwing
+herself at his feet, had, through him, obtained her husband's
+pardon, and that pardon she had carried next her bosom
+to his father's house, hoping to find him there.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><br /><br />Having divided this tale into chapters, we now come to
+the</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>CONCLUSION.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Henry being now pardoned, Willie Galloway advised that
+he should take his wife to his father's house, and remain
+there, adding&mdash;"Mind ye, Maister Henry, that possession
+is nine points o' law&mdash;and if ye be in want o' the matter o'
+five hundred pounds for present use, or for mair to prove
+your birthright at law, I am the man that will advance
+it, and that will leave no stone unturned till I see you
+righted."</p>
+
+<p>Willie's suggestion was acted upon; and Henry and
+Helen took up their abode in the Priory, where they had
+been but a few weeks, when he obtained information that
+his father had fallen in a duel, and that his adversary was
+none other than Squire Norton, the father of his then wife;
+but with his dying breath he declared, in the presence of
+his seconds, and invoked them to record it, that his injured
+son Henry was his only and lawful heir.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"That," exclaimed Norton, with a savage laugh over his
+dying antagonist, "it will cost him some trouble to prove!"</p>
+
+<p>The murderer, in the name of a child which his daughter
+had borne to Sir John, had the hardihood to enter legal
+proceedings to obtain the estate.</p>
+
+<p>Henry applied to the parish of Glencleugh for the register
+of his mother's marriage; but no such record was found.
+Old Dugald Mackay had a dreamy recollection of such a
+marriage taking place; but he said&mdash;"It pe very strange
+that it isna in te pook; hur canna swear to it."</p>
+
+<p>Many thought that the day would be given against Henry,
+and pitied him; but before judgment was pronounced in
+the case, young Norton was found guilty of forgery, and
+condemned to undergo the just severity of the law. Previous
+to his ignominious death, in the presence of witnesses,
+he confessed the injury he had done to Henry by tearing
+the leaves from the parish register, and directed where they
+might be found. They were found&mdash;old Norton fled from
+the country, and Henry obtained undisputed possession of
+the estate; but on his father's widow and child he settled
+a competency.</p>
+
+<p>Laird Howison's sorrow moderated as his years increased;
+and when Henry and Helen had children, and when they
+had grown up to run about, he requested that they should
+be sent to him every year, to pull the primroses around
+Primrose Hall; and they were sent. One of them, a girl,
+the image of her mother, he often wept over, and said, he
+hoped to live to love her, as he had loved her mother. Willie
+Galloway often visited his friends in Cheshire, and remained
+"canny Willie" to the end of the chapter.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span></p>
+<h2>THE BRIDE OF BRAMBLEHAUGH.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>It has been stated by the greatest critics the world ever
+saw&mdash;whose names we would mention, if we did not wish
+to avoid interfering with the simplicity of our humble annals&mdash;that
+no fictitious character ought to be made at once
+virtuous and unfortunate; and the reason given for it is
+that mankind, having a natural tendency to a belief of an
+adjustment, even in this world, of the claims of virtue and
+the deserts of vice, are displeased with a representation
+which at once overturns this belief, and creates dissatisfaction
+with the ways of Providence. This may be very good
+criticism, and we have no wish to find fault with it as
+applied to works intended to produce a certain effect on the
+minds of readers; but, so long as Nature and Providence
+work with machinery whose secret springs are hid from our
+view, and evince&mdash;doubtless for wise purposes&mdash;a disregard
+of the adjustment of rewards and punishments for virtue
+and vice, we shall not want a higher authority than critics
+for exhibiting things as they are, and portraying on the page
+of truth, wet with unavailing tears, goodness that went to
+the grave, not only unrewarded, but struck down with
+griefs that should have dried the heart and grizzled the hairs
+of the wicked.</p>
+
+<p>In a little haugh that runs parallel to the Tweed&mdash;at a
+part of its course not far from Peebles, and through which
+there creeps, over a bed of white pebbles, a little burn, whose
+voice is so small, except at certain places where a larger
+stone raises its "sweet anger" to the height of a tiny</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p>
+<p>"buller," that the lowest note of the goldfinch drowns it
+and charms it to silence&mdash;there stood, about the middle of
+the last century, a cottage. Its white walls and dark roof,
+with some white roses and honeysuckle flowering on its
+walls, bespoke the humble retreat of contentment and
+comfort. The place went by the name of Bramblehaugh,
+from the sides of the small burn being lined, for several miles,
+with the bramble. The sloping collateral ground was
+covered with shrubs and trees of various kinds, which
+harboured, in the summer months, a great collection of
+birds&mdash;the blackbird, the starling, the mavis, and others of
+the tuneful choir&mdash;whose notes rendered harmonious the
+secluded scene where they sang unmolested. The spot is
+one of those which, scattered sparingly over a wild country,
+woo the footsteps of lovers of nature, and, by a few months
+of their simple charms, regenerate the health, while they
+quicken and gratify the business-clouded fancies of the
+denizens of smoky towns.</p>
+
+<p>The cottage we have now described was occupied by
+David Mearns, and his wife Elizabeth, called, by our national
+contraction, Betty. These individuals earned a livelihood,
+and nothing more, by the mode in which poor cotters in
+Scotland contrive to spin out an existence; the leading feature
+of which, contentment, the result of necessity, is often
+falsely denominated happiness by those whose positive pleasures,
+chequered by a few misfortunes, are forgotten in the
+contemplation of a state of life almost entirely negative.
+Difficulties that cannot be overcome deaden the energies
+that have in vain been exerted to surmount them; and,
+when all efforts to better our condition are relinquished, we
+acquire a credit for contentedness, which is only a forced
+adaptation of limited means to an unchangeable end. David
+Mearns, who had, in his younger days, been ruined by a high
+farm, had learned from misfortune what he would not have
+been very apt to have received from the much-applauded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
+philosophy which is said to generate a disposition to be
+pleased with our lot. The bitterness of disappointment, and
+the wish to get beyond the reach of obligations he could not
+discharge, suggested the remedy of a reliance simply on his
+capability of earning a cotter's subsistence; and having
+procured a cheap lease of the little domicile of Bramblehaugh,
+he set himself down, with the partner of his hopes
+and misfortunes, to eat, with that simulated contentment
+we have noticed, the food of his hard labour, with the relish
+of health, and to extract from the lot thus forced upon him
+as much happiness as it would yield. The cottage and the
+small piece of ground attached to it, was the property of an
+old man, who, having made a great deal of money by the
+very means that had failed in the hands of David Mearns,
+had purchased the property of Burnbank, lying on the side
+of the small rivulet already mentioned, and, in consequence,
+it was said, of Betty Mearns bearing the same name,
+(Cherrytrees,) though there was no relationship between
+them, had let to David the small premises at a low rent.</p>
+
+<p>A single child had blessed the marriage of David Mearns
+and his wife&mdash;a daughter, called Euphemia, though generally,
+for the sake of brevity and kindliness, called Effie;
+an interesting girl, who, at the period we speak of, had arrived
+at the age of sixteen years. In a place where there
+were few to raise the rude standard of beauty formed in the
+minds of a limited country population, she was accounted
+"bonny"&mdash;a much&mdash;abused word, no doubt, in Scotland, but
+yet having a very fair and legitimate application to an interesting
+young creature, whose blue eyes, however little real
+town beauty they may have expressed or illuminated, gave
+out much tenderness and feeling, accompanied by that inexpressible
+look of pure, unaffected modesty, which is the first,
+but the most difficult gesture of the female manner attempted
+to be imitated by those who are destitute of the feeling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
+that produces it. An expression of pensiveness&mdash;perhaps
+the fruit of the early misfortunes of her parents operating
+on the tender mind of infancy, ever quick in catching, with
+instinctive sympathy, the feeling that saddens or enlivens
+the spirits of a mother&mdash;was seldom abroad from her countenance,
+imparting to it a deep interest, and, by suggesting
+a wish to relieve the cause of so early an indication of incipient
+melancholy, creating an instant friendship, which subsequent
+intercourse did not diminish.</p>
+
+<p>Walter Cherrytrees, the Laird of Burnbank, a man approaching
+seventy years of age, had a daughter, Lucy, about
+the same age as Effie Mearns. He had lost his wife about
+fifteen years before; and&mdash;though a feeling of anxiousness
+often found its way to his heart, suggesting to his vacant
+mind, as the cure of his listlessness and the balm of his bereavement,
+another wife&mdash;he had for a long time been nearly
+equally poised between the hope of Lucy becoming his comfort
+in his old age, and the wish for a tender partner of pleasures
+which, without participation, lose their relish. His
+daughter, Lucy, was a sprightly, showy girl, who, having got
+a good education, might, with the prospect she had of inheriting
+her father's property, have been entitled to look for
+a husband among the sons of the neighbouring proprietors,
+if her father's secluded mode of life, and plain, blunt manners,
+had not to a great extent limited her intercourse to a
+few acquaintances, by no means equal to him in point of
+wealth or status, however estimable they might have been
+in other respects. A more pleasant companion to the old
+Laird of Burnbank could not be found, from the one end of
+Bramblehaugh to the other, than David Mearns, his tenant,
+whose honesty and bluntness, set off by a fertility of simple
+anecdote, had charms for one of the same habits of thought
+and feeling, which all the disadvantages of his poverty could
+not counterbalance. The intimacy of the fathers produced,
+at a very early period, a friendship between the daughters,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
+who, notwithstanding, could not boast of the resemblance of
+thought and manners, and community of feeling, which
+formed the foundation of the attachment existing between
+the parents.</p>
+
+<p>This friendship was not exclusive of some acquaintanceships
+with the neighbouring young men and women, which,
+however, were in general mutual; neither of the two young
+maidens having formed any intimacy with another without,
+her friend participating in the friendship. Among others,
+Lewis Campbell, the son of a neighbouring farmer, who had
+been a large creditor of David Mearns at the time of his
+failure, called sometimes at the cottage of Bramblehaugh,
+and was soon smitten with a strong love for Effie. They
+sometimes indulged in long walks by the side of the river.</p>
+
+<p>We may anticipate, when we say that the hours spent in
+these excursions&mdash;in which the greatest beauties of external
+nature, and the strongest and purest emotions of two loving
+hearts, acting in co-operation and harmony, formed a present
+and a future such as poets dream of, and the world
+never realizes, but in momentary glimpses&mdash;were the happiest
+of these lovers. Effie's inseparable companion, Lucy,
+frequently met them as they sauntered along by the house
+of Burnbank; and the soft breathings of ardent affection
+were relieved by the gay and innocent prattle of the companions,
+who enjoyed, though in different degrees, the conversation
+and manners of the young lover. The simplicity
+and single-heartedness of Effie were entirely exclusive of a
+single thought unfavourable to an equal openness and
+frankness on the part of her companion, whom she had informed,
+in her artless way, of the state of her affections.
+But what might not have resulted from a mere acquaintanceship
+between Lucy and Effie's lover, was called forth
+by the pride of the former, whose spirit of emulation, excited
+by the good fortune of her poor friend, suggested a
+secret wish to alienate the affections of Lewis from her companion,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
+and direct them to herself. The wish to be beloved,
+though the mere effect of emulation, is the surest of the artificial
+modes by which love itself is generated in the heart
+of the wisher; and Lucy soon became, unknown for a
+time to Effie, as much enamoured of young Lewis as was
+her unsuspecting friend.</p>
+
+<p>The first intimation that Effie received of the state of
+Lucy's feelings towards her lover, was from Lewis himself.
+Sitting at a part of the haugh called the Cross Knowe, from
+the circumstance of an old Romish cruciform stone that
+stood on the top of a gentle elevation&mdash;a place much resorted
+to by the lovers&mdash;Lewis, unable to conceal a single thought
+or feeling from one who so well deserved his confidence, first
+told her of the perfidy of her friend.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not so well supplied with sweethearts, Effie,"
+he began, "as I am; for I can boast of two besides
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"That speaks little in your favour, Lewie," replied she;
+"for, if it was my wish, I could hae a' the young men o'
+the haugh makin love to me frae mornin to e'en."</p>
+
+<p>"That remark, Effie," said Lewis, "implies that I have
+courted, or at least received marks of affection, from others
+besides you, while I was leading you to suppose that my
+heart was entirely yours. Now, that is not justified by what
+I said; for one may have sweethearts, and neither know
+nor acknowledge them as such."</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe I am wrang, Lewie," said Effie; "but what was
+I to think but that the twa ither sweethearts ye mentioned
+were acknowledged by ye? It's no in the pooer o' my puir
+heart to conceive how a young woman could love are that
+neither kenned nor acknowledged her love. But I speak
+frae my ain simple, an' maybe worthless thoughts. The
+world's wide, an' haulds black an' fair, weak an' strong,
+heigh and laigh; an' wharfore no also hearts an' minds as
+different as their bodies? The birds o' this haugh hae only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
+their ain single luves; but they're a' coloured alike that belang
+to ae kind. Would that it had been God's pleasure to
+mak mankind like thae bonny birds!"</p>
+
+<p>"I fear, Effie," replied Lewis, "that a statement of mine,
+intended to be partly in jest, has been construed by you in
+such a manner as to produce to you pain. God is my witness
+that I am as single-hearted in my affection as the birds
+of this haugh; and gaudier colours, sweeter notes, and
+better scented bowers will never interfere with the love I bear
+to Effie Mearns."</p>
+
+<p>"What meant ye, then, Lewie, by sayin ye had twa
+sweethearts besides Effie Mearns?" said she.</p>
+
+<p>"That you shall immediately know," replied Lewis
+"and you will think more highly of me when I shew you,
+by my revealing secrets, not indeed confided to me, but still
+secrets, that you have all my heart and the thoughts that it
+contains. The first of my other lovers you will not be jealous
+of, for she is old Lizzy Buchanan, or, as she calls herself,
+Buwhanan, my nurse, who loves me as well as you do,
+Effie; but the other, I fear, may create in you an unpleasant
+feeling of confidence misplaced, and friendship repaid
+by something like treachery. Surely I need say no more."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it indeed sae, Lewie?" said she. "It's lang sin I
+whispered&mdash;and my heart beat and my limbs trembled as I
+did it&mdash;in the ear o' Lucy Cherrytrees, that my puir, silly
+thoughts were never aff Lewie Campbell. And what think
+ye she said to me? She said I needna look far ayont
+Bramblehaugh for a bonnier and a brawer lover."</p>
+
+<p>"Then," replied Lewis, "I am not much better off than
+you are; for she told me that your simplicity, she feared,
+was art, and that your poverty made any beauty you
+had; and she doubted if that bonny face was not a great
+snare for the ruin of a penniless lover."</p>
+
+<p>"Sae, sae," said she, sighing deeply; "and has the fair
+face o' life's friendship put on the looks o' the hypocrite at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
+the very time when greater confidence was required? I
+hae read in Laird Cherrytrees' books he is sae kind as lend
+me, many an example o' fause and faithless creatures, baith
+men and women, o' the world, o' the great cities that lie
+far ayont oor humble sphere; but little did I think that
+here in Bramblehaugh, where our bughts ken nae nicht-thieves,
+and our hen-roosts nae reynards, there was ane, and
+that ane my friend, wha could smile in my face at the very
+moment she was tryin to ruin me in the eyes o' ane wha is
+dearest to me on earth."</p>
+
+<p>As she thus poured forth her feelings with greater loquacity
+than she generally exhibited&mdash;being for the most
+part quiet and gentle&mdash;the tears flowed down her cheeks
+in great profusion, and she sobbed bitterly, in spite of
+all the efforts of Lewis to satisfy her that Lucy's endeavours
+to lessen her in his estimation were entirely fruitless.</p>
+
+<p>"Apprehend nothing, dear Effie, from the discovered
+treachery of a false friend," said he, as he pressed her
+to his bosom. "It has less power with me than the
+whispers of that gentle burn have on the sleeping echoes
+of the Eagle's Rock that only answers to the voice of
+the tempest."</p>
+
+<p>"It's no that, Lewie," replied she, wiping away her tears,
+"that gies me pain. I hae nae fear o' faith and troth
+that has been pledged, and better than pledged; for I
+hae seen it i' yer looks, and heard it i' the soonds o'
+yer deep-drawn sighs. Thae tears are for a broken friendship&mdash;for
+the return o' evil for guid&mdash;for the withered
+blossoms o' a bonny flower I hae cherished and watered, in
+the hope it wad yield me a sweet smell when I kissed
+its leaves i' the daffin o' youth or the kindliness o' age. If
+it is sae sair to lose a friend, what, Lewie&mdash;what wad
+it be to lose a lover?"</p>
+
+<p>"The very existence of great evils, Effie," said he,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
+"makes us happy, in the thought that they are beyond our
+reach."</p>
+
+<p>"But did I no think," said she, "that I was beyond
+the reach o' the pain o' experiencing the fauseness o'
+Lucy Cherrytrees&mdash;the very creature o' a' ithers, I hae
+chosen as my bosom friend&mdash;to whom I confided a' my
+thochts and the very secret o' my love?"</p>
+
+<p>"But it is an ill wind that blaws naebody guid, as they
+say, Effie," said Lewis. "I can better appreciate your goodness,
+now that I have experienced the faithlessness of
+another."</p>
+
+<p>"An' if I hae lost a friend," replied Effie, "I am the
+mair sure o' my lover. Ye dinna ken, Lewie, how muckle
+this has raised you even in my mind, whar ye hae aye occupied
+the highest place. Ye hae rejected the offered luve
+o' the braw heiress o' Burnbank, for the humble dochter o'
+David Mearns, wha earns his bread in the sweat o' his brow.
+Oh! what can a puir, penniless cottager's dochter gie in return
+to the man wha, for her sake, turns his back on a big
+ha', a thoosand braid acres, an' a braw heiress?"</p>
+
+<p>"Her simple, genuine, unsophisticated heart," replied
+Lewis, "with one unchangeable, devoted affection beating
+in its core. Were Burnbank Hall as big as the Parliament
+House, and Burnbank itself longer than the lands watered
+by the Brambleburn, and Lucy Cherrytrees as fair as our
+unfortunate Mary Stuart, I would not give my simple
+Effie, with no more property of her own than the bandeau
+that binds her fair locks, for Lucy Cherrytrees and all her
+lands."</p>
+
+<p>The two lovers continued their evening walks, indulging
+in conversations which, embracing the subject of their affection,
+and anticipating the pleasures of their ultimate union,
+realized that fullest enjoyment of hope which is said to
+transcend possession. No notice was taken of their mutual
+sentiments on the subject of Lucy Cherrytrees' affection<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
+for Lewis, and her unjustifiable attempts to displace her old
+friend, to make room for herself in the heart of the contested
+object of their wishes.</p>
+
+<p>Matters continued in this state for some time, Effie being
+regularly gratified by a visit from Lewis three times a-week.
+On one occasion a whole week passed without any intelligence
+of her lover. Her inquiries had produced no satisfactory
+explanation of the unusual occurrence; and Fancy,
+under the spell of the genius of Fear, was busy in her
+vocation of drawing dark pictures of coming evil. At last
+she was told by her father, who had procured the intelligence
+from a friend of George Campbell, the father, that
+young Lewis had been suspected of an intention to marry
+the poor daughter of the cottager, David Mearns, and had
+been despatched, without a minute's premonition, 'to an
+uncle, who was a merchant in Rio de Janeiro. No time had
+been given to him to write to Effie; and care had been
+taken to prevent him from sending her any intelligence
+while he remained at Liverpool, previous to his departure.
+The statement was corroborated by intelligence to the same
+effect, procured by one of Laird Cherrytrees' servants from
+one of the servants of George Campbell, who told it to Lucy,
+and who again told it to Effie, with tears in her eyes, which
+she took every care to conceal. The effect produced on the
+mind of Effie Mearns, by this unexpected misfortune, was
+proportioned to its magnitude, and the susceptibility of the
+feelings of the delicate individual on whom it operated. For
+many days she wept incessantly, refusing the ordinary sustenance
+of a life which she now deemed of no importance to herself
+or to any one else. All attempts at comforting a
+bruised heart were&mdash;as they generally are in cases of
+disappointed love&mdash;unavailing; and the effects of time
+seemed only apparent in a quieter, though not in any
+degree less poignant sorrow. Every object kept alive the
+remembrance of the youth who had first made an impression<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
+on her heart, and whose image was graven on every spot of
+the neighbourhood which had been consecrated by the exchange
+of a mutual passion. The scenes of their wanderings,
+hallowed as they had been in her memory, were now
+peopled with undefined terrors; and every time that she was
+forced abroad to take that air and exercise which latterly
+seemed indispensable to her existence, her sorrow received
+an accession of power from every tree under which they
+had sat, and every knowe or dell where they had listened
+to the musical loves of the birds, as they exchanged their
+own in not less eloquent sighs.</p>
+
+<p>The first circumstance that produced any effect on the
+mind of the disconsolate maiden, was a misfortune of another
+kind, which, realizing the old adage, seemed to follow with
+all due rapidity the footsteps of its precursor. Her mother,
+who sat on one side of the fire, while Effie occupied her
+usual seat in a corner of the cottage in the other, had been
+using all the force of her rude but impressive eloquence to
+get her daughter to adopt the means that were in her
+power for the amelioration of a grief which might render
+her childless.</p>
+
+<p>"I am gettin auld, Effie," she said, "an' you are the
+only are I can look to for administerin to yer faither an' to
+me that comfort we hae a richt to expect at the hands o' a
+dochter wha never yet was deficient in her duty. Our
+poverty, which winna be made ony less severe, as ye may
+weel ken, by the income o' years, will mak yer attention to
+us mair necessary; an' it may even be&mdash;God meise the
+means!&mdash;that your weak hands may yet be required to
+work for the support o' yer auld parents. I hae lang intended
+to speak to you in this way, and it was only pity for
+my puir heart-broken Effie that put me aff frae day to day,
+in the expectation that either some news wad come frae
+Lewie, or that ye wad get consolation frae anither and a
+higher source, to support ye for trials ye may yet hae to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
+bear up against, for the sake o' them that brocht ye into the
+world. A' ither means hae been tried to get ye to determine
+to live, an' no lay yersel doun to dee, an' they havin
+failed, what can I do but try the last remedy in my pooer&mdash;to
+speak, as I hae now dune, to yer guid sense, an' lay afore
+ye the duties o' a dutifu' bairn, which are far aboon the
+thochts o' a disappointed love. Promise, now, my bonny
+Effie, that ye will try to gie up yer mournin, for the
+sake o' parents whase love for ye is nae less than Lewie
+Campbell's."</p>
+
+<p>As Betty finished her impressive admonition to Effie, who
+acknowledged its force, and inwardly determined on complying
+with the request of her mother, an unusual noise at
+the door of the cottage startled her anxious ear. It seemed
+that a number of people were approaching the cottage,
+and the groans of one in deep distress and pain were mixed
+with the low talk of the crowd, who, from those inexpressible
+indications which the ear can catch and analyse ere
+the mind is conscious of the operation, seemed already to
+sympathise with one to whom they were bearing a grief.
+Housed by that anticipative fear of evil which all unfortunate
+people feel, Betty ran to the door, followed by her
+daughter, and opened it&mdash;to let in the mangled body of her
+husband; who, in felling an oak, on the property of Burnbank,
+had fallen under the weight of the tree, and got his
+leg broken, and one of his arms dislocated at the shoulder-joint.
+He was conveyed, by the kind neighbours, to a bed;
+and, by the time they got him undressed, for the purpose of
+his wounds being submitted to the curative process of the
+doctor, that individual arrived, and proceeded to perform
+the painful operation of setting the broken bones. The full
+effect of this misfortune to Effie and her mother was for a
+time suspended by the call made upon them to relieve the
+sufferings of the father and husband; and it was not till the
+bustle ceased, and the neighbours (excepting two women,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
+whose services, in addition to those of the wife and
+daughter, might still be required) went away, that they felt
+the full force of the gigantic evil that had befallen them, the
+consequences of which might extend through the remaining
+years of their existence.</p>
+
+<p>A period of no less than eighteen months passed away,
+and David Mearns was still unable to do more than, with
+assistance, to rise from his bed, and sit, during a part of the
+day, by the fire, or at the window. During the whole of
+this time, he had been tended by his daughter with assiduous
+care. Her filial sympathies, called into active operation
+by the sorrows of her parent, filled up the void that
+had been made in her heart by the departure of her lover;
+and a new source of grief effected (however paradoxical it
+may seem) a change in the morbid melancholy to which she
+had been enslaved, which, although not for mental health or
+ease, was so much in favour of exertion and remedial exercise,
+that she came to present the appearance of one inclined
+to endeavour to sustain her sorrow, rather than resign
+herself to the fatal power of an irremediable woe. Among
+the visitors who took an interest in a family reduced
+by one stroke to want and all its attendant evils, Laird
+Cherrytrees evinced the strongest concern for the fate of
+his friend; and, by a timeous contribution of necessary assistance,
+ameliorated, in so far as man could, the unhappy
+condition of virtue under the load of misery. The many
+visits of the good old laird, and the long periods of time he
+passed by the bedside of the patient, enabled him to see and
+appreciate the devoted attention of Effie to her parent; and
+often, as she flew at the slightest indication of a wish for
+something to assuage pain, or remove the uneasiness produced
+by the long confinement, he would stop the current
+of his narrative, and fix his eyes on the kind maiden, so
+long as her tender office engaged her attention and feelings
+These long looks, not unaccompanied at times with a deep<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
+sigh, were attributed, as they well might, to admiration and
+approbation of so much filial affection and devotedness exercised
+towards one whom the old laird respected above all his
+friends.</p>
+
+<p>The visits of Laird Cherrytrees were at first twice or
+thrice a-week. His infirm body already begun to exhibit
+the effects of old age, prevented him from walking; and such
+was the anxiety he felt for the unhappy patient, that he
+mounted his old pony, Donald, nearly as frail as his master,
+to enable him to administer consolation so much required.
+He came always at the same hour; Effie, who expected him,
+was often at the door ready to receive him; and, while she
+held old Donald's head till he dismounted, welcomed her
+father's friend with so much sincerity and pleasure, that if
+she had failed in her ostlership, he would have felt a disappointment
+he would not have liked to express. Even when
+at a distance from the cottage, he strained his eyes to endeavour
+to catch a glimpse of the faithful attendant; and,
+if he did not see her, the rein of Donald was relaxed, and
+he was allowed to saunter along at his own pleasure, or even
+to eat grass by the roadside, (a luxury he delighted in from
+his having once belonged to a cadger,) so as to give Effie
+time to get to her post.</p>
+
+<p>The three days of the week on which Laird Cherrytrees
+was in the habit of visiting David Mearns, were Monday,
+Thursday, and Saturday; and he seldom came without
+bringing something to the poor family&mdash;either some money
+for old Betty; some preserves, prepared by Lucy, for the
+invalid; or a book, or a flower from Burnbank garden, for
+Effie. When his conversation with David was finished&mdash;and
+every day it seemed to get shorter and shorter, though
+there seemed no lack of either subjects or ideas&mdash;he commenced
+to talk with Effie, chiefly on the nature and contents
+of the books he brought her to read; and nothing seemed
+to delight him more than to sit in the large arm-chair by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
+David's bedside, and hear Effie discoursing, <i>ex cathedra</i>, (on
+a three-footed stool at the foot of the bed, opposite to the
+Laird's chair,) with her characteristic simplicity and good
+sense, on the subjects he himself had suggested. But, notwithstanding
+all her efforts to appear well-pleased in presence
+of the man who was supporting her family, her train
+of thoughts was often broken in upon by the recollections of
+Lewis Campbell, and she would sit for an hour at a time,
+with the eyes of the Laird fixed on her melancholy face, as
+if he had been all that time in mute cogitation, suggesting
+some remedy for her sorrow. His ideas and feelings seemed
+to be operated upon by the same power that ruled the mind
+of the maiden; for his face followed, in its changing
+expressions, the mutations of her countenance. Her melancholy
+seemed to be communicated by a glance of her
+watery eye, as the thought of Lewis entered her mind; and
+when she recovered from her gloomy reverie, a corresponding
+indication of relief lighted up the grey, twinkling orbs
+of the old Laird. This custom of "glowrin," for whole
+hours at a time, on the face of the sensitive girl, at first
+painful to her, became a matter of indifference; and the
+position and attitudes of the three individuals&mdash;Betty being
+generally engaged about the house&mdash;undergoing, while
+the Laird was present, no change, came to assume something
+like the natural properties of the parties, as if they
+had been fixtures, or lay figures for the study of a painter.</p>
+
+<p>Every time the Laird came to the cottage, he extended
+the period of his stay, and, latterly, he did not stir till a
+servant from Burnbank, sent by Lucy, came to take him
+home. It seemed as if he could not get enough of
+"glowrin;" for, latterly, all his occupation, which at first
+consisted of rational conversation, merged in that mute eloquence
+of the eye, or rather in that inebriation of the orb,
+"drinking of light," which lovers of sights, especially
+female countenances, are so fond of. The visits had been so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
+regular, not a day being ever missed, that, as Effie held the
+stirrup till he mounted Donald, during all which time the
+process of "glowrin" went on as regularly as at the bedside
+of David, she never thought of asking, and he never thought
+of stating, when he would call again. Time had stamped
+the act of calling with the impress of unchangeable custom.
+The caseless clock of David's cottage was not more regular;
+the only change being that already observed&mdash;that the
+time of the Laird's stay gradually and gradually lengthened.</p>
+
+<p>The homage paid by Effie to Laird Cherrytrees was, as
+may easily be conceived, the respect, attention, and kindness
+of an open-hearted girl, filled with gratitude to the
+preserver of the lives of her and her parents. Every evening
+she offered up, at her bedside, prayers for the preservation
+and happiness of the man but for whose kindness
+starvation might have overtaken the helpless invalid, and
+not much less helpless wife and daughter. In their prayers
+the "amen" of David and his wife was the most heart-felt
+expression of love and gratitude that ever came from
+the lips of mortal. This feeling, however, did not prevent
+David Mearns and Betty from sometimes indulging, in the
+absence of Effie (in all likelihood giving freedom to her
+tears, as she sat in some favourite retreat of her absent
+lover,) in some remarks on the extraordinary conduct of
+Laird Cherrytrees. They soon saw through the secret, and
+resolved upon drawing him out; for which purpose Effie was
+to be called away on the occasion of the next visit.</p>
+
+<p>The Laird came as he used to do, took his seat, and resumed
+his gazing. Effie pleased him exceedingly, by an
+account she gave him of the last book he brought to her;
+and, throwing himself back in the arm chair, he seemed, for
+a time, wrapped in meditation. Effie obeyed, in the meantime,
+her mother's request, to come for a few minutes to the
+green to assist her in her work; and, when the Laird again<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
+applied his eyes to their accustomed vocation, he was surprised,
+but not (for once) displeased, at her disappearance.
+A great struggle now commenced between some wish and a
+restraint. He looked round the cottage, and then turned
+his eyes on David; acts which he repeated several times.
+Incipient syllables of words half-formed died away in his
+struggling throat. He moved restlessly in the large chair,
+and twirled his silver-headed cane in his hand. He even
+rose, went to the door, looked out, came back again, and
+took his seat without saying a word. Holding away his
+face from David, he at last made out a few words, uttered
+with great difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>"She's a fine lassie, Effie," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"A bonnier an' a better never was brocht up in Bramblehaugh,
+savin yer ain Lucy," replied David.</p>
+
+<p>"Hoo auld is she noo?" said the Laird, still holding
+away his face.</p>
+
+<p>"She will be nineteen come the time," replied David.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a pity she's sae young," rejoined the Laird, with a
+great struggle, and making a noise with his cane, as if he had
+repented of his words, and wished to drown them before they
+reached the ears of David.</p>
+
+<p>"I dinna think sae, beggin yer Honour's pardon," replied
+David. "We need her assistance, in this trial; an' I'm
+just thinkin o' some way she micht use her hands&mdash;an she's
+willing aneugh, puir cratur&mdash;for our assistance."</p>
+
+<p>"Are ye no pleased wi' my assistance?" said the Laird,
+displeased at something in David's reply.</p>
+
+<p>"Yer Honour has saved our lives," replied David, feelingly,
+"an' it wad only be because we are ashamed o
+yer guidness that we wad wish our dochter to tak a part
+o' that burden aff ane wha is under nae obligation to serve
+us."</p>
+
+<p>"If I hae been yer friend, ye hae been mine," said the
+Laird. "I hae got guid advices frae ye; an', even noo, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
+hae something to ask ye concernin mysel, that nae ither
+man i' the haugh could sae weel answer."</p>
+
+<p>"What is that, yer Honour?" said David.</p>
+
+<p>"What do ye think, David Mearns, I should do," said
+the Laird, moving about in the chair in evident perplexity,
+"if my dochter Lucy were to tak a husband an' leave Burnbank?
+I carena aboot fa'in into the hands o' Jenny
+Mucklewham, wha, for this some time past, has neither
+cleaned my buckles nor brushed my coat as I wad wish.
+She says I'm mair fashious; but that's a mere excuse."</p>
+
+<p>"I hae seen aulder men marry again," said David, thinking
+he would please the Laird, by giving him such an answer
+as he was clearly fishing for.</p>
+
+<p>"Aulder men, David, man!" replied the Laird, looking
+down at his person, and adjusting his wig. "Did I ask ye
+onything aboot my age? I wanted merely your advice, what
+I should do in certain circumstances, an' ye gie me a comparison
+for an answer.&mdash;Do ye think I should marry?"</p>
+
+<p>"If yer Honour has ony wish in that way, I think ye
+should," said David.</p>
+
+<p>"I never yet did wrang in following your advice, David
+Mearns," said the Laird. "&mdash;She's a fine lassie, Effie."</p>
+
+<p>"Ou, ay," responded David, at a loss what more to
+say.</p>
+
+<p>"Very fine," again said the Laird, turning his face
+partially from the window, so as the tail of his eye
+reached David's face, and waiting for something more.</p>
+
+<p>David could, however, say nothing. The very circumstance
+of the Laird's wishing him to say something pertinent
+to the purpose already so broadly hinted at, prevented him
+from touching so delicate a subject; and, notwithstanding
+of another application of the tail of the Laird's eye, he was
+silent.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye hae gien me ae advice, David," said the Laird, in despair
+of getting anything more out of David without a question:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
+"could ye no tell me <i>wha</i> I should marry, man?"
+And having achieved this announcement, he rose and walked
+to the window.</p>
+
+<p>"That's owre delicate a subject for me to gie an advice
+on, yer Honour," replied David. "The doo lays aside
+ninety-nine guid straes, an' taks the hundredth, though a
+crooked ane, for its nest. Ye maun judge for yersel."</p>
+
+<p>"What say ye to yer ain Effie, then?" said the Laird, relieved
+at last from a dreadful burden.</p>
+
+<p>"If yer Honour likes the lassie, an' she'll tak yer Honour,
+I can hae nae objections," replied David.</p>
+
+<p>The Laird, who seemed twenty years younger after this
+declaration, took David by the hand, and shook it till the
+pain of his dislocated arm almost made him cry.</p>
+
+<p>"Will ye speak to her aboot it. David!" said he, still
+holding his hand. "The best farm o' Burnbank will be
+your reward. Plead for me, David, my best friend. Tell
+Betty aboot it, and get her to use a mother's pooer. If I
+can trust my een, Effie doesna dislike me. If a' gaes weel,
+ye may hae Ravelrigg, or Braidacre, or Muirfield&mdash;onything
+that's in my pooer to gie, David." And the old lover, exhausted
+by the struggle and excitement he had suffered,
+sank back into the chair.</p>
+
+<p>"I will do my best," replied David. And the old Laird
+sighed, and absolutely groaned with pure, unmixed satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of this scene, Effie and her mother came in.
+The damsel took her old seat on the three-footed stool at the
+foot of the bed; the eyes of the Laird sought again her face,
+where he thought they had a better right now to rest. No
+more was spoken; enough for a day had been said and done;
+and, with a parting look to David, to keep him in remembrance
+of his promise, and a purse of money slipped into the
+hand of Betty, as a solvent of any obstacle that might exist
+in her mind, the lover went to the door to receive Donald<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
+from the soft hands of Effie, who, as was her custom, had
+gone out before him, to lead the old cadger to the door, and
+hold the bridle till he with an effort got into the saddle.
+The only difference Effie could observe in his departure
+this day, was a kind of mock-gallant wave of the hand,
+as he, with more than usual spirit, struck his spurless
+heels into Donald's sides, and tried to rise in the saddle,
+in response to the hobble of the old Highlander.</p>
+
+<p>The Laird had been scarcely out of the house, when
+David had a communing with his wife, in absence of Effie,
+on the extraordinary intimation made by the old lover.
+Betty was agreeable to the match; but the tear came into
+her eye as she thought of the sacrifice poor Effie was to be
+called upon to make. Neither of them could answer for the
+consent of Effie, whose melancholy, though somewhat ameliorated,
+was little diminished, and whose recollections of
+Lewis Campbell were as vivid as they were on the day of his
+departure. When she returned from one of her solitary
+rambles, which fed her passion and increased her grief, she
+was delicately told of the intentions of Laird Cherrytrees.
+The announcement of the extraordinary intelligence produced
+an effect which neither her father nor mother could
+have anticipated. A quick operation of her mind placed
+before her all the affectionate acts of attention she had for
+years been in the habit of applying to the old friend of her
+father, and the preserver of their lives. Gratitude, operating
+in one of the most grateful hearts that ever beat in the
+bosom of mortal, had produced in her an exuberant kindness,
+a devotedness of a species of affection due by a child to
+its godfather, a playful freedom of the confidence of one who
+relied on the disparity of years for a license from even the
+suspicion of a possibility of any other relation existing between
+them. That now came back upon her, loaded with self-reproach
+and shame, and attributing to her misconstrued
+attentions the extraordinary passion that had taken hold of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
+the heart of the old Laird. She was totally unable to make
+any reply to her parents. The image of Lewis Campbell,
+never absent from her mind, assumed a new form, and swam
+in the tears which flowed from her eyes. The natural contrast
+between age and youth, love and gratitude, assumed its
+legitimate strength. The first feeling of her mind was, that
+she would suffer the death that had for a time been impending
+over her, and whose finger was already on her
+breaking heart, rather than comply with the wishes of her
+father and mother. They saw the struggle that was in her
+mind, and abstained from pressing what they had suggested.
+They did not ask her even to give her sentiments; but the
+silent tears that stole down her cheek and dropped in her
+lap from her drooping head, required no spoken commentary
+to tell them the extent of her grief, and the resolution
+at least of a heart that might entirely break, as it appeared
+to be breaking, but never could forget.</p>
+
+<p>There was little sleep for the eyes of Effie on the succeeding
+night. Her sobs reached the ears of her parents, who,
+unable to yield her consolation, were obliged to leave her
+to wrestle with her grief; sending up a silent prayer to
+the Author of all good dispensations, that He might assuage
+the sorrow of one who had already, with exemplary patience,
+submitted to the rod of affliction. The sacredness of her
+feelings was too well appreciated by her parents to admit of
+any offer of counsel, where deep-seated affection, the work of
+mysterious instinct, stood in solemn derision of the vulgar
+ideas of this world's expediency. The struggle in her mind
+arose from the strength of her love, and the power of her
+filial devotion. No part of the attendant circumstances or
+probable consequences of her decision escaped her mind. She
+knew that she never could be happy as the wife of any
+other individual, even of suitable age, than Lewis Campbell.
+But this concerned only herself; and she knew, and trembled
+as she thought, that the result of her decision might be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
+the destitution, the want, perhaps the death of her parents;
+their all depended on the breath of the man whom she, by
+the sign of her finger, might change from a friend to a foe;
+and she might thereby become the destroyer of those who
+gave her being.</p>
+
+<p>The morning came, but brought neither sleep nor relief to
+the unhappy maiden. Her parents seemed inclined not to
+advert to the subject that day, but to let her struggle on
+with her own thoughts. The hour of the Laird's visit approached,
+and he was already on the road for the home of
+his beloved, whom his ardent fancy pictured standing smiling
+at the door, ready as usual to receive him and lead him
+into the house. Donald&mdash;who knew a reverie in his master
+bettor than he did himself, and did not fail to take advantage
+of it&mdash;ambled on with diminished speed. The Laird
+approached the cottage. No Effie was there. His bright
+visions took flight, and were succeeded by a cold shiver, the
+precursor of a gloomy train of ideas, which pictured a refusal
+and all its attendant horrors. He drew up the head of
+Donald, and even invited him to partake of the long grass
+which grew by the way-side. He counted the moments as
+Donald devoured the food; and, from time to time, lifted
+his eyes to see if Effie was yet at the cottage door. She was
+not, to be seen&mdash;and she had not been absent before for
+many months. His mind was unprepared for a refusal;
+the ground-swell of his previous excited fancy distracted him
+amidst the dead stillness of despair. He looked again,
+and for the last time that day. Effie was not yet there.
+He turned the head of the delighted, and no doubt astonished
+Donald, and quietly sought again the house of Burnbank.</p>
+
+<p>The same procedure was gone through on the succeeding
+day. Laird Cherrytrees again proceeded to the cottage of
+David Mearns; and, as he sauntered along, he thought it
+impossible that Effie should again be absent from her post.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
+He was too good a man, and too conceited a lover, as all
+old lovers are, to allow his mind to dwell on the probable
+operation of necessity and the fear of injuring her father's
+patron, on the mind of the daughter; and yet a lurking,
+rebellious idea suggested that he would rather see Effie at
+the door, impelled by that cause, than absent altogether.
+His hopes again beat high, and Donald was pricked on to
+the goal of his wishes with an asperity he did not relish so
+well as a reverie. The spot was attained. Effie was still
+absent. Donald was again remitted to the long grass, and
+all the resources of a lover's mind were called up, to enable
+him to face the evil that awaited him. But all was in vain&mdash;he
+found it impossible to proceed.</p>
+
+<p>"I am rejected," he muttered to himself, with a sigh; "a
+cottager's dochter has refused the Laird o' Burnbank; but
+her cauldness an' cruelty mak me like her the mair. Effie
+Mearns, Effie Mearns! hoo little do ye ken what commotion
+ye hae produced in this puir, burstin heart! But,
+though ye winna hae me, I winna desert yer faither. Hame,
+Donald, to Burnbank." And, as he pulled up the bridle
+with his left hand, he wiped away the tears that had collected
+in his eyes, and, casting many a look back to the cottage,
+cantered slowly home.</p>
+
+<p>These proceedings of the Laird had been noticed by Betty
+Mearns from the window of the cottage, and she and
+David were at no loss to guess the cause of them. They
+knew his timid, sensitive disposition, and truly attributed
+his return to his not seeing Effie at the door waiting for him
+as usual. Apprehensions now seized the good mother, that
+the Laird might withdraw his attentions and assistance
+from the family, the result of which would be nothing but
+misery and ruin; as David's fractured limbs were yet far
+from being healed, and a long period must yet pass before
+he could earn a penny to keep in their lives. These fears
+were increased by a third and a fourth day having passed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
+without a visit from the Laird, who had, notwithstanding,
+been seen reconnoitering as usual at a distance from the
+cottage. Effie herself saw how matters stood, and learned,
+from the looks of her father and mother, sentiments they
+seemed unwilling to declare. She was still much convulsed
+with the struggle of the antagonist duties, wishes, emotions,
+and fears, that rose in her mind; and the apprehensions
+of her parents, which she considered well-founded,
+added to her sorrow an additional source of anguish.</p>
+
+<p>"This house," said David, at last overcome by his feelings,
+"has become mair like an hospital that has lost its
+mortification than an honest man's cottage. Effie sits greetin
+an' sabbin the hail day, an' you, Betty, look forward to starvation,
+wi' the gruesome face o' despair. I am unhappy
+mysel, besides being an invalid. What is this to end in?
+What are we to do? How are we to live withoot meat, now
+that Burnbank, guid man, has deserted us?"</p>
+
+<p>"There has come naething frae Burnbank for five days,"
+replied Betty; "an' the siller I got frae the guid auld man,
+the last time he was here, I payed awa i' the village for
+necessaries I had taen on afore we got that help. Our girnel
+winna haud oot lang against three mous; an' if Laird
+Cherrytrees bides awa muckle langer, I see naething for it
+but to beg."</p>
+
+<p>The tear started to the eye of David. He looked at
+Effie. She wept and sobbed, and covered her face with her
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Effie, woman," said David, "a' this micht hae been
+averted if ye had just gane to the door, an' welcomed the
+auld Laird, as ye were wont. He's a blate man, though a
+guid carl; an' he has, nae doot, thocht he was unwelcome
+when yer auld practice o' waitin for him was gien
+up."</p>
+
+<p>"I tauld her that, David," said Betty, "an' pressed her to
+gang to the door, though it was only to gie the blate Laird<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
+a glimpse o' her, whilk was a' he wanted to bring him in;
+but she only sabbed the mair. Unhappy hour she first saw
+that callant, wha may now be dead or married for ought
+she kens!&mdash;an yet for his sake maun a hail family dree
+the dule o' this day's misery. Effie, woman, can ye no
+forget are wha hasna thocht ye worth the trouble o
+tellin ye, by ae scrape o' his pen, whether he be i' the
+land o' the livin!"</p>
+
+<p>A sob was the only reply Effie could make to this
+appeal.</p>
+
+<p>"I hae tauld Effie," said David, "what wad save us frae
+the ruin an' starvation that stare us i' the face; but my
+mind's made up to suffer to the end, though I should lie
+here wi' my broken banes, and dree the pains o' hunger,
+rather than force my dochter to marry a man against her
+ain choice. But, O Effie, woman, wad ye see yer puir
+faither, broken as he is baith in mind and body, lie starvin
+here in his bed, wi' nae mair pooer to earn a bite o' bread
+than the unspeaned bairn, and no mak a sacrifice to save
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, faither," replied Effie, "I wad dee to save ye."</p>
+
+<p>"But deein winna save either him or me," said Betty.
+"Naething will hae that effect but yer agreein to be the
+leddy o' the braw hoose an' braid acres o' Burnbank. Wae's
+me! what a difference between that condition, wi' servants
+at yer nod, an' a' the comforts an' luxuries o' life at yer
+command, an', abune a', the pooer o' makin happy yer
+auld faither and mother, an' this awfu prospect o' dreein the
+very warst an' last o' a' the evils o' life&mdash;want an' auld
+age&mdash;ill-matched pair! Effie, woman, my bonny bairn, hae
+ye nae love in yer heart, but for Lewie Campbell? Wad
+ye, for his sake, see a' this misfortune fa' on the heads o'
+yer parents, whom, by the laws o' God an' man, ye are bound
+to honour, serve, and obey?"</p>
+
+<p>It was easier for Effie to say she would die to save<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
+her parents, than that she would comply with the wish
+of her mother; but the feeling appeal of her parent increased
+her agony, which induced another paroxysm of
+hysterical sobs&mdash;the only answer she could yet make to her
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Effie doesna care for either you or me, Betty," said
+David, "or she wad hae little hesitation aboot marryin a
+guid, fresh, clean, rich, auld man, to save her faither and
+mother frae poverty and starvation. I see nae great sacrifice
+i' the matter. Her young heart mayna rejoice i' the
+pleasures o' a daft love, but her guid sense will be gratified
+by a feelin o' duty far aboon the vain, frawart freaks o' a
+silly, giddy, youthfu passion. Let her refuse Laird Cherrytrees,
+an' when Lewie Campbell comes hame, the owrecome
+bread o' the funeral o' her faither may grace a waddin
+bought wi' the price o' his life."</p>
+
+<p>"Dinna speak that way, faither," cried Effie, lifting up her
+hands; "I canna stand that. You said ye wadna force me,
+an' ye <i>are</i> forcin me. Oh, my puir heart, wha or what will
+support ye when grief for my parents turns me against ye?
+Faither, faither, when I am dead, Laird Cherrytrees will
+be again yer friend. A little time will do't: will ye no
+wait?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hunger waits only eight days, as the sayin is," replied
+he, "an ye'll live mair than that time, I hope an' trow. I
+will be dead afore ye, Effie, an' ye'll hae the consolation, as
+ye maybe drap a tear on the mossy grey stane that covers
+the Mearnses i' the kirkyard o' our parish, to think, if ye
+shouldna like to say, in case ye micht be heard&mdash;though
+thinkin an' speakin's a' ane to God&mdash;that 'that stane was
+lifted ten years suner than it micht hae been, because
+I liked Lewie Campbell better than auld Laird Cherrytrees.'"</p>
+
+<p>"An' it's no likely," said the mother, "that I wad be
+there to hear Effie mak sae waefu a speech. If I binna<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
+lyin wi' the Mearns, I'll be wi' the Cherrytrees o' Mossnook&mdash;nae
+relations o' the Burnbanks, though maybe as guid a
+family. But, afore I'm mixed wi' the dust o' that auld hoose,
+Effie&mdash;an' it mayna be lang&mdash;ye may join the twa Cherrytrees,
+an' let the gravestanes o' the Mearns, as weel as the
+Mossnooks, lie yet a score years langer withoot bein moved.
+It's a pity to disturb the lang grass. Its sough i' the nichtwind
+keeps the bats frae pickin the auld banes, an' maybe
+it may save yer mother's, if ye send her there afore her time."</p>
+
+<p>Effie's feelings could no longer withstand these appeals.
+Her sobbing ceased suddenly; and, starting up from her
+seat, she looked to the old clock that stood against the wall
+of the cottage. She noticed that it was upon the hour of
+the Laird's usual visit.</p>
+
+<p>"It is twelve o'clock, faither," she said, firmly&mdash;"this
+hoor decides the fate o' Effie Mearns."</p>
+
+<p>Walking to the door, she placed herself in the position
+she used to occupy when she intended to welcome her
+father's friend. Now she was to welcome a husband. Laird
+Cherrytrees was, as might have been expected, allowing
+Donald to take his liberty of the road-side, grazing while he
+was busy reconnoitering the cottage. The moment he saw
+the form of Effie standing where he had for several long
+days wished to see her, he pulled up Donald's bridle with
+the alacrity of youth, and, striking his sides with his unarmed
+heels, made all the speed of a bridegroom to get to
+his bride. The sight of the object he had gazed upon so
+unceasingly for so long a time, and whom he had strained
+his eyes in vain to see during these eventful days, operated
+like a charm on the old lover. He discovered at first sight
+the red, swollen eyes of Effie; but he was too happy in
+thinking he had been successful, as he had no doubt he had,
+to meditate on the struggle which produced his bliss. Having
+taken a long draught of the fountain of his hopes and
+happiness, and feasted his eyes on the face of the maiden,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
+who attempted to smile through her tears, which he did
+sitting on his horse, and, without speaking a word&mdash;for,
+loquacious in politics or rural economy, he was mute in love&mdash;he
+dismounted, while Effie, as usual, held the reins. He
+lost no time in getting into his chair, falling back into it
+like a breathless traveller who has at last attained the end
+of his journey. David and Betty, who construed Effie's
+conduct into a consent, took an early opportunity, while she
+was still at the door, of letting the happy Laird know that
+their daughter, as they conceived, was inclined to the match.
+The Laird received the intelligence as if it had been too
+much for mortal to bear. He was at first beyond the
+vulgar habit of speech. He sighed, turned his eyes in their
+sockets, groaned, and wrung his hands. On recovering
+himself, he exclaimed&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Whar is she, Betty? Let me see the dear creature.
+David, ye'll hae Ravelrigg; it's the best o' them a'. Whan
+is't to be, Betty? Ye maun fix the day; an' ye maun
+brak the thing to Lucy, and to Jenny Mucklewham; for I
+hae nae pooer. Let me see her&mdash;let me see the sweet
+creature this instant."</p>
+
+<p>Effie, at the request of her mother, came in and resumed
+her seat on the three-footed stool. Her eyes were still
+swollen, and she looked sorrowfully at her father. The
+Laird fixed his eyes on her; but his loquacity was gone.
+He had not a word to say; but his "glowrin" was in some
+degree changed, being accompanied by a soft smile of self-complacency
+and contentment, and freed from the nervous
+irritability with which he used to solicit with his eyes a
+look from the object of his affections. His visit this day
+was shorter than it used to be. Next day, Betty was to
+visit Burnbank, to arrange for the marriage.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, the unfortunate girl resigned herself as a
+self-sacrifice into the hands of her mother. Bound with
+the silken bands of filial affection, she renounced all desire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
+of exercising her own free-will, or indulging in those feelings
+of the female heart which are deemed so strong as to demand
+the sacrifice often of all other earthly considerations.
+The fate of Iphiginia has occupied the pens and tongues of
+pitying mortals for thousands of years. A lovely woman
+sacrificed for a fair wind, doomed to have the blood that
+mantled in the blushing cheeks of beauty sprinkled on the
+altar of a false religion, is a spectacle which the imagination
+cannot contemplate without a participation of the strongest
+sympathies of the heart; yet there are, in the common
+every-day world we now live in, many a scene in the act of
+being performed, where, though there is no bloodshed and
+no smoking altar exhibited, the sacrifice is not less than
+that of the Grecian victim. Our blessed, holy altar of
+matrimony is often, by the wayward feelings of man&mdash;for
+we here say nothing of vice or corrupt conduct&mdash;made more
+cruel than those of Moloch and Chiun. There is many a
+bloodless Iphiginia in those days, whose sufferings are unknown
+and unsung, because confined to the heart that
+broke over them and concealed them in death. The young,
+tender, and devoted female, who, for the love she bears to
+her parents, consents to intermarry with rich age, to embrace
+dry bones, to extend her sympathies to churlishness,
+caprice, and ill-nature, or, what is worse, to the asthmatic
+giggle of a superannuated love, while all the while her
+heart, cheated of its tribute and swelling with indignation,
+requires to be watched by her with vigilance and firmness,
+the cruelty of which she herself feels&mdash;presents a form of self-sacrifice
+possessing claims on the pity of mankind beyond
+those of the boasted self-immolation of ancient devotees.</p>
+
+<p>The silence and dejection of our bride were construed, by
+her parents, into that seemly and becoming sedateness
+which sensible young women think it proper to assume on
+the eve of so important a change in their condition as
+marriage; while the happy bridegroom had come to that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
+time of life when he is pleased with submission, though it
+be expressed through tears. No chemical menstruum has
+so much power in the dissolution of the hardest metals as
+the self-complacency of an old lover has in construing, according
+to his wishes, the actions, words, or looks of the
+young woman who is destined to be his bride. Silence and
+tears are expressive of happiness as well as of grief; and, so
+long as the desire of the ancient philosopher is uncomplied
+with by the gods, and there is no window to the heart, that
+organ in the young victim may break while the sexagenarian
+bridegroom is enjoying the imputed silent, restrained happiness
+of the object of his ill-timed affection.</p>
+
+<p>The sadness and melancholy of the apparently-resigned
+Effie Mearns had no effect on the noise and show of the
+preparations for her marriage with her old lover. The
+marriages of old men are well known to be celebrated
+with higher bugle notes from the trumpet of fame than any
+others. A sumptuous dinner was to be given to the neighbouring
+lairds, and the cotters were to be fed and regaled
+on the green opposite to the mansion. Dancing and music
+were to add their charms to the gay scene; and it was
+even alleged that the light of a bonfire would lend its
+peculiar aid, in raising the joy of the guests, predisposed to
+hilarity by plenteous potations, to the proper height suited
+to the conquest of the old bridegroom over, at once, a young
+woman and old Time.</p>
+
+<p>For days previous to the eventful one, Effie Mearns was
+not heard to open her lips. She looked on all the gay preparations
+for her marriage as if they had been the mournful
+acts of the undertaker employed in laying the silver trimming
+on the coffin lid of a lover. The bedside of her sick
+parent, who was still unable to rise, was the place where she
+sat "shrouded in silence." She heard the conversations of
+her father and mother about the progress of the preparations,
+without exhibiting so much interest as to show that she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
+understood them. Misgivings crossed the minds of the old
+couple, and brought tears to their eyes, as they contemplated
+the animated corpse that sat there, waiting the nod
+of the master of ceremonies, and ready to perform the part
+assigned to it in the forthcoming orgies of mournful joy;
+but they had gone too far to recede, and it was even a subject
+of satisfaction to them that the period of the celebration
+was so near, for otherwise they might have had reason to
+fear that their daughter would not have survived the intermediate
+time. When the bridegroom called, his ears were
+alarmed by the voices of the parents, who saw the necessity
+of endeavouring to hide the condition of their daughter;
+and he was satisfied, if he got, free and unrestrained, "a
+feast of the eyes." His love was still expressed by silent
+gazing; for it was too deep in his old heart for either words
+or tears; if, indeed, there was moisture enough in the seat
+of his affection for the suppliance of the <i>softest</i> expression
+of the soft passion.</p>
+
+<p>The eventful day arrived. The marriage was to take
+place in the cottage, where David Mearns still lay confined
+to bed. The sick man wore a marriage favour attached to
+the breast of his shirt!&mdash;for Laird Cherrytrees would be contented
+with no less a demonstration of his participation
+in his unparalleled happiness. The still silent bride <i>submitted</i>
+passively to all the acts of her nimble dressers,
+whose laugh seemed to strike her ears like funeral bells;
+yet she tried&mdash;poor victim! to smile, though the clouded
+beam came through a tear which, by its steadfastness,
+seemed to belong to the orb. The bridegroom came at the
+very instant when he ought to have come&mdash;the hand of the
+clock not having had time to leave the mark of notation. He
+was dressed in the style of his earliest days, with cocked
+hat, laced coat, and a sky-blue vest, embroidered in the
+richest manner; while a new wig, ordered from the metropolis,
+imparted to him the freshness of youth. His cheek<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
+was flushed with the blood which joy had forced, for a moment,
+from where it was more needed, at the drying fountain
+of life; and his eye spoke a happiness which his parched
+tongue could not have achieved, without causing shame even
+to himself. Everything was new, spruce, perking, self-complacent.
+The clergyman next came, and all was prepared.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout all this time and all these preparations, not
+the slightest change had been observed on the bride. After
+she was dressed, she took her seat again, silently by the side
+of her father's sickbed, where she sat like a statue. The
+ceremony was now to commence, and she stood up, when
+required by the clergyman, as if she obeyed the command
+of an executioner. It was noticed that she seemed to incline
+to be as near as possible to her father's bed; and her unwillingness
+or inability to come forward forced the clergyman
+and the bridegroom some paces from the situation they
+at first held. The ceremony proceeded till it came to the
+part where the consent of the parties is asked. The happy
+bridegroom pronounced his response, quick, sharp, and with
+an air of conceit, which brought a smile to the faces of the
+parties present. There was now a pause for the consent of
+the bride. All eyes were fixed on her death-like face. A
+severe struggle was going on in her bosom; yet her countenance
+was unmoved, and no one conjectured that she
+suffered more than sensitive females often do in her situation.
+The clergyman repeated his question. There was
+still a pause&mdash;the eyes of all were riveted on her. "I <i>canna</i>,
+I <i>canna</i>!" at last she exclaimed, in a voice of agony, and fell
+back on the bed&mdash;a corpse!</p>
+
+<p>Six months after the death of Effie Mearns, Lucy Cherrytrees
+was married, without faint or swoon, to Lewis Campbell,
+who returned home, in spite of his reported death. The
+union was against the consent of the Laird, who soon died
+of either a broken heart or old age&mdash;no doctor could have
+told which.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
+<h2>GLEANINGS OF THE COVENANT.</h2>
+
+<h3>XIV. &mdash;JAMES RENWICK.</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the times in which we live, party spirit is carried very
+far. Many honest tradesmen, merchants, and shopkeepers,
+are ruined by their votes at elections. The ordinary intercourse
+of social life is obstructed and deranged. Friends go
+up to the polling station with friends, but separate there,
+and become, it may be, the most inveterate enemies. This,
+our later reformation of 1832, has cost us much; but our
+sufferings are nothing to those which marked the two previous
+reformations from Popery and Prelacy. In the one
+instance, fire and faggot were the ordinary means adopted
+for defending political arrangements; in the other, the gallows
+and the maiden did the same work, and the boots and
+the thumbikins acted as ministering engines of torture. The
+whole of society was convulsed; men's blood boiled in their
+veins at the revolting sights which were almost daily obtruding
+upon their attention; and their judgments being
+greatly influenced by their feelings, it is not to be wondered
+at that they should, in a few instances, have overshot, as it
+were, the mark&mdash;have sacrificed their lives to the support of
+opinions which appear now not materially different from
+those which their enemies pressed upon their acceptance.
+It is a sad mistake to suppose that the friends of Presbytery,
+during the fearful twenty-eight years' persecution of Charles
+and James, died in the support of certain doctrines and
+forms of church government merely. With these were,
+unhappily, or rather, as things have turned out, fortunately,
+combined, political or civil liberty, the establishment and
+support of a supreme power, vested in King, Lords, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
+Commons&mdash;instead of being vested, by usurpation, merely
+in the King alone. By avoiding to call Parliaments, and by
+obtaining supplies of money from France and otherwise, the
+two last of the Stuart Despots had, in fact, broken the compact
+of Government, and had exposed themselves all along,
+through the twenty-eight years of persecution, to dethronement
+for high treason. This was the strong view taken by
+those who fought and who fell at Bothwell Bridge, and this
+was the view taken by nine-tenths of the inhabitants of
+Scotland&mdash;of the descendants and admirers of Bruce and
+Wallace&mdash;of Knox and Carstairs. James Renwick, the
+last of the martyrs in the cause of religion and liberty, was
+executed in Edinburgh in his twenty-sixth year. He was a
+young man of liberal education, conducted both at the college
+of Edinburgh, and Groningen, abroad&mdash;of the most amiable
+disposition, and the most unblemished moral character&mdash;yet,
+simply because he avowed, and supported, and publicly
+preached doctrines on which, in twelve months after his
+execution, the British Government was based, he was adjudged
+to the death, and ignominiously executed in the presence
+of his poor mother and other relatives, as well as of
+the Edinburgh public. Mr Woodrow, in his history of this
+man's life, alludes to some papers which he had seen, containing
+notices of Mr Renwick's trials and hair-breadth escapes;
+prior to his capture and execution&mdash;which, however, he refrains
+from giving to the public. It so happens that, from
+my acquaintance with a lineal descendent of the last of the
+Martyrs, I have it in my power, in some measure, to supply
+the deficiency; his own note, or memorandum-book, being
+still in existence, though it never has been, nor ever will,
+probably, be published.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the month of January 1688, that Mr Renwick
+was preaching, after nightfall, to a few followers, at Braid
+Craigs, in the neighbourhood of Edinburgh. The night was
+stormy&mdash;a cold east wind, with occasional blasts of snow&mdash;whilst<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
+the moon, in her second quarter, looked out, at intervals,
+on plaids and bonnets nestled to the leeward of
+rocks and furze. It was a piteous sight to view rational and
+immortal creatures reduced to a state upon the level with the
+hares and the foxes. Renwick discoursed to them from the
+point of a rock which protruded over the lee side of the
+Craigieknowe. His manner was solemn and impressive. He
+was a young man of about twenty-five years of age; and his
+mother, Elspeth Carson, sat immediately before him&mdash;an
+old woman of threescore and upwards&mdash;in her tartan plaid
+and velvet hood. Her son had been born to a larger promise,
+and had enjoyed an excellent academic education;
+and much it had originally grieved the old woman's heart
+to find all her hopes of seeing him minister of her native
+parish of Glencairn, blasted; but his conscience would not
+allow him to conform; and she had followed him in his wanderings
+and field-preachings, through Ayrshire, Renfrewshire,
+and all along by the Pentland Hills, to Edinburgh,
+where a sister of hers was married, and lived in a respectable
+way on the Castle Hill. This evening, after psalm-singing
+and prayer, Mr. Renwick had chosen for his text
+these words, in the fourth verse of the eighteenth chapter of
+the book of Revelation&mdash;"Come out of her, my people."
+The kindly phrase, "my people," was beautifully insisted
+upon.</p>
+
+<p>"There ye are," said Renwick, stretching out his hand to
+the darkening sleet; "there ye are, a poor, shivering, fainting,
+despised, persecuted remnant, whom the great ones despise,
+and the men of might, and of war, and of blood, cut
+down with their swords, and rack with their tortures. Ye
+are, like ye'r great Master, despised and rejected of men; but
+the Master whom ye serve, and whom angels serve with
+veiled faces, and even He who created and supports the
+sun, the moon, and the stars, He&mdash;blessed be His name!&mdash;is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
+not ashamed to acknowledge ye, under all your humiliation,
+as <i>His</i> people. 'Come out of her,' says He, '<i>my people</i>.' O,
+sirs, this is a sweet and a loving invitation. Ye are '<i>His
+people</i>,' the sheep of His pasture, after all; and who would
+have thought it, that heard ye, but yesterday, denounced at
+the cross of Edinburgh as traitors, and rebels, and non-conformists,
+as the offscourings of the earth, the filth and the
+abomination in the eyes and in the nostrils of the great and
+the mighty? 'Come out!' says the text, and out ye have
+come&mdash;'done ere ye bade, guid Lord!' Ye may truly and
+reverentially say&mdash;Here we are, guid Lord; we have come
+out from the West Port, and from the Grassmarket, and
+from the Nether Bow, and from the Canongate&mdash;out we
+have come, because we are thy people. We know thy voice,
+and thy servants' voice, and a stranger and a hireling, with
+his stipend and his worldly rewards, will we not follow; but
+we will listen to him whose reward is with him; whose stipend
+is Thy divine approbation; whose manse is the wilderness;
+and whose glebe land is the barren rock and the
+shelterless knowe. Come out of <i>her</i>. There <i>she</i> sits," (pointing
+towards Edinburgh, now visible in the scattered rays of the
+moon,) "there she sits, like a lady, in her delicacies, and her
+drawing-rooms, and her ball-rooms, and her closetings, and
+her abominations. Ye can almost hear the hum of her many
+voices on the wings of the tempest. There she sits in her
+easy chair, stretching her feet downwards, from west to
+east, from castle to palace! But she has lost her first love,
+and has deserted her covenanted husband. She hath gone
+astray&mdash;she hath gone astray!&mdash;and He who made her hath
+denounced her&mdash;He whose she was in the day of her betrothment,
+hath said&mdash;She is no longer mine; 'come out of
+her, my people'&mdash;be not misled by her witcheries, and her
+dalliance, and her smiles&mdash;be not terrified by her threats,
+and cruelties, and her murderings&mdash;she is drunk, she is
+drunk&mdash;and with the most dangerous and intoxicating<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
+beverage, too&mdash;she is drunk with the blood of the saints.
+When shipwrecked and famishing sailors kill each other,
+and drink the blood, it is written that they immediately
+become mad, and, uttering all manner of blasphemies, expire!
+Thus it is with the 'Lady of the rock'&mdash;she is now
+in her terrible blasphemies, and will, by and by, expire in
+her frenzy. And who sits upon her throne?&mdash;even the
+bloody Papist, who misrules these unhappy lands&mdash;he, the
+usurper of a throne from which by law he is debarred&mdash;even
+the cruel and Papistical <i>Duke</i>, whom men, in their folly or
+in their fears, denominate '<span class="smcap">King</span>'&mdash;he, too, is doomed&mdash;the
+decree hath gone forth, and he will perish with her, because
+he would not <i>come out</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Will he, indeed, Mr Bletherwell? But there are some
+here who must perish first." So said the wily and infuriated
+Claverhouse, as he poured in his men by a signal from
+the adjoining glen, (where the lonely hermitage now stands
+in its silent beauty,) and in an instant had made Renwick,
+and about ten of his followers&mdash;the old woman, his mother,
+included&mdash;prisoners. This was done in an instant, for the
+arrangements had been made prior to the hour of meeting,
+and Claverhouse, attired in plaid and bonnet, had actually
+sat during the whole discourse, listening to the speaker till
+once he should utter something treasonable, when, by rising
+on a rock, and shaking the corners of his plaid, he brought
+the troop up from their hiding-places, amidst the whins and
+the broom by which the glen was at that time covered.
+Renwick, seeing all resistance useless, and indeed forbidding
+his followers, who were not unprovided for the occasion, to
+fire upon the military, marched onwards, in silence, towards
+Edinburgh. As they passed along by the land now denominated
+"Canaan," they halted at a small public-house kept
+by a woman well known at the time by the nickname of
+"Red-herrings," on account of her making frequent use of
+these viands to stimulate a desire for her strong drink.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
+Over her door-way, indeed, a red-herring and a foaming
+tankard were rudely sketched on a sign-board, (like cause
+and effect, or mere sequence!) in loving unity. The prisoners
+were accommodated with standing-room in Tibby's
+kitchen; while the soldiers, with their leader, occupied the
+ben-room and the only doorway&mdash;thus securing their prisoners
+from all possibility of escape. Refreshments, such as
+Tibby could muster, consisting principally of brandy and
+ale, mixed up in about equal proportions of each, were distributed
+amongst the soldiers&mdash;who were, in fact, from their
+long exposure in the open air, in need of some such stimulants;
+whilst the poor prisoners were only watched, and
+made a subject of great merriment by the soldiers. The
+halt, however, was very temporary; but, temporary as it
+was, it enabled several of the members of the field-meeting
+to reach Edinburgh, and to apprise their friends, and
+what is termed the mob of the streets, of the doings at
+"Braid Craigs." Onwards advanced the party&mdash;soldiers
+before and behind, and their captives in the middle&mdash;till
+they reached the West Port, at the foot of the Grassmarket.
+It was near about ten o'clock, and the streets were in a buz
+with idle 'prentices, bakers' boys, shoemakers' lads, &amp;c.
+The march along the Grassmarket seemed to alarm Clavers,
+for he halted his men, made them examine their firelocks,
+spread themselves all around the prisoners, and, advancing
+himself in front, and on his famous black horse, with drawn
+sword and holster pistols, seemed to set all opposition
+at defiance. The party had already gained the middle of
+that narrow and winding pass, the West Bow, when a waggon,
+heavily loaded with stones, was hurled downwards upon
+the party, with irresistible force and rapidity&mdash;Clavers's
+horse shied, and escaped the moving destruction; but it
+came full force into the very midst of the soldiers, who,
+from a natural instinct, turned off into open doors and side
+closes; in this they were imitated by the poor prisoners,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
+who were better acquainted with the localities of the West
+Bow than the soldiery. In an instant afterwards, a dense
+and armed mob rushed headlong down the street, carrying
+all before them, and shouting aloud, "Renwick for ever!
+Renwick for ever!" This was taken as a hint by the prisoners,
+who, in an instant, had mixed with the mob; or
+sunk, as it were, through the earth, into dark passages and
+cellars. "Fire!" was Claverhouse's immediate order, so
+soon as the human torrent had reached him; and <i>fire</i> some
+of the soldiers did, but not to the injury of any of the prisoners,
+but to that of a person&mdash;a bride, as it turned out&mdash;who,
+in her curiosity or fear, had looked from a window
+above; she was shot through the head, and died instantly.
+But, in the meantime, the rescue was complete&mdash;Claverhouse,
+afraid manifestly of being shot from a window, galloped
+up the brae, and made the best of his way to the
+Castle, there to demand fresh troops to quell what he called
+an insurrection: whilst, in the meantime, the men, after a
+very temporary search or pursuit, marched onwards, with
+their muskets presented to the open windows, in case any
+head should protrude. But no heads were to be seen; and
+the soldiers escaped to the guard-house (to the Heart of
+Midlothian) in safety. Here, however, a scene ensued of a
+most heart-rending nature. Scarcely had the men grounded
+their muskets in the guard-house, when a seeming maniac
+rushed upon them with an open knife, and cut right and
+left like a fury. He was immediately secured, but not till
+after many of the soldiers were bleeding profusely. They
+thrust him immediately, bound hand and foot, into the
+black-hole, to await the decision of next morning; but next
+morning death had decided his fate&mdash;he had manifestly died
+of apoplexy, brought on by extreme excitement. His
+mother, who had followed her son when he issued forth deprived
+seemingly of reason, having lost sight of him in the
+darkness, had learned next morning of his fate and situation.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
+She came, therefore, with the return of light, to
+the prison door, and had been waiting hours before it was
+opened. At last Clavers arrived, and ordered the maniac
+to be brought into his presence, and that of the Court, for
+examination. But it was all over; and the distorted limbs
+and features of a young and handsome man were all the
+mark by which a fond mother could certify the identity of
+an only son. From this poor woman's examination, it
+turned out that her son was to have been married on that
+very day to a young woman whom he had long loved; but
+that he had been called to see her corpse, after she was shot
+by the soldiery, and had rushed out in the frantic and armed
+manner already described. The poor woman, from that
+hour, became melancholy; refused to take food; and, always
+calling upon the names of her "bonny murdered bairns,"
+was found dead one morning in her bed.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, James Renwick had made the best of
+his way down the Cowgate, and across, by a narrow wynd,
+into the Canongate, where a friend of his kept a small public-house.
+He had gone to bed; but his wife was still at the
+bar, and two men sat drinking in a small side apartment.
+He asked immediately for her husband, and was
+recognised, but with a wink and a look which but too
+plainly spoke her suspicion of the persons who were witnesses
+of his entrance. Hereupon he called for some refreshment,
+as if he had been a perfect stranger, and,
+seating himself at a small table, began to read in a little
+note-book which he took from his side pocket&mdash;"four,
+five, six, seven&mdash;yes, seven," said he&mdash;"and it has cost
+me seven pounds my journey to Edinburgh." This he said
+so audibly as to be heard by the persons who were sitting
+in the adjoining box, that they might regard him as a
+stranger, and unconnected with Edinburgh. But, as he
+afterwards expressed it, he deeply repented of the attempt
+to mislead. The Lord, he said, had justly punished him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
+for distrusting his power to extricate him, as he had already
+done, from his troubles. The men, after one had accosted
+him in a friendly tone about the weather, or some indifferent
+subject, took their departure; and Mrs Chalmers
+and he, now joined by the husband, enjoyed one hour's
+canny crack ere bedtime, over some warm repast. The
+whole truth was made known to them; but, though perfectly
+trustworthy themselves, they expressed a doubt of
+their customers, who were known to be little better than
+hired informers, who went about to public-houses, at the
+expense of the Government, listening and prying if they
+could find any evidence against the poor Covenanters.
+Next day, even before daylight, the house was surrounded
+by armed men, and Renwick was demanded by name.
+Mr Chalmers did not deny that he was in the house, but
+said that he came to him as to a distant relation, and that
+he was no way connected with his doctrines or opinions.
+In the meantime, Renwick was aroused, and had resolved
+to sell his life as dearly as possible. He was a young
+and an active man, and trusted, as he owned with great
+regret afterwards, to his strength and activity, rather than
+to the mercy and the wisdom of his Maker. So, rushing
+suddenly down stairs, and throwing himself, whilst discharging
+a pistol, (which, however, did no harm), into the
+street, he was out of sight in a twinkling; but, in passing
+along, his hat fell off; and this circumstance drew the attention
+and suspicion of every one whom he passed, to
+his appearance. One foot, in particular, pressed hard upon
+him from behind, and a voice kept constantly crying,
+"Stop thief!&mdash;stop thief!" He ran down a blind alley, on
+the other side of the Canongate, and was at last taken,
+without resistance, by three men, one of whom&mdash;and it was
+the one who had all along pursued him&mdash;was the person
+who had accosted him last night in the public-house, respecting
+the weather. He was immediately carried to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
+prison, where he remained&mdash;visited indeed by his mother&mdash;till
+next assizes, when he was tried, condemned, and afterwards
+executed&mdash;the Last of the Martyrs!</p>
+
+<p>The conversation which he had with his mother, his
+public confessions of faith, and adherence to the covenanted
+cause, as well as his last address, drowned at the
+time in the sound of drums&mdash;all these are given at full
+length in Woodrow, (the edition of Dr Burns of Paisley),
+to which I must refer the reader who is curious upon such
+subjects. In this valuable work will likewise be found the
+inscription placed upon a very handsome cippus, or monument
+of stone, erected to his memory. We give it to the
+reader. There is another, if we mistake not, in the Greyfriars
+of Edinburgh, somewhat in the same style. They
+are both equally simple and touching.</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+In memory of the late<br />
+REVEREND JAMES RENWICK,<br />
+the last who suffered to the death for attachment to the<br />
+Covenanted Cause of Christ<br />
+in Scotland.<br />
+Born near this spot, 15th February, 1662,<br />
+and executed at the<br />
+Grassmarket, Edinburgh,<br />
+1688.<br />
+"The righteous shall be in everlasting remembrance."<br />
+Ps. cxli. and 6.<br />
+Erected by subscription, 1828.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>The late James Hastings, Esq. gave a donation of the
+ground. The subscriptions, amounting to about £100,
+were collected at large from Christians of all denominations;
+and the gentleman who took the most active part in suggesting
+and carrying through the undertaking, was the
+Rev. Gavin Mowat, minister of the Reformed Presbyterian
+Congregation at Whithorn, and formerly at Scar-brig, in
+Penpont, <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Dumfriesshire'">Dumfries-shire</ins>. The monument is placed upon
+the farm of Knees, at no great distance from the farm-house
+where the martyr was born. It stands upon an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
+eminence, from which it may be seen at the distance of
+several miles down the glen, in which the village of Monyaive
+is situated. It was visited last summer by the author
+of this narrative; when the resolution, which has now been
+very imperfectly fulfilled, was taken.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3><a name="OLD_ISBEL_KIRK" id="OLD_ISBEL_KIRK"></a>XV. &mdash;OLD ISBEL KIRK.</h3>
+
+<p>Isbel Kirk lived in Pothouse, Closeburn, in that very
+house where that distinguished scholar, the late Professor
+Hunter of St Andrew's, was born. She had never been
+married, and lived in a small lonely cottage, with no companions
+but her cat and cricket, which chirped occasionally
+from beneath the hudstone, against which her peat-fire was
+built. There sat old, and now nearly blind, Isbel Kirk,
+spinning or carding wool, crooning occasionally an old
+Scotch song, or, it might be, one of David's psalms, and
+enjoying at intervals her pipe, a visit from her next
+neighbour, Nancy Nivison, or her champit-potatoes&mdash;a
+luxury which the west country, and that alone, has hitherto
+enjoyed. Two old Irish women had settled some time before
+this on the skirts of the opposite brae, where they had
+built a small turf cabin, and lived nobody could well tell
+how. They were generally understood to make a kind of
+precarious living, by going about the country periodically,
+giving <i>pigs</i> or crockery-ware in exchange for wool. Isbel
+Kirk was a most simple, honest creature, living on little,
+but procuring that little by her industry in spinning sale
+yarn, weaving garters, and using her needle occasionally, to
+assist the guidwife of Gilchristland in shirt-making for a
+large family. But the M'Dermots were the aversion of
+everybody, and seldom visited even by the guidman of
+Barmoor, on whose farm, or rather on the debatable skirts
+of it, they had sat down, almost in spite of his teeth. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
+was a humane man; and, though he loved not such visitors,
+yet he tolerated the nuisance, as his wife reckoned them
+skilled in curing children's diseases, and in spaeing the
+young women's fortunes. John Watson pastured sheep,
+where corn harvests now wave in abundance; and his
+flocks spread about to the doors of the M'Dermots and
+Isbel Kirk. These flocks gradually decreased, and much
+suspicion was attached to his Irish and heathenish neighbours,
+for they attended no place of worship, not even the
+conformed Curate's; but there was no proof against them.
+At last, a search was suddenly and secretly instituted
+under the authority of the Laird of Closeburn; and, although
+much wool was found, still there were no entire
+fleeces, nor any means left of bringing it home to the
+M'Dermots.</p>
+
+<p>"Na, na, guidman," said the elder of the two harridans.
+"Na&mdash;ye needna stir aboot the kail-pot in that way&mdash;ye'll
+find naething there but a fine bit o' the dead braxy I gat
+frae the guidman o' Gilchristland, for helping the mistress
+wi' her kirn, that wadna mak butter; but there are folks
+that ye dinna suspect, and that are maybe no that far off
+either, wha could very weel tell ye gin they liked whar yer
+braw gimmer yows gang till."</p>
+
+<p>Being pushed to be more particular, they were seemingly
+compelled at last to intimate that auld Isbel Kirk,
+she and her friend, Nanny Nivison, could give an account
+of the stolen sheep, if they liked. The guidman would not
+credit such allegations; but the old women persisted in
+their averment, and even offered to give the guidman of
+Barmoor occular demonstration of the guilt of the twa
+<i>saunts</i>, as they called them. A few days passed, and still a
+lamb or an old sheep would disappear&mdash;they melted away
+gradually, and the guidman began to think that his flocks
+must be bewitched, and that the devil himself must keep a
+kitchen somewhere about the Chaise Craig, over which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
+Archy Tait had often seen the <i>old gentleman</i> driving six-in-hand
+about twelve o'clock at night. Returning, therefore,
+one morning to the M'Dermots, and renewing the conversation
+respecting Isbel Kirk and Nanny Nivison, it was agreed
+that one of the Irish sisterhood should walk over to Isbel's
+with him next forenoon, and that she would give him evidence
+of the fate of his flocks. Isbel was sitting before her
+door, in the sunshine of a fine spring morning, when the
+guidman and Esther M'Dermot arrived. She welcomed
+them kindly into her small but clean and neat cottage;
+and, with all the despatch which her blindness would permit
+of, dusted for their use an old-fashioned chair, and a
+round stool, which served the double purpose of stool and
+table. The conversation went on as usual about the
+weather, and the last sufferer in the cause of the Covenant,
+when Esther M'Dermot went into a dark corner, and forthwith
+drew out into the guidman's view, and to his infinite
+astonishment, a sheep's head, which bore the well-known
+mark of the farm on its ears.</p>
+
+<p>"Look there, guidman," said Esther, "isna that proof
+positive of the way in which your braw hirsel is disposed
+of? By Jasus and the holy St Patrick! and here is a foot
+too, and twa horns!"</p>
+
+<p>Poor Isbel Kirk could scarcely be made to apprehend the
+meaning of all this&mdash;indeed she could scarcely see the evidences
+of her guilt&mdash;and assured the guidman, in the most
+unequivocal manner imaginable, that she was innocent as
+the child unborn; indeed, she said, what should she do with
+dead sheep, or how should she get hold of them, seeing she
+was old and blind, and had not enjoyed a bit of mutton, or
+any other flesh, meat, since the new year?</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," responded old Esther; "but ye hae friends that can
+help ye; dinna I whiles see, after dark, twa tall figures
+stealing o'er your way frae the Whitside linn yonder! I'se
+warrant they dinna live on deaf nits, after lying a' day in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
+dark and damp cave." Isbel held up her hands in prayer,
+entreating the Lord to be merciful to her and to his ain
+inheritance, and to discomfit the plans of his and her enemies.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye may pray," said Elspat, "as ye like, but ye'll no
+mak the guidman here distrust his ain een, wi' yer praying
+and yer Whiggery." This last suggestion of the nightly
+visitors staggered Mr Watson not a little; he well knew
+how friendly old Isbel was to the poor Covenanters, and
+brought himself to conclude, under the weighty and conclusive
+evidence before him, that Isbel might have persuaded
+herself that she was rendering God good service
+by feeding his chosen people with the best of his flock.
+Isbel could only protest her innocence and ignorance of the
+way in which these evidences against her came there;
+whilst the guidman and Esther took their leave&mdash;he threatening
+that the matter should not rest where it was, and the
+old Irish jade pretending to commiserate Isbel on the unfortunate
+discovery.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning, the pothouse was surrounded, and carefully
+searched by a detachment of Lag's men, to whom information
+of Isbel's harbouring rebels had been (the reader
+may guess how) communicated. Having been unsuccessful
+in their search, they put the poor blind creature to the
+torture, because she would not discover, or, perhaps, could
+not reveal, the retreat of the persecuted people. A burning
+match was put betwixt her fingers, and she was firmly
+tied to a bedpost, whilst the fire was blown into a flame by
+one of the soldiers. Not a feature in Isbel's countenance
+changed; but her lips moved, and she was evidently deeply
+absorbed in devotional exercise.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come, old Bleary," said one, "out with it! or
+we will roast you on the coals, like a red herring, for
+Beelzebub's breakfast."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye can only do what ye're permitted to do," said the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
+poor sufferer, now writhing with pain, and suffering all
+the agonies of martyrdom. "Ye may burn this poor auld
+body, and reduce it to its natural dust; but ye will never
+hear my tongue betray any of the poor persecuted remnant."</p>
+
+<p>It is horrible to relate, but the fact cannot be disputed,
+that these monsters stood by and blew the match till the
+poor creature's fingers were actually burnt off&mdash;yet she
+only once cried for mercy; but, when they mentioned the
+conditions, she fainted; and thus nature relieved her from
+her sufferings. When she came again to herself, she
+found that they had killed the only living creature which
+she could call companion, and actually hung the body of the
+dead cat around her neck; but they were gone, and her hands
+were untied.</p>
+
+<p>During the ensuing night a watch was set upon poor
+Isbel's house, thinking, as the persecutors did, that they
+would catch the nightly visitants, who were yet ignorant of
+their friend's sufferings in their behalf. The men lay concealed
+among brackens, on the bank opposite to the pothouse,
+and near to Staffybiggin, the residence of the
+M'Dermots. To their surprise, a figure, about twelve o'clock,
+came warily and stealthily around a flock of sheep which
+lay ruminating in the hollow. It was a female figure,
+if not the devil in a female garb. They continued to keep
+silent and lie still. At last they saw the whole flock
+driven over and across a thick-set bush of fern. One of
+the sheep immediately began to struggle; but it was manifestly
+held by the foot&mdash;in a few instants, two figures were
+seen dragging it into M'Dermot's door. This naturally
+excited their surprise, and, rushing immediately into the
+hut, they found the two old women in the act of preparing in
+a pit&mdash;which, during the day time, was concealed&mdash;mutton
+for their own use. The murder was now out. These
+wretched women had been in the habit, for some years, of
+supplying themselves from the Barmoor flocks; the one
+lying flat down upon her back amongst the furze, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
+other driving the sheep over her breast. Thus the sister
+who caught, had an opportunity of selecting; and the best
+of the wedders had thus from time to time disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Isbel Kirk!&mdash;her innocence was now fully established;
+but it was too late. Her kind friend Nanny Nivison
+attended her in her last illness, and the guidman of Barmoor
+paid every humane attention. But the ruffians of a mistaken
+and ill-advised government had deranged her nervous
+system. Besides, the burn never properly healed;
+it at last mortified, and she died almost insensible, either of
+pain or presence. Her soul seemed to have left its frail tabernacle
+ere life was extinct. The example we have here given
+is taken from that humble source, which the historian leaves
+open to the gleaner. Indeed, the histories of those times
+give but a very imperfect idea of the atrocities of that remarkable
+period. The cottage door must be opened to get at
+the truth; but the stately political historian seldom enters.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3><a name="THE_CURLERS" id="THE_CURLERS"></a>XVI. &mdash;THE CURLERS.</h3>
+
+<p>Winter 1684-5 was, like the last, cold, frosty, and
+stormy. The ice was on lake and muir from new year's
+day till the month of March. Curling was then, as it is
+still, the great winter amusement in the south and west of
+Scotland. The ploughman lad rose by two o'clock of a
+frosty morning, had the day's fodder threshed for the
+cattle, and was on the ice, besom in hand, by nine o'clock.
+The farmer, after seeing things right in the stable and the
+byre, was not long behind his servant. The minister left
+his study and his M.S., his concordance, and his desk, for
+the loch, and the rink, and the channel-stane. Even the
+laird himself was not proof against the temptation, but
+often preferred full twelve hours of rousing game on the
+ice, to all the fascinations of the drawing or the billiard-room,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
+or the study. Even the schoolmaster was incapable
+of resisting the tempting and animating sound; and, at
+every peal of laughter which broke upon his own and his
+pupils' ears, turned his eyes and his steps towards the
+window which looked upon the adjoining loch; and, at
+last, entirely overcome by the shout over a contested shot;
+off he and his bevy swarmed, helter-skelter, across the
+Carse Meadow, to the ice. From all accounts which I
+have heard of it, this was a notable amongst many notable
+days. The factor was never in such play; the master
+greatly outdid himself; the laird played hind-hand in
+beautiful style; and Sutor John came up the rink "like
+Jehu in time o' need." Shots were laid just a yard, right
+and left, before and behind the tee; shots were taken out,
+and run off the ice with wonderful precision; guards,
+that most ticklish of all plays, were rested just over the
+hog-score, so as completely to cover the winner; inwicks
+were taken to a hair, and the player's stone whirled in
+most gracefully, (like a lady in a country dance), and
+settled, three-deep-guarded, upon the top of the tee.
+Chance had her triumphs as well as good play. A random
+shot, driven with such fury that the stone rebounded and
+split in two, deprived the opposite side of four shots, and
+took the game. The sky was blue as indigo, and the sun
+shot his beams over the Keir Hills in penetrating and invigorating
+splendour. Old women frequented the loch
+with baskets; boys and young lads skated gracefully
+around; the whisky-bottle did its duty; and even the
+herons at the spring-wells had their necks greatly elongated
+by the roaring fun. It was a capital day's sport.
+Little did this happy scene exhibit of the suffering and the
+misery which was all this while perpetrated by the men of
+violence. Clavers, the ever-infamous, was in Wigtonshire
+with his Lambs; Grierson was lying in his den of Lag,
+like a lion on the spring; Johnstone was on the Annan;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
+and Winram on the Doon; whilst Douglas was here, and
+there, and everywhere, flying, like a malevolent spirit, from
+strath to strath, and from hill to dale. The snow lay, and
+had long been lying, more than a foot deep, crisp and
+white, over the bleak but beauteous wild; the sheep were
+perishing for want of pasture; and many poor creatures
+were in absolute want of the necessaries of life. (The
+potato, that true friend of the people, had not yet made
+its way to any extent into Scotland). Caves, dens, and outhouses
+were crowded with the persecuted flock. The
+ousted ministers were still lifting up their voice in the
+wilderness, and the distant hum of psalmody was heard
+afar amongst the hills, and by the side of the frozen stream
+and the bare hawthorn. What a contrast did all this present
+to the fun, frolic, and downright ecstacy of this day's
+sport! But the night came, with its beef and its greens,
+and its song, and its punch, and its anecdote, and its
+thrice-played games, and its warm words, and its half-muttered
+threats, and its dispersion about three in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>"Wha was yon stranger?" said John Harkness to Sandy
+Gibson, as they met next day on the hill. "I didna like
+the look o' him; an' yet he played his stane weel, an' took
+a great lead in the conversation. I wish he mayna be a
+spy, after a'; for I never heard o' ony Watsons in Ecclefechan,
+till yon creature cast up."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed," said lang Sandy, "I didna like the creature&mdash;it
+got sae fou an' impudent, late at nicht; an' then that puir
+haverel, Will Paterson, cam in, an' let oot that the cave
+at Glencairn had been surprised, an' the auld minister
+murdered. If it be na the case&mdash;as I believe it isna
+hitherto&mdash;there was enough said last nicht to mak it necessary
+to hae the puir, persecuted saint informed o' his
+danger."</p>
+
+<p>"An' that's as true," responded John; "an' I think
+you an' I canna do better than wear awa wast o'er whan<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
+the sun gaes down, an' let honest Mr Lawson ken that his
+retreat is known. That Watson creature&mdash;didna ye tent?&mdash;went
+aff, wi' the curate, a wee afore the lave; they were
+heard busy talking together, in a low tone of voice, as they
+went hame to the manse. I wonder what maks the laird&mdash;wha
+is a perfect gentleman, an' a friend, too, o' the
+Covenanted truth&mdash;keep company, on the ice, or off it,
+wi' that rotten-hearted, roupit creature, the curate o' Closeburn?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed," replied the other, "he is sae clean daft aboot
+playing at channel-stane, that, I believe, baith him, an'
+the dominie, an' the factor&mdash;forby Souter Ferguson&mdash;would
+play wi' auld Symnie himself, provided he was a
+keen and a guid shot! But it will be mirk dark&mdash;an'
+there's nae moon&mdash;ere we mak Glencairn cave o't."</p>
+
+<p>John Harkness and Sandy Gibson arrived at Monyaive,
+in Glencairn, a little after dark. The cave was about a
+mile distant from the town; and, with the view of refreshment,
+as well as of concerting the best way of avoiding
+suspicion, they entered a small ale-house kept by an old
+woman at the farther end of the bridge. They were
+shewn into a narrow and meanly-furnished apartment, and
+called for a bottle of the best beer, with a suitable accompaniment
+of bread and cheese. The landlady, by-and-by,
+was sent for, and was asked to partake of her own beverage,
+and questioned, in a careless and incidental manner, respecting
+the news. She looked somewhat embarrassed;
+and, fixing her eyes upon a keyhole, in a door which
+conducted to an adjoining apartment, she said, in a whisper&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I ken brawly wha ye are, an maybe, too, what ye're
+after; but ye hae need to be active, lads; for there are those
+in that ither room that wadna care though a yer heads, as
+well as those o' some ither folks that shall be nameless
+were stuck on the West Port o' Edinbro."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In an instant, the two young farmers were <i>butt</i> the house,
+and beside Tibby Haddow's peat fire. In the course of a
+short, and, to all but themselves, an inaudible conversation,
+they learned that Lag himself, disguised as a common
+soldier, was in the next room, in close colloquy with
+a person clothed in grey duffle, with a broad bonnet on his
+head. From the description of the person, the two Closeburnians
+had no manner of doubt that the information
+obtained last night, in regard to the existence of a place of
+refuge in Glencairn, was now in the act of being communicated.</p>
+
+<p>"At one o'clock!" said a well-known voice&mdash;it was that
+of Lag, to a certainty.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, at one," responded the stranger, Watson&mdash;whose
+voice was equally well-known to the farmers&mdash;"at one!"
+And they parted&mdash;the one going east, and the other west&mdash;and
+were lost in the darkness of night.</p>
+
+<p>It was now past seven, with a clear, frosty night. What
+was to be done? It was manifest that the cave was betrayed&mdash;at
+least, that the <i>whereabouts</i> was known&mdash;and it
+was likewise necessary that this information should be
+conveyed to the poor inmate. But where was he to find a
+refuge, after the cave had been vacated? It struck them, in
+consulting, that if they could get the old woman to be
+friendly and assisting, the escape might be effected before
+the time evidently fixed upon for taking the cave by surprise.
+This was, however, a somewhat dangerous experiment; for,
+although Tibby M'Murdo was known to be favourable&mdash;as
+who amongst the lower classes was not?&mdash;to the non-conformists,
+yet she might not choose to run the immense risk of
+ruin and even death, which might result from her knowingly
+giving harbour to a rebel. So, by way of sounding the old
+woman&mdash;who lived in the house by herself, her granddaughter,
+who was at service in the town, only visiting her
+occasionally&mdash;they proposed to stay all night in the house,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
+as they were in hourly expectation of a wool-dealer who
+had made an appointment to meet them here, but who,
+owing to the heavy roads, had manifestly been detained beyond
+the appointed time. The old woman had various objections
+to this arrangement; but was at last persuaded to
+make an addition to her fire, to put half-a-dozen bottles of her
+best ale on the table, with a tappit hen, and what she termed
+"a wee drap o' the creature," and to retire to rest about
+eight o'clock, her usual hour, they having already paid for
+all, and promised not to leave the house till she rose in the
+morning. At this time, about eight o'clock, the night had
+suddenly became dark and cloudy, and there was a strange
+noise up amongst the rocks overhead. It was manifest
+that there was a change of weather fast approaching. At
+last the snow descended, the wind arose, and it became a
+perfect tempest. Next morning, there were three human
+beings in Tibby's small <i>ben</i>, busily employed in discussing
+the good things already purchased, as well as in higgling
+and bothering about the price of wool. The weather,
+which had been exceedingly boisterous all night, had again
+cleared up into frost, and the inhabitants of Monyaive
+were busied in cutting away the accumulated snow from
+their doors, when in burst old Tibby's granddaughter, and,
+all at once, with exceeding animation, made the following
+communication:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, granny, ye never heard what has taen place this
+last nicht. I had it a' frae Jock Johnston. Ye ken Jock&mdash;he's
+oor maister's foreman, an' unco weel acquent wi' the
+dragoons that lodge in the Spread Eagle. Weel, Jock tells
+me that Lag was here last nicht, in disguise like, an' that
+they had gotten information, frae ane o' their spies like,
+aboot a cave up by yonder where some o' the puir persecuted
+folks is concealed; an' that, aboot ane o'clock o' this morning&mdash;an'
+an awsome morning it was&mdash;they had marched on,
+three abreast, through the drift, carrying strae alang wi'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
+them an lighted matches; an' that they gaed straight to the
+cave, an' immediately summoned the puir folks to come out
+and be shot; and that they only answered by a groan,
+which tellt them as plainly as could be, that the puir creatures
+were there; and that they immediately set fire to the
+straes at the mooth o' the cave, and fairly smoked them
+(Jock tells me) to death. Did ye ever hear the like
+o't?"</p>
+
+<p>"O woman!" responded the grandmother, "but that is
+fearfu'!&mdash;these are indeed fearfu' times; there is naebody
+sure o' their lives for half-an-hour thegither, wha doesna gae
+to hear the fushionless curates!"</p>
+
+<p>At this instant, one of the dragoons drew up his horse
+at the door, asking if a man, such as he described, with a
+blue bonnet and a grey duffle coat, had returned late last
+night, or rather this morning, to bed. Old Tibby answered,
+in a quavering voice, that the man mentioned had left her
+house about eight o'clock, and had not yet returned. The
+dragoon appeared somewhat incredulous; and, giving his
+horse to the girl to hold, he dashed at once and boldly
+into the room, where the three persons already mentioned
+were seated. The young farmers questioned immediately
+the propriety of his conduct; but he drew his
+sword, and swore that he would make cats' meat of the first
+that should lay hold upon him. He had no sooner said so,
+than a man sprang upon him from the fireside, and, striking
+his sword-arm down with the poker, immediately
+secured his person by such means as the place and time
+presented. The fellow roared like a bull, blaspheming and
+vociferating mightily of the crime of arresting a king's
+soldier in the discharge of his duty. But he was hurried
+into a concealed bed, tied firmly down with ropes and even
+blankets, and made to know that, unless he was silent, he
+might have to pay for his disobedience with his life.
+When old Tibby saw how things were going on, and that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
+her house might suffer by such transactions, she sallied
+forth as fast as her feeble limbs and well-worn staff would
+carry her, exclaiming as she went&mdash;"We'll a' be slain&mdash;we'll
+a' be slain!&mdash;the laird o' Lag will be here&mdash;and
+Clavers will be here&mdash;and the King himself will be here&mdash;an'
+we'll a' be murdered&mdash;we'll a' be murdered!" At this
+moment, the trooper appeared in his regimentals, mounted
+his horse, and was off at full gallop. The granddaughter,
+now relieved from holding the dragoon's horse, followed
+her grandmother, and brought her lamp to the house; but,
+to their infinite surprise, there was nobody there save the
+very cursing trooper whom she had seen so recently ride
+off. His voice was loud, and his complainings fearful; but
+neither Tibby nor her granddaughter durst go near him, as
+they were fully convinced that he was a devil, and no man,
+since he had the power at once of mounting a horse and
+flying rather than riding away, and, at the same time, of
+lying cursing and swearing in a press bed in the <i>ben</i>. At
+last a neighbour heard the tale, and, being less superstitions,
+relieved the unfortunate prisoner from his rather awkward
+predicament. He swore revenge, and to cut poor old Tibby
+into two with his sword; but he found, upon searching for
+his weapon, that it was absent, as well as his clothes, which
+had been forcibly stripped from him when he was tied&mdash;and
+that without leave&mdash;and that he had nothing for it
+but to thrust himself into canonicals&mdash;in which garb he
+actually walked home to his quarters, amidst the shouts of
+his companions, and to the astonishment of all the staring
+villagers.</p>
+
+<p>As he was making the best of his way to hide his disgrace
+in the Spread Eagle, he was told that his commanding officer,
+Sir Robert Grierson, had been wishing to speak with him,
+for some time past. Upon appearing immediately in the
+presence of authority, he was questioned in regard to the
+mission on which he had been despatched, and was scarcely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
+credited when he narrated the treatment which he had
+met with, and the loss which he had sustained. A detachment
+was immediately despatched in quest of the thief,
+the <i>wool-merchant</i>, who had so cleverly supplied himself
+with a passport from the king; and, after our soldier's person
+had been unrobed, and attired for the present in his
+stable undress, Lag set out with a few followers, to examine
+the cave, in order to be assured of Mr Lawson's death.
+"They may gallop off with our horses," said Lag, in a jocular
+manner, by the way; "but they will not easily gallop off
+with the old choked hound, who has led us so many dances
+over the hills of Queensberry and Auchenleck." At last,
+they arrived at the mouth of the cave, and entered. Black
+and blue, and severely bruised, lay the dead body before
+them. "Ah, ha!" said Lag, making his boot, as he expressed
+it, acquainted with old Canticle's posteriors. "Ah, ha! my
+fleet bird of the mountain, and we have caught you at
+last, and caught you <i>napping</i>&mdash;ha, ha! Why don't you speak,
+old fire and brimstone? What! not a word now!&mdash;and yet
+you had plenty when you preached from the Gouk Thorn,
+to upwards of two thousand of your prick-eared, purse-mouthed,
+canting followers. Come, my lads, we have less
+work to do now; we will e'en back to quarters, and drink a
+safe voyage into the Holy Land, to old Dumb-and-flat there!"
+So saying, he reined up his horse, and was on the point of
+withdrawing the men, when one of them, who had eyed
+the body, which was imperfectly seen in the dark cave,
+more nearly than the rest, exclaimed&mdash;"And, by the Lord
+Harry, and we are all at fault, and the game is off, on four
+living legs, after all&mdash;off and away! and we standing
+drivelling here, when we should be many miles off in hot
+pursuit of this cunning fox who has contrived to give us
+the slip once more."</p>
+
+<p>"What means the idiot?" vociferated Grierson.</p>
+
+<p>"Mean!&mdash;why, what should I mean, Sir Robert, but that
+this here piece of carrion is no more the stinking corpse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
+of old Closeburn, than I am a son of the Covenant!"</p>
+
+<p>It turned out, upon investigation, that this was the body
+of the informer Watson, who had preceded Lag to the
+cave during the terrible drift; had been observed by John
+Harkness and Sandy Gibson, who were then employed in
+removing Lawson to the small inn; and, after a drubbing
+which disabled him from moving, he had been left the
+only tenant of the cave. When Grierson came, as above
+mentioned, from the drift and the cold, as well as the beating,
+he was unable to speak; but his groans brought his
+miserable death upon him; and Lawson, by assuming the
+dragoon's garb and steed, was enabled to escape, and to
+officiate, as has been already mentioned in a former paper,
+for several years before his death, in his own church, from
+which he had been so long and so unjustly driven. Thus
+did it please God to punish the infamous conduct of
+Watson, and to enable his own servant to effect his escape.
+The dragoon's horse was found, one morning at day-light,
+neighing and beating the hoof at old Tibby's door. It
+soon found an owner, but told no stories respecting its late
+occupant, who was now snugly lodged in William Graham's
+parlour in the guid town of Kendal. Graham and he were
+cousins-german.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3><a name="THE_VIOLATED_COFFIN" id="THE_VIOLATED_COFFIN"></a>XVII. &mdash;THE VIOLATED COFFIN.</h3>
+
+<p>An effort has, of late, been made to repel the allegations
+which, for past ages, have been made against the infamous
+instruments of cruelty during the twenty-eight years' persecution.
+The Covenanters have been represented as factious
+democrats, setting at defiance all constituted authority,
+and exposing themselves to the vengeance of law and
+justice. These sentiments are apt to identify themselves
+with modern politics; but we hope we will never see our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
+country again devastated by oppression, cruelty, and all the
+shootings, and headings, and hangings of the Stuart despotism
+repeated. It becomes, therefore, the duty of every
+friend of good and equal government to put his hand to
+the work, and to support those principles under which Britain
+has flourished so long, and every man has sat in safety
+and in peace under his own vine and his own fig-tree. No
+train of reasoning, or of demonstration, however, will suffice
+for this. The judgment is, in many occasions, convinced
+of error and injustice, whilst the heart and the conduct
+remain the same. There must be something in accordance
+with the decisions of the judgment pressed home upon the
+feelings. There must be vivid pictures of the workings of
+a system of misrule placed before the mind's eye, so that a
+deep and a human interest may be felt in the picture. The
+reader must open the doors of our suffering peasantry, and
+witness their family and fireside bereavements. He must become
+their companion under the snow-wreath and the damp
+cave&mdash;he must mount the scaffold with them, and even
+listen to their last act and testimony. How vast is the
+impression which a painter can, in this way, make upon the
+spirit of the spectator! Let Allan's famous Circassian slave
+be an instance in point; but the painter is limited to a
+single point of time, and the relation which that bears and
+exhibits to what has gone before or will come after; but
+the writer of narrative possesses the power of shifting his
+telescope from eminence to eminence&mdash;of varying, <i>ad libitum</i>,
+time, place, and circumstances&mdash;and thus of making up for
+the acknowledged inferiority of written description of narratives
+to what is submitted, as Horace says, "<i>Oculis fidelibus</i>,"
+by his vast and unlimited power of variety. The
+means, therefore, by which past generations have been
+made to feel and acknowledge the inhumanities, the scandalous
+atrocities of those blood-stained times, still remain
+subservient to their original and long tried purposes; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
+it becomes the imperious duty of every succeeding age to
+transmit and perpetuate the impressions of abhorrence with
+which those times were regarded and recollected. This
+duty, too, becomes so much the more necessary, as the times
+become the more remote. The object which is rapidly
+passed and distanced by the speed of the steam-engine,
+does not more naturally diminish in dimensions to the eye,
+as it recedes into the depths of distance, than do the events
+which, in passing, figured largely and impressively, lose
+their bulk and their interest when removed from us by the
+dim and darkening interval of successive centuries; and the
+only method by which their natural and universal law can
+be modified, or in any degree counteracted, is by a continuous
+and uninterrupted reference to the past&mdash;by making
+what is old, recent by description and imagination; and
+by more carefully tracing and acknowledging the connection
+which past agents and times have, or may be supposed
+to have, upon the present advancement and happiness of
+man. Had the devotedness of the Covenanter and Nonconformist
+been less entire than it was&mdash;had the arbitrary
+desires of a bigoted priesthood and a tyrant prince been
+submitted to&mdash;then had the Duke of York been king to the
+end of his days&mdash;Rome had again triumphed in her priesthood;
+and we at this hour, if at all awakened from the
+influence of surrounding advancement to a sense of our
+degradation, had been only enacting bloody Reformation,
+instead of bloodless Reform, and suffering the incalculable
+miseries which our forefathers, centuries ago, anticipated.
+Nay, more, but for the lesson taught us by the friends of
+the Covenant and the conventicle, where had been the
+great encouragement to resist political oppression in all
+time to come, when the proudly elevated finger may point to
+the record, which said, and still says, in letters indeed of
+blood&mdash;"A people resolved to be free, can never be ultimately
+enslaved." The Covenant had its use&mdash;and, immense<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
+in its own day, and in its immediate efforts, it placed
+William, and law, and freedom on the throne of Britain;
+but that is as nothing in the balance, when compared with
+the less visible and more remote effects of this distinguished
+triumph:&mdash;It, throughout all the last century, maintained
+a firm and unyielding struggle with despotism, sometimes
+indeed worsted, but never altogether subdued; and it has,
+of late years, issued in events and triumphs too recent and
+too agitating to be now fairly and fully discussed. Nor
+will the influence of the Covenant cease to be felt in our
+land, till God shall have deserted her, and left her entirely
+to the freedom of her own will, to the debasing
+influence of that luxury and corruption which has formed
+the grave of every kingdom that has yet lived out its
+limited period.</p>
+
+<p>These Gleanings of the Covenant have been written
+under the impression, and with the view above expressed;
+and it is hoped that the following narrative, true in all its
+leading circumstances, and more than true in the "vraisemblable,"
+may contribute something to the object thus distinctly
+stated.</p>
+
+<p>The funeral of Thomas Thomson had advanced from the
+Gaitend to the Lakehead. The accompaniment was numerous&mdash;the
+group was denser. Thomas had lived respected,
+and died regretted. He was the father of five
+helpless children, all females, and his wife was manifestly
+about to be delivered of a sixth. Just as the procession had
+advanced to the house of Will Coultart, a troop of ten men
+rode up. They had evidently been drinking, and spoke not
+only blasphemously, but in terms of intimidation.&mdash;"Stop,
+you cursed crew," said the leader. "He has escaped law,
+but he shall not escape justice. Come here, lad;" and
+at once they alighted from their horses, seized the coffin,
+and opening the lid, were about to penetrate the corpse
+through and through. "Stop a little," said John Ferguson,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
+the famous souter of Closeburn; "there are maybe twa at
+a bargain-making;" so saying, he lifted an axe which he
+took up at a wright's door, and dared any one to disturb
+them in their Christian duty. A "pell-mell" took place, in
+the midst of which poor Ferguson was killed. He had two
+sons in the company, who, seeing how their father had been
+used, rushed upon the dragoons, and were both of them
+severely wounded. In the meantime, Douglas of Drumlanrig
+came up, and, understanding how things went, ordered
+the soldiers to give in, and the wounded men to be taken
+care off. All this was wondrous well; but what follows is
+not so. The body of Ferguson was carried to Croalchapel;
+and the two sons accompanied it, with many tears. Douglas
+seemed to feel what had happened, and could not avoid
+accompanying the party home. He entered the house of
+mourning, where there was a dead father, a weeping widow,
+and two wounded sons. He entered, but he saw nothing
+but Peggy. Poor Peggy was an only sister of these lads&mdash;an
+only daughter of her murdered father. Douglas was a
+man of the world! Oh, my God, what a term that is! and
+how much misery and horror does it not contain. Peggy was
+really beautiful; not like Georgina Gordon, or Lady William,
+or Mrs Norton, or Lady Blessington; for her beauty
+depended in no degree upon art. Had you arrayed her in
+rags, and placed her in a poor's-house, she would have appeared
+to advantage. Peggy, too, (the God who made her
+knows,) was pure in soul, and innocent in act as is the
+angel Gabriel! she never once thought of sinning, as a
+woman may, and does (sometimes) sin; she lived for her
+father, whom she loved&mdash;and for her mother, whom she did
+not greatly dislike. But her mother was a stepmother, and
+Peggy liked her father. Guess, then, her grief, when Peggy
+saw her father murdered, her brothers wounded, and knew
+the cause thereof. "Lift her," said Douglas to his men, after
+he had, in seeming humanity, seen the corpse and brothers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
+home; "lift her into Red Hob's saddle, and carry her to
+Drumlanrig." No sooner said than done. The weeping,
+screaming girl was lifted into the saddle, and conveyed, per
+force, to Drumlanrig. At that gate there stood a figure
+clothed in dyed garments. It was the elder brother of
+Peggy, he who had been least injured of the two. He stood
+with his sword in his hand, and dared any one who would
+conduct his sister into the abode of dishonour. Douglas
+snapped, and then fired a pistol at him, but neither took
+effect. In the meantime, the brother was secured, and the
+sister was carried into the "Blue Room," well known afterwards
+as the infamous sleeping-chamber of old "Q." The
+not less infamous, though ultimately repentant Douglas,
+advanced into the chamber. The poor girl seemed as if she
+had seen a snake; she shrunk from his approach and from
+his blandishments. She had previously opened the window
+into the green walk; she had taken her resolve, and, in a
+few instants, lay a maimed, almost mangled being, on the
+beautiful walks of Drumlanrig. Douglas was manifestly
+struck by the incident, but not converted. He took sufficient
+care to have the poor girl conveyed home, and to have the brothers
+provided for, but his hour was not yet come. It was
+not till after his frequent conversations with the minister of
+Closeburn, that he came to a proper sense of his horrible
+conduct. But what was the awful devastation of this
+family. The poor beauteous flower Peggy, who was about
+to have been married to a farmer's son, (Kirkpatrick of
+Auchincairn,) was by him rejected. He called at the house
+sometime afterwards, with a view to see her; but he came
+full of suspicion, and therefore unwilling to receive the
+truth. He had heard the whole story, and must have known
+that his Peggy was at least as pure in mind as she had been
+beautiful in person; but he belonged not naturally to the
+noble stock of the family to which he was to have been
+allied, and gave himself up to prejudice. The girl was still<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
+in bed, to which, from her bruises, she had been confined for
+months. The meeting might have been one which a poet
+would have gloried in describing, or a painter in delineating
+and embellishing, with hues stolen from the arc of Heaven!
+Alas! it was one only worthy of the pencil of a Ribera&mdash;fraught
+with cruelty, and abounding in selfishness and dishonour.
+The girl, as she turned her pale yet beautiful face
+on him, told him the truth, and watched, with tears in her
+eyes, the effect of her narrative on one whose image had
+never been absent from her mind, if indeed it had not supported
+her in her struggle, and nerved her to the purpose
+which preferred death to dishonour. Her bruises and
+wounds spoke for her, and, to any one but her lover, would
+have proved that he was a part of the object of her sacrifice.
+It was all to no purpose. The eloquence of truth, of
+love, of nature, were lost upon him; nothing would persuade
+him that the object of his love had not been degraded.
+He turned a cold glance of doubt upon her, and
+turned to leave the room. Peggy rushed out of bed, and,
+maimed and weak as she was, would have stopped him.
+Her energies failed her&mdash;her lover was gone; and her
+mother, roused by the cries of her pain, came and assisted
+her again into bed. Poor Peggy heard no more of Kirkpatrick.
+She sickened and died?&mdash;no! far worse!&mdash;she
+became desperate, married a blackguard, and lived a drunkard;
+the sons were banished for firing at Douglas, as he
+passed in his carriage through Thornhill; and the poor
+mother of the whole family became&mdash;shall I tell it I&mdash;an object
+of charity! Thus was, to my certain knowledge, at
+least to that of my ancestors, a most creditable and well-doing
+family ruined, root and branch, by the persecutors&mdash;or,
+in other words, by those who, without knowing what
+they did, regarded the "Covenant" as an unholy thing,
+and fought the foremost in the ranks of oppression and
+uniformity.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Now, there is not a word of this in Woodrow, or Burns,
+or even in the MS. of the Advocate's Library; and yet we
+can assure the reader, that the material facts are as true
+as is the death of Darnley, or the murder of Rizzio! God
+bless you, madam! you have, and can have, and ought to
+have no notion whatever of the united current of <i>horribility</i>,
+which ran through the whole ocean of cruelty during these
+awful and most terrific times! May the God that made,
+the Saviour that redeemed, and the Holy Spirit that prepares
+us for heaven, make us thankful that in <i>those times</i> we
+do not live; and that such men as Woodrow and Burns
+(the first and the last) have been raised up, to vindicate and
+to justify such men as then suffered in their families, or in
+their persons, for the covenanted cause of the Great Head
+of our Presbyterian Church!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p>
+<h2>THE SURGEON'S TALES.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MONOMANIAC.</h3>
+
+
+<p>In some of my prior papers, I have had occasion to make
+some oblique references to that disease called <i>pseudoblepsis
+imaginaria</i>&mdash;in other words, a vision of objects not present.
+Cullen places it among local diseases, as one of a depraved
+action of the organs contributing to vision; "whereby, of
+course, he would disjoin it from those cases of madness
+where a depraved action of the brain itself produces the
+same effect. In this, Cullen displays his ordinary acuteness;
+for we see many instances where there is a fancied
+vision of objects not present, without insanity; and, indeed,
+the whole doctrine of spirits has latterly been founded on
+this distinction.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> From the very intimate connection, however,
+which exists between the visual organs and the brain
+itself, it must always be a matter of great difficulty&mdash;if indeed,
+in many cases, it be not entirely impossible&mdash;to
+make the distinction available; for there are cases&mdash;such as
+that of the conscience-spectre, and those that generally
+depend upon thoughts and feelings of more than ordinary
+intensity&mdash;that seem to lie between the two extremes of
+merely diseased visual organs and diseased brains; and, in
+so far as my experience goes, I am free to say that I have
+seen more cases of imaginary visions of distant objects, resulting
+from some terrible excitement of the emotions, than
+from the better defined causes set forth by the medical
+writers. Among the passions and emotions, again, that in
+their undue influence over the sane condition of the mind,</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
+<p>are most likely to give rise to the diseased vision of <i>phantasmata</i>,
+I would be inclined to place that which usually
+exerts so much absorbing power over the young female
+heart. The cause lies on the surface. In the case of the
+passions&mdash;of anger, revenge, fear, and so forth&mdash;the feeling
+generally works itself out; and, in many cases, the object
+is so unpleasant that the mind seeks relief from it, and flies
+it; while, in the emotions of love, there is a morbid brooding
+over the cherished image that takes hold of the fancy;
+the object is called up by the spell of the passion placed before
+the mind's eye, and held there for hours, days, and
+years, till the image becomes almost a stationary impression,
+and is invested with all the attributes of a real presence.
+I do not feel that I would be justified in saying
+that I am able to substantiate the remark I have now made
+by many cases falling under my own observation; the examples
+of <i>monomania</i> in sane persons are not very often to
+be met with; and I have heard many of my professional
+brethren say, that they never experienced a single instance
+in all their practice.</p>
+
+<p>The case I am now to detail, occurred within two miles
+of the town of &mdash;&mdash;. The patient was a lady, Mrs C&mdash;&mdash;,
+an individual of a nervous, irritable temperament, and possessed
+of a glowing fancy, that, against her will, brought up
+by-past scenes with a distinctness that was painful to her.
+She had lately returned from India, whither she had accompanied
+her husband, whom she left buried in a deep,
+watery grave in the channel of the Mozambique. I had
+been attending her for a nervous ailment, which had shattered
+her frame terribly, while it increased the powers of
+her creative fancy, as well as the sensibility by which the
+mental images were invested with their chief powers over
+her. She suffered also from a tenderness in the <i>retina</i>,
+which forced her to shun the light. How this latter complaint
+was associated with the other, I cannot explain,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
+unless upon the principle which regulates the connection
+between the sensibility of the eye and the heated brains
+of those who labour under inflammation of that organ. I
+was informed by her mother, Mrs L&mdash;&mdash;, as well as her
+sister, that she had come from India a perfect wreck, both
+of mind and body; and, for a period of eighteen months
+afterwards, could scarcely be prevailed upon to see any of
+her friends&mdash;shutting herself up for whole days in her
+room, the windows of which were kept dark, to prevent the
+light, which operated like a sharp sting, from falling upon
+her irritable eyes. It was chiefly with a view to the removal
+of this opthalmic affection, that I was requested to visit
+her; and I could very soon perceive, that the visionary
+state of her mind was closely connected with the habit
+of dark seclusion to which she was necessitated to resort,
+for the purpose of avoiding the pain produced by the rays
+of the sun. On my first interview, I found her sitting alone
+in the darkened room, brooding over thoughts that seemed
+to exert a strong influence over her; but she soon joined
+me in a conversation which, diverging from the subject of
+her complaint, embraced topics that brought out the peculiarity
+of her mind&mdash;a strong enthusiastic power of portraying
+scenes of grief which she had witnessed, and which, as
+she proceeded, seemed to rise before her with almost the
+vividness of presence; yet, with her, judgment was as strong
+and healthy as that of any day-dreamer among the wide
+class of mute poets, of whom there are more in the world
+than of philosophers.</p>
+
+<p>I could not detect properly her ailment, and resolved to
+question her mother alone.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you not notice anything peculiar about my daughter?"
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>"The love of a shaded room, resulting from an irritability
+in the organs of sight, is to me no great rarity," I replied.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Though her fit has not been upon her," rejoined she,
+with an air of melancholy, "it is not an hour gone since her
+scream rung shrilly through this house, as if she had been
+in the hands of fiends; and, to be plain with you, I left you
+to discover yourself what may be too soon apparent. I fear
+for her mind, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"I have seen no reason for the apprehension; but her
+scream, was it not bodily pain?"</p>
+
+<p>"I could wish that it had been mere bodily pain; but it
+was not. You have not heard Isabella's history," she continued,
+in a low, whispering tone. "She has experienced
+what might have turned the brain of any one. I discovered
+something extraordinary in her about six months ago. One
+evening, when the candles were shaded for the relief of her
+eyes, and I and Maria were sitting by her, she stopped suddenly
+in the midst of our conversation, and sat gazing intensely
+at something between her and the wall; pointing
+out her finger, her mouth open, and scarcely drawing her
+breath. I was terror-struck; for the idea immediately
+rushed into my mind, that it was a symptom of insanity;
+but I had no time for thought&mdash;a scream burst from her,
+and she fell at my feet in a faint. When she recovered, she
+told us that she had seen, in the shaded light of the candle,
+which assumed the blue tinge of the moonlight, the figure
+of a dead body sitting upright in the waters, with the sailcloth
+in which he was committed to the deep wrapped
+around him, and his pale face directed towards her. At
+the recollection of the vision, she shuddered, would not
+recur to the subject again, but betrayed otherwise no
+wandering of the fancy. Several times since, the same
+object has presented itself to her; and, what is extraordinary,
+it is always when the candle is shaded; yet she
+exhibits the same judgment, and I could never detect
+the slightest indication of a defect in the workings of
+her mind. I sent for you to treat her eyes, and left it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
+to you to see if you could discover any symptoms of a
+diseased mind."</p>
+
+<p>"Was the object she thus supposes present to her, ever
+exposed in reality to the true waking sense?" said I, suspecting
+a case of <i>monomania</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Did she not tell you?" rejoined she. "Come."</p>
+
+<p>And leading me again into her daughter's darkened
+apartment, she whispered something in her ear, retired, and
+left us together.</p>
+
+<p>"Your mother informs, me, madam," said I, "that you
+have seen <i>what exists not</i>; and I am anxious, from professional
+reasons, to know from yourself whether I am to attribute
+it to the creative powers of an active fancy, or to an
+affection of the visual organs, that I have read more of than
+I have witnessed."</p>
+
+<p>She started, and I saw I had touched a tender part&mdash;probably
+that connected with her own suspicions that her
+mother and sister deemed her insane.</p>
+
+<p>"It was for this purpose, then, that you have been called
+to see me?" she replied, hastily. "It is well; I shall be
+tested by one who at least is not prejudiced. My mother
+and sister think that I am deranged. I need not tell you
+that I consider myself sane, although I confess that this
+illusion of the sense, to which I am subjected, makes me
+sometimes suspicious of myself. Will you listen to my
+story?"</p>
+
+<p>I replied that I would; and thus she began:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Experience, sir, is a world merely to those who live in
+it&mdash;it exists not&mdash;its laws cannot be communicated to the
+heart of youth; the transfusion of the blood of the aged
+into the veins of the young to produce wisdom, is not more
+vain than the displacing of the hopes of the young mind
+by the cold maxims of what man has felt, trembled to feel,
+and wished he could have anticipated, that he might have
+been prepared for it. Such has ever been, such is, such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
+will ever be, the history of the sons and daughters of Adam.
+What but the changes into which I&mdash;still comparatively a
+young woman&mdash;have passed&mdash;not, it would almost seem,
+mutations of the same principle, but rather new states of
+existence&mdash;could have wrung from a heart, where hope
+should still have lighted her lamp, and illuminated my
+paths, these sentiments of a dearly purchased experience?
+When I and George Cunningham, my schoolfellow, my first
+and last lover, and subsequently my husband, passed those
+brilliant days of youth's sunshine among the green holms
+and shaggy dells of &mdash;&mdash;; following the same pursuits&mdash;conning
+the same lessons&mdash;indulging in the same dreams of
+future happiness, and training each other's hearts into a
+community of feeling and sentiment, till we seemed one
+being, actuated by the same living principle: in how happy
+a state of ignorance of those changes that awaited me in the
+world, did I exist? I would fall into the hackneyed strain of
+artificial fiction writing, were I to portray the pleasures of
+a companionship and love that had its beginning in the very
+first impulses of feeling; with a view to set off by contrast
+the subsequent events that awaited us, when our happiness
+should have been realized.</p>
+
+<p>When a woman of sensibility says she loves a man, she
+has told, through a medium that works out the conditions
+of the responding powers of our common nature, the heart,
+more than all the eulogistic eloquence of the tongue could
+achieve, to show the estimate she forms of the qualities of
+the object of her affections; but when she adds that that
+love originated in the friendship of children, grew with the
+increase of the powers of mind and body, and entered as a
+part into every feeling that actuated the young hearts, she
+has expressed the terms of an endearment so pure, tender,
+exclusive, and lasting, that it transcends all the ordinary
+forms of the communion of spirits on earth. The attachment
+is different from all others&mdash;it stands by itself; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
+to endeavour to conceive its purity and force by any factitious
+mixture of friendship, and the ordinary endearments of
+limited time and favourable circumstances of meeting, would
+be as vain as all hypothetical investigation into the nature of
+feeling must ever be. I cannot tell when I first knew the
+young man whose name I have mentioned under an emotion
+that shakes my frame; the syllables were a part of my early
+lispings, and I cannot yet think that they are unconnected
+with a being that has now no local habitation upon earth.
+Our parents were intimate neighbours; and the woods and
+waters of &mdash;&mdash;, if their voices&mdash;sweeter than articulated intelligence&mdash;could
+imitate the accents of man, would tell best
+when they wooed us into that communion, which they cherished,
+and witnessed, with an apparent participation of our
+joy, to open into an early affection. The power of mutual objects
+of pleasure and interest, especially if they are a part
+of the lovely province of nature&mdash;the rural landscape,
+secluded and secreted from the eyes of all the world besides,
+with its dells and fountains, birds and flowers&mdash;in increasing
+the attachment of young hearts, has been often observed
+and described; but we felt it. These inanimate objects are
+generally, and were to us, not only a tie, but they shared a
+part of our love, as if in some mysterious way they had become
+connected with, and a part of us. The often imputed
+association of ideas is a poor and inadequate solution of this
+work of nature: it is the effect put for the cause; the common,
+boasted philosophy of man, who invents terms of
+familiar sound to explain secrets eternally hidden from him.
+If we who felt, as few have ever felt, the influence of these
+green, umbrageous shades&mdash;with their nut-trees, bushes,
+flowers, and gowany leas; their singing birds, and nests
+with speckled eggs; their half-concealed fountains of limpid
+water, and running streams, and beds of white pebbles&mdash;in
+nourishing and increasing our young loves, could not
+tell how or why they were invested with such power; the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
+philosopher, I deem, may resign the task, and say, with a
+sigh, that it was nature, and nature alone, who did all this;
+and the secret will remain unexplained.</p>
+
+<p>We enjoyed ten years of this intercourse&mdash;I calculate from
+the fifth to the fifteenth year of our youth&mdash;and every one
+of these years, as it evolved the ripening powers of our
+minds, so it strengthened the mingling affections of our
+hearts. We became lovers long before we knew the sanctions
+and rights, and duties of pledged faith; we were each
+other's by a troth, a thousand times spoken; exchanged and
+felt in the throbbing embrace, the burning sighs, and the
+eloquent looks, that were but the natural impulses of a feeling
+we rejoiced in, yet scarcely comprehended. My heart,
+recoiling from the thoughts of after years, luxuriates in the
+memory of these blissful hours; and, were not the theme
+exhausted a thousand times by the eloquence of rapt feeling,
+speaking with the tongue of inspiration, I could dwell
+on these early rejoicings of unsullied spirits for ever.</p>
+
+<p>My dream was not scattered&mdash;it was only changed in its
+form and hues, when my youthful betrothed was removed
+from home, to go through a course of navigation to fit him for
+the service of the sea, to which the intentions of his father,
+and his own early wishes, led him. I could have doubted my
+existence sooner than the faith of his heart; and he was
+only gone to make those preparations for attaining a position
+in society that would enable him to realize those fond
+and bright prospects we had indulged in contemplating
+among the woods that resounded to pledges exchanged in
+the face of heaven. The first place of his destination was
+London, from whence, for a period of about three years,
+I heard from him regularly by letters, which breathed with
+an increased warmth the same sentiments we had repeated
+and interchanged so often during the long period of our
+prior intercourse. Some time after this, he sailed to India;
+then were my thoughts first tinged by the changing hues of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
+solitude; and my hopes and fears bound to the wayward
+circumstances of a world which had as yet been to me a
+paradise.</p>
+
+<p>I heard nothing from him for two long years after he left
+London. A portrayment of my thoughts during that
+period would be a thousand times more difficult than for
+the painter to seize and represent the changing hues of the
+gem that, thrown on a tropic strand, reflects the endless
+hues of the earth and sky. I trembled and hoped by turns
+but every idea and every feeling were so strongly mingled
+with reminiscences of former pleasures, the prospects of
+future happiness, the fears of a change in his affections, or
+of his death, that I could not pronounce my mind as being,
+at any given moment, aught but a medium of impressions
+that I could not seize or fix, so as to contemplate myself.
+All I can say is, that he was the presiding genius of every
+emotion with which my heart was influenced; and, to
+those who have loved, that may be sufficient to shew the
+utter devotion of every pulse of my being to the deified
+image enshrined within my bosom. Now came the period
+of the realizing of my dreams. George Cunninghame came
+back, and married me.</p>
+
+<p>We had scarcely been two months married when my
+husband, whom I loved more and more every day, got, by
+the influence of powerful friends, the command of a large
+vessel&mdash;the <i>Griffin</i>&mdash;engaged in the trade to India. It was
+arranged that I should accompany him, that, as we had
+been associated from our earliest infancy, (our separation
+had been only that of the body, and interfered not with the
+union of the immaterial essence), we should still be together.
+In this resolution I rejoiced; and, though by
+nature a coward, my love overcame all my terrors of the
+great deep. The day was fixed for our departure. A lady
+passenger and two servants were to go with us to the Cape,
+from whose society I expected pleasure; and every preparation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
+which love could suggest was made to render me
+happy. We left the Downs on a calm day of December,
+and went down the Channel with a rattling gale from the
+north. Life on board of an Indiaman has been a thousand
+times described; and, would to heaven I had nothing to
+detail but the ordinary conduct of civilized men! Our
+chief officer was one Crawley, and our second a person of
+the name of Buist&mdash;the only individual my husband had
+no confidence in being Hans Kreutz, the steward, a German,
+who was whispered to have been engaged as a maritime
+venatic, or pirate, in the West Indies: and, if any man's
+character might be detected in his countenance, this
+foreigner's disposition might have been read in lineaments
+marked by the graver of passion. Part of what I
+have now said may have been the result of after experience;
+yet I could perceive shadowings of evil at this time,
+which I had not the knowledge of human nature to enable
+me to turn to any account.</p>
+
+<p>With a series of gentle breezes and fine weather, we came
+to the Cape, where Mrs Hardy and her two servants were
+put ashore. One of the servants had agreed to accompany
+me to Madras, and was to have come on board again, to join
+us, before we left Table Bay. Whether she had changed
+her mind, or been detained by some unforeseen cause, I know
+not, but the boat came off without her; and all the information
+that I could get was, that she was not to be found.
+I trembled to be left on board of a vessel without a female
+companion, and strongly insisted upon George to delay his
+departure until another effort should be made to endeavour
+to find a servant in Cape Town; but, a favourable wind
+having sprung up at that moment, Crawley remonstrated, in
+his peculiar mode of abject petitioning; and my husband,
+having himself seen the advantage of seizing the favourable
+opportunity for taking and accomplishing the passage of the
+Mozambique, we departed, under a stiff gale; and, in a short<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
+time, reached the middle of that famous Channel, where the
+fears of the seamen have been so often excited by the reputed
+cannibalism of the natives of Madagascar. At this
+time I was strangely beset by nightly visions of terror,
+which I could impute to no other cause than the stories that
+George had repeated to me of the wild character of these
+savages. During the day, but more especially during the
+blue, sulphurous, flame-coloured twilight of that region&mdash;I
+often fixed my eye on the long, dark, umbrageous coast&mdash;followed
+the ranges of receding heights&mdash;threaded the deep
+recesses of the valleys, that seemed to end in dark caves, and
+peopled every haunt with festive savages performing their
+unholy rites over a human victim, destined to form food for
+creatures bearing that external impress of God's finger which
+marks the lords of the creation. Those visions were always
+connected, in some way, with myself; and I could not
+banish the idea, which clung to me with a morbid power of
+adherence, that I might, alone and unprotected, be cast
+into some of these cimmerian recesses, and be subjected to
+the unutterable miseries of a fate a thousand times worse
+than death, and what might follow death, by the usages of
+of eaters of human beings. There was no cause for any such
+apprehensions; and I am now satisfied that these dark creations
+of my fancy were in some mysterious way connected
+with a disordered state of my physical economy; but I was
+not then aware of such predisposing causes of mental gloom,
+and still brooded over my imagined horrors, till I drove rest
+and sleep from my pillow, and disturbed my husband with
+my pictured images of a danger that he said was far removed
+from me. From him I got some support and relief;
+but the faces of the men I saw around me, and especially
+those of Crawley and Kreutz, seemed, to me, rather to reflect
+a corroboration of my fears, than to afford me encouragement
+and support. The grim visions retained their
+power over me; and, the wind having fallen off almost to a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
+dead calm, I found myself fixed in the very midst of the
+scenes that thus nourished and perpetuated them. The depression
+of mind produced by these frightful day-dreams and
+nightmares, made me sickly and weak. I could scarcely
+take any food; every piece of flesh presented to me, reminded
+me of the feasts of the inhabitants of that dark, dismal island
+that lay stretching before me in the vapours of a tropical
+climate, like a land of enchantment called up by fiends from
+the great deep; the dyspeptic nausea of sickness was the very
+food of my gloomy thoughts; and the co-operative powers
+of mind and body tended to the increase of my misery, till
+I seemed a victim of confirmed hypochondria.</p>
+
+<p>We were still fixed immovably in the same place: all
+motive powers seemed to have forsaken the elements&mdash;the
+sea was like a sheet of glass, the sails hung loose from
+the masts, and the men lay listless about, overcome with
+heat, and yawning in lethargy. It was impossible to keep
+me below. I required air to keep me breathing, and felt a
+strange melancholy relief from fixing my eyes on the very
+scene of my terrors. Every effort to occupy my mind was
+vain; and I lay, for hours at a time, with my eyes fixed on
+the shore, piercing the deep, wooded hollows, following the
+faint traces of the savages as they disappeared among the
+thick trees, and investing every naked demon with all the
+characteristics of the followers of the mysterious midnight
+rites in which I conceived they engaged when the hour of
+their orgies came. I often saw individuals&mdash;rendered
+gigantic by the magnifying medium of the thick vapour&mdash;come
+down to the beach, and fix their gaze on us for a time,
+and then pace back again to the wooded recesses. Sometimes,
+when unable to sleep, I crept up from the cabin, and sat
+and surveyed the silent scene around me&mdash;the hazy moon,
+throwing her thick beams over the calm sea&mdash;the dark shadows
+of unknown birds sailing slowly through the air, and
+uttering at intervals sounds I had never heard before&mdash;the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
+fires of the inhabitants among the trees on the coast, that sent
+up a long column of red light through the atmosphere, and exhibited
+the flitting bodies of the naked beings as they danced
+round the objects of their rites. It is impossible for me, by
+any language of which I have the power, to convey an adequate
+conception of my feelings during these hours. They
+were realities to me; and, therefore, whatever may be said
+against fanciful creations, I have a right to claim attention
+to states of the mind and feelings that belong to our nature
+in certain positions. At a late hour one night, I was engaged
+in those gloomy watchings and reveries, when Kreutz
+came to me, and said the captain had been taken suddenly
+ill. I turned my eyes from the scene along the shore I was
+surveying, and fixed them for a moment on his face, where
+the light of the moon sat in deep contrast with the long
+bushy hair that flowed round his temples. A shudder&mdash;that
+might have been accounted for from the state of my
+mind and the nature of the communication he had made to
+me, but which I instinctively attributed, at the time, to the
+expression of his face&mdash;passed over me, and, starting up, I
+hurried into the cabin off the cuddy, where I found George
+under the grasp of relentless spasms of the chest and
+stomach. He was stretched along on the floor, grasping the
+carpet, which he had wound up into a coil, and vomiting
+violently into a bason which he had hurriedly seized before
+he fell.</p>
+
+<p>'Good God, Isabella!' he exclaimed, 'what is this? I
+am dying. That villain Cr'&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>And, whether from weakness or prudence, he stopped,
+with the guttural sound of these two letters, Cr, which applied
+equally to Crawley as to Kreutz, and left me in doubt
+which of them he meant. At this moment Buist the mate
+entered the cabin; and my agitation and the necessity of
+affording relief to the sufferer, took my mind off the fearful
+subject hinted at by the broken sentence I had heard.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
+With the assistance of Buist, I got him placed on the bed.
+There was no doctor on board, and I was left to the suggestions
+of my own mind, for adopting means to save him.
+These were applied, but without imparting any relief. The
+painful symptoms continued, and he got every moment
+worse. Neither Crawley nor Kreutz appeared; and when
+Buist went out to bring what was deemed necessary for the
+patient, I hung over him, and asked him what he conceived
+to have been the cause of his illness; but my question
+startled him&mdash;he looked up wildly in my face; his mind
+was directed towards heaven; and the means of salvation
+through the redeeming influence of a believed divinity of
+Him who died on the cross, was the subject alone on which
+he would speak. The scene, at this moment, around me
+was extraordinary, and, though I cannot say I had any distinct
+perception of the individual circumstances that combined
+to make up the sum of my horrors, I can now see, as
+through a dark medium, the co-operating elements. There
+was no candle in the cabin; the light of the moon through
+the windows filling the apartment with a blue glare, and
+tinging his pallid face with its hues. My mind, wrought up
+by the dreamy visions I had indulged in previously, and
+labouring under a disease which imparted to every feeling its
+own eliminated gloom, saw even the darkest circumstances
+of my condition in a false and unnatural aspect. The scenes
+of our youth and early love; the impressions of the religious
+sentiments he was muttering in broken snatches; the
+view of his approaching death; the dark means by which it
+was accomplished; my condition after he should die, in the
+power of men I feared; the orgies of the natives I had been
+contemplating; the deep grave, so fearful in its dead calmness;
+and the monsters that revelled in it, to which he
+would be consigned&mdash;all flitted through my brain; but
+with such rapidity&mdash;driving out, by short energies, the more
+engrossing thoughts concerned in the manner of his recovery&mdash;that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
+I could not particularize them, while I drew, by
+some synthetic process of the mind, their general attributes,
+and thus increased the terror of the scene.</p>
+
+<p>Two hours passed, and every moment made it more apparent
+that my husband was posting to death. There was
+no sound heard throughout the ship except the dull tread
+of the watch; and, at intervals, the whispers of Crawley,
+as he communed stealthily with Buist, who went out of the
+cabin repeatedly, to carry intelligence of the state of the
+sufferer. For about three quarters of an hour he had been
+raving wildly. The detached words he uttered raised, by
+their electric power, the working of my fancy which filled
+up, by a train of thoughts scarcely more within the province
+of reason, the chain of his wandering ideas. No connected
+discourse on the subject of his illness, though mixed up
+with all the reminiscences of an affection that had lasted
+since the period of infancy, or the prospects that awaited
+me in the unprecedented position in which I was about to
+be thrown, could have distracted me in the manner effected
+by these insulated vocables, wrung by madness from expiring
+life and reason. They ring in my ears even yet,
+when the beams of the moon shine through the casements;
+and, even now, I think I see that dimly lighted cabin, and
+my husband lying before me in the agonies of death. I
+became, as if by some secret sympathy, as much deranged
+as himself. As I watched him, I cast rapid looks around
+me&mdash;out upon the still deep, in the direction of the fearful
+island&mdash;upon the articles of domestic use lying in confusion,
+and exhibiting dimly-illuminated sides and dark
+shades. It seemed to me some frightful dream; and, when
+I turned my eyes again on the pale face which had been
+the object of my excited fancy for so many years, saw the
+struggles of expiring nature, and heard the wild accents that
+still came from his parched lips, I screamed, and tore my
+hair in handfuls from my head. In that condition, I saw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
+him die; and the increase of my frenzy, produced by that
+consummation of all evils, made me rush out, and forward
+to the side of the ship. I felt all the stinging madness of
+the resolution to die&mdash;to fly from the man who, I feared,
+had murdered him&mdash;to escape from that island of cannibals,
+where I thought I would be left by my relentless foes, by
+plunging into the deep, when Crawley, who had heard of
+his demise, seized me, and dragged me back.</p>
+
+<p>This paroxysm was succeeded by a kind of stupor that
+seized my whole mind and body. I sat down on a cot in
+the side of the cabin, and saw Kreutz bring in a light.
+The glare of it startled me; but it was only as a vision
+that could not awake the sleeper. They proceeded to lay
+out my husband on a table. They undressed him&mdash;for his
+clothes were still on; and I saw them take a large sheet,
+wrap it round him, and pin it firmly at all the folds.
+When their labours were finished, they took each a large
+portion of brandy, and Crawley came forward and offered
+me a portion. I had no power to push it from me. He
+held it to my mouth; but my lips were motionless; and,
+tossing it off himself, he and the others went out of the
+cabin. No precaution was taken to keep me within; but
+the frenzy that had previously impelled me to self-destruction
+had subsided, and I shuddered at what a few moments before
+appeared to me to be a source of relief. I sat for
+hours in the position in which they left me, gazing upon
+the dead body before me, but without the energy to rise
+and look at the features of him who had formed the object
+of my earliest devotions, the subject of all my fondest
+dreams of early youth and matured womanhood, now lying
+there lifeless. I had scarcely, during that period, consciousness
+of any object, but of a long, white figure extended on
+the table, with the moonlight reflected from it. The
+stupor left me&mdash;I cannot tell at what hour; and the first
+movement of living energy in my brain was a stinging impulse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
+to rush forward and seize the body. I obeyed it,
+without a power to resist; and, tearing off the folds, laid
+bare the face, which was as placid as I had ever seen it,
+when, watching over him, I used to steal a look of him,
+during the hours of night, as he slept by my side, in the
+moonlight that stole through the cabin-window. In my
+agony, I clung to him&mdash;kissed the cold lips&mdash;called out
+'George! George!'&mdash;threw the folds of the sheet over the
+face&mdash;again looked round me for some one to comfort me&mdash;felt
+the consciousness of my perilous position&mdash;and, as a
+kind of refuge from the despair that met me on every hand,
+withdrew again the folds, and acted over again the frenzied
+parts of a madness that mocked the miseries of the inmates
+of an asylum.</p>
+
+<p>I must have exhausted myself by the excitement into
+which I was thrown; for, some time afterwards, I found
+myself lying upon the cot, and wakening again to a consciousness
+of all the ills that surrounded me. The light of
+the moon had given place to the dull beams of earliest
+dawn, which were only sufficient to shew me the extended
+figure on the table, and the confusion into which the furniture
+of the cabin was thrown. I heard the sounds of several
+footsteps in the cuddy. Sounds of voices struck my ear;
+and, rising up, I crawled forward to a situation where I could
+hear the communings from which my fate might be known.</p>
+
+<p>'When the wind starts,' said Crawley&mdash;'it will be from
+the north&mdash;we should turn and make all speed for Rio,
+where we may dispose of the cargo, and then run the vessel
+to the West Indies. How do the men feel disposed,
+Kreutz&mdash;all braced and steady?'</p>
+
+<p>'All but Wingate and Ryder, who are watched by the
+others,' replied the German. 'These dogs would mutiny,
+ha! ha!&mdash;mein gut friend Buist is against their valking the
+plank; but they must either come in or go out. Teufel!
+no mutineers aboard the Griffin.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Right, Hans,' said Crawley. 'Get Murdoch to knock
+together the boards&mdash;we will bury him to-morrow; but the
+wife, man, what is to be done with her?'</p>
+
+<p>'Put her ashore, to be sure,' responded Kreutz. 'There
+is not von difficulty there. The natives will be glad of
+her, and we want her not. If this calm were gone, all
+would be gut and recht. That is the von thing only that
+troubles me.'</p>
+
+<p>'If there is no wind,' said Crawley, 'to carry us out of
+the channel, there is none to bring any one to us.'</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, I thought they heard some movements,
+produced by a nervous trembling that came over me, and
+forced me to hold by a chair. Some whisperings followed.
+Kreutz went away, and Crawley entered. I had just time
+to retreat to the other side of the body of my husband. His
+manner was now that which was natural to him&mdash;harsh and
+repulsive. He ordered me peremptorily to the lower cabin.
+I had no power to resist, or even to speak; but I saw, in the
+order, the eternal separation of me and George; and, rushing
+forward, I withdrew the covering from his face, to take
+the last look&mdash;to imprint the last kiss on his cold lips.
+The act operated like the stirrings of conscience on the
+cowardly man of blood. His averted eye glanced for an
+instant on the body, and, seizing the coverlet, he wrapped
+up the countenance, and, taking me by the arm, hurried
+me down to the apartment set apart for passengers. This
+cabin was darker than the captain's, from some of the windows
+having been changed into dead lights; and I considered
+myself pent up in a dungeon. Hitherto my feelings
+had been, in a great measure, the result of existing moving
+circumstances; but now I was left to reflection, in so far as
+that act of the mind could be concerned in the attempt to
+picture the extremities of a fate that seemed as unavoidable
+as unparalleled. The diseased visions that had distracted
+me before any real evil occurred, were changed, from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
+their dreamy, shadowy character, to realities. The lengthened
+trains of images that were required to satisfy the
+cravings of hypochondria, fled; and, in their place, there
+was one general, overwhelming fear, that seemed to engross
+all my thinking energies, and left no power to particularize
+the visions of danger that awaited me among the savages.
+There was only one presiding, prevailing idea that served as
+the rallying point of my terrors; and that was the dead
+body of George, with the white sheet in which he was
+swathed, and the peculiarly-formed oaken table on which
+he was placed, and at which we used to dine upon all the
+dainties to be found on board an Indiaman. It was the
+steadfastness of this idea that excluded the images of the
+fearful deep recesses&mdash;the Bacchanalian orgies of the savages&mdash;their
+anthropophagous rites, their midnight revels; but
+retained, as it were, hanging round it, the fear they had engendered,
+as a more complex feeling. After Crawley had
+left me, I had thrown myself down on a couch&mdash;an act
+of which I retained no consciousness; for afterwards, when
+daylight began to break in through the only window that
+was not closed up, I started to my feet, and did not know,
+for some time, that I was separated from the corpse; the
+vision of which had, during the interval, been so vivid, that
+it combined the conditions of figure and locality as perfectly
+as if the object had been before me.</p>
+
+<p>On the deck I now heard the sound of several loud voices,
+and afterwards a scuffle, accompanied with the tramping of
+feet. There was then silence for a time; but my ears were
+stung, on a sudden, by a scream, succeeded by a plash, as
+if some one had been precipitated into the sea. A gurgling
+noise, as if the individual were drowning, followed; and
+the suspicion rushed into my mind, that they had made an
+example (to terrify the others) of one of the men who had
+rebelled against the authority of the mutineers. A silence,
+as deep as that of death, succeeded, which lasted about an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
+hour, at the end of which period the sound of the saw and
+hammer were distinctly heard. I recollected the orders of
+Crawley, for Murdoch, the carpenter, to prepare George's
+coffin. The knocking continued for a considerable time,
+and produced such an effect upon me that the ideas, which
+had been, as it were, chained up by the freezing influence
+of the prevailing vision of the extended and rolled-up body,
+broke away and careered through my mind with the velocity,
+unconnectedness, and intensity, that belong to certain
+states of excited mania. Images of the past and the future
+were mixed up in confusion; and every succeeding thought
+stung me with increased pain, till the idea of suicide again
+suggested itself, bringing in its train that which destroyed
+it&mdash;the terror of an avenging God, who will pass judgment
+on the takers of their own lives. I started, and sought
+forgiveness; and, for the first time under this agony, felt the
+soft action of the balm of a confided trust in Him who has
+mercy in endless stores for the good, but who poured his
+fury even upon the house of Israel, for the blood they shed
+upon the land. But, must I confess it, the relief I felt
+from this high source was immediately again lost in the
+cold shiverings of instinctive fear, as I heard the knocking
+cease, knew the coffin was finished, and perceived, from the
+sounds in the cabin off the cuddy, that they were putting
+the body into the rudely constructed box, with a view of
+burying him in the deep sea.</p>
+
+<p>Some indescribable emotion, at this time, forced me towards
+the cabin window, although the sight of the water
+was frightful to me. It was still and calm as ever, and the
+light was already sufficient to enable me to see far down in
+its green recesses. I could not take my eye from it. There
+were numerous creatures swimming about in it, some of
+which I had got described to me, but many of them I had
+never seen before. They seemed more hideous to me now
+than they had ever appeared when, on former occasions, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
+sat and watched their motions. The large bull-mouthed
+shark was there, rolling his huge body in apparent lethargy,
+and turning up his white belly in grim playfulness, as if in
+mockery of my misery. It had a charm about its truculent
+savageness that riveted my attention, while it shook my
+frame. It was connected in my mind with the fate of
+George's body, which, every moment, I expected to hear
+plash in the sea, in the midst of that shoal of creatures
+with strange forms and ravenous maws. An exacerbation
+of these sickly feelings made me lift my eyes; but it was
+only to fix them on the not less fearful island that lay
+before in the far distance, and now, in the fogs of the
+morning, through which the red sun struggled to send his
+beams, appeared a huge mass of inspissated vapour lying
+motionless on the surface of the sea. The very indistinctness
+of this hazy vision stimulated my fancy to its former
+morbid activity, and I saw again the mystic wooded ravines,
+sacred to the rights of cannibalism, of which I myself was
+doomed to be the object.</p>
+
+<p>From this dream I was roused by the loud tread of men's
+feet over my head, as if the individuals were bearing a load
+that increased the heaviness of their steps. I was at no
+loss for the cause&mdash;they were carrying the coffin with the
+body in it to midship, where it was to be let down into its
+watery grave. In a short time afterwards, a gurgling of
+the waters met my ear, and, struggling to the foot of the
+companion ladder, I would have rushed upon deck if my
+strength would have permitted; but I fell upon the steps,
+and, lying there, heard a cry from some of them. I gathered,
+from the detached words I heard, that the bottom of the
+coffin had given way, from its insufficiency and the weight
+that had been put in it to make it sink; and that the body
+had gone down, while the chest swam on the surface.
+Several feet were now heard rapidly in motion, and the
+voice of Kreutz, who was running aft, fell on my ear.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Teufel!' I heard him say, 'we shall have that grim corpse
+when the gallenblase&mdash;ha!&mdash;ha!&mdash;the gall bladder has
+burst, rising like von geist from the bottom of the deep sea,
+and staring at us. Hell take the stumper, Murdoch!'</p>
+
+<p>These words, uttered by the German, were followed by
+some expression from Crawley, no part of which I could
+make out, except the oaths directed against the carpenter.
+The sounds died away; but I heard enough to satisfy me
+of the fact that George's body had been consigned to the
+deep with only the shroud to defend it against the attacks
+of the ravenous creatures I had been contemplating. My
+mind was again forced, and with increased energy, into the
+train of gloomy meditations suggested by what I had heard;
+and so vivid were the visions that obeyed the excited powers
+of my imagination, that I forgot, as I lay brooding over
+them on the sofa to which I had staggered, the danger that
+next awaited myself. I could not now look at the sea, for
+I feared to meet the fact which would add probation to my
+imaginations&mdash;that the animals I had seen there had disappeared
+to crowd round the prey that had been given to
+them. Yet the actual vision of that dear form, mutilated,
+torn, and devoured, could not, I am satisfied, have produced
+more insufferable agony, than accompanied and resulted
+from the diseased imaginings in which my fancy was engaged.
+The process that I pictured going on in the bottom
+of the sea, was coloured by hues so sickly, and attended by
+circumstances so distorted and grim, that all natural appearances,
+however harrowing, must have fallen short of the
+power they exercised over me. The positions in which I
+imagined him to be placed, were varied in a greater degree
+than ever I had seen the human body; the expressions of
+the countenance, though fixed by death, and not likely to
+be changed, became as Protean as the changing postures of
+the limbs; and the marine monsters that gambolled or
+fought around him for the prize, were invested with forms,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
+colours, and attributes, of a kind not limited to what I had
+ever seen in the deep. The only idea that seemed to remain
+stationary, and not liable to the mutations into which
+all the others were every moment gliding, was the colour
+of the body, which was that of the green medium in which
+he lay. That sickly hue pervaded all parts; and even the
+dark or light colours of the inhabitants of the deep, partook,
+more or less, of the prevailing tint. It seemed to be the
+universal of all particulars, as time or space is the medium
+or condition of existence of all thought and matter; I felt
+the impossibility of any idea being true that did not partake
+of it; and, so strongly was the feeling of the ex-natural
+that accompanied it, that even now I cannot look at anything
+green without shuddering.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot tell how long I was under the dominion of this
+train of thought. I was, in a manner, torn from it by the
+entrance of Kreutz with some food for me. He growled out
+a few words of mixed German and English, and left it on
+the table. It is needless to say that I could eat nothing.
+Even before these misfortunes overtook me, my appetite had
+left me; but now I loathed all edibles. After having been
+roused from the train of morbid imaginings in which I had
+been engaged, and which I clung to as if they imparted to
+me some unnatural satisfaction, I felt (and it is a curious
+fact) a recoiling disinclination to resume the grim subject,
+and even resorted to some imbecile and despairing efforts to
+avoid it. It was not that I expected any relief from forbearing:
+every other subject that could be suggested by my
+position was equally fraught with tears and pains; but that
+having, as I now suppose, exhausted, for the time, the diseased
+workings, the view of an effort to call up again the
+thoughts that had been as it were supplied by disease, penetrated
+me with a sensation beyond the powers of endurance.
+For two or three hours afterwards, my attention was directed
+to the proceedings upon deck; but I could hear little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
+beyond indistinct mutterings, and occasional sounds of the
+treading of feet over me. The calm, which had lasted for
+many days, still continued; and, until a wind sprung up,
+no effort could be made by the mutineers to retrace their
+progress through the channel, and proceed to their projected
+destination. At last the shades of night began to fall; exhausted
+nature claimed some relief from her sufferings; but
+the drowsiness that overcame me, was only a medium of a
+new series of imaginings still more grotesque and unnatural
+than those that had haunted me during the day.</p>
+
+<p>When the morning dawned, I expected every moment the
+execution of the purpose I had heard declared by Crawley,
+to put me ashore on the island; and, during moments of
+more rational reflection, I could not account for my not having
+been disposed of in this way on the previous day. The
+terrors of that destiny were as strong upon me as ever; but,
+I must confess, that the view of real evil, almost unprecedented,
+as it seemed, in its extent and peculiarity, produced
+feelings entirely different from what resulted from the prior
+musings of my hypochondriac fancy: I would not be believed
+were I to say that the expected reality was not much
+more painful than the sickly vision. The miseries were
+of different kinds, proceeding from different causes, operating
+upon a mind in two different states. There was something
+in my own power. I was not justified in committing
+suicide as a mode of escape from an affliction that God
+might have seen meet to put upon me; but all my reasonings
+on this subject fled before the view of this next calamity
+that awaited me. An extraordinary thought seized
+me, that I was not bound to hold life, when, through my
+own body and sensibilities, God's laws were to be overturned,
+and my sufferings were to be made a shame in the
+face of heaven. I secreted a knife in my bosom, and sat
+in silent expectation of the issue. I was again supplied
+with meat; but, on this occasion, Crawley brought it to me&mdash;and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
+here began a new evil. He resumed, partially, his
+former dastardly sneaking manner; made love to me; offered
+me the honour of being still a captain's wife, and accompanied
+the offer with, obliquely-hinted threats of a due consequence
+of my rejection of his suit. I spurned him; but I cannot
+dwell on the details of this proceeding. His suit was
+persisted in for two or three days, when, roused to madness,
+he told me, that next day, if I consented not, I would be
+wedded to the natives of Madagascar. I traced the outline
+of the knife through the covering of my bosom, and
+defied him.</p>
+
+<p>The next night was clear, and somewhat chill&mdash;indications
+of a cessation of the calm. The rudeness of Crawley
+had had the effect of keeping my mind from falling into
+the grasp of the demon of diseased fantasy; but, now my
+fate was fixed, I had no more to fear from him; and towards
+midnight, I fell again into the train of imaginings
+that had formerly haunted me. I had opened the cabin
+window for air&mdash;having felt a suffocating oppression of the
+chest during the day, proceeding from the extreme heat and
+the confined apartment. My eyes were again fixed in the
+direction of the island. I could see the dark shade of the
+land lying upon the gilded waters. All was still; my
+thoughts sought again the deep&mdash;the grave of George, the
+fancied condition of his body; and, as my ideas diverged to
+the calm scene around, it appeared to me as if all nature
+were dead, and that my own pulsations were the only living
+movements on earth. Lights now began to move along
+the shore, and then a fire blazed up into the firmament.
+The bodies of the savages flitted before it; I had seen the
+same appearances before; but I was now connected with
+these orgies in a more <i>real</i> manner than formerly. They
+ceased, and my mind again sought the recesses of the green
+deep, where all I loved on earth lay engulfed. My eye
+at times wandered over the surface of the waters; but I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
+feared to look downwards into their bosom. My attention
+was suddenly fixed by an object in the sea. I put up my
+hands and rubbed my eyes. Was I deceived by a fancy?
+No! a dead body was there, not four yards distant from
+where I sat. It was that of my husband, rolled up in the
+same white sheet in which I had seen him extended on the
+oak table, and with his head raised somewhat above the
+surface, by the weights placed in the shroud having, as I
+afterwards thought, descended to the feet. A part of the
+sewing had been torn off the head, which was bare&mdash;the
+face was openly exposed to me, the moon shone upon it;
+I could perceive the very features, and even the lustreless
+eyes, that seemed fixed on the ship. There was not a
+breath of wind to ruffle the surface of the sea, which shone
+with a blue lustre in the light of the moon; and the body
+was as motionless as if it had been fixed on the earth. I
+have described, hitherto, what actually befell me, with the
+various states of my mind under extraordinary circumstances
+of pain and depression. My fancies belonged as
+much to nature as the facts which excited and nourished
+them, and must be believed by those who have studied the
+workings of the mind, even unconnected with the principles
+and facts of pathology. This was, however, no vision of
+the fancy, but a reality resulting from well-known physical
+laws. I sat, fixed immovably, at the window, and felt no
+more power of receding from it, than I formerly had of resigning
+my musings. My eyes were fixed upon that countenance
+which had been the <i>beau ideal</i> of love's idolatry&mdash;the
+fairest thing on earth, and the archetype of my dreams
+of heaven. I could not fly from it, horrible as it seemed
+in its blue glare and ghastly expression. I loved it while it
+shocked me; and all my powers of thinking were bound up
+in freezing terror. I felt the hair on my head move as the
+shrivelling skin became corrugated over my temples. That,
+and the occasional throbbings of my heart, were the only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
+motions of any part of my being; but the body I gazed at
+seemed to be as immovable, and its eyes seemed not less
+steadfastly fixed on me than mine were on it.</p>
+
+<p>How long I sat in this position I know not. There was
+no internal impulse that moved me to desist. I could, I
+thought, have looked for ever. Certain fearful objects possess
+a charm over the mind&mdash;and this was one of them;
+but I have sometimes thought that the power lay in producing
+the negative state of mental paralysis; for the instant
+my attention was called to a strange noise upon the
+deck, I was suddenly recalled to a natural sense of the fear
+it inspired. The sounds I heard were a mixture of exclamations
+and objections, pronounced in tones of fear and
+anger. I turned away my face from the dead body, with a
+strong feeling of repugnance to contemplate it again; and,
+groping my way to the companion-ladder, listened to what
+was going on above. Kreutz and Crawley were in communication.</p>
+
+<p>'There is more than chance in that frightful appearance,'
+I heard Crawley say. 'And this calm too&mdash;it will never
+end. God have mercy on us! Is there no man that will
+undertake to sink the body? I cannot stand the gaze of
+these white balls. See! the face is directed towards me; and
+yet I did not do the deed, though I authorized it. Will
+no one save me from the glare of the grim avenger? I will
+give twenty gold pieces to the man who will remove it to
+the deep. Go forward, Kreutz, and try if you can prevail
+upon a bold heart to undertake the task!'</p>
+
+<p>'Pho, man!' responded the German&mdash;'all von phantasy&mdash;anybody
+would have risen in the same way&mdash;Teufel!
+I heed it not von peterpfenning. But the men are alarmed,
+and begin to say that the captain has not got fair play.
+Hush! seize your degen. There is von commotion before
+the mast.'</p>
+
+<p>I now heard a tumult in the fore part of the vessel and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
+began to suspect that the crew had been led to believe that
+George had died a natural death, and had been by some
+means prevailed upon to work the vessel, when the wind rose
+in another direction, under the command of Crawley. The
+noise increased, and with it the fears of the cowardly villain
+whose conscience had been awakened by such strange means.
+Kreutz had left him to try to pacify the men; and the tones
+of his terror-struck voice continued to murmur around.</p>
+
+<p>'There it still is,' he groaned, as his attention seemed to
+be divided between the sight he contemplated and the tumult,
+'gazing steadfastly with these lack-lustre eyes for revenge.
+It is on me they are fixed&mdash;immovably fixed&mdash;as a victim
+which the spirit that floats over the body in that dead
+light of the moon demands, and will get. There is a God
+above in that blue firmament, who sees all things. I am
+lost. These men obey the call of a power that chooses that
+grim apparition as its instrument to call down destruction
+on my head. Ha! Kreutz has no influence here; the
+avengers are prepared.'</p>
+
+<p>A step now came rapidly forward, and Kreutz's voice was
+again heard.</p>
+
+<p>'If you will not try to quell them,' said he, 'all is lost.
+They swear the captain has been murdered, and that verdamt
+traitor Buist heads them on. Donner! shall Hans
+Kreutz die like one muzzled dog? On with degen in hand,
+and it may not be too late! We have friends among the
+caitiffs; strike down the first man; his blut will terrify
+them more than that staring geist, which is, after all, only
+von natural body, with no more spirit in it than the bones
+of my grandmutter. Frisch! frisch! auf, man! come, come,
+dash in and strike the first mutineer!'</p>
+
+<p>The cowardly spirit of Crawley was acted upon by the
+stern German; for I heard him cry out&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>'Hold there, men! what means this tumult&mdash;'sdeath?'</p>
+
+<p>The rest of his words were drowned by the noise; but I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
+heard the sounds of his and Kreutz's feet as they rushed
+forward. In an instant, the sound like that of a man falling
+prostrate on the deck, met my ear; and then there rose
+a yell that rung through every cranny of the ship. All
+seemed engaged in a desperate struggle. The words 'Revenge
+for our captain!' often rose high above all the other
+sounds. The clanging of many daggers followed; several
+bodies fell with a crash upon the deck, and loud groans, as
+if from persons in the agonies of death, were mixed with
+the cries of those who were struggling for victory. The
+tramping and confusion increased, till all distinct sound
+seemed lost in a general uproar. I got alarmed, and left
+my station at the foot of the companion-ladder; but I knew
+not whither to fly. I took again my seat at the window,
+as if I felt that there was an opening for me from which I
+might fly from the fearful scene. My agitation had banished
+from my mind for an instant the vision of the body;
+and I started again with increased fear as my eyes fell upon
+the corpse that had apparently been the cause of the uproar.
+It was still there, as motionless as before; yet, I thought,
+still nearer to me. I saw the features still more distinctly
+than ever, and found my mind again chained down by the
+charm it threw over me. The sounds for a time seemed to
+come upon my ear from a far, far distance, or like those
+heard in a dream; and like a dreamer, too, I struggled to
+get away from a vision that I at once loved and trembled
+at. The noises on deck seemed as those of the world, and
+the object before me the creation of the fancy that bound
+my soul, but left the sense of hearing open to living sounds.
+While in this state, I was suddenly roused by a rush of
+several men into the cabin; they held daggers in their hands
+and their countenances were besmeared with blood. I
+looked at them, under the impression that they were my
+enemies, and that the cause of Crawley had triumphed; but
+I was soon undeceived&mdash;they told me that both he and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
+Kreutz lay dead upon the deck, and that the victorious
+party were determined to complete the voyage and take the
+ship to Madras. The removal of one evil from a mind borne
+down by the weight of many, only leaves a greater power of
+susceptibility of the pain of what remains. The moment I
+heard of my own personal safety, I recurred again to the
+subject that affected me more deeply than even the fears of
+being consigned to the natives of the island&mdash;the dead
+body of George was still in the waters. The men understood
+and appreciated my sufferings. I again went to the
+cabin window, and, pointing to the corpse, implored Buist,
+who was present, to get it taken up and buried. He replied,
+that that had already been agreed upon, and orders
+were given to that effect. Several of the men volunteered of
+themselves to assist. A boat was put out, and I watched
+the solemn process. I saw them drag up the body from the
+sea, and would have flown to the deck to embrace once
+more the dearest object of my earthly affections; but I was
+restrained from motives of humanity. I had reason to suppose
+that it had been dreadfully mutilated, and that was
+the reason why I was saved the pain of the sad sight. That
+same evening it was consigned again to the deep; and with
+it sunk the bodies of his murderers, Crawley and Kreutz.</p>
+
+<p>Next day, a breeze sprang up, and bore us away from
+that fatal place. My eyes were fixed on it till I could see
+no longer any traces of that island which had caused me so
+many fears. In a short time, we arrived in India, where I
+remained about two months, and returned again with the
+Griffin to Britain.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, sir," she continued, "all these things are in the
+course of man's doings in this strange world. It is also
+very natural that I should think of him. But a more dreadful
+effect has followed. I shudder when I think of it."</p>
+
+<p>She stopped and looked at me, as if she were afraid to
+touch upon the subject of the visual illusion. I told her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
+that I understood the cause of her fears; and having questioned
+her, I satisfied myself from her answers that I had
+at last discovered a case of true <i>monomania</i>, in which the
+patient conceived that she saw, with the same distinctness
+as when she looked from the cabin window of the <i>Griffin</i>
+the corpse of her husband swimming in the sea, with the
+head and chest above the waters, surrounded with the same
+blue moonlight, and every minute circumstance attending
+the real presence.</p>
+
+<p>I meditated a cure; but I frankly confess that it was my
+anxious wish to witness her under the influence of the fit;
+and, with that view, I purposed waiting upon her repeatedly
+in the evenings, when, under the shaded light of the
+candle, it generally came over her. I was baffled in this
+for several weeks, chiefly, I presume, from the circumstance
+of my presence operating as an engagement of her mind;
+but one evening when I was sitting with her mother in
+another room, the sister came suddenly, and beckoned me
+into that occupied by my patient. The door was opened
+quietly and, on looking in, I saw, for the first time, a vision-struck
+victim of this extraordinary disease. She sat as if
+under a spell, her arms extended, her eyes fixed on the imaginary
+object, and every sense bound up in that which contemplated
+the spectre vision. The fit ended with a loud
+scream; she fell back in her chair, crying wildly&mdash;"George!&mdash;George!"
+and lay, for a minute or two, apparently insensible.</p>
+
+<p>I continued my study of this extraordinary case for a
+considerable period; and, while I administered to her relief,
+I got her to explain to me some things which may be of use
+to our profession. I need not say that I was able to penetrate
+the dark secret of the seat of either the pathology or
+the metaphysique of the disease. That it was connected with
+the irritability of her nerves, and the affection of the eyes,
+there can be little doubt; because, as she mended in health,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
+the fits diminished in number, and latterly went off. I may,
+however, state that, from all I could learn from her, the fit
+was something of the nature of a dream&mdash;all the objects
+around her, at the time, being as much unnoticed as if they
+existed not; and although she was possessed with an absolute
+conviction that the body of her husband was actually
+at the time present, it was precisely that kind of conviction
+that we feel in a vivid dream.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
+<h2>THE FOUNDLING AT SEA.</h2>
+
+
+<p>About the year 1708 or 1710, the good ship <i>Isabella</i>, Captain
+Hardy, sailed from the port of Greenock for Bombay,
+being chartered by the East India Company to carry out a
+quantity of arms and ammunition for the use of the Company's
+forces.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Isabella</i> carried out with her several passengers;
+amongst whom were a lady, her child&mdash;a girl about three
+years of age&mdash;and a servant-maid. This lady, whose name
+was Elderslie, was the wife of a lieutenant in the British
+army, who was then with his regiment at Calcutta, whither
+she was about to follow him; he having written home that,
+as he had been fortunate enough to obtain some semi-civil
+appointments in addition to his military services, he would,
+in all probability, be a residenter there for many years. The
+lieutenant added that, under these circumstances, he wished
+his "dear Betsy, and their darling little Julia, to join him
+as soon as possible." And this, he said, he had the less
+hesitation in requiring, that the appointments he alluded
+to would render their situation easy and comfortable.
+It was then in obedience to this invitation that Mrs
+Elderslie and her child were now passengers on board
+the <i>Isabella</i>.</p>
+
+<p>For about six weeks the gallant ship pursued her way
+prosperously&mdash;that whole period being marked only by alternatives
+of temporary calms and fair winds. The vessel
+was now off the coast of Guinea; and here an inscrutable
+Providence had decreed that her ill-fated voyage&mdash;for it was
+destined to be so, flattering as had been its outset&mdash;should
+terminate. A storm arose&mdash;a dreadful storm&mdash;one of those
+wild bursts of elemental fury which mock the might of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
+man, and hoarsely laugh at his puny and feeble efforts to
+resist their destructive powers. For two days and nights the
+vessel, stript of every inch of canvass, drove wildly before
+the wind; and, on the morning of the third day, struck
+furiously on a reef of rocks, at about half a mile's distance
+from the shore. On the ship striking, the crew&mdash;not
+doubting that she would immediately go to pieces, for a
+dreadful sea was beating over her, and she was, besides,
+every now and then, surging heavily against the rock on
+which she now lay&mdash;instantly took to their boats, accompanied
+by the passengers. All the passengers? No, not
+all. There was one amissing. It was Mrs Elderslie.
+About ten minutes before the ship struck, that unfortunate
+lady, together with two men and a boy, were swept from
+the deck by a huge sea that broke over the stern; sending,
+with irresistible fury, a rushing deluge of water, of many feet
+in depth, over the entire length of the ship. Neither Mrs
+Elderslie nor any of the unhappy participators in her dismal
+fate were seen again.</p>
+
+<p>In the hurry and confusion of taking to the boats, none
+recollected that there was still a child on board&mdash;the child
+of the unfortunate lady who had just perished; or, if any
+did recollect this, none chose to run the risk of missing the
+opportunity of escape presented by the boats, by going in
+search of the hapless child, who was at that moment below
+in the cabin. In the meantime, the overloaded boats&mdash;for
+they were much too small to carry the numbers who were
+now crowded into them, especially in such a sea as was then
+raging&mdash;had pushed off, and were labouring to gain the
+shore. It was a destination they were doomed never to
+reach. Before they had got half-way, both boats were
+swamped&mdash;the one immediately after the other&mdash;and all
+on board perished, after a brief struggle with the roaring
+and tumbling waves that were bellowing around them.</p>
+
+<p>From this moment, the storm, as if now satisfied with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
+the mischief it had wrought, began to abate. In half an
+hour it had altogether subsided; and the waves, though still
+rolling heavily, had lost the violence and energy of their
+former motion. They seemed worn out and exhausted by
+their late fury.</p>
+
+<p>The crew of the unfortunate vessel had left her, as we
+have said, in the expectation that she would shortly go to
+pieces; but it would have been better for them had they
+had more confidence in her strength, and remained by her;
+for, strange to tell, she withstood the fury of the elements,
+and, though sorely battered and shaken, her dark hull
+still rested securely on the rock on which she had struck.
+The wreck of the <i>Isabella</i> had been witnessed from the shore
+by a crowd of the natives, who had assembled directly opposite
+the fatal reef on which she had struck. They would fain
+have gone out in their canoes to the unfortunate vessel when
+she first struck, as was made evident by some unsuccessful
+attempts they made to paddle towards her; but whether
+with a friendly or hostile purpose, cannot be known. On
+the storm subsiding, however, they renewed their attempts.
+A score of canoes started for the wreck, reached it, and, in
+an instant after, the deck of the unfortunate vessel was
+covered with wild Indians. Whooping and yelling in the
+savage excitement occasioned by the novelty of everything
+around, they flew madly about the deck, scrambled down
+into the hold, tore open bales and packages, and possessed
+themselves of whatever most attracted their whimsical and
+capricious fancies. While some were thus occupied in the
+hold, others were ransacking the cabin. It was here, and at
+this moment, that a scene of extraordinary interest took
+place. A huge savage, who was peering curiously into one
+of the cabin beds, suddenly uttered a yell, so piercing and
+unusual, that it attracted the notice of all his wild companions;
+then, plunging his hand into the bed, drew forth,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
+and held up to the wondering gaze of the latter, a beautiful
+little girl of about three years old. It was the daughter of
+the unfortunate Mrs Elderslie. The unconscious child had
+slept during the whole of the catastrophe, which had deprived
+her, first of her parent, and subsequently of her protectors,
+and had only awoke with the shout of the savage
+who now held her in his powerful, but not unfriendly
+grasp; for he seemed delighted with his prize. He hugged
+the infant in his bosom, looked at it, laughed over it, and
+performed a thousand antics expressive of his admiration
+and affection for the fair and blooming child of which he
+had thus strangely become possessed. The child, for some
+time, expressed great terror of her new protector and his
+sable companions, calling loudly on her mother; but the
+anxious and eager endearments of the former gradually
+calmed her fears and quieted her cries.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, the plunder of the vessel was going on
+vigorously in all directions&mdash;above and below, in the cabin
+and forecastle, till, at length, as much was collected as the
+savages thought their canoes would safely carry. These,
+therefore, were now loaded with the booty; and the whole
+fleet, shortly after, made for the shore.</p>
+
+<p>In one of these canoes was little Julia Elderslie and her
+new protector, who, by still maintaining his friendly charge
+over her, shewed that he meant to appropriate her as a part
+of his share of the plunder.</p>
+
+<p>On reaching the shore, the kind-hearted savage, as his
+whole conduct in the affair shewed him to be, consigned his
+little protegée to the care of a female&mdash;one of the group of
+women who were on the beach awaiting the arrival of the
+canoes, and who appeared to be his wife.</p>
+
+<p>The woman received the child with similar expressions of
+surprise and delight with those which had marked her husband's
+conduct on his first finding her. She turned her
+gently round and round, examined her with a delighted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
+curiosity, patted her cheeks, felt her legs and arms, and, in
+short, handled her as if she had been some strange toy, or as
+if she wished to be assured that she was really a thing of
+flesh and blood.</p>
+
+<p>For two days the natives continued their plunder of the
+wreck. By the third, the vessel had been cleared of every
+article of any value that could be carried away; and on this
+being ascertained, a general division of the spoil, accumulated
+on the shore, took place.</p>
+
+<p>It was a scene of dreadful confusion and uproar, and
+more than once threatened to terminate in bloodshed; but
+it eventually closed without any such catastrophe. The
+partition was effected, the encampment was broken up, and
+the whole band&mdash;men, women, and children, all loaded with
+plunder&mdash;commenced their march into the interior; the
+little Julia forming part of the burden of the man who had
+first appropriated her; a labour in which he was from time
+to time relieved by his wife.</p>
+
+<p>From three to four years after the occurrence of the
+events just related, a Scotch merchant ship, the <i>Dolphin</i> of
+Ayr, Captain Clydesdale, bound for the Cape of Good Hope,
+while prosecuting her voyage, unexpectedly run short of
+water, in consequence of the bursting of a tank, when off the
+Gold Coast of Africa.</p>
+
+<p>On being informed of the accident, the captain determined
+on running for the land for the purpose of endeavouring
+to procure a further supply of the indispensable
+necessary of which he had just sustained so serious a
+loss.</p>
+
+<p>The vessel was, accordingly, directed towards the coast,
+which she neared in a few hours; and, finally, entered a
+small bay, which seemed likely to afford at once the article
+wanted, and a safe anchorage for the ship while she waited
+for its reception.</p>
+
+<p>By a curious chance, the bay which the <i>Dolphin</i> now entered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
+was the same in which the <i>Isabella</i> had been wrecked
+upwards of three years before. But of that ill-fated
+vessel there was now no trace; a succession of storms,
+similar to that which had first hurled her on the rocks,
+had at length accomplished her entire destruction: she had,
+in time, been beaten to pieces, and had now wholly disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>There was then no appearance of any kind, no memorial
+nor vestige by which those on board the <i>Dolphin</i> might
+learn, or at all suspect that the locality they were now in
+had been the scene of so deep a tragedy as that recorded in
+the early part of our tale.</p>
+
+<p>All unconscious of this, the <i>Dolphin</i> came to within pistol-shot
+not only of the reef, but of the identical spot on which
+the <i>Isabella</i> had been wrecked.</p>
+
+<p>Having come to anchor, a boat, filled with empty watercasks,
+was despatched from the ship for the shore. In this
+boat was the captain, first mate, and a pretty numerous
+party of men, all well armed, in case of any interruption
+from the natives.</p>
+
+<p>On landing, Captain Clydesdale, the mate, and two men,
+leaving the others in the boat, set out in quest of water.
+The search was not a tedious one. When they had walked
+about a quarter of a mile inland, the gratifying noise of a
+waterfall struck upon their ears. Following the delightful
+sound, they quickly reached a rocky dell into which a crystal
+sheet of water, of considerable breadth, was falling from
+a height of about fifteen feet; and, after sportively circling
+about for a moment in a deep but clear pool below, sought
+the channel which conducted to the sea, found it, and glided
+noiselessly away.</p>
+
+<p>Delighted with this opportune discovery, Captain Clydesdale
+despatched one of the men who was along with him to
+the boat, to order the others up with the water casks.</p>
+
+<p>Having seen the people commence the task of filling the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
+latter, the captain and mate, each armed with a musket,
+cutlass, and brace of pistols, started for a walk a little farther
+inland, in order to obtain a view of the country. For nearly
+an hour they wandered on, now scaling heights, and now
+forcing their way through patches of tangled brushwood,
+without meeting with any adventure, or seeing anything at
+all extraordinary. They had now gained the banks of
+the stream which, lower down, formed the cascade at which
+the water casks were filling; and this they proposed to
+trace downwards, as its banks presented a clear and open
+route, till they should reach the point whence they had
+started.</p>
+
+<p>While jogging leisurely along this route, the adventurers,
+by turning a projecting rock, suddenly opened a small bight
+or hollow, sheltered on all sides, except towards the river,
+by the high grounds around it. In the centre of this little
+glen was an Indian encampment! Alarmed at this unexpected
+sight, the captain and mate abruptly halted, and
+would have again retreated behind the projecting rock or
+knoll which had first concealed them, and taken another
+route, but they perceived they were seen by a group of male
+natives who were lolling on the grass in front of the wigwams.
+On seeing the white men&mdash;who now stood fast,
+aware that it was useless to attempt to retreat&mdash;the Indians
+sprang to their feet with a loud yell, and rushed towards
+them. The captain and mate instinctively brought down
+their muskets; for reason would have shown them that resistance
+was equally useless with flight. The hostile attitude,
+however, which they had assumed, had the effect of
+checking the advance of the natives, who suddenly halted,
+and, to the great relief of the captain and mate, made
+friendly signs of welcome to them.</p>
+
+<p>Confiding in and returning these signs, the latter raised
+their muskets and advanced towards the party, who now
+also resumed their march towards the strangers. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
+met, when, after some attempts at conversation, conducted
+on the part of the natives with great good-humour, but, on
+both sides, altogether in vain, one of the former suddenly
+ran off at full speed towards the wigwams, into one of which
+he plunged, and instantly reappeared, leading a female child
+of six or seven years of age by the hand. As he advanced
+towards the captain and mate, he kept pointing to the child's
+face, then to his own, then towards those of the strangers,
+and laughing loudly the while.</p>
+
+<p>With an amazement which they would have found it difficult
+to express, Clydesdale and his companion perceived that
+the child, now produced, was fair, of regular features, smooth
+hair, and without any trace of African origin. Exposure to
+a tropical sun had deeply embrowned her little cheeks; but
+enough of bloom still remained, as, when coupled with other
+characteristics, left no doubt on the minds of the captain and
+his mate that the child, however it had come into its present
+situation, was of European parentage.</p>
+
+<p>His curiosity greatly excited by this extraordinary circumstance,
+Mr Clydesdale now endeavoured to obtain some
+account of the child from the natives; but he could make
+little or nothing of the attempted conference on this subject.
+From what, however, he did gather, he came to the conclusion&mdash;a
+very accurate one, as the reader may guess&mdash;that
+a shipwreck had taken place on the coast, and that the
+child had been saved by the natives.</p>
+
+<p>Believing this to be the case, Captain Clydesdale now
+became anxious to know whether any others had escaped;
+but could not make himself understood. At length one of
+the savages, of more apt comprehension than the others,
+seemed to have obtained a glimmering of the import of
+the captain's queries, and fell upon an ingenious mode of
+replying to them. Grasping Mr Clydesdale by the arm,
+he conducted him to a small pool of water that was hard
+by. He then took a piece of bark that was lying on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
+ground, placed about a dozen small pebbles on it, and
+launched it into the pool. Then stooping down, he edged
+it over, till the stones slid, one after the other, into the
+water, until one only remained. Allowing the piece of
+bark now to right itself, and to float on the water, he
+pointed to the single stone it carried, and then to the
+child; thus intimating, as Mr Clydesdale understood it,
+and as it was evidently meant to signify, that all had
+perished excepting the little girl.</p>
+
+<p>While this primitive mode of communication was going
+on, the man who had brought the child to Captain Clydesdale
+had returned to his wigwam, and now reappeared,
+carrying several articles in his hand, which he held up to
+the former. Mr Clydesdale took them in his hand, and
+found them to consist of fragments of a child's dress, made,
+as he thought, after the fashion of those in use in Scotland.
+On the corner of what appeared to be the remains of a
+little shift, he discovered the initials, J. E. But the most
+interesting relic produced on this occasion, was a small
+locket, containing some rich black hair on one side, and on
+the other the miniature of a young man in a military uniform,
+with the same initials, J. E., engraven on the rim.
+This locket, the man who brought it gave Captain Clydesdale
+to understand, had been found hanging around the
+neck of the child when first discovered.</p>
+
+<p>Satisfied now, beyond all doubt, of the child's European
+descent, Mr Clydesdale approached her, took her kindly
+by the hand, and, hoping to make something of her own
+testimony, began to put some questions to her; but, to his
+great disappointment, found that she did not understand
+him, although he spoke to her both in French and English.
+The little girl, in truth, he soon discovered, neither understood
+nor spoke any language but that of the tribe in whose
+hands she was.</p>
+
+<p>It appeared, however, sufficiently clear to Captain Clydesdale,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
+that a shipwreck had taken place on the coast, and
+that at no very great distance of time, and that the child
+before him had been on board of the unfortunate vessel.
+Various circumstances, too, led him to the belief that the
+ship had been a British one; and in this opinion he was
+joined by the mate.</p>
+
+<p>The result of the Captain's reflections on these points,
+was a determination to take the child to Scotland with him,
+if he could prevail upon her present possessors to part with
+her, and to take his chance of making some discovery regarding
+her on his return home.</p>
+
+<p>Having come to this resolution, he hastened to make
+known to the natives his wish to have the little girl;
+and was well pleased to perceive that the proposal, which
+they seemed at once to comprehend, was not received
+with any surprise, far less indignation. Encouraged by
+this reception of his overture, Captain Clydesdale now
+addressed himself particularly to the man who appeared
+to be the guardian, or, perhaps, proprietor of the child,
+and, unbuckling his cutlass from his side, presented it
+to him&mdash;making him, at the same time, to understand
+that he offered it as the price of the little girl. The man
+demurred. Captain Clydesdale pulled a clasp-knife out
+of his pocket, and made signs that he would give that
+also, provided the locket and fragment of shift, with the
+initials on it, were given along with the child. This addition
+to the first offer had the desired effect. The cutlass
+and knife were accepted, the locket and shift given in exchange,
+and the little hand of the girl placed in Captain
+Clydesdale's, to signify that she was now his property.
+After some farther interchange of civilities with the natives,
+the captain, his mate, and the little Julia Elderslie&mdash;for, we
+presume, the reader has been all along perfectly aware that
+the child in question was no other than that unfortunate
+little personage&mdash;proceeded on their way towards the place<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
+where the watering party had been left. This spot they
+reached in safety, after about an hour's walking, and found
+the men waiting their return&mdash;the casks having been already
+all filled and shipped.</p>
+
+<p>In half an hour after, the boat was alongside the <i>Dolphin</i>,
+and little Julia was handed upon deck; and, in less
+than another hour, the ship was under weigh, and prosecuting
+her voyage to the Cape, where she ultimately
+arrived in safety. During this time, Captain Clydesdale
+had discovered in his Ponakonta&mdash;the name given to little
+Julia by the Africans, and by which he delighted to call
+her&mdash;a disposition so docile and affectionate, and a manner
+so gentle and unobtrusive, that he already loved her with
+all the tenderness of a parent, and had secretly resolved
+that he would adopt her as his own, and as such bring her
+up and educate her, if no one possessed of a better right to
+discharge this duty to her should ever appear.</p>
+
+<p>In about six months after the occurrence of the events
+just related, the good ship <i>Dolphin</i> arrived safely at the
+harbour of Ayr, all well; and the little demi-savage,
+Ponakonta, in high spirits, and already beginning to
+jabber very passable English&mdash;an acquisition which still
+more endeared her to her kind-hearted protector, who
+took great delight in listening to her prattle, and in
+questioning her regarding her life amongst the Africans&mdash;of
+which she was now able to give a tolerably intelligible
+account. She had, however, no recollection whatever of
+the shipwreck, nor of any incident connected with it.
+Some dreamy reminiscences, indeed, she had of her mother;
+but, as might have been expected, considering how very
+young she was when that catastrophe happened which had
+deprived her of her parent, they were too vague and indefinite
+to be of the slightest avail towards throwing any light
+on her parentage.</p>
+
+<p>On arriving at Ayr, Captain Clydesdale's first step, with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
+regard to his little charge, was to avail himself of every
+means he could think of to make her singular history, with
+all its particulars, publicly known, in the hope that it
+might bring some one forward who stood in some relationship
+to her. The worthy man, however, took this step
+merely as one that was right and proper in the case, and
+not, by any means, from any desire to get rid of his little
+protegée. On the contrary, if truth be told, he would have
+been sadly disappointed had any one appeared to claim her.
+Nothing of this kind occurring, after a lapse of several
+weeks, Captain Clydesdale&mdash;who, although pretty far advanced
+in years, was unmarried, and had no domestic establishment
+of his own, being almost constantly at sea&mdash;placed
+little Julia under the charge of some female relatives, with
+instructions to give her every sort of education befitting her
+years; for all of which&mdash;boarding, clothing, and tuition&mdash;he
+came under an obligation to pay quarterly&mdash;giving a
+handsome sum, in the meantime, to account. Having
+thus disposed of his protegée, and satisfied that he had
+placed her in good hands, which was indeed the case,
+Captain Clydesdale went again to sea&mdash;his destination, on
+this occasion, being South America.</p>
+
+<p>The worthy man, however, did not go away before having
+a parting interview with his little Ponakonta, whom
+he kissed a thousand times, nor before he had entreated
+for her every kindness and attention, during his absence,
+at the hands of those whom he had now constituted her
+guardians. It was upwards of two years before Captain
+Clydesdale returned from this voyage; for it included
+several trading trips between foreign ports; and thus was
+his absence prolonged.</p>
+
+<p>Great was the good man's delight with the improvement
+which he found had taken place on his little charge
+since his departure. She now spoke English fluently; had
+made rapid progress in her education; and gave promise of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
+being more than ordinarily beautiful. Captain Clydesdale
+had the farther satisfaction of learning that she was a universal
+favourite&mdash;her gentle manners and affectionate disposition
+having endeared her to all.</p>
+
+<p>On first casting eyes on her protector, after his return
+from South America, little Julia at once recognised him,
+flew towards him, flung her arms about his neck, and wept
+for joy&mdash;calling him, in muttered sounds, her father, her
+dear father. Deeply affected by the warmth of the grateful
+child's regard, Captain Clydesdale, with streaming eyes,
+took her up in his arms, hugged her to his bosom, and
+kissed her with all the fervour of parental love. Soon
+after, Captain Clydesdale again went to sea; and, by and
+by, again returned. Voyage after voyage followed, of
+various lengths; and, after the termination of each, the
+worthy man found his interesting protegée still advancing
+in the way of improvement, and still strengthening her hold
+on the affections of those around her.</p>
+
+<p>Time thus passed on, until a period of nine years had
+slipped away; and when it had, Julia Elderslie&mdash;who now
+bore, and had all along, since her arrival in Scotland, borne,
+the name of Maria Clydesdale&mdash;was a blooming and highly
+accomplished girl of sixteen.</p>
+
+<p>It was about this period that Captain Clydesdale began
+to think of retiring from the sea, and of settling at home
+for the remainder of his life. He was now upwards of sixty
+years of age, and found himself fast getting incompetent to
+the arduous duties of his profession. Fortunately, he was
+in a condition, as regarded circumstances, to enable him
+to effect the retirement he meditated. He was by no means
+rich; but, having never married, he had accumulated sufficient
+to live upon, for the few remaining years that might
+be vouchsafed him.</p>
+
+<p>Part of Captain Clydesdale's little plan, on this occasion,
+was to rent or purchase a small house in the neighbourhood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
+of the village of Fernlee, his native place, in the west of
+Scotland; to furnish it, and to take his adopted daughter
+to live with him as his housekeeper. All this was accordingly
+done; a house, a very pretty little cottage, with garden
+behind, and flower-plot in front, was taken, furnished,
+and occupied by Mr Clydesdale and his protegée. Here,
+for two years, they enjoyed all the happiness of which their
+position and circumstances were capable&mdash;and it was a
+happiness of a very enviable kind. No daughter, however
+deep her love, could have conducted herself towards her
+parent with more tenderness, or with more anxious solicitude
+for his ease and comfort, than did Maria Clydesdale
+towards her protector. Nor could any parent more sensibly
+feel, or more gratefully mark the affectionate attentions of
+a child, than did Captain Clydesdale those of his Maria.</p>
+
+<p>He doated on her, and to such a degree, that he never
+felt happy when she was out of his sight.</p>
+
+<p>More than satisfied with her lot, Maria sought no other
+scenes of enjoyment than those of her humble home; and
+coveted no other happiness than what she found in contributing
+to that of her benefactor.</p>
+
+<p>Thus happily, then, flew two delightful years over the old
+man and his adopted child; and, wrapped up in their felicity,
+they dreamt not of reverses. But reverses came;
+Misfortune found her way even into their lonely retirement.
+Within one week, Captain Clydesdale received intelligence
+of the total loss of two vessels of which he was the principal
+owner, and in which nearly all that he was worth was
+invested. The blow was a severe and unexpected one, and
+affected the old man deeply. Not on his own account, as he
+told his Maria, with a tear standing in his eye, but on hers.
+"I had hoped," he said, "to leave you in independence&mdash;an
+humble one indeed, but more than sufficient to place
+you far beyond the reach of want. But now&mdash;&mdash;" And
+the old man wrung his hands in exquisite agony of grief.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Infinitely more distressed by the sight of her benefactor's
+unhappiness than by the misfortune which occasioned it,
+Maria flung her arms about his neck, and said everything
+she could think of to assuage his grief and to reconcile him
+to what had happened. Amongst other things, she told
+him that the accomplishments which his generosity had
+put her in possession were more than sufficient to secure her
+an independence, or, at least, the means of living comfortably;
+and that she would immediately make them available
+for their common support.</p>
+
+<p>"There are a number of wealthy families around us, my
+dear father," she said, "from which I have no doubt of
+obtaining ample employment. I can teach music, drawing,
+French, sewing, &amp;c.; and will instantly make application to
+the various quarters where I am likely to succeed in turning
+them to account. Besides, father," she continued, "it
+is probable that we shall soon have some great family in
+Park House; and, in such case, I might calculate on obtaining
+some employment there&mdash;perhaps enough of itself
+to occupy all my time."</p>
+
+<p>To all this the old man made no reply&mdash;he could make
+none. He merely took the amiable girl in his arms, embraced
+her, and bade God bless her.</p>
+
+<p>Although the mention by Miss Clydesdale of the particular
+residence above named appears a merely incidental circumstance,
+and one, seemingly, of no great importance, it is
+yet one, as the sequel will shew, so connected with our
+story, that a particular or two regarding it may not be
+deemed superfluous.</p>
+
+<p>Park House was a large, a magnificent mansion, with a
+splendid estate attached, both of which were, at this moment,
+in the market. The house was within a quarter of a
+mile of Captain Clydesdale's cottage, and the reference in
+the advertisements to those who wished to see the house
+and grounds, was made to the captain, who, with his usual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
+readiness to oblige, had undertaken this duty&mdash;a duty which
+he had already discharged towards several visitors&mdash;none of
+whom, however, had become purchasers. It was about a
+week after the period last referred to&mdash;namely, that marked
+by the circumstance of Mr Clydesdale's losses&mdash;that a gentleman's
+carriage drove up to the little gate which conducted
+to that worthy man's residence. From this carriage descended
+a tall military-looking man, of apparently about
+sixty years of age, who immediately advanced towards the
+house. Captain Clydesdale, who saw him approaching,
+hastened out to meet him. The latter, on seeing the captain,
+bowed politely, and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Clydesdale, I presume, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"The same, at your service, sir," replied the honest
+seaman.</p>
+
+<p>"You are referred, to, sir, I think, as the person to whom
+those wishing to see Park House and grounds should
+apply."</p>
+
+<p>"I am," replied Mr Clydesdale; "and will be happy to
+shew them to you, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said the visitor. "It is precisely for that
+purpose I have taken the liberty of calling on you. I have
+some idea of purchasing the estate, if I find it to answer my
+expectations."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you have the goodness to step into the house, sir,
+for a few moments, and I will then be at your service?" said
+Captain Clydesdale.</p>
+
+<p>The gentleman bowed acquiescence, and, conducted by
+the former, walked into the house, and was ushered into a
+little front parlour, in which Miss Clydesdale was at the
+moment engaged in sewing. On the entrance of the visitor,
+she rose, in some confusion, and was about to retire,
+when the latter, entreating that he might not be the cause
+of driving her away, she resumed her seat and her work.
+Having also seated himself, the stranger now made some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
+remarks of an ordinary character, by way of filling up the
+interval occasioned by the absence of Captain Clydesdale.
+Many words, however, had he not spoken, nor long had he
+looked on the fair countenance of his companion, when he
+seemed struck by something in her appearance which appeared
+at once to interest and perplex him. From the moment
+that this feeling took possession of the stranger, he
+spoke no more, but continued gazing earnestly at the downcast
+countenance of Maria Clydesdale; who, conscious of,
+and abashed by the gaze, kept her face close over the work
+in which she was engaged. From this awkward situation,
+however, she was quickly relieved by the entrance of Captain
+Clydesdale, who came to say that he was now ready to
+accompany his visitor to Park House. The latter rose,
+wished Miss Clydesdale a good morning; accompanying
+the expressions, however, with another of those looks of interest
+and perplexity with which he had been from time
+to time contemplating her for the last five or ten minutes,
+and followed the captain out of the apartment.</p>
+
+<p>"That interesting and very beautiful young lady whom I
+saw at your house is your daughter, sir, I presume?" said
+the stranger to Captain Clydesdale, as they proceeded together
+towards Park House.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, she is: that is, I may <i>say</i> she is; for I have
+brought her up since she was a child; and she has never,
+at least, not since she was five or six years of age, had any
+other protector than myself. She never knew her parents."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! a foundling," said the gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but under rather extraordinary circumstances. I
+found her amongst the savages of the coast of Guinea."</p>
+
+<p>"On the coast of Guinea!" exclaimed the stranger, in
+much amazement. "Very extraordinary, indeed. What
+are the circumstances, if I may inquire?"</p>
+
+<p>Captain Clydesdale related them as they are already before
+the reader; not omitting to mention the fragment of shift,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
+with the initials on it, and the locket with hair and miniature,
+which he still carefully kept.</p>
+
+<p>On Captain Clydesdale concluding, the stranger suddenly
+stopped short, and, looking at the former with a countenance
+pale with emotion, said&mdash;"Good God, sir, what is this?
+I am bewildered, confounded. I know not what to think.
+It is possible. Yet it cannot be. My name, sir, is Elderslie,
+General Elderslie. I have just returned from the East
+Indies, where I have been for the last seventeen years.
+Shortly after my going out, my wife and child, a daughter,
+embarked on board the <i>Isabella</i> from Greenock, to join me
+at Calcutta. The ship never reached her destination; she
+was never more heard of; but there was a report that she
+was seen, if not bespoken, off the Gold Coast; and from
+there being no trace of her afterwards, it is more than probable
+that she was wrecked on these shores; and, O God!
+it is probable also, although I dare not allow myself to
+believe it, that this girl is&mdash;is my child! Let us return, let
+us return instantly," he added, with increasing agitation,
+and now grasping Captain Clydesdale by the arm, "that I
+may see this locket you speak of. I gave such a trinket to
+my beloved, my unfortunate wife. The initials you mention
+correspond exactly. My child's name was Julia Elderslie;
+my own Christian name is James; and the same
+initials are thus also on the rim of the locket."</p>
+
+<p>"It is precisely so!" said Captain Clydesdale, with a
+degree of surprise and emotion not less intense than those
+of the general's. "There <i>are</i> the initials of J. E. also on
+the locket; and now that my <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'atttention'">attention</ins> is called to the
+circumstance, there is a strong resemblance between the
+miniature it encloses, and the person now before me."</p>
+
+<p>"Let us hasten to the house, for God's sake! captain,"
+said the general, with breathless eagerness, "and have this
+matter cleared up, if possible."</p>
+
+<p>They returned to the house. Captain Clydesdale put the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
+locket and the fragment of the little shift, which bore the
+initials J. E., into the hands of the general. He glanced
+at the latter, examined the former for an instant with
+trembling hands, staggered backwards a pace or two, and
+sank into a chair. It was the identical locket which, some
+twenty years before, he had given to his wife. The miniature
+it contained, introduced into the trinket at a subsequent
+period, was his own likeness.</p>
+
+<p>"Bring me my child, Captain Clydesdale," said the
+general, on recovering his composure; "for I can no longer
+doubt that your adopted daughter is, indeed, my Julia."</p>
+
+<p>Captain Clydesdale left the apartment, and in a moment
+returned leading in Julia Elderslie, who had hitherto been
+kept in ignorance of what was passing. On her entrance
+the general rushed towards her, took her by the left hand,
+gently pushed the sleeve of her gown a little way up the
+wrist, saw that the latter exhibited a small brown mole,
+and exclaiming&mdash;"The proof is complete; you are&mdash;you are
+my daughter, the image of your darling but ill-fated mother,"
+took her in his arms in a transport of joy.</p>
+
+<p>The feelings of Julia Elderslie, on this extraordinary
+occasion, we need not describe, they will readily be conceived.
+Neither need we detain the reader with any further
+detail; seeing that, with the incident just mentioned, the
+interest of our story terminates.</p>
+
+<p>It will be enough now, then, to say, that General Elderslie,
+who had amassed a princely fortune, bought the estate
+and mansion of Park House. That he took every opportunity,
+and adopted every means he could think of, of shewing
+his gratitude to Captain Clydesdale, for the generous
+part he had acted towards his daughter. That this daughter
+ultimately inherited his entire fortune; the general
+having never married a second time; and that she finally
+married into a family of high rank and extensive influence
+in the west of Scotland.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span></p>
+<h2>THE ASSASSIN.</h2>
+
+
+<p>At a late hour of an evening in the beginning of the year
+1569, mine host of the Stag and Hounds&mdash;the principal
+hostelry of Linlithgow at the period referred to&mdash;was suddenly
+called from his liquor&mdash;the which liquor he was at
+the moment enjoying with a few select friends who were
+assembled in the public room of the house&mdash;to receive a
+traveller who had just ridden up to the door.</p>
+
+<p>Much as Andrew Nimmo&mdash;for such was the name of
+mine host&mdash;much, we say, as Andrew loved custom, it was
+not without reluctance that he rose to leave his party to
+attend the duties of his calling on the present occasion.
+He would rather he had not been disturbed; for he was
+in the middle of an exceedingly interesting story, when the
+summons reached him, and was very unwilling to leave it
+unfinished. But business must be attended to; its demands
+are imperative; and no man, after all, could be more
+sensible of this than mine host of the Stag and Hounds.
+So, however reluctant, from his seat he rose, and, telling
+his friends he would rejoin them presently, hastened out of
+the apartment.</p>
+
+<p>On reaching the door, Andrew found the traveller had
+dismounted. He was standing by the head of his horse&mdash;a
+powerful black charger&mdash;and seemingly waiting for some
+one to relieve him of the animal.</p>
+
+<p>This duty Andrew now performed; he took hold of the
+bridle, after a word or two of welcome to his guest, and
+asked whether he should put up the horse and supper him?</p>
+
+<p>"What else have I come here for?" replied the stranger,
+gruffly. "Surely put him up; but I must see myself to
+his being properly suppered and tended. If we expect a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
+horse to do his duty, we must do our duty by him. So
+lead the way, friend!"</p>
+
+<p>Damped by the uncourteous manner of the traveller,
+Andrew made no further reply than a muttered acquiescence
+in the justice of the remark just made, but instantly led
+the horse away towards the stable; calling out, as he went,
+on John Ramsay, the ostler, to come out with the buet&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>
+lantern; for it was pitch dark, and a light, of course,
+indispensable.</p>
+
+<p>With the scrutinizing habits of his calling, mine host of
+the Stag and Hounds had been secretly but anxiously endeavouring
+to make out his customer; to arrive at some
+idea of his rank and profession, if he had any; but the
+darkness of the night had prevented him from noting more
+than that he was a man of tall stature, and, he thought, of
+a singularly stern aspect.</p>
+
+<p>When Ramsay had brought the light, however, mine
+host obtained farther and better opportunities of pursuing
+his study of the stranger; and, besides having his former
+remarks confirmed, now discovered that he had the appearance
+of a person of some consideration, his dress being that
+of a gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>"Fine beast that, sir!" adventured mine host, after a
+silence of some time, during which the latter and his guest
+had been standing together overlooking the operation of
+John Ramsay as he fed and littered the animal, whose
+noble proportions had elicited the remark. "Poorfu' beast,
+sir," continued Mr Nimmo. "I think I hae never seen a
+better."</p>
+
+<p>"Not often, friend, I daresay," replied the stranger, who
+was standing erect, with folded arms, and carefully marking
+every proceeding of the ostler. "For a long run and a
+swift, he is the animal for a man to trust his life to."</p>
+
+<p>Mine host was startled a little by the turn given to this
+remark: it smelt somewhat, he thought, of the highway; or,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
+at any rate, seemed to carry with it a somewhat suspicious
+sort of reference. He was, however, much too prudent a
+man to exhibit any indication of an opinion so injurious
+to the character of his guest, and, therefore, merely said
+laughingly&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"That he weel believed that if a man war in sic jeopardy
+as required his trusting to horse legs for his life, he wad
+be safe aneuch on sic a beast as that, especially if he got
+onything o' a reasonable start."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, give him ten minutes of a start, and there's not a
+witch that ever rode over North Berwick Law on a broomstick
+that'll throw salt on his tail, let alone a horse and
+rider of flesh and blood!" replied the stranger, with a grim
+smile. "<i>I'll</i> trust my life to him," he added, emphatically,
+"and have no fears for the result."</p>
+
+<p>The tendence on the much prized animal which was the
+subject of these remarks having now been completed, mine
+host and his guest left the stable, and proceeded to the house,
+which having entered, the former ushered the latter into the
+public room, being the best in the house, and the only one
+fit for the reception, as our worthy landlord deemed it, of a
+personage of the stranger's apparent quality.</p>
+
+<p>The latter at first shewed some reluctance to enter an
+apartment in which there was already so many people assembled;
+for it was still occupied by the company formerly
+alluded to; but, on being told by mine host that he should
+have a table to himself, in a distant part of the room, if he
+did not wish for society, he expressed himself reconciled to
+the arrangement, and, walking into the apartment, took his
+place at its upper end; then throwing himself down in a
+chair, having previously laid aside his hat, cloak, and sword,
+he commenced a vigilant but silent scrutiny of the party by
+which the table that occupied the centre of the apartment
+was surrounded. While he was thus employed, the landlord,
+who had gone for a moment about some household<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
+business, approached him to receive his orders regarding his
+night's entertainment. The result of the conference on this
+subject, was an order for supper, and for a measure of wine
+to be brought in, in the meantime, until the former should
+be prepared. The landlord bowed, and retired to execute
+his commissions. In a minute after, a pewter measure of
+claret, with a tall drinking glass, stood before the stranger.
+He filled up the latter from the former, drank it off, and
+again set himself to the task of scrutinizing the company
+before him&mdash;a task to which he now added that of listening
+to their conversation, which seemed to be of a nature to
+interest him much, if one might judge from the earnest
+intensity of his look, and the varying but strongly marked
+expression of countenance with which he listened to the
+various sentiments of the various speakers. The subject of
+the conversation was the Regent Murray&mdash;his proceedings,
+government, and character.</p>
+
+<p>"Aweel, folk may say what they like o' the Regent," said
+one of the speakers, "but I think he's managing matters
+very weel on the whole, and I wish we may never hae a
+waur in his place. He's no a man to be trifled wi'; and if
+he keeps a tight rein hand, he doesna o'erride the strength
+o' his steed. He's a strict, justice-loving man; that I'll
+say o' him."</p>
+
+<p>"Then ye say mair o' him than I wad, deacon," said another
+of the party. "His strictness I grant ye; but as to
+his justice, there was unco little o't, I think, in his treatment
+o' his sister: his conduct to that poor woman has been
+most unnatural, most savage, selfish, and unfeelin. That's
+my opinion o't, and it's the opinion o' mony a ane besides
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, weel; every are has his ain mind o' thae things,
+Mr Clinkscales," replied the first speaker; "but for my part,
+I'll ay ride the ford as I find it; that's my creed."</p>
+
+<p>"Has ony o' ye heard," here interposed another of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
+party, "o' that cruel case o' Hamilton's o' Bothwellhaugh?
+Ane o' the Queen's Hamilton's," added the querist.</p>
+
+<p>Some said they had, others that they had not. For the
+benefit of the latter, the speaker explained. He said that
+Hamilton of Bothwellhaugh was one of those who had been
+forfeited for the part he took at the battle of Langside.
+That the person to whom his property was given by the
+Regent, had turned Hamilton's wife out of her home, unclothed,
+and in a wild and stormy night; and that the poor
+woman had died in consequence of this cruel treatment.</p>
+
+<p>"An' what's Hamilton sayin to that?" inquired one of
+the party.</p>
+
+<p>"They say he's in an awfu takin about it," replied the
+first speaker, "an' threatenin vengeance, richt an' left; particularly
+against the Regent."</p>
+
+<p>"I think little wonder o't," said another of the party.
+"It's a shamefu business, and aneuch to mak ony man desperate."</p>
+
+<p>"But is't true?" here inquired another.</p>
+
+<p>The reply to this question came from a very unexpected
+quarter: it came from the stranger, who, starting fiercely
+to his feet, and stretching towards the company with a look
+and gesture of great excitement, exclaimed&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, gentlemen, true it is&mdash;true as God is in heaven&mdash;true
+in every particular. An eternal monument to the
+justice and clemency of the tyrant Murray. The wife of
+Bothwellhaugh was turned naked out of her own house in
+a cold and bitter night, and died of bodily suffering and a
+broken heart. She did&mdash;she did. But"&mdash;and the stranger
+ground his teeth and clenched his fist as he pronounced
+the word&mdash;"there will be a day of count and reckoning.
+The vengeance, the deadly vengeance of a ruined, deeply
+injured, and desperate man, will yet overtake the ruthless,
+remorseless tyrant."</p>
+
+<p>Having thus delivered himself, the stranger again retired<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
+to his former place, reseated himself, and relapsed into his
+former silence; although the deep and laboured respiration
+of recent excitement, which he could not subdue, might
+still be distinctly heard even from the farthest end of the
+apartment.</p>
+
+<p>It was some time after the stranger had retired to his
+place before the company felt disposed to resume their conversation.
+The incident which had just occurred, the
+energy with which the stranger had spoken, and the extreme
+excitement he had evinced, had had the effect of
+throwing them all into that silent and reflective mood
+which the sudden display of anything surprising or interesting
+is so apt to produce even in our merriest and most
+thoughtless moments.</p>
+
+<p>At length, however, the chill gradually wore off; the
+conversation was resumed, at first in an under tone, and
+by fits and starts; by and by it became more continuous;
+and, finally, began to flow with all its original volume and
+freedom. No more allusion, however, was made by any
+of the party to the case of Bothwellhaugh. This was a
+subject to which, after what had taken place, none seemed
+to care about returning. Neither did the stranger evince
+any desire to hold farther correspondence with the revellers;
+but, on the contrary, appeared anxious to avoid it; nay,
+one might almost have supposed that he regretted having
+obtruded himself upon them at all, and that he could
+have wished that what he had uttered in an unguarded
+moment had remained unsaid. Be this as it may, however,
+he sought no farther intercourse with the party, but
+having hastily despatched the supper which was placed
+before him, and finished his measure of wine, he glided
+unobserved out of the apartment, and, conducted by his
+host, retired to the sleeping chamber which had been appointed
+for him.</p>
+
+<p>On the following morning, the stranger, who was sojourning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
+at the Stag and Hounds, went out to transact, as he
+told his landlord, some business in the town; saying, besides,
+that he would not probably return till evening.</p>
+
+<p>Strongly impressed by the manner and appearance of
+his guest, and not a little awed by his grim and fierce
+aspect, he of the Stag and Hounds could not help following
+him to the door, when he departed, and furtively
+looking after him as he stalked down the main street of
+the town; and much, as he looked at him, did he marvel
+what sort of business it could be he was going about.
+This, however, was a point on which the worthy man had
+no means of enlightening himself, and he was therefore
+obliged to be content with the privilege of muttering some
+expressions of the wonder he felt.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, the stranger had turned an angle of the
+street, and disappeared&mdash;at least from the view of the landlord
+of the Stag and Hounds. Not from ours; for we shall
+follow and keep sight of him, and endeavour to make out
+what he was so curious to know.</p>
+
+<p>Having passed about half-way down the main street of
+the town, the former suddenly halted before a large unoccupied
+house, with a balcony in front. It was a residence
+of the Archbishop of St Andrew's. Standing in
+front of this house, the stranger seemed to scan it with
+earnest scrutiny. He looked from window to window with
+the most cautious and deliberate vigilance, and appeared to
+be noting carefully their various heights and positions.
+While pursuing this inquiry, he might also have been frequently
+observed glancing, from time to time, on either
+side, as if to see that no one was marking the earnestness
+of his examination of the building.</p>
+
+<p>Having apparently completed his survey of the front of
+the house, the stranger passed round to the back part of the
+building, and proceeded to the gate of the garden, which lay
+behind, and through which only was the house accessible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
+on that side. On reaching the gate, the stranger paused,
+looked cautiously around him for a few seconds, when,
+observing no one in sight, he hastily plunged his hand
+beneath his cloak, drew out a key, applied it to the lock,
+opened the gate, passed quickly in, and closed the door
+cautiously behind him.</p>
+
+<p>With hurried step the intruder now proceeded to the
+house, drew forth another key, inserted it into the lock of
+the main door, turned it round, applied his foot to the
+latter, pushed it open, and entered the building; having
+previously, as in the former instance, secured the door behind
+him. Ascending the stair in the inside of the house,
+the mysterious visitant now commenced a careful examination
+of the various apartments on the second floor; and at
+length adopting one&mdash;a small room, with one window to
+the front&mdash;made it the scene of his future operations.
+These were, the laying on the floor a straw mattress, which
+he dragged from another apartment, and hanging a piece
+of black cloth&mdash;which he also found in the lumber-room,
+from whence he had taken the mattress&mdash;against the wall
+of the apartment opposite the window.</p>
+
+<p>Having completed these preparations, the secret workman
+went up to the window, knelt down on the mattress,
+and levelling a stick, or staff, which he found in the apartment,
+as if it had been a musket, seemed to be trying where
+he might be best situated for firing at an object without.
+This experiment he tried repeatedly; shifting his position
+from place to place, until he appeared to have hit upon one
+that promised to suit his purpose.</p>
+
+<p>This ascertained, he rose from his knees; threw down
+the staff; glanced around the apartment, as if to see that
+all was right; descended the stair; came out of the house,
+locking the door after him; crossed the garden, and passed
+out at the gate, locking that also before he left, and with the
+same precaution that he had used at entering; that is, looking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
+around him to see that no one marked his proceedings.</p>
+
+<p>The guest of the Stag and Hounds now returned to his
+inn, from which he had been absent about two hours. At
+the door he was met by mine host, who, touching his cap,
+asked if "his honour intended dining at his house, as it
+was now about one of the clock," the general dinner-hour
+of the period.</p>
+
+<p>Without noticing the inquiry of his landlord&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Be there any armourers in this town of yours, friend?"
+he said, "where I could fit me with some weapons I want."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, indeed, there be one, and a main good one he is,"
+replied the other. "Tom Wilson, I warrant me, will fit
+your honour with any weapon you can desire, from a pistolet
+to a culverin; from a two-handed sword of six feet
+long, to a dagger like a bodkin. And as for armour, you may
+have anything, everything from head-piece to leg-splent; all
+of the best material, and first-rate workmanship."</p>
+
+<p>"Where is this man Wilson's shop?" inquired the stranger.</p>
+
+<p>"See you, sir," replied the other; "see you yonder projecting
+corner, beyond the palace entrance?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, three doors beyond that, you will find Wilson's
+shop; and, if your honour chooses, you may use my
+name with him, and he will not serve you the worse, or
+the less reasonably, I warrant me. It is always a recommendation
+to Tom to be a guest at the Stag and
+Hounds."</p>
+
+<p>Without saying whether or not he would avail himself of
+the privilege offered him of using his name, the mysterious
+stranger hastened away in the direction pointed out to him,
+and, in half a minute after, he was in the workshop of
+Wilson the armourer.</p>
+
+<p>"Your pleasure, sir," said that person, advancing towards
+his customer from an inner apartment.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Have you a good store of fire-arms, friend?" inquired
+the latter.</p>
+
+<p>"Pretty fair, sir; pretty fair," replied the armourer
+"What description may you want?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I want a carbine, friend&mdash;something of a sure
+piece&mdash;that will carry its ball well to the mark. None of
+your bungling articles, that first hang fire, and then throw
+their shot in every direction but the right one. I would
+have a piece of good and certain execution."</p>
+
+<p>"Here, then, sir, here is your commodity," said the
+armourer, disengaging a short and heavy gun from an arms'-rack
+that occupied one side of the shop. "Here is a piece
+that I can recommend. It will be the fault of the hand or
+the eye when this barker misses its mark, I warrant ye.
+I'd take in hand myself to smash an egg with it, with single
+ball, at fifty yards distance. I have done it before now
+with a worse gun."</p>
+
+<p>"I will not require any such feat from the piece as that,
+friend," said Wilson's customer, drily; and having taken
+the gun in his hand, he began to examine the lock, and to
+see that the piece was otherwise in serviceable condition.
+Being satisfied that it was, he demanded the price. It was
+named. The money was tendered, and accepted, and the
+stranger departed with his purchase; having, however, previously
+received from the armourer, in lieu of luck's-penny,
+although he offered to pay for them, half a dozen balls, and
+a few charges of powder, to put the capability of the gun to
+immediate trial. This, however, its new proprietor did not
+think necessary; but, instead, returned to the archbishop's
+house with it; and, after loading and priming it, placed it
+in a corner of the apartment, which we have described him
+as having put into so strange a state of preparation.</p>
+
+<p>Leaving the house with the same cautious and stealthy
+step as before, the stranger again returned to his inn; but
+it was now to leave it no more for the night.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"What news stirring, friend?" said he to the landlord.</p>
+
+<p>"Naething, sir," replied he, as he laid the cloth for his
+dinner; "only that the Regent will pass through the town
+to-morrow. I hear he'll be this way about twelve o'clock.
+The magistrates, I understand, hae gotten notice to that
+effect."</p>
+
+<p>"So," replied the stranger. "Then we shall have a sight."</p>
+
+<p>"A brave sight, sir, for he is to be accompanied by a
+gallant cavalcade, and the trades of the town are to turn
+out with banners and music to do him honour. It will be
+a stirring day, sir, and I trust a good one for my poor house
+here; for such doings make people as thirsty as so many
+dry sponges."</p>
+
+<p>To these remarks the guest made no reply, but proceeded
+with his dinner; the materials for which having, in the
+meantime, been brought in, and placed on the table by another
+attendant.</p>
+
+<p>On the following morning, the little town of Linlithgow
+exhibited a scene of unusual bustle. Hosts of idlers were
+seen gathered here and there, along the whole line of the
+main street; and persons carrying trades' banners&mdash;as yet,
+however, carefully rolled up&mdash;might be seen hurrying in all
+directions to the various mustering-places of their crafts.
+An occasional discharge of a culverin too; and, as the morning
+advanced, a merry peal of bells heightened the promise
+of some impending event of unusual occurrence. By and by,
+these symptoms of public rejoicing became more and more
+marked: the groups of idlers increased; the banners were
+unfurled; the firing of the culverins became more frequent;
+and the bells either really did ring, or appeared to ring
+more furiously.</p>
+
+<p>It was when matters thus bespoke the near approach of
+a crisis&mdash;which crisis, we may as well say at once, was the
+advent of the Regent&mdash;that the mysterious lodger at the
+Stag and Hounds ordered his horse to be brought to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
+door. The horse was brought; the stranger settled his
+bill; and, saying to his landlord that he would witness the
+sight from horseback more advantageously than on foot,
+mounted, and rode off in the direction of the approaching
+cavalcade. In this direction, however, he did not ride far;
+for, on gaining the eastern extremity of the town, he suddenly
+wheeled round, and rode back in rear of the line of
+street, until he reached the gate of the garden behind the
+mansion of the Archbishop of St Andrew's, in which the
+mysterious preparation before described had been made.</p>
+
+<p>Having arrived at the gate, he dismounted, opened it,
+led in his horse, and fastened him to a tree close by. This
+done, he removed the lintel, or cross-bar, over the gate.
+The latter, contrary to his practice on former occasions,
+he now left wide open, and proceeded towards the house,
+into which he disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>In less than a quarter of an hour after, the Regent had
+entered the town. He was on horseback, surrounded by a
+number of friends, also mounted, and followed by a numerous
+party of armed retainers.</p>
+
+<p>As the cavalcade penetrated into the town, the crowd,
+which the occasion had assembled, gradually became more
+and more dense, and the progress of the Regent and his
+party consequently more slow; until, at length, they were
+so packed in the narrow street, with the human wedges
+that were forcing themselves around them, that it was with
+great difficulty they could make any forward progress at all.</p>
+
+<p>Becoming impatient with the delay thus occasioned,
+although carefully concealing this impatience, the Regent,
+who was now directly opposite the house of the Archbishop
+of St Andrew's, kept waving his hand to the crowd, as if
+entreating them not to press so closely, that he might pass
+on with more speed. The crowd endeavoured to comply
+with the wishes of the Regent, but their efforts only added
+to the confusion, without mending the matter in other respects.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
+It was at this moment that all eyes were suddenly
+directed towards the house of the Archbishop of St Andrew's,
+in consequence of a shot being fired from one of the
+windows. When these eyes looked an instant after again
+towards the Regent, he was not to be seen; he had fallen
+from his horse, mortally wounded: a ball had passed through
+his body. It was Hamilton of Bothwellhaugh who had
+fired the fatal shot.</p>
+
+<p>The friends and retainers of the Regent, seconded by the
+town's people, flew to the house of the archbishop, and
+endeavoured to force the door, in order to get at the murderer
+but it had been barricaded by the wily assassin, and
+resisted their efforts long enough to allow of his escaping
+from the house, mounting his horse, and darting through
+the garden gate at the top of his utmost speed. He was
+pursued; but, thanks to his good steed, pursued in vain,
+and subsequently escaped to France; having done a deed
+which the moralist must condemn, but which cannot be
+looked upon as altogether without palliation.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span></p>
+<h2>THE PRISONER OF WAR.</h2>
+
+
+<p>I had been preserved, through divine mercy, from one of
+the most lingering and fearful deaths. I was rescued, I
+scarce knew how, after the grim king of terror held me in
+his embrace, and all hope had fled. As consciousness returned,
+my heart thrilled at the recollection of the miseries
+I had endured while floating, a helpless being, on the bosom
+of the ocean.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> I shuddered to think, while I lay feeble as
+an infant in the cabin of the vessel which was bearing me
+to my home, and whose humane crew had been the means
+of my deliverance, that I was still at the mercy of the winds
+and waves; but kind nursing, aided by youth and a good
+constitution, quickly brought strength; and I was enabled,
+after a few days, to come upon deck. On my first attempt,
+when my head rose above the deck as I ascended the companion-ladder,
+and my eyes fell upon the boundless waste of
+waters, a chill of horror shot through my frame. Like a lone
+traveller who had suddenly met a lion in his path, I stood
+paralysed; every nerve and muscle refused to act. I must
+have fallen back into the cabin, had not my hand instinctively
+clung to their hold for a few seconds. I could not
+withdraw my fixed gaze, while all I had suffered rushed upon
+me like a hideous dream. Slowly my faculties returned, when
+I ascended the deck, where I sat for a few hours. Each
+day after this brought additional strength; so that, before
+we made soundings, I was as strong and cheerful as I had
+ever been in my life. The weather was squally, and I assisted
+the crew as much as was in my power; and, when not
+so occupied, lay listlessly looking over the ship's bows that
+bravely dashed aside the waves that rolled between me and</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span></p>
+<p>the home I now longed to reach, or walked the deck musing
+upon the joy my return would impart to my over-indulgent
+parents.</p>
+
+<p>As we neared the shores of Scotland, a circumstance occurred
+that both greatly surprised and alarmed me. This
+was a sudden change in the manners and temper of the crew.
+Care and anxiety took the place of their wonted cheerfulness;
+the joyous laugh, or snatch of song, no longer broke
+the monotonous hissing of the waves that rippled along the
+sides of the vessel, or the dull whistle of the wind through
+the rigging. At the first appearance of every sail that hove
+in sight, I could perceive every eye turned to it with a look
+of alarm until she was made out. Fearful of giving offence
+to my benefactors, I made no remark on the subject for
+some time, although I felt disappointed at what I saw&mdash;attributing
+it to cowardice; yet they were all stout, young,
+resolute-looking fellows at other times. This scene of alarm,
+and appearance of a wish to skulk below or conceal themselves,
+had occurred twice in the course of the forenoon.
+After the last ship we encountered was made out to be a
+merchant-brig, I could no longer refrain from delivering my
+sentiments of the greater number of the crew, but addressing
+the mate, said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Mr Ross, it is fortunate for us that these strange sails
+have turned out to be British merchantmen. Had they
+proved to be French privateers, we should have made
+but a poor stand, I fear, notwithstanding our eight carronades."</p>
+
+<p>"What makes you think so?" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, there is not a vessel that heaves in sight," said I,
+"but the men look as if they wished themselves anywhere
+but where they are."</p>
+
+<p>"Avast there, my man!" said he. "What! do you
+mean to say that they would not stand by their guns while
+there was a chance? Yes, they would, and long after; and,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
+if you think otherwise, all I say is, you form opinions and
+talk of what you know nothing about."</p>
+
+<p>Casting an angry look at me&mdash;the only one he ever gave&mdash;he
+squirted his quid over the bulwarks, and was walking
+away, when I stopped him.</p>
+
+<p>"If I have given you offence, Mr Ross, nothing was
+farther from my intention. I cannot but observe the alarm
+caused by every sail that heaves in sight until she is made
+out to be a friend. Now, the little time I was at sea, before
+I fell overboard and was saved by you, every sail that
+hove in sight made the hearts of all on board leap for
+joy."</p>
+
+<p>"Ho! ho!" and he laughed aloud. "Are you on that
+tack, my messmate? You are quite out in your reckoning,
+and becalmed in a fog; but I shall soon blow it away.
+There is not a man on board with whom I would not go
+into action with the fullest reliance upon his courage; and,
+were we to meet a French privateer, you would quickly see
+such a change as would satisfy you that my confidence is
+not misplaced. Every face, that the moment before expressed
+anxiety and alarm, would brighten up with joy; every man
+would stand to his gun as cheerfully as to the helm. It
+is their liberty the poor fellows are afraid of being deprived
+of by our own men-of-war&mdash;the liberty to toil for their
+parents or wives where they can get better wages than the
+Government allows. Danger, in any form, they meet undaunted
+when duty calls; it is for their countrymen they
+quail. Were the smallest sloop-of-war in the British navy
+to heave in sight, and a boat put off from her with a boy
+of a midshipman and eight or ten men, every one on board,
+who had not a protection, would shake in his shoes at
+her approach; yet, against an enemy, every man would
+stand to his gun until his ship was blown out of the water."</p>
+
+<p>A new and painful feeling came over me as he spoke. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
+was myself an entered seaman, and, of course, liable to impressment;
+but the idea of being taken had never occurred
+to me. I wondered that it had not, after the scenes I had
+witnessed in the frigate; but my longing for home had
+entirely engrossed my mind. I was, indeed, home-sick, and
+weary of the sea. From this moment, no one on board felt
+more alarm than I did at the sight of a top-royal rising out
+of the distant waters. My feelings were near akin to those of
+a felon in concealment.</p>
+
+<p>At length we reached the Moray Firth, in the evening,
+and arrangements were made for as many of the crew as
+could be spared to be landed at Cromarty, where the vessel
+was to put in. This was to avoid the danger of impressment
+in the Firth of Forth. I gave the captain an order
+upon my father for my passage, and the expense he had
+been at on my account, as I was to leave, with the others in
+the boat, as soon as we were off the town, which we hoped
+to reach in the morning. My anxiety was so great that I
+had kept the deck since nightfall. It was intensely dark;
+nothing broke the gloom but the flashes of light that gleamed
+for a moment upon the waves, as they rippled along the
+sides of the vessel, and the dull rays of the binnacle-lamp
+before the man at the helm. Bell after bell was struck, still
+I stood at the bows, leaning upon the bowsprit, unmindful
+of the chill wind from under the foretopsail, anxiously
+watching for the first tints of dawn. Tediously as the
+night wore on, I thought, when morning dawned, it had
+fled far too fast.</p>
+
+<p>The dark clouds began at length to melt away in the
+east, and the distant mountain-tops to rise like grey clouds
+above the darkness that still hid the shores from our view.
+Gradually the whole face of nature began to emerge from the
+morning mists. We were just off the Sutors of Cromarty.
+My heart leapt for joy at the near prospect of being once
+more on firm ground, and so near home. Several of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
+crew had now joined me, and all eyes were directed to the
+entrance of the bay. Only a few minutes had elapsed in
+this pleasing hope&mdash;for it was still dullish on the horizon&mdash;when
+the report of a gun from seaward of us, so near that I
+thought it was alongside, made us start and look round.
+Each of us seemed as if we had been turned into stone by
+the alarming sound; while, so sudden was the revulsion of
+feeling, in my own case, that my heart almost ceased to
+beat. There, not half-a-league to windward of us, lay a
+frigate, with her sails shaking in the wind, and a boat,
+well-manned, with an officer in her stern, putting off from her.</p>
+
+<p>So completely were we overcome by the sudden appearance
+of this dreaded object, which seemed to emerge from
+darkness, as the sun's first rays fell upon and whitened her
+sails, that we stood incapable of thought or action. The
+well-manned barge was carried, by the faint breeze and
+impetus of her oars, almost as swift as a gull on the wing.
+The report of the gun brought the captain and mate upon
+deck before we had recovered from our stupor.</p>
+
+<p>"Bear a hand, men!" cried Ross, as he sprung upon
+deck. "Man the tacklefalls! clear the boat! and give them
+a run for it at least."</p>
+
+<p>Roused by his voice, every nerve was strained, the boat
+lowered, and we in her, ready to push off, when the captain
+called over the side&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My lads, do as you think for the best; but it is of no
+use to try. The frigate's boat will be under our stern ere
+you can gain way."</p>
+
+<p>I stood in the act of pushing off, when the object we
+were going to strain every nerve to avoid swept round the
+stern, and grappled us. We hopelessly threw our oars
+upon the thwarts, and prepared to reascend the vessel, to
+settle with the captain and bring away our chests. As for
+myself, I had no call to leave the boat. All I possessed in
+the world was upon my person, and half-a-guinea given me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
+by the captain to carry me home. The other three were
+getting their bags and chests ready to lower into the boat,
+having got their wages from the captain, when he called me
+to come on deck. I obeyed; when he said to the midshipman
+in command of the boat&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Sir, to prevent any unpleasant consequences arising to
+this poor fellow, Elder, here, I shall let you know how he
+came on board of us. He belonged to the <i>Latona</i>, and is
+no deserter, I assure you. Ross, bring here our log-book,
+and satisfy the gentleman if he wishes." Ross obeyed; and
+having examined it, the captain told the wretched state in
+which I had been picked up, and the way in which I had
+accounted to him for the accident. During the recital, he
+looked hard at me, no muscle of his face indicating either
+pity or surprise. When the captain ceased to speak, he only
+said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Well, my lad, you have for once had a narrow escape&mdash;you
+must hold better on in future. I shall report to the
+captain, and get the D from before your name. Tumble
+into the boat, my lads. Good day, captain." And, in a
+few minutes afterwards, I was on board the <i>Edgar</i>, seventy-four,
+and standing westwards for the Firth of Forth.</p>
+
+<p>It was strange the change that came over the impressed
+men, when there was no longer any hope of escape. Like
+true seamen, they bent to the circumstance they could not
+remedy, and were, as soon as they got on board, as much at
+home, and more cheerful, than they had been for many days
+before. As for myself, I took it much to heart, and was
+very melancholy when we entered the Firth and stood up to
+the roadstead. I could hardly restrain my feelings when
+the city of Edinburgh came in sight, and when I thought
+of the short distance in miles that divided me from my
+parents and home&mdash;that home I had left so foolishly in
+the hopes of being back at the conclusion of the war, which
+I now found was raging more furiously, if possible, than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
+when I left, and with much less prospect of its termination.
+I would stand for hours gazing upon the White Craig, the
+eastern extremity of the Pentland Hills, and wish I was
+upon it, until my eyes were suffused with tears. I begged
+hard for the first lieutenant to give me leave to go on shore,
+if only for eight-and-forty hours, to visit my parents; but
+he refused my request, fearful of my not returning. Several
+of the hands on board, natives of Edinburgh, who had
+been long in the <i>Edgar</i>, obtained leave. With one of them
+I sent a letter to my father, who came the following day.
+It was a meeting of sorrow, not unmixed with upbraidings,
+on his part, for what I had done; but we parted with
+regret&mdash;he to do what he could to obtain my discharge, I
+under promise not to act so precipitately in future, if I was
+once more a free agent. What steps were taken I know
+not, for next morning we received orders to sail for the
+Nore. We had many faces on board that looked as long as
+my own, for there were still several who had obtained promise
+of leave whose turn had not come round. Wallace,
+one of the mess I was in, had not been in his native city
+for ten years, having been all that time voluntarily on board
+of men-of-war, either at home or on foreign stations. He
+was to have had two days' leave the very morning we
+sailed, and had doomed ten gold guineas, which he had
+long kept for such purpose, to be expended in a blow-out
+in Edinburgh, among his relations and friends. When
+the boatswain piped to weigh anchor, Wallace, who was
+captain of the foretop, ran to his berth, opened his chest,
+took out his long-hoarded store, and came on deck with it
+in his hand. His looks bespoke rage and disappointment,
+bordering upon insanity. He gazed upon the distant city
+that shone upon the gently swelling hills glancing back the
+sun's rays, then at the purse of gold in his hand. He
+seemed incapable of speech. A bitter smile curled his
+lip, bespeaking the most intense scorn. I looked on, wondering<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
+what he meant to do. It was but the scene of a
+minute. Suddenly raising his hand, he threw the purse
+and gold over the side with all his force, exclaiming:&mdash;"Go,
+vile trash! what use have I for you now? The first
+action may lay me low!" Then, as if relieved from some
+oppressive load, he mounted the rattlings to his duty with
+a smile of satisfaction; and we bore away for the Nore,
+where I was draughted on board the <i>Repulse</i>, sixty-four,
+and departed upon a cruise along the coast of Brittany; at
+times lying off Brest harbour, and at others, standing along
+the coast in search of the enemy. Employed in this monotonous
+duty, month followed month, and year after year
+passed away.</p>
+
+<p>It was now the year 1799. The century was drawing
+to a close; but the interminable war seemed only commencing.
+I had become almost callous to my fate. We
+were standing along, under a steady breeze, as close in
+shore as we could with safety to the vessel. It was the
+dog-watch; and I had only been a short time turned in
+when our good ship struck upon some sunken rocks with
+such force that I thought she had gone to pieces. Every
+one in a moment turned out. The night was as dark as
+pitch, and the sea breaking over us, while we lay hard and
+fast. Everything was done to lighten her in vain. She
+was making water very fast, in spite of all our exertions at
+the pumps. Still there was not the smallest confusion on
+board. Our discipline was as strict, and our officers as
+promptly obeyed, as they were before our accident. As the
+tide rose, the wind shifted, and blew a gale right upon the
+shore, causing the ship to beat violently. Day at length
+dawned, and there, not one hundred fathoms from our deck,
+lay a rocky and desolate-looking shore. We had been
+forced over a reef of sunken rocks that were not in our
+charts; and, during the darkness, as was supposed, had
+been carried in-shore by some current; but, however it had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
+happened, there we were, in a serious scrape, the sea breaking
+over our decks, and our hold full of water.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after daybreak we could perceive the peasantry
+crowding down to the water's edge. Everything had been
+done that skill and resolution could accomplish, to save the
+vessel, but in vain. We had nothing before our eyes but
+instant death. The sea ran so high that no boat could live
+for a moment in the broken water between us and the shore.
+The French peasantry were making no effort for our safety,
+but running about and looking on our deplorable situation,
+with apparently no other feeling than that of curiosity. At
+this time, James Paterson, an Edinburgh lad, volunteered
+to make the attempt to swim to the shore with a log-line,
+and fearlessly let himself over the side. It was, to all appearance,
+a hopeless attempt; for every one felt assured
+that he would be beat to death against the rocks that lined
+the beach, on which the waves were beating with great
+fury.</p>
+
+<p>It was a period of fearful suspense; yet, dreadful as our
+situation was, there was not the least unnecessary noise on
+board. All was prompt attention and obedience. The
+weather was extremely cold, and the sea, at times, making
+a complete breach over the ship, which we expected every
+moment to go to pieces. As for myself, I meant to stow
+below and perish with her, rather than to float about,
+bruised and maimed, and drown at last. One half of
+the crew were only dressed in their shirts and trousers,
+without shoes or stockings, as they had leaped from their
+hammocks. When she struck, we had no leisure to put on
+more than our trousers. Thus we stood, holding on by the
+nettings, or anything we could lay hold of, to prevent our
+being washed off the decks, with our eyes anxiously watching
+the progress of the brave Paterson, who swam like an otter,
+the boatswain and his mates serving out the line to him.
+We saw him near the rocks, and the people making signs<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
+to him. This was the point of greatest danger, but, by the
+aid of the peasants, he surmounted it.</p>
+
+<p>Those on the beach gave a shout, which we replied to
+from the deck. A hawser was made fast to the line, and
+secured on shore. It was not until now that we began to
+hope; and with this hope arose an anxiety on the part of
+every one to save what they could. I strove to reach my
+chest, in which were a pair of new shoes and five guineas,
+but my efforts, like those of the others, were vain; our
+under decks were flooded several inches, and everything was
+loose and knocking about in the most furious manner, from
+the rolling and pitching of the vessel upon the rocks, so
+that I was but too happy to reach the decks without being
+crushed to death. All I regretted was my shoes; the money
+I cared not for, and do not think I would have taken it,
+as we expected to be plundered as soon as we got to the
+beach.</p>
+
+<p>After a great deal of fatigue, we all got safe to land, and
+now the plundering began. There were no regular soldiers
+on the spot, but a great many of the peasantry had firelocks
+and bayonets, and stood over us, stripping those of the men,
+who had them, of their jackets and hats. At first, we were
+disposed to resist, but soon found it to be of no use. One
+of the fellows seized the chain of the watch belonging to one
+of our men, and was in the act of pulling it from the pocket,
+when the owner, Jack Smith, struck him to the ground with
+a blow of his fist. The next moment poor Smith lay a lifeless
+corpse upon the sand, felled by a stroke from the butt
+end of a musket.</p>
+
+<p>There was no one present who seemed to have or who
+assumed any authority, to whom our officers might appeal
+for protection; they were not more respected than the men;
+all were searched and robbed as soon as they arrived from
+the wreck. Poor Smith's fate taught us submission, even
+while our bosoms burned with a desire for vengeance. One<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
+of my messmates said aloud&mdash;"I would cheerfully stand
+before the muzzle of one of the old <i>Repulse's</i> thirty-twos,
+were she charged to the mouth with grape well laid, to
+sweep these French robbers from the face of the earth." As
+for myself, they took nothing from me. I had twopence in
+the pocket of my trousers; when I saw what was going on,
+I took it out and held it in my hand while they searched
+me. I more than once thought they were going to strip me
+of my nether garments, and give me in exchange a pair of
+their own gun-mouthed rags, which would scarcely have
+reached my knees; for several of them looked at them as if
+they felt inclined to make the exchange; but I escaped, and
+felt thankful.</p>
+
+<p>We stood for several hours shivering upon the beach
+without food, fire, or water, while the plunderers were busy
+picking up anything that drifted ashore, but still keeping a
+strict watch over us; at length, the chief magistrate of a
+neighbouring small town arrived, and to him our officers
+complained of the usage we had received. He only shook
+his head, and shrugged his shoulders, when the body of
+Smith was pointed out to him. What could we do? A
+grave was dug for him on the spot where he was murdered,
+and we were marched off into the interior. It was well on
+in the afternoon before we reached the place where we were to
+halt. It was a small poverty-stricken-like town, with an old
+ruinous church and churchyard, surrounded by high walls,
+with an iron gate close by. Into this chill, desolate place,
+we were crowded by the soldiers, the gate locked upon us, and
+sentinels placed around the building. Here we remained until
+the evening, when there was served out to every man a
+small loaf, black as mud; yet, black as it was, I never
+ate a sweeter morsel; for neither I nor any of my companions
+had tasted any food since the evening before.</p>
+
+<p>But how shall I express the horror we felt when we
+found we were to remain where we were, in this old, ruined<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
+charnel-house of a church, which could scarcely contain us
+all, unless we stood close together. To lie down was out
+of the question; and, although we could, there were neither
+straw, blankets, nor covering of any kind, to screen us from
+the cold. We implored in vain to be removed; but these
+privations, bad as they were, did not annoy us so much as
+the idea of spending the long dark night in such a miserable
+place. By far the greater number of us believed as firmly
+in the reality of ghosts as we did in our own existence; and,
+of all places in the world, a church and churchyard, from
+time immemorial, have been their favourite haunts, and
+the terror of all who believe in their reality&mdash;even those who
+affect to disbelieve in the visits of spirits to this earth, feel
+sensations which they would not choose to own, when in a
+churchyard, in a dark night, with gravestones and crumbling
+human bones around them. Of all men seamen are the
+most superstitious, and give the most ready credence to
+ghost stories. The unmanning feeling of fear, that had not
+touched a single heart in the extremity of our danger from
+the storm, was now strongly marked in every face, exaggerated
+by a horror of we knew not what. Fear is contagious&mdash;we
+huddled together, and peered fearfully around, expecting
+every moment to see some appalling vision or hear some
+dreadful sound. Our sense of hearing was painfully acute&mdash;the
+smallest noise made us start; but our feelings were
+too much racked to remain long at the same intensity&mdash;they
+gradually became more obtuse as the night wore on, until
+we at length began to entertain each other with fearful
+stories of ghosts; feeling a strange satisfaction in increasing
+the gloomy excitement under which we laboured. Had any
+of us begun a humorous story, with the view of diverting
+our thoughts from their present bent, and the circumstances
+we were in, I am certain he would have been silenced in no
+gentle manner.</p>
+
+<p>We might have been about two hours or less in this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
+state, in the most intense darkness&mdash;our own whispers being
+all that we could recognise of each other, even although in
+contact&mdash;when a low pleasant murmur suddenly fell upon
+our ears: It was the voice of Dick Bates, who, having either
+been requested, or, moved by his present situation, had, of
+his own accord, commenced singing in an under tone his
+favourite ballad of "Hozier's Ghost." Now, Dick was the
+best singer in the whole crew, with a voice like a singing
+bird; it was at this moment so low that, had it been broad
+daylight, he would have appeared only to have been breathing
+hard; yet it was at this time distinctly heard by all, and
+made our flesh creep upon our bones, although a strange
+kind of pleasure was mingled with the feeling. We scarcely
+breathed when he came to the lines&mdash;</p>
+
+<div style="padding-left:25%">
+"With three thousand ghosts beside him,<br />
+And in groans did Vernon hail&mdash;<br />
+Heed, O heed my fatal story,<br />
+I am Hozier's injured Ghost."<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>I thought the whole was present before me, and I could see
+the scene the poet described, and shuddered when he breathed
+forth&mdash;</p>
+
+<div style="padding-left:25%">
+"See these ghastly spectres sweeping<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mournful o'er this hated wave,</span><br />
+Whose pale cheeks are stained with weeping&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">These were English captains brave.</span><br />
+<br />
+"See these numbers pale and horrid!<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">These were once my seamen bold.</span><br />
+Lo! each hangs his drooping forehead<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">While his mournful tale is told."</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<p>I believe there was not a man in the old church who did
+not think he saw the ghastly train of spectres flitting before
+his eyes, and who did not feel every nerve thrill, and every
+hair of his head stand on end. Many were the tales of
+superstition and of terror related, until overpowered nature
+sank into sleep; but I have since often reflected that, of all
+the accounts of fearful sights I heard, they were all related<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
+at second hand, from the authority of others. No one
+asserted they themselves had ever seen anything out of
+the ordinary course of nature except Bob Nelson, and his
+was calculated to lead a more prejudiced observer astray. It
+was as follows&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It was during a voyage I made to New York from
+Greenock, in the brig <i>Cochrane</i>, that I once saw, with my
+own eyes, a strange sight, such as I hope never to witness
+again. Our cargo consisted of dry goods, and we had
+several emigrants as passengers; in particular, a family of
+six in the cabin, the husband and wife, with four children;
+they were wealthy, and had sold off their farm stock to purchase
+land, and settle somewhere in America. When they
+came on board at the quay of Greenock, they were accompanied
+by a great many relations and friends, who took a
+most affectionate leave of them; in particular one old woman,
+the mother of the emigrant's wife. Her wailings were
+most pitiable; she wrung her hands, and stood as if rooted
+to our decks. I heard her say more than once&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Mary, I feel I shall never see you more, nor these
+lovely babes. O why will you leave your aged mother to
+go mourning to her grave?'</p>
+
+<p>"Her daughter looked more like one dead than alive, as
+she lay sobbing upon the breast of her husband, her mother
+holding one of her hands between both of her's. Poor soul,
+she looked as if her heart was breaking, but spoke not; at
+length, the husband said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'O woman, have you no feeling for your daughter?'</p>
+
+<p>"The old woman's grief seemed, all at once, turned into
+rage: she let her daughter's hand drop, and, raising her
+hands, cursed him for depriving her of her daughter; concluding
+with&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'But, James, remember what I say; dead or alive, I
+shall yet see my Mary.'</p>
+
+<p>"The poor young woman was carried below in a faint<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
+and the old dame was conveyed from the deck by the friends,
+for we were by this time cast loose, and leaving our berth.
+For several days I saw nothing of the farmer's family, as
+they were very sick; but the children had now begun to
+play about the deck, and their father would leave the cabin
+for a short time, once or twice a-day, for his wife remained
+very ill, and confined to her bed. The haglike appearance
+of the old woman, in her rage, had made a great impression
+on me, and had evidently sunk the spirits of the young
+people; for I often saw, when the husband came on deck,
+that he was much dejected. I felt it strange that the
+figure of the old woman often occurred to my mind when I
+looked at him; and I several times dreamed I saw her in
+my sleep, as I had seen her in Greenock, but her appearance
+was more pale and hideous, and had so great an effect
+upon me, that I always awoke in an agony, and cursed her
+from my heart.</p>
+
+<p>"About mid-passage we met with westerly gales and rough
+weather, which caused the passengers to keep below for
+several days, and retarded our passage much. It was blowing
+very hard. It was my turn at the wheel. In the midwatch
+we had occasional showers. The clouds were scudding
+along in immense bodies over the face of the moon,
+which was just at the full, so that we had, at times, bright
+moonlight for a minute or two, then gloom; but the night
+was not dark. I might have been at the wheel half my time
+or so. My eye was fixed ahead to watch the set of the
+waves, save when I glanced to the compass. I thought I
+saw something upon the bowsprit in the gloom that was
+not there a moment before. I looked aloft to see for a
+break in the clouds that the moon might shew me more distinctly
+what it was. I looked ahead again, and there it still
+was, but nearer the bows of the vessel. Still I could not
+make out what it was. Soon a burst of moonlight shone
+forth, and I saw it resembled a human figure, but whether<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
+man or woman I could not tell, for the moon was as suddenly
+obscured as it had shone forth. I felt very queer;
+being certain it was none of the crew&mdash;for the whole watch
+was aft at the time&mdash;and I was sure that all the passengers
+were below, and no one had come on deck since the watch
+had been changed. I looked at the spot where I had seen
+it, and it was gone. I felt the greatest inclination to tell
+what I had seen; but the fear of being laughed at, made me
+say nothing of it at this time; I, however, never wished so
+much for anything in my life as that my spell at the wheel
+was over, and the watch passed. When, at length, I was
+released, I crept to the foxa, and tumbled into my hammock,
+but could not close an eye for thinking of what I had seen.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, my mates, I was then, as I am now, in a pretty
+mess, and wished myself as heartily out of the <i>Cochrane</i> as
+we all do ourselves out of this old foundered hulk of a
+church. I was fairly aground with fear, and felt all of a
+tremble for the nights I must pass on board before we
+reached New York, where I was determined to leave the
+brig if I saw any more such sights. For a few days the
+gale continued, sometimes blowing very hard, at others
+more moderate, but nothing uncommon occurred. At length
+it abated, and we had pleasant weather. I began to think
+I had been deceived, and was glad I had not spoken of
+what I had seen to any of the crew. It was the afternoon,
+towards evening. I was again at the wheel. The sun
+was setting in a bed of clouds, as gaily coloured as a ship
+rejoicing&mdash;the colours of all nations floating aloft, from the
+point of her bowsprit to the end of her jib-boom. The
+four children were playing upon deck, laughing and full of
+joy at being once more relieved from their long confinement
+in the cabin. I looked at their innocent gambols and at
+the beautiful sky by turns, as much as my duty would
+allow, and felt more happy than I had done since we sailed.
+It was so pleasant to look ahead; for every face on deck<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
+wore a pleasing and happy aspect. I looked again at the
+children's gambols; but I almost dropped at the wheel.
+My hands and limbs refused to do their office. There, before
+me, close by the children, stood the exact representation
+of the old woman&mdash;so stern, so unearthly was her look,
+that I cannot express it; but she was pale as the foam on
+the crest of a wave. I could not call out. I had no
+power either to move tongue or limb. The yawing of the
+vessel called the attention of the mate to me, who sung out
+to hold her steady. I heard him, but could not obey.
+My whole faculties were engrossed by the fearful vision.
+My eyes appeared as if they would have started out of my
+head. One of the crew seized the wheel. All looked at
+me with astonishment. I stood rivetted to the spot, pointing
+to where the spectre stood; but no one saw anything
+but myself. The captain was below in the cabin, with the
+farmer and his wife&mdash;the latter of whom was known to all
+the crew to be very ill. As I looked to the unearthly figure,
+attracted by a power I could not resist, the children continued
+their play. The features of the old woman, I thought,
+relaxed, and a sadness came over them, but it was of unearthly
+expression. The figure glided from the children to
+the cabin-companion, and disappeared below, when it as
+suddenly came again upon deck, accompanied by the farmer's
+wife, pale and wasted. Both gazed upon the children.
+The young woman appeared to wring her hands in great
+distress, as I had seen her before she was carried below;
+but the old woman hurried her over the side of the brig,
+and I saw no more of them. When they disappeared, my
+faculties returned. I trembled as if I had been in an ague,
+and the cold sweat stood in large drops upon my forehead.
+The mate and crew thought that I had been in a fit, until I
+told them what I had seen. They looked rather serious,
+but were much inclined to laugh at me. The mate began
+to jaw me a little on my fancies. All had passed in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
+minute or two. Scarce had the mate spoken a dozen of
+words, when the captain hurried upon deck, much affected,
+and called to one of the female steerage passengers to go
+instantly to the cabin and assist, as he feared the farmer's
+wife was dead. The mate ceased to speak, and the rest of
+the crew looked as amazed as I did at the strange occurrence.
+The captain came to us. When he heard my strange
+story, he shook his head, and only said it was a remarkable
+occurrence; but I had been deceived by some illusion, and
+commanded us not to speak of it, for distressing the poor
+husband. We resolved to obey him, as we were by this
+time nearly in with the land, and expected to make it next
+day, which we did; and the poor farmer was helped ashore,
+almost as death-like as the body of his wife, which was
+buried in New York. I sailed several trips afterwards in
+the <i>Cochrane</i>, but never saw anything out of the common
+afterwards in her or anywhere else."</p>
+
+<p>The first rays of the rising sun shone upon us all sound
+asleep, as quiet and undisturbed as if we had passed the
+night under the roofs of our fathers' houses; but I was
+cold, stiff, and sore when I awoke. I had passed the night
+upon a flat gravestone outside of the church, for want of
+room within, without any covering but my shirt and trousers&mdash;all
+I had saved from the wreck. There was not a character
+engraved on the stone that was not as distinctly
+marked on my body. It was of no use grumbling or being
+cast down&mdash;we were fairly adrift, and must go with the
+current. It was now that the buoyancy of a sailor's mind
+burst forth. The old church and churchyard resounded
+with shouts and laughter, that made the French sentinels
+think we had all gone mad. Some were busy at leap-frog,
+others were pursuing each other among the ruins and tomb-stones&mdash;all
+were in active exertion for the sake of warmth,
+and to beguile the time; while the French gathered outside
+wherever they could obtain a sight of us, and looked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
+on in amazement at our frolics. I am certain they were not
+without fear for us; for a few of the lads had contrived to
+clamber to the top of the ruins; and were amusing themselves
+by antics, at the hazard of their necks, and throwing
+small pieces of lime at us below. The officer in command
+called to them to come down; but they knew not what he
+said. Some of them cried out, in answer to his call&mdash;"Speak
+like a Christian if you want us to understand you,
+and don't wow like a dog." At this moment, Nick Williams,
+one of our maintop men, had scaled the highest point
+of the walls, and had, at the risk of his life, contrived to
+perch himself upon the crumbling stone, and was huzzaing
+most vociferously. It was a daring and foolhardy feat. A
+shout of admiration rose from the outside of the walls, when
+a real British cheer answered it from within. Whether the
+officer was enraged at the apparent defiance and disobedience
+to his commands, I know not, but several muskets
+were fired through the rails of the gate, and the balls recoiled
+from the walls. A shout of rage burst from us; and a serious
+conflict was only prevented by the prudence of the petty
+officers who were among us; for the enraged seamen had
+begun to collect stones from the base of the ruined walls to
+hurl at the dastardly guards, who were shouting, <i>"Vive la
+Nation!" "Vive la Republique!"</i> Our boatswain, who was
+a cool and resolute old tar, seeing that the storm was still
+on the verge of bursting out&mdash;for we looked upon their cries
+as insulting as their balls&mdash;by a happy thought, struck up
+the national air, "God save the King," which we sung with
+an enthusiasm and strength of lungs never, I am certain,
+surpassed before or since. If it had no melody, it had a
+tone and sound equivalent to both. Many who still held
+the stones in their hands, which they had lifted to hurl at
+the guards, struck them together like cymbals, in regular
+time, to increase the noise. The effect was most exhilarating
+and produced the desired effect of turning our angry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
+feeling into good-humour. So pleased were we, that we
+gave them "Rule Britannia" in the same style, until we
+forgot, in our enthusiasm, that we were prisoners, hungry,
+cold, and naked. Scarce had the last loud cadence died
+away, when the gate was thrown open, and a miserable
+allowance of the same black bread was served out to
+us, with plenty of water, and the gate once more shut
+against us.</p>
+
+<p>It was very strange that, among more than five hundred
+of us, not one knew a word of French, and there were none
+of those who entered the enclosure could speak a word of
+English, so that we knew not what those who had the
+power over us meant to do. We conjectured that they intended
+to keep us where we were until we were exchanged;
+and had already begun to canvass the possibility of breaking
+out of the hated church and yard, and making a bold push
+for our liberty, in the following night, by overpowering our
+guards, seizing their arms, and passing along the coast,
+until we reached some of the small ports, and making
+prizes of all the vessels in it, and setting sail for England.
+A council was actually deliberating in the church, composed
+of the petty officers and a few of our picked hands, when
+our attention was roused by the sound of martial music
+approaching the churchyard, where it halted, and we were
+soon after turned out, and numbered to the officer in
+command.</p>
+
+<p>The party who had just arrived consisted of two companies
+of soldiers of the line, regularly clothed and armed, as
+the French troops were; while those under whose charge
+we had been were only the armed peasantry of the neighbourhood.
+We hoped the change would be for our advantage.
+We saw at once we were going to be conveyed into the
+interior. Go where we must, we felt we could not be worse
+fed, lodged, or used than we had been. No harsh word
+was used to us by the regular troops; and, before we had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
+been a few hours on the road, we understood each other well
+enough by dumb show, and marched on in good humour;
+we walking in the middle of them like a drove of bullocks,
+as frolicsome as children, singing, laughing, and putting
+practical jokes upon each other, to beguile the way. Scarce
+had we travelled a couple of miles, until my bare feet became
+sore from the small stones and bruises; yet I limped
+on in the best manner I could, and as cheerfully as possible.
+I was in the front as we were on the point of entering
+a village; the soldiers in file enclosing us on either side,
+and bringing up the rear, so that we could not walk faster
+or slower than they chose. A few hundred yards from the
+entrance of the village, those in front turned round, and
+pointing to the fowls of various kinds that were feeding on
+the highway before us, made signs which we readily understood,
+and nodded significantly; they then drew to each
+side of the road, and we behind them, leaving a gap in the
+middle of the way like the prongs of a fork closed at the
+base. The ducks, hens, and other fowls became alarmed as
+we came close upon them, and ran for shelter to the vacant
+space in the middle, when the front closed, and all were
+secured by those in the centre; the poor people, their
+owners, calling in vain for restitution of their property.
+The soldiers would not allow them to come within their
+ranks; and, at night, when we stopped, the former procured
+wood for us to dress the stolen fowls, after having received
+their proportion. This, I confess, was a species of robbery;
+but we were starved by the allowance of government, and
+we were in an enemy's country, who had plundered the
+shipwrecked mariner cast upon their shores. We thought,
+therefore, although, of course, the reasoning was wrong, that,
+in appropriating whatever we could lay hands upon, we
+were merely making fair and just reprisals for the losses we
+had sustained at the hands of our captors; but, the truth is,
+we troubled ourselves very little about the right or wrong of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
+the matter, for we were lodged either in large empty barns,
+or ruined churches, all the way to Rennes, and could, from
+hunger, have eaten a jackass when we were allowed to
+rest for the night. Even yet, I remember the relish a small
+piece of a roast pig or fowl had, without either bread or salt,
+at this time, for we were not scrupulous what we lifted that
+would eat, if we could carry it. In one village, five pigs
+disappeared in this manner, and only the great weight of
+the parent prevented her following them. At the time, it
+had not the appearance of theft; there was so much fun in it
+that it resembled a great hunt, for every eye was in quest of
+game, and all was done so quietly and dexterously that there
+was not the least confusion or noise. We closed so rapidly
+that the prey had no means of escape, nor room to move
+until it was despatched; yet the people, as we passed, were
+often very kind to us, so far as was in their power, for they
+appeared to be miserably poor. When we reached Rennes
+my feet were so sore, swelled, and cut, that I walked with
+great pain; numbers of us were in the same situation. We
+did not pass straight through the town, but were halted, for
+some time, in the market-place, while the inhabitants came
+in crowds to gaze at the English prisoners; and a miserable
+sight we were. We might have been here about half an
+hour, when a beautiful young lady came to where we were,
+with a young woman behind her carrying a large basket
+filled with shoes. I thought she had come to sell them, as
+so many were barefoot. I saw her giving them to the men,
+and hirpled to the spot, and looked with an anxious eye at
+the store which was diminishing fast. I had still retained
+the twopence, and resolved to make an effort to obtain
+a pair, but felt backward, conscious I had no equivalent to
+give for them; holding out my coppers, I pointed to a pair
+which I thought would answer me; I felt ashamed, and
+looked to the ground, pointing to my feet when I had attracted
+her attention, for she was looking in another direction.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
+She took the shoes and gave them to me. I proffered
+my little cash; she gently put my hand aside, and, by a sign,
+made me know that I was welcome to them. I never saw
+a female so lovely as this young lady; her clear, black eyes
+were swimming in tears, and her face covered with blushes;
+her looks were so mild, so benevolent, she looked like an
+angel sent from heaven to administer to our wants. Never
+before or since have I felt the same sensation so intensely.
+It was delightful; it was painful. I felt a choking in my
+throat. I could have wept, and have found relief in it, but
+I was surrounded by those who would have made sport of
+my emotion. I retired a few paces to make way for others,
+in silence. I dared not utter a sound, lest my feelings had
+overpowered me, but stood and gazed at the lovely creature
+until she retired. I felt as if everything to be esteemed on
+earth was concentrated in her person and mind. Had I been
+an admiral I would have gloried in calling her mine; had
+it been necessary I could have faced death or any danger, to
+free her from trouble or grief, with a feeling of joy and
+exultation. Many a time has this fair creature been embodied
+in my mind's eye, as fair and lovely as she was then,
+but I never saw her again.</p>
+
+<p>Many others of the good inhabitants of Rennes administered
+to our wants. I got, besides the shoes, a substitute
+for a jacket, and a straw hat from an old man. Indeed, we
+saw in our route scarce any others except old men, women,
+and boys. Women were driving the carts, and working in
+the fields, and doing the work done by the men in Britain.
+From Rennes we were marched to Perche, our final destination,
+in the same manner as we had been from the coast,
+and lodged in prison; but I found it no prison to me:
+men were so scarce at this time in France that we were
+allowed to work out of prison if we chose, and only visited
+once a-week to pass muster, and receive our allowance&mdash;so
+I soon found a master, or, more properly, he found me in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
+prison&mdash;a cart and plough-wright residing a short distance
+from town.</p>
+
+<p>Citizen Vauquin, in secret, was a staunch Royalist; but,
+in his common conversation, a Republican. To me he was
+extremely kind, but our communications were very limited,
+from my want of knowledge of French; but I was picking
+it up with rapidity, and we soon contrived to understand
+each other pretty well.</p>
+
+<p>It was now well on in the spring, and the weather warm
+and agreeable. I was busy at my work, when Vauquin,
+who was a stout, hale old man, came to me; there was something
+comic in the expression of his countenance, joy and
+vexation seemed by turns to pass over it, and at times to
+struggle for mastery; he looked cautiously around lest any
+one might overhear us, then said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, France! beautiful France! these cursed Democrats
+have dimmed your glory, and ruined you! We have lost
+our fleet in Egypt, and we fly before the Germans. What
+can we have but defeat, while the best blood in France
+either has been shed by her sons, or languishes in obscurity.
+Could we be freed from the ruffians that tyrannize over us
+in any way but this? We have suffered much, and must
+suffer more, before we see the glories of France shine as
+they once shone in the courts of her kings. Ha! Elder,
+your sailors are the devils that humble France; from your
+riches the seas are covered with your ships, and the brave
+French, plundered by their rulers, have few. What could
+be done with sixteen ships when fifty were upon them?"</p>
+
+<p>Piqued by his national vanity, I replied&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Had Nelson had half the number, there would have
+been no fighting."</p>
+
+<p>"Why no fighting, Monsieur?" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Because they would have run if they could," replied I;
+"or struck when they saw no chance&mdash;that's all I have to
+say on the subject. If you please let us change it, my friend."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"By all means," said he, "let us change it. We are a
+ruined and undone people since we lost our King. The
+great nation are a people without a head; and, when a
+house wants the head, all goes wrong."</p>
+
+<p>"You and I are at one on this point," replied I. "But
+how comes it that you are as democratic as any one in the
+neighbourhood when politics is the subject of discourse?
+It is not so in Britain. Every man speaks his mind; yet
+we have a king and a kingly government. I was led to
+believe, before I left home, that in France alone there was
+liberty: for all men were equal&mdash;freedom and equality
+being the law of the land."</p>
+
+<p>"O Monsieur Elder!" exclaimed he, "freedom and
+equality are the worst tyranny, as I shall shew you by my
+sad experience. When all men make the law, who is to
+obey? Better one tyrant than one million; for, when
+every one thinks he is a law-maker, no one thinks of obeying
+the law farther than it pleases himself. Listen to me;
+and you shall hear the truth as I have experienced it, and
+many thousands in France as well as I:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"When first the people of France began to give attention
+to the writers and haranguers against the oppression
+which we, no doubt, suffered, no one was more enthusiastic
+than I was for the removal of the abuses; and I thought
+no sacrifice could be too great to have them removed. I
+was, at the time, carpenter to the great chateau which you
+see in the distance. Our old lord, who was a severe master,
+had died only a few years before, and had not the love of a
+single peasant in his wide domains; but his son was the
+reverse of his parent&mdash;the friend and benefactor of every
+one on his estate; yet he inherited a fund of animosity
+which it would have taken years of his kindness and
+humanity to have obliterated. In this state of matters,
+the troubles broke out. He was on the side of the people,
+and aided, as far as in him lay, the cause of improvement in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
+the state, until the factions in Paris&mdash;who, ruling the silly
+multitude, led them to believe that they were ruled by
+them&mdash;struck at the root of all good government by insulting
+and imprisoning the King. From this time, he took
+no active part in the commotions, but remained at his
+chateau. I was his overseer, and managed his affairs. I
+loved him with all my soul, for he was worthy of my love.
+My ideas went still farther than his went, and I felt not
+displeased with anything that had as yet occurred; for I
+knew the tenacity with which the aristocracy clung to their
+privileges; but the cunning and designing men who, under
+the faint shew of obeying the people, ruled them at their
+will for mischief and disorder, ultimately, by taking the
+life of the King, took the key-stone out of the arch which
+sheltered the people, and brought the whole fabric of civil
+order about their ears. I was confounded at the blindness
+I had laboured under; and, from that hour, my whole ideas
+changed. But, alas! it was too late; and even those that
+had lent a willing hand trembled at the mischief they had
+done. Benefits are soon forgot; but the remembrance of
+injuries are indelible. Numbers of needy plunderers had
+arrived from Paris, and overspread these peaceful plains like
+evil spirits, rousing the worst feeling of our peasantry into
+action. As yet, no serious outrage had been committed in
+this quarter; but I too plainly saw that it would not long
+be deferred. I requested my dear master to fly, as many
+others had done; for blood had begun to flow like water in
+Paris and the provinces&mdash;not the blood of the guilty, but
+the blood of the noble and virtuous; for, alas! France had
+become the arena in the remorseless war of poverty against
+property. The whole fabric of social order had been dissolved,
+and men had returned to their original state of
+barbarism; like jackalls or wolves, only banding together
+when they scented plunder. To be rich or nobly born was
+a crime of the deepest dye, only to be atoned by blood. I,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
+with extreme pain, saw the storm gathering, and could only
+deplore it; and what added to my anguish, was, I dared not
+argue against them; for our old and worthy magistrates had
+been deposed, and others, more in the spirit of the times,
+appointed. As yet, no blood had been shed in Perche, but
+numbers were immured in prison; and, had I given the
+least cause of suspicion, I would have been placed beyond
+the power of lending that aid to the distressed which I was
+resolved to afford them, or perish in the attempt. Several
+times I had entreated my young lord to fly, and avoid the
+storm; but my entreaties were in vain. He thought far
+too well of his fellow-men.</p>
+
+<p>"At length a rumour reached us that two commissioners
+were on their way to the chateau to sequestrate it for the
+use of the state: immediately there was a violent commotion
+amongst the people&mdash;fearful of losing their share of
+the plunder, all marched in a tumultuous manner to assault
+it. Aware of what might ensue&mdash;for blood had begun to
+flow&mdash;I got my young lord disguised as one of my workmen,
+and set to his bench&mdash;that very one at which you work&mdash;and
+joined the crowd as they approached the chateau. To
+prevent suspicion, no one shouted louder than I, 'Down
+with the Tyrants!'&mdash;'Down with the Aristocrats!'&mdash;'<i>Vive
+la Nation!</i>'&mdash;'<i>Vive la Republique!</i>' We entered the
+chateau, which was searched in vain for my young lord.
+It was now that the true spirit of the peasantry shewed itself
+in all its deformity; everything of value was in a short
+time carried off or destroyed; while every quarter resounded
+with execrations and cries for blood&mdash;the oppressions of
+the father were alone remembered. How it occurred I have
+yet to learn, but the youthful aristocrat was discovered in
+my shop; this was a severe blow to me, for I was immediately
+seized by the furious crowd, charged by them
+with the worst of crimes in their eyes, the concealing from
+them a victim of their rage. It was a fearful hour. I expected<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
+to have been torn to pieces upon the spot. My
+presence of mind did not forsake me: I begged to be heard
+before the fatal daggers that were brandished around reached
+my heart. I stood firm until a pause of the storm, when I
+appealed to them not for mercy, but for revenge&mdash;revenge
+upon my lord before I died. "I have been betrayed," I
+cried, "by some one. I appeal to yourselves for my former
+love of my country. Let me die, but let it be for my country,
+and let me be revenged upon the tyrants. Fire the chateau!&mdash;'<i>Vive
+la Nation</i>,' '<i>A bas les Aristocrats</i>,' '<i>Vive la Republique</i>'&mdash;and
+let me die by the light of the stronghold of
+tyranny enveloped in flames."</p>
+
+<p>"I now breathed more freely. Shouts rent the air; for
+like a weathercock is a mob&mdash;ever pointing as the last breath
+of wind blows. '<i>Vive Vauquin!</i>' resounded from every
+lip; the chateau was enveloped in flames; its owner immersed
+in a dungeon to await his doom, already fixed before
+the mock forms of justice were gone through. Think
+not the worse of me for the part I acted; every paper and
+article of plate had been concealed for some days before.
+To save, if possible, his life, no one was louder in denouncing
+my lord than myself, for his having dared to conceal
+himself in my shop. At my return, I began seriously to
+turn over in my mind what steps I was next to pursue for
+his safety, now rendered difficult, almost beyond my power
+to overcome. I feared not death, nor any danger to myself,
+could my object have been attained by it. There was
+not a moment to be lost; the following day was to have
+been the day of his trial and death. The commissioners
+had arrived from Paris, and a fête was resolved to be got
+up to welcome them. In a state of anxiety I can hardly
+describe, I bustled about and waited upon the commissioners;
+but my chief object was to ascertain the exact spot
+where the aristocrats were confined. My lord was my
+chiefest care, for however much I had, at the commencement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
+of the revolution, wished for the abused power of the
+nobles to be reduced, I had no wish for their ruin, far less
+their murder; judge my horror when I learned that he was
+in the lower dungeon of the prison, to which there was only
+one entrance through the guard-room, which was constantly
+filled by the soldiers on guard. With a heart void of hope
+I returned to my home. In an agony of mind I threw myself
+upon my couch, that if possible I might exclude every
+other thought but the one that I wished to fix my whole
+attention upon: while I walked about, I felt like one distracted.
+At length, I was so fortunate as to call to mind
+having, when a boy, heard my father tell that he had assisted
+my grandfather in securing a door into the lower dungeon,
+that led into another even more loathsome, where
+the Huguenots were wont to be confined in the time of
+Louis the Fourteenth; this had a door which led into the
+outer court of the prison, the walls of which were in the
+hinder part, ruinous and neglected, as few of the present
+people in authority knew of such a dungeon; the old door
+having been long built up. A faint ray of hope shot
+through my mind; I started from my bed, and, concealing
+what tools I judged to be necessary, proceeded to the jail
+without being perceived&mdash;this was rendered the more easy
+as every one was engaged preparing for the fête. I remained
+under the shelter of the ruined wall until it was
+quite dark. A voice of mirth and revelry sounded in the
+front of that prison, whose gloomy walls and strong iron
+barred windows might, and no doubt did, enclose hearts
+more sorrowful than mine, but none more anxious. My situation,
+solitary as it was, was full of peril&mdash;I might be missed
+at the fête, and suspicion roused if I was so fortunate as to
+succeed; but I allowed no selfish thought to intrude. I was
+so fortunate as to find the low arched door I had heard my
+father speak of; after considerable labour it yielded to my
+efforts, and I entered the low and noisesome vault which had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
+heard and re-echoed the groans of so many victims of tyranny
+whose only fault was adhering to the dictates of their consciences
+against an intolerant priesthood. So baleful was the
+air I breathed, that I was forced to retire, or I had fallen to
+the damp floor; again I entered, for I heard the voice of
+my lord in prayer, and felt a new sort of assurance arise
+in my mind; there was no distinguishing one object from another,
+so impenetrable was the darkness, and the faint sound
+appeared to come from no particular side of the dungeon. I
+commenced groping with my hands, from the entrance, along
+the walls; it was a loathsome task, for they were damp and
+ropy, and loathsome reptiles ever and anon made me withdraw
+my fingers; still I groped on. At length I succeeded; the
+door was forced to yield to my skill and efforts; all that divided
+me from him I sought was the strong planks and plaster.
+I struck a sharp single blow upon it, and paused&mdash;the voice
+of my master had ceased from the commencement of my
+work upon the second door. It was a period of intense
+anxiety, lest he should alarm his guards, if any of them
+had been in his dungeon. To my first signal no answer was
+made: he knew not that he had a friend so near, willing
+to sacrifice everything for his rescue. I struck a second
+blow, and again listened; I heard him utter a faint exclamation
+of surprise, and all was again still. The third time
+I struck, and I heard a movement on the other side: the
+plaster was struck, piercing a small hole, and we were enabled
+to communicate. I found he was alone in his dismal
+dungeon. It was agreed that I was to return in two hours
+with a disguise for him, after I had appeared at the fête;
+and, in the meantime, I loosened the fastening so as he
+could easily force it away should any thing happen to prevent
+my return; and, these arrangements being made, I
+took my departure, in the same stealthy manner in which I
+had reached him.</p>
+
+<p>"With my heart still anxious but more at ease, I joined<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
+the festive throng, and, joining in the dance for a short time,
+then retired, got all ready, returned, with a view to relieve
+my lord from his dungeon, and had the unspeakable pleasure
+to see him beyond its walls, dressed as a peasant girl. Our
+parting was brief but sincere, my wishes for his safety were
+equal to the extent of my love, but I have never heard of
+him since; whether he went for La Vendee, or joined the
+allied army, I never knew. As soon as I saw him safe out
+of the town, I returned to the joyous group, and was among
+the last to leave it. My share in the escape of my noble
+master was never even suspected; but from this time I have
+wished the fall of the tyrants that have ruled France with a
+rod of iron, and for the return of our King and nobility,
+until which time we can never hope for tranquillity. I am
+not displeased at what can assist in aiding their overthrow
+but I feel, as a true Frenchman, humbled at every defeat
+our brave forces sustain. I love the beautiful fields of
+France and all her sons, but I hate the demagogues who at
+present rule her destinies."</p>
+
+<p>Had I not been an exile against my will, I never had
+been more happy in my life than I was at this time. I, no
+doubt, was a prisoner of war; but it was only in name. I
+never saw my prison but once a-week, when I appeared at
+the muster to receive my jail allowance, and returned to
+citizen Vauquin's in a few hours after, or strayed where I
+chose within the proscribed distance. Our visits to the
+prison always gave rise to an afternoon of merriment and
+pleasure&mdash;a meeting of friends. Not one of us wished to
+escape, or desired an exchange.</p>
+
+<p>I was always a fortunate fellow. The four months I was
+here I improved much in my drawing, and found the instructions
+of poor Walden of the utmost service to me; and
+I was much benefited by a relation of Vauquin's, who had
+studied the arts at Paris. It was thus I spent my evenings;
+but I was never as yet allowed to enjoy my good fortune<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
+long. We were ordered to be marched to the coast at
+Saint Malos, where a cartel was to be in readiness to receive
+us. I bade adieu to my kind friend, Citizen Vauquin, not
+without regret, and set out for the coast. There was not a
+trace of pleasure at our release among us; we had no cause,
+at least nine-tenths of us. For, as Bill Wates had foretold,
+off Jersey we were brought too by the <i>Ramillies</i>, and crowded
+on board her. The greater part were draughted to other
+men-of-war, but in her I remained until she was paid off,
+at the peace.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span></p>
+<h2>WILLIE WASTLE'S ACCOUNT OF HIS WIFE.</h2>
+
+<div style="padding-left:35%">
+"Sic a wife as Willie had!<br />
+I wadna gie a button for her."<br />
+</div>
+
+<p><span style="padding-left:60%" class="smcap">Burns.</span><a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>"It was a very cruel dune thing in my neebor, Robert
+Burns, to mak a sang aboot my wife and me," said Mr
+William Wastle, as he sat with a friend over a jug of reeking
+toddy, in a tavern near the Bridge-end in Dumfries
+where he had been attending the cattle market; "I didna
+think it was neebor-like," he added; "indeed it was a rank
+libel upon baith her and me; and I took it the worse, inasmuch
+as I always had a very high respect for Maister
+Burns. Though he said that I 'dwalt on Tweed,' and that
+I 'was a wabster,' yet everybody kenned wha the sang was
+aimed at. Neither did my wife merit the description that
+has been drawn o' her; for, though she was nae beauty,
+and hadna a face like a wax-doll, yet there were thousands</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span></p>
+<p>o' waur looking women to be met wi' than my Kirsty; and
+to say that her mither was a 'tinkler,' was very unjustifiable,
+for her parents were as decent and respectable people,
+in their sphere o' life, as ye would hae found in a' Nithsdale.
+Her faither had a small farm which joined on with
+one that I took a lease o', when I was about one-and-twenty.
+Kirsty was about three years aulder; and, though not a
+bonny woman, she was, in many respects, as ye shall hear
+in the coorse o' my story, a very extraordinary one. I was
+in the habit o' seeing her every day, and as I sometimes
+was working in a field next to her, I had every opportunity
+o' observing her industry, and that, frae mornin' till nicht,
+she was aye eident. This gave me a far higher opinion o'
+her than if I had seen her gaun about wi' a buskit head;
+and often, at meal-times, I used to stand and speak to her
+owre the dyke. But, after we had been acquainted in this
+manner for some months, when the cheerfu' summer weather
+came in, and the grass by the dyke-sides was warm and
+green, and the bonny gowans blossomed among it, I louped
+owre the dyke, and we sat doun and took our dinners together.
+I couldna have believed it possible that a bit bare
+bannock and a drap skim milk wad gang doun sae deliciously,
+but never before had I partaken o' onything that
+was sae pleasant to the palate. One day I was quite surprised,
+when I found that my arm had slipped unconsciously
+round her waist, and, drawing her closer to my side, I seighed,
+and said&mdash;'O Kirsty, woman!'</p>
+
+<p>"She pulled away my hand from her waist, and looking
+me in the face, said&mdash;'Weel, Willie, man, what is't?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Kirsty,' said I, 'I like ye.'"</p>
+
+<p>"'I thocht as meikle,' quoth she, 'but could ye no hae
+said sae at ance.'"</p>
+
+<p>"'Perhaps I could, dear,' said I; 'but ye ken true love
+is aye blate; however, if ye hae nae objections, I'll gang
+yont, after fothering time the micht, and speak to yer faither<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
+and mither; and if they hae nae objections, and ye have yer
+providin' ready, wi' yer guid-will and consent, I shall gie
+up oor names, and we shall be cried on Sabbath first.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh,' said she, 'I haena lived for five-and-twenty years
+without expectin' to get a guidman some day; and I hae
+had my providin' ready since I was eighteen, an' a' o' my
+ain spinnin' and bleachin', an' the lint bocht wi' what I had
+wrocht for; so that I am behauden to naebody. My faither
+and mither have mair sense than to cast ony obstacle in the
+way o' my weelfare; and, as ye are far frae bein' disagreeable
+to me, if we are to be married, it may as weel be sune
+as syne, and we may be cried on Sunday if ye think proper.'</p>
+
+<p>"'O Kirsty, woman!" cried I, and I drew my arm round
+her waist again, 'ye hae made me as happy as a prince!
+I hardly ken which end o' me is upmost!'</p>
+
+<p>"'Na, Willie,' said she, 'there is nae necessity for ony
+nonsensical raptures, ye ken perfectly weel that yer head
+is upmost, though I hae heard my faither talk about some
+idiots that he ca's philosophers, who say that the world
+whirls roond aboot like a cart-wheel on an axle-tree, and that
+ance in every twenty-four hours our feet are upmost, and our
+head downmost; but it will be lang or onybody get me to believe
+in sic balderdash! As to yer being happy at present, it
+shall be nae faut o' mine if ye are not aye sae; and if ye be
+aye as I would wish ye to be, ye will never be unhappy.'</p>
+
+<p>"Such, as near as I can recollect, is not only the history,
+but the exact words o' oor courtship. Her faither and
+mither gied their consent without the slightest hesitation.
+I remember her faither's words to me were&mdash;'Weel, William,
+frae a' that I hae seen o' ye, ye appear to be a very
+steady and industrious young man, and ane that is likely to
+do weel in the world. I hae seen, also, wi' great satisfaction,
+that ye are very regular in yer attendance upon the
+ordinances; there hasna been a Sabbath, since ye cam to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
+oor neebor, that I hae missed ye oot o' yer seat in the kirk.
+Frae a' that I hae heard concernin' ye, also, ye hae always
+been a serious, sober, and weel-behaved young man. These
+things are a great satisfaction to a faither when he finds
+them in the lad that his dochter wishes to marry. Ye hae
+my consent to tak Kirsty; and, though I say it, I believe
+ye will find her to mak as industrious, carefu', and kind a
+wife, as ye would hae found if ye had sought through a'
+broad Scotland for ane. I will say it, however, and before
+her face, that there are some things in which she takes it o'
+her mother, and in which she will hae her ain way. But
+this is her only faut. I'm sure ye'll ne'er hae cause to complain
+o' her wasting a bawbee, or o' her allowing even the
+heel o' a kebbuck to gang to unuse. It is needless for me
+to say mair; but ye hae my full and free consent to marry
+when ye like.'</p>
+
+<p>"Then up spoke the auld guidwife, and said&mdash;'Weel,
+Willie, lad, if you and Kirsty hae made up yer minds
+to mak a bargain o' it, I am as little disposed to oppose yer
+inclinations as her faither is. A guid wife, I sincerely
+believe, ye will find her prove to ye; and though her faither
+says that in some things she will be like me, and have her
+ain way, let me tell ye, lad, that is owre often necessary for
+a woman to do, wha is striving everything in her power for
+the guid o' her husband and the family, and sees him, just
+through foolishness, as it were, striving against her. Ye are
+strange beings you men-folk to deal wi'. But ye winna find
+her a bare bride, for she has a kist fu' o' linen o' her ain
+spinnin', that may serve ye a' yer days, and even when ye
+are dead, though ye should live for sixty years.'</p>
+
+<p>"I thought it rather untimeous that the auld woman
+should hae spoken aboot linen for oor grave-claes, before
+we were married; and I suppose my countenance had
+hinted as much, for Kirsty seemed to hae observed it, and
+she said&mdash;'My mother says what is and ought to be. It is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
+aye best to be provided for whatever may come; and as
+Death often gies nae warning, I wadna like to be met wi' it,
+and to hae naething in the house to lay me out in like a
+Christian.'</p>
+
+<p>"I thought there was a vast deal o' sense and discretion
+in what she said; and though I didna like the idea o' such
+a premature providing o' winding-sheets, yet, after she
+spoke, I highly approved o' her prudence and forethought.</p>
+
+<p>"It was on a Monday afternoon, about three weeks after
+the time I have been speaking o', that Kirsty, wi' her
+faither, and mother, and another young lass, an acquaintance
+o' hers, that was to be best-maid, cam yont to my
+house for her and me to be married. I had sent for ane o'
+my brothers to be best-man, and he was with me waiting
+when they came. She was not in the least discomposed,
+but behaved very modestly. In a few minutes the minister
+arrived, when the ceremony immediately began, and within
+a quarter of an hour she was mine, and I was hers, for the
+term o' oor natural lives.</p>
+
+<p>"From the time that I took the farm, I had no kind o'
+dishes in the house, save a wooden bowie or twa, four
+trenchers, three piggins, and twa bits o' tin cans, that I had
+bought from a travelling tinker for twopence a-piece, and
+which Kirsty afterwards told me, were each a halfpenny
+a-piece aboon their value. I dinna think that I had tasted
+tea aboon a dozen times in the whole course o' my life; but,
+as it was coming into general use, I thought it would look
+respectfu' to my bride, before her faither and mother, if I
+should hae tea upon oor marriage day, and I could ask the
+minister to stop and tak a dish wi' us. I thought it would
+gie a character o' respectability to oor wedding. Therefore,
+on the Saturday afore the marriage, I went to Dumfries, and
+bought half a dozen o' bonny blue cups and saucers. I
+never durst tell Kirsty how meikle I gied for them. It was
+with great difficulty that I got them carried hame without<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
+breaking. I also bought two ounces o' the best tea, and a
+whole pound o' brown sugar.</p>
+
+<p>"I had a servant lassie at the time, the doohter o' a hind
+in the neighbourhood; she was necessary to me to do the
+work about the house, and to milk twa kye that I kept, to
+mak the cheese, and a part o' the day to help the workers
+out wi' the bondage.</p>
+
+<p>"'Lassie,' said I, when I got hame; 'do ye ken hoo to
+mak tea?'</p>
+
+<p>"'I'm no very sure,' said she; 'but I think I do. I ance
+got a cup when I wasna weel, frae the farmer's wife that my
+faither lives wi'. I'll try.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Here, then,' says I; 'tak care o' thir, and see that ye
+dinna break them, or it will mak a breaking that ye
+wouldna like in your quarter's wages.' So I gied her the
+cups and saucers to put awa carefully into the press.</p>
+
+<p>"'O maister,' says she; 'but noo, when I recollect, ye'll
+need a tea-kettle, and a tea-pat, and a cream-pat, and teaspoons.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Preserve me!' quoth I, 'the lassie is surely wrang in
+the head! Hoo mony articles o' <i>tea</i> and <i>cream</i> hae ye there?
+The parritch kettle will do as weel as a tea-kettle&mdash;where
+can be the difference? Your tea-pats I ken naething aboot,
+and as for a cream-pat, set down the cream-bowie; and as
+for spoons, ye fool, they dinna sip tea&mdash;they drink it&mdash;just
+sirple it, as it were, oot o' the saucer.'</p>
+
+<p>"'O sir,' said she; 'but they need a little spoon to stir
+it round to mak the sugar melt&mdash;and that is weel minded,
+ye'll also require a sugar-basin.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Hoots! toots! lassie,' cried I, 'do ye intend to ruin
+me? By yer account o' the matter, it would be almost as
+expensive to set up a tea equipage, as a chariot equipage.
+No, no; just do as the miller's wife o' Newmills did.'</p>
+
+<p>"'And what way micht that be, sir?' inquired she.</p>
+
+<p>"'Why,' said I, 'she took such as she had, and she never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
+wanted! Just ye tak such as ye have&mdash;cogie, bowie, or
+tinniken, never ye mind&mdash;show ye your dexterity.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Very weel, sir,' said she; 'I'll do the best I can.'</p>
+
+<p>"But, just to exemplify another trait in my wife's character,
+I will tell ye the upshot o' my cups and saucers. I
+confess that I was in a state of very considerable perturbation;
+not only on account o' what the lassie had told me
+about the want o' a tea-kettle, tea-pat, and so forth, but
+also that, including the minister, there were seven o' us,
+while I had but six cups; and I consoled mysel by thinking
+that, as Kirsty and I were now <i>one</i>, she might drink oot o'
+the cup and I wad tak the saucer, so that a cup and saucer
+would serve us baith; and I was trustin to the ingenuity o'
+the lassie to find substitutes for the other deficiencies,
+when she came ben to where we were sitting, and going
+forward to Kirsty, says she&mdash;'Mistress, I have had the
+twa ounces o' tea on boiling in a chappin o' water, for
+the last twa hoors&mdash;do ye think it will be what is ca'ed
+<i>masked</i> noo?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Tea!' said my new-made wife, wi' a look o' astonishment;
+'is the lassie talking aboot <i>tea</i>? While I am to be
+in this house&mdash;and I suppose that is to be for my life&mdash;there
+shall nae poisonous foreign weed be used in it, nor
+come within the door, unless it be some drug that a doctor
+orders. Take it off the fire, and throw the broo awa. My
+certes! if young folk like us were to begin wi' sic extravagance,
+where would be the upshot? Na, na, Willie,' said
+she, turning round to me, 'let us just begin precisely as we
+mean to end. At all events, let us rather begin meanly,
+than end beggarly. I hae seen some folk, no aboon oor
+condition in life, mak a great dash on their wedding-day;
+and some o' them even hire gigs and coaches, forsooth, to
+tak a jaunt awa for a dozen o' miles! Poor things! it was
+the first and last time that ony o' them was either in gig or
+coach. But there shall be nae extravagance o' that kind for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
+me. My faither and mither care naething about tea, for they
+hae never been used to it, and I'm sure that our friends here
+care as little; and, asking the minister's pardon, I am perfectly
+sure and certain, that tea can be nae treat to him, for
+he has it every day, and it will be standing ready for him
+when he gangs hame. The supper will be ready by eight
+o'clock, and those who wish it, may tak a glass o' speerits
+in the meantime&mdash;as it isna every day that they are at my
+wedding.'</p>
+
+<p>"Her faither and mother looked remarkable proud and
+weel-pleased like at what she said, just as if they wished to
+say to me&mdash;'There's a wife for ye!' But I thought the
+minister seemed a good deal surprised, and in a few minutes
+he took up his hat, wished us much joy, and went away.
+For my part, I didna think sae much aboot my bride's lecture,
+as I rejoiced that she thereby released me from the
+confusion I should have experienced in exposing the poverty
+o' my tea equipage.</p>
+
+<p>"It was on the very morning after oor marriage, and
+just as I was gaun oot to my wark&mdash;'Willie,' says she, 'I
+think we should single the turnips in the field west o' the
+hoose the day. The cotters' twa bondage lasses, and me,
+will be able to manage it by the morn's nicht.'</p>
+
+<p>"'O, my dear,' quoth I, 'but I hae nae intention that ye
+should gang out into the fields to work, noo that ye are my
+wife. Let the servant-lass gang out, and ye can look after
+the meat.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Her! the idle taupie!' said she, 'we hae nae mair need
+for her than a cart has for a third wheel. Mony a time it
+has grieved me to observe her motions, when ye were out o'
+the way&mdash;and there would she and the other twa wenches
+been standing, clashing for an hour at a time, and no
+workin' a stroke. I often had it in my mind to tell ye, but
+only I thought ye might think it forward in me, as I perceived
+ye had a kindness for me. But I can baith do all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
+that is to do in-doors, and work out-by also, and at the end
+o' the quarter she shall leave.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Wi' a' my heart,' says I, 'if ye wish it;' for it struck
+me she micht be a wee thocht jealous o' the lassie; 'but
+there is no the sma'est necessity for you working out in the
+fields; for though she leaves, we can get a callant at threepence
+a-day, that would just do as muckle out-work as she
+does, and ye would hae naething to attend to but the affairs
+o' the hoose.'</p>
+
+<p>"'O William!' replied she, 'I'm surprised to hear ye
+speak. Ye talk o' threepence a-day just as if it were naething.
+Hoo mony starving families are there, that threepence
+a-day would mak happy? It is my maxim never to
+spend a penny unless it be laid out to the greatest possible
+advantage. Ye should always keep that in view, every
+time ye put yer hand in your pocket. He that saves a
+penny has as mony thanks, in the lang run, as he that gies
+it awa. Threepence a-day, not including the Sabbath, is
+eighteenpence a-week; noo, you that are a scholar, only
+think how much that comes to in a twelvemonth. There
+are fifty-twa weeks in the year&mdash;that is fifty-twa shillings;
+and fifty-twa sixpences is&mdash;how much?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Twenty-six shillings, my dear,' said I, for I was quite
+amused at her calculation&mdash;the thing had never struck me
+before.</p>
+
+<p>"'Weel,' added she, 'fifty-two shillings and twenty-six
+shillings, put that together, and see how much it comes to.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh,' says I, after half a minute's calculation, 'it will
+just be three pounds, eighteen shillings, to a farthing.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Noo,' cried she, 'only think o' that!&mdash;three pounds
+eighteen shillings a-year; and ye would throw it away, just
+as if it were three puffs o' breath! Now, William, just
+listen to me and tak tent&mdash;that is within twa shillings o'
+four pounds. It would far mair than cleed you and me,
+out and out, frae head to foot, from year's end to year's end.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
+But at present the wench's meat and wages come to three
+times that, and therefore I am resolved, William, that while
+I am able to work, we shall neither throw away the one
+nor the other. It is best that we should understand each
+other in time: therefore, I just tell ye plainly, as I said
+yesterday, that as I wish to end, I mean to begin. This
+very day, this very morning and hour, I go out wi' the
+bondage lassies to single the turnips; and, at the end o' the
+quarter, the lazy taupie butt-a-house maun walk aboot her
+business.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Weel, Kirsty, my darling,' says I, 'your way be it.
+Only I maun again say, that I had no wish or inclination
+whatever to see you toiling and thinning turnips beneath a
+burning sun, or maybe taking them up and shawing them,
+when the cauld drift was cutting owre the face keener than
+a razor.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Weel, William,' quoth she, 'it is needless saying any
+more words about it&mdash;it is my fixed and determined resolution.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Then, hinny,' says I, 'if ye be absolutely resolved upon
+that, it is o' no manner o' use to say ony mair upon the
+subject, of course&mdash;your way be it.'</p>
+
+<p>"So the servant lassie was discharged accordingly, and
+Kirsty did everything hersel. Wet day and dry day, whatever
+kind o' wark was to be done, there was she in the
+middle o' it, by her example spurring on the bondagers.
+Even when we began to hae a family, I hae seen her working
+in the fields wi' an infant on her back; and I am certain
+that for a dozen o' harvests, while she was aye at the head
+o' the shearers, there was aye our bairn that was youngest
+at the time, lying rowed up in a blanket at the foot o' the
+rig, and playing wi' the stubble to amuse itsel.</p>
+
+<p>"There were many that said that I was entirely under
+her thumb, and that she had the maister-skep owre me.
+But that was a grand mistake, for she by no means exercised<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
+onything like maistership owre me; though I am free to
+confess, that I at all times paid a great degree o' deference
+to her opinions, and that she had a very particular and
+powerfu' way o' enforcing them. Yet, although I was in
+no way cowed by her, there wasna a bairn that we had, from
+the auldest to the youngest, that durst play <i>cheep</i> before her.
+She certainly had her family under great subjection, and
+their bringing up did her great credit. They were allowed
+time to play like ither bairns&mdash;but from the time that they
+were able to make use o' their hands, ye would hardly hae
+found it possible to come in upon us, and seen ane o' them
+idle. All were busy wi' something; and no ane o' them
+durst hae stepped owre a prin lying on the floor, without
+stooping doun to tak it up, or passed onything that was out
+o' its place without putting it right. For I will say for her
+again, that, if my Kirsty wasna a bonny wife, she was not
+only a thrifty but a tidy ane, and keepit every ane and every
+thing tidy around her.</p>
+
+<p>"She was a strange woman for abhorring everything that
+was new-fangled. She was a most devout believer in, and
+worshipper o' the wisdom o' oor ancestors. She perfectly
+hated everything like change; and as to onything that implied
+speculation, ye micht as weel hae spoken o' profanation
+in her presence. She said she liked auld friends, auld customs,
+auld fashions; and was the sworn enemy o' a' the innovations
+on the practices and habits that had been handed
+doun frae generation to generation. I dinna ken if ever
+she heard the names Whig or Tory in her life; but if Tory
+mean an enemy o' change, then my Kirsty certainly was a
+Tory o' the very purest water.</p>
+
+<p>"I dinna suppose that she believed there was such a word
+as <i>improvement</i> in the whole Dictionary. She would hae
+allooed everything to stand steadfast as Lot's wife, for ever
+and for ever. But, however, just to gie ye a specimen or
+twa o' her remarkable disposition:&mdash;I think it was about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
+sixteen years after we were married, that I took a tack o' an
+adjoining farm, which was much larger than the ane we occupied.
+I was conscious it would require every penny we
+had scraped thegither, and that we had saved, to stock it.
+My wife was by no means favourable to my taking it. She
+said we kenned what we had done, but we didna ken what
+we might do; and it was better to go on as we were doing,
+than to risk oor a'. I acknowledge that there was a vast
+deal o' truth in what she said; but, however, I saw that the
+farm was an excellent bargain, and I was resolved to tak
+it, say what she might; and therefore, though she was said
+to domineer owre me, yet, just to prove to every person round
+about that I was not under a wife's government, I did tak
+it. I had not had it twa years, when I began to find that
+thrashing wi' the flail would never answer. Often, when the
+markets were on the rise, and when I could hae turned owre
+many pounds into my ain pocket, I found it was a'thegither
+impossible for me to get my corn thrashed in time to catch
+the markets while they were high; and I am certain that,
+in the second year that I had the new farm, I lost at least a
+hundred pounds frae that cause alone&mdash;that is, I didna get
+a hundred pounds that I micht hae got, and that was much
+the same as losing it oot o' my pocket. Thrashing machines
+at that period were just beginning to come into vogue, but
+there was a terrible outcry against them; and mony a ane
+said that they were an invention o' the Prince o' Darkness;
+for my part I wish he would never do mair ill upon the
+earth, than invent sic things as thrashing-machines. Hooever,
+I saw plain and clearly the advantage that the machine
+had owre the flail, and I was determined to hae ane. But
+never did I see a woman in such a steer as the mention o'
+the thing put Kirsty in! She went perfectly wild aboot it.</p>
+
+<p>"'What, William!' she cried, 'what do ye talk aboot?
+Losh me, man, have ye nae mair sense?&mdash;have ye nae discretion
+whatever? Will ye really rush upon ruin at a horse-race?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
+Ye talk aboot getting a machine! How, I ask ye,
+how do ye expect that ever ye could prosper for a single day
+after, if ye were to throw oor twa decent barn-men oot o'
+employment, and their families oot o' bread? I just ask
+ye that question, William. Does na the proverb say&mdash;'Live
+and let live;' and hoo are men to live, if, by an invention
+o' the Enemy o' mankind, ye tak work oot o' their hands,
+and bread oot o' their mouths?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Dear me, Kirsty!' said I, 'hoo is it possible that a
+woman o' your excellent sense can talk such nonsense? Ye
+see very weel that, if I had had a machine, I micht hae
+made a hundred pounds mair than I did by last year's crops&mdash;that,
+certainly, would hae been a good turn to us&mdash;and,
+tak my word for it, it is neither in the power nor in the
+nature o' the Evil One to do a guid turn to onybody.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Willie,' quoth she, 'ye talk like a silly man&mdash;like a
+very silly man, indeed. If the Enemy o' mankind hadna
+it in his power to do for us what we tak to be for oor guid,
+hoo in the warld do ye think he could tempt us to our hurt?
+I say, that thrashing-machines are an invention o' his, and
+that they are ane o' the instruments he is bringing up for
+the ruin o' this country. It is him, and him alone, that is
+putting it into your head to buy ane o' his infernal devices,
+in order that he may not only ruin you, baith soul and body,
+by filling ye wi' a desire o' riches, an' making ye the oppressor
+and the robber o' the poor, but that, through your
+oppression and robbery, he may ruin them also, and bring
+them to shame or the gallows!'</p>
+
+<p>"'Forgie me, Kirsty,' said I, 'what in a' the world do ye
+mean? Hoo is it possible that ye can talk aboot me as
+likely to be either an oppressor or a robber o' the poor?
+I'll declare there never was a beggar passed either me or
+my door, that ever I saw, but I gied him something. I'm
+sure, guidwife, ye baith ken better o' me, and think better
+o' me than to talk sae.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"'Yes, William,' said she, 'I did think better o' ye; but
+I noo see distinctly that the Enemy is leading ye blindfolded
+to your ruin. First, through the pride o' your heart, he
+tempted ye to tak this big farm, that, as ye thocht, ye
+might hasten to be rich; and now he is seducing ye to buy
+ane o' his diabolical machines for the same end, and in order
+that ye may not only deprive honest men and their families
+o' bread, but, belike, rather than starve, tempt them to steal!
+And what ca' ye that but oppressing and robbing the poor?
+Hooever, buy a machine!&mdash;buy ane, and ye'll see what will
+be the upshot! If ye dinna repent it, say I'm no your wife.'</p>
+
+<p>"I confess her words were onything but agreeable to me,
+and they rather set me a hesitating hoo to act. Hooever
+my mind was bent upon buying the machine. I had said
+to several o' my neebors that I intended to hae ane put up;
+and I was convinced that, if I drew back o' my word, it
+would be said that my wife wouldna let me get it, and I
+would be made a general laughing-stock&mdash;and that was a
+thing that I held in greater dread than even my wife's lectures,
+severe as they sometimes were; therefore, reason or
+nane, I got a machine put up. It caused a very general
+outcry amongst a' the 'datal' men and their wives for miles
+round. At ae time I even thocht that they would mob
+me and pull it to pieces. But all their clamour was a mere
+snaw-flake fa'ing in the sea, compared wi' the perpetual
+dirdum that Kirsty rang in my ears about it. She actually
+threatened that judgments would follow, and I didna ken a'
+what. But, on the morning o' the day that I yoked the
+horses into it, and began to thrash wi' it for the first time
+I declare to you that she took the six bairns wi' her, and
+absolutely went to her faither's, vowing to work for them
+until the blood sprang from her finger-ends, rather then live
+wi' a man that would be guilty o' such madness and iniquity.</p>
+
+<p>"But having heard before dinner-time that I had had to
+employ a woman at sixpence a-day to feed into the machine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
+she came back as fast as her feet could carry her, wi' a' the
+bairns behint her, and ordering the stranger away, began to
+feed the machine hersel', and the bairns carried her the sheaves.</p>
+
+<p>"I saw that out o' a spirit o' pure wickedness, she was
+distressing hersel' far beyond what there was the sma'est
+occasion for. It was as clear as day, that indignation was
+working in her heart, like barm fermenting in a bottle, and
+just about half an hour before we were to leave off thrashing
+for the nicht, she was seized with a very alarming pain
+in the breast. I saw and said it was a hysterical affection,
+and was altogether the consequence o' the passion that she
+had given way to on account o' the unlucky machine. She,
+however, denied that there were such diseases in existence
+as either hysterical or nervous affections. They were sham
+disorders, she said, that cam into the country wi' tea and
+spirit-drinking; and she assuredly was free from indulging
+in either the ane or the other. But she grew worse and
+worse, and was at last obliged to sit down upon some straw
+on the barn-floor. I ventured forward to her, and said&mdash;'Kirsty,
+woman, ye had better gang awa into the house.
+Ye will do yersel' mair ill by sittin there, for there is a current
+o' air through the loft, which, after you being warm
+with working, may gie ye your death o' cauld. Rise up,
+dear, and gang awa into the house, and try if a glass o'
+usquebae will do ye ony guid.'</p>
+
+<p>"Maister Burns, the poet, has said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span style="padding-left:30%">'She has an ee, she has but <i>ane</i>;'<br /></span></p>
+
+
+<p>but, certes, had he seen the look that she gied me as I then
+spoke to her, he would hae been satisfied that she had <i>twa</i>!
+I saw it was o' nae manner o' use for me either to offer
+advice or to express sympathy. The wife o' an auld man
+that was called John Neilson, and who for several years had
+been our barn-man, came into the machine-loft at the time,
+and wi' a great deal o' concern she asked my wife what was
+like the matter wi' her. Now this auld Peggy Neilson had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
+the reputation, for miles round, o' being an extraordinary
+<i>skilly</i> woman. There wasna a bairn in the parish took a
+sair throat, or got a burnt foot, or a cut finger, or took a
+<i>dwam</i> for a day or twa, but its mother said&mdash;'I maun hae
+Peggy Neilson spoken to aboot that bairn, before it be owre
+late.' Kirsty, therefore, told her hoo she was affected, when
+the other, wi' the confidence o' a doctor o' medicine brought
+up at the first college in the kingdom, said&mdash;'Then, ma'am,
+if that be the way ye feel, there is naething in the warld sae
+guid for ye as a blast o' the pipe. I aye carry a tinder-box
+and flint and steel wi' me, and ye are welcome to a whuff o'
+my cutty.'</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Kirsty was a bitter enemy to baith smoking and
+snuffing in general; but she had great faith in the skill o'
+Peggy Neilson, and wad far rather hae done whatever she
+advised than followed the prescription o' the best doctor in
+a' the land. She took the auld woman's pipe, therefore,
+and began to blaw through a spirit o' pain and perverseness
+at the same moment. As I anticipated, it soon made her
+dizzy in the head, and she had to be led to the house.
+Hooever, in a short time, the pain she had been suffering
+was greatly abated, though whether the smoking contributed
+towards removing it or not, I dinna pretend to say. Just
+as she had been taen to the house, we were dune wi'
+thrashing for the day, and I was very highly gratified wi'
+the day's wark.</p>
+
+<p>"But I was very tired, and as soon as I had had my
+sowens I went to bed. I several times thought, and remarked
+it, that there was a sort o' burnt smell about.</p>
+
+<p>"'Ay,' said Kirsty, who by this time was a great deal
+better; 'they who will use the engines o' forbidden agents
+maun expect to smell them, as in the end they will feel
+them.'</p>
+
+<p>"Being conscious it was o' nae use to reason wi' her, for
+she in general had the better o' me in an argument, I tried<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
+to compose mysel' to sleep. But it was in vain to think o'
+closing my een, for the smell o' burning grew stronger and
+stronger, and I was rising again, saying&mdash;'There is something
+burning aboot somewhere, and I canna rest until I
+hae seen what it is.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Nor let other folk rest either,' said Kirsty.</p>
+
+<p>"Just at that moment, oor eldest dochter, who was as
+perfect a picture o' beauty as ever man looked upon wi' eyes
+o' admiration, and who being alarmed by the smell, as well
+as me, had gane oot to examine from what it proceeded
+came running oot o' breath, crying&mdash;'Faither! faither!-the
+barn and everything is on fire!'</p>
+
+<p>"'O goodness!' cried I, as I threw on part o' my claes
+in the twinkling o' an ee; 'what wretch can hae been sae
+wicked as to do it!'</p>
+
+<p>"'It's a judgment upon ye,' said Kirsty, 'for having
+such a thing about the place, after a' the admonitions ye
+had against it. I said ye would see what would be the upshot,
+and it hasna been lang o' coming.'</p>
+
+<p>"'O ye tormenter o' my life!' cried I, as I ran oot o' the
+house; 'it's your handy-work!'</p>
+
+<p>"'Mine!' exclaimed she. 'O ye heartless man that ye
+are, how dare ye presume either to say or think sic a thing!'
+and she followed me out.</p>
+
+<p>"The whole stackyard was black wi' smoke&mdash;it was hardly
+possible to breathe&mdash;and a great sheet o' fire, like the mouth
+o' a fiery dragon, was rushing and roaring out at the barn-door.
+I didna ken what to do; I was ready to rush head
+foremost into the middle o' the flames, as if that I could hae
+crushed them out wi' the weight o' my body; and I am persuaded
+that I would hae darted right into the machine loft,
+where the flames were bursting through the very tiles, as
+frae the mouth o' a volcano, had not my wife, and our eldest
+daughter Janet, flewn after me and held me in their arms,
+the one crying&mdash;'Be calm, William&mdash;do naething rashly&mdash;let<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
+us see to save what can be saved;' and the other saying&mdash;'Faither!
+faither! dinna risk your life.'</p>
+
+<p>"Now, there was a hard frost owre the entire face o' the
+ground, and there wasna a drop o' water to be got within a
+quarter o' a mile; and the whole o' my year's crop, with, the
+exception o' what had that day been thrashed, was in the
+stackyard. I shouted at the pitch of my voice for assistance,
+but the devouring flames soon roared louder than I did.
+Kirsty, wi' her usual presence o' mind, began to clear away
+the straw from around the barn, to prevent the fire from
+spreading, and she called upon the bairns and me to follow
+her example. She also ordered a laddie to set the horses out
+o' the stables, and the nowt oot o' the 'courtine,' and drive
+them into a field, where they would be oot o' danger. A'
+our neighbours round aboot, in a short time arrived to our
+assistance; but a' our combined efforts were unavailing.
+The wood wark o' the machine was already on fire&mdash;the barn
+roof fell in, and up flew such a volley o' smoke and firmament
+o' fire as man had never witnessed. The sparks ascended in
+millions upon millions; and as they poured down again
+like a shower o' fire, every stack that I had broke into a
+blaze, and the whole produce o' my farm, corn, straw, and hay
+became as a burning fiery furnace. It became impossible
+for ony living thing to remain in the stackyard. From
+end to end, and round and round, it was one fierce and awful
+flame. The heat was scorching, and the dense smoke was
+baith blinding and suffocating. Every person was obliged
+to flee from it. The very cattle in the field ran about in
+confusion, and moaned wi' terror, and the horses neighed wi'
+fright, and pranced to and fro. I stood at a distance, as
+motionless as a dead man, gazing wi' horror upon the terrific
+scene o' desolation, beholding the destruction o' my property&mdash;the
+burning up, as I may say, o' a' my prospects.
+The teeth in my head chattered thegither, and every joint in
+my body seemed oot o' its socket; and the raging o' destruction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
+in the stackyard was naething to the raging o' misery
+in my breast; and especially because I coudna banish frae
+my brain the awfu' thought that the hand o' the wife o' my
+bosom had lighted the conflagration. While I was standing
+in this state o' speechless agony, and some around about me
+were pitying me, while others in whispers said&mdash;'He had
+nae business to get a thrashing machine, and the thing woudna
+hae happened,' Kirsty came forward to me, and takin' me
+by the hand, said&mdash;'William, dinna be silly&mdash;appear like a
+man before folk. Our loss is nae doubt great, but in time
+we may get ower it; and be thankfu' that it is nae waur
+than it is like to be&mdash;for your wife and bairns are spared to
+ye, and we have escaped unskaithed.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Awa, ye descendant o' Judas Iscariot!' cried I; 'dinna
+speak to me!'</p>
+
+<p>"'William,' said she, calmly, 'what infatuation possesses
+ye, man?&mdash;dinna mak a fool o' yoursel'.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Awa wi' ye!' cried I, perfectly shaking wi' rage.</p>
+
+<p>"'Dear me!' I heard a neighbour remark to another;
+'how gruffly he speaks to Kirsty! I aye thought that she
+had the upperhand o' him, but it doesna appear by his manner
+o' speaking to her.'</p>
+
+<p>"Distracted, wretched, and angry as I was, I experienced
+a sort o' secret pleasure at hearing the observation. I had
+shewn them that I wasna a slave tied to my wife's apron-strings,
+as they supposed me to be. Kirsty left me wi' a
+look that had baith scorn and pity in it. But oor auldest
+lassie, my bonny fair-haired Janet&mdash;to look upon whose
+face I always delighted beyond everything on earth&mdash;came
+running forward to me; and throwing her arms about my neck,
+sobbed wi' her face upon my breast, and softly whispered&mdash;'Dinna
+stand that way, faither, a' body is looking at ye; and
+dinna speak harshly to my poor mother&mdash;she is distressed
+enough without you being angry wi' her.' I bent my head
+upon my bairn's shouther, and the tears ran doun my cheeks.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"By this time, everything was oot o' the house; and the
+fire was prevented from reaching it, chiefly through the
+daring exertions o' a hafflins laddie, whose name was James
+Patrick, who was the son o' a neebor farmer, and who,
+though no aboon seventeen years o' age, I observed was very
+fond o' oor bonny Janet; for I had often observed the young
+creatures wandering in the loaning thegither; and when ye
+mentioned the name o' the ane before the other, the blood
+rose to their face.</p>
+
+<p>"Next morning, the stackyard, barn, byres, and stables,
+presented a fearful picture o' devastation. There was naething
+to be seen but the still smoking heaps o' burnt straw
+and roofless buildings, wi' wreck and ruin to the richt hand
+and to the left. Some thought that the calamity would
+knock me aff my feet, and cause me to become a broken
+man&mdash;and I thought myself that that would be its effect.
+But Kirsty was determined that we should never sink while
+we had a finger to wag to keep us aboon the water. Cheap
+as she had always maintained the house, she now keepit it
+at almost no expense whatever. For more than two years,
+nothing was allowed to come into it but what the farm produced,
+and what we had within ourselves, neither in meat
+nor in claething.</p>
+
+<p>"But though I witnessed all her exertions, nothing
+could satisfy my mind that she was not the cause o' the
+destruction o' the machine, and through it o' all that was
+in and about the <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'stack-yard'">stackyard</ins>. The idea haunted me perpetually,
+and rendered me miserable, and I could not look
+upon my wife without saving to mysel&mdash;'Is it possible that
+she could hae been guilty o' such folly and great wickedness.'
+I was the more confirmed in my suspicion, because
+she never again mentioned the subject o' the machine in
+my hearing, neither would she allow it to be spoken aboot
+by ony ane else.</p>
+
+<p>"What gratified me maist, during the years that we had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
+to undergo privation, was the cheerfulness wi' which all the
+bairns submitted to it; and I couldna deny that it was
+solely to her excellent manner o' bringing them up. Our
+Janet, who was approaching what may be called womanhood,
+was now talked o' through the hale country-side for
+her beauty and sweet temper; and it pleased me to observe,
+that, during our misfortune, the attentions o' James Patrick
+(through whose skilful exertions oor house was saved frae
+the conflagration) increased. It was admitted, on all hands,
+that a more winsome couple were never seen in Nithsdale.</p>
+
+<p>"Oor auldest son, David, who was only fifteen months
+younger than his sister, had also grown to be o' great assistance
+to me. Before he was seventeen he was capable o'
+man's work, which enabled me to do with a hind less than
+I had formerly employed. My landlord, also, was very
+considerate; and, the first year after the burning, he gave
+me back the half o' the rent, which I, with great difficulty,
+had been able to scrape thegether. But when I went hame,
+and, in the gladness o' my heart, began to count down the
+money upon the table before Kirsty and the bairns, and to
+tell them how good the laird had been&mdash;'Tak it up, William!'
+cried she, 'tak it up, and gang back wi' it&mdash;he would
+consider it an obligation a' the days o' our lives. I will be
+beholden to neither laird nor lord! nor shall ony ane belonging
+to me&mdash;sae, tak back the money, for it isna
+ours!'</p>
+
+<p>"'Bless me!' thought I, 'but this is something very remarkable.
+This is certainly another proof that she really
+is at the bottom o' the fire-raising. It is the consciousness
+o' her guilt that makes her shudder at and refuse the kind kindness
+o' the laird.'</p>
+
+<p>"'It is braw talking, Kirsty,' said I, 'but I see nae
+necessity for persons that hae been visited wi' a misfortune
+such as we met wi', and wha hae suffered sae much on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
+account o' it, to let their pride do them an injury or exceed
+their discretion. Consider that we hae a rising family to
+provide for.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Consider what ye like,' quoth she, 'but, if ye accept
+the siller, consider what will be the upshot. Ye would hae
+to be hat in hand to him at all times and on all occasions.
+Yer very bairns would be, as it were, his bought slaves.
+No, William, tak back the money&mdash;I order ye!'</p>
+
+<p>"'Ye <i>order</i> me!' cried I, 'there's a guid ane!&mdash;and where
+got ye authority to order me. If ye will hae the siller taen
+back, tak it back yersel.'</p>
+
+<p>"Without saying another word, she absolutely whipped
+it off the table, every plack and bawbee, into her apron;
+and, throwing on her rockelay and hood, set aff to the laird's
+wi' it, where, as I was afterwards given to understand, she
+threw it down upon his table wi' as little ceremony as she
+had sweept it aft' mine.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye may weel imagine that baith my astonishment
+and vexation were very considerable. I had seen a good
+deal o' Kirsty, but the act o' taking back the siller
+crowned a'!</p>
+
+<p>"'Losh!' said I, in the pure bitterness o' my spirit, 'that
+caps a'!&mdash;that is even worse than destroying the machine,
+wi' the stacks and stabling into the bargain!'</p>
+
+<p>"'What do ye mean about destroying the machine,
+faither?' inquired Janet and David, almost at the same
+instant&mdash;'who do ye say destroyed it?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Naebody,' said I, angrily, 'naebody!'&mdash;for I found I
+had said what I ought not to hae said.</p>
+
+<p>"'Really, faither,' said Janet, 'whatever it may be that
+ye think and hint at, I am certain that ye do my mother a
+great injustice if ye harbour a single thought to her prejudice.
+It may appear rather proud-spirited her takin back
+the siller, though I hae na doubt, in the lang run, but we'll
+a' approve o' it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>'</p>
+
+<p>"'That is exactly what I think, too,' said David.</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, nae dout!' said I, 'nae dout o' that!&mdash;for she
+has ye sae learned, that everything she does, or that ony o'
+ye does, is always right; and whatever I do must be
+wrang!' and I went oot o' the house in a pet, driving the
+door behind me, and thinking about the machine and the
+loss o' the siller.</p>
+
+<p>"Hooever, I am happy to say, that although Kirsty did
+tak back the money to the laird and leave it wi' him, yet,
+as I have already hinted to ye, through her frugal management,
+within a few years we got the better o' the burning.
+But there is a saying, that some folk are no sooner weel
+than they're ill again&mdash;and I'm sure I may say that at that
+time. I no sooner got the better o' the effects o' ae calamity,
+until another overtook me. Ye hae heard what a
+terrible dirdum the erecting o' toll-bars caused throughout
+the country, and upon the Borders in particular. Kirsty
+was one o' those who cried oot most bitterly against them.
+She threatened, that if it were attempted to place ane within
+ten miles o' oor farm, she would tear it to pieces with her
+ain hands.</p>
+
+<p>"'Here's a bonny time o' day, indeed!' said she, 'that a
+body canna gang for a cart-load o' coals or peats, or tak their
+corn, or whatever it may be, to the market, but they must
+pay whatever a set o' Justices o' the Peace please to charge
+them for the liberty o' driving along the road. Na, na!
+the roads did for our faithers before us, and they will do for
+us. They went alang them free and without payment, and
+so will we; for I defy any man to claim, what has been a
+public road for ages, as his property. Only submit to such
+an imposition, and see what will be the upshot. But, rather
+than they shall mak sic things in this neighbourhood, I will
+raise the whole countryside.'</p>
+
+<p>"Unfortunately in this, as in everything else, she verified
+her words. A toll-bar was erected within half-a-mile o'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
+oor door Kirsty was clean mad about it. She threatened
+not only to break the yett to pieces, but to hang
+the toll-keeper owre the yett-post if he offered resistance.
+I thought o' my machine, and said little; and the more
+especially because every ane, baith auld and young, and
+through the whole country, so far as I could hear, were
+o' the same sentiments as Kirsty. There never was onything
+proposed in this kingdom that was mair unpopular.
+And, I am free to confess, that, with regard to the injustice
+o' toll-bars, I was precisely o' the same way o' thinkin' as
+my wife&mdash;only I by no means wished to carry things to the
+extremes that she wished to bring them to.</p>
+
+<p>"I ought to tell ye, that our laird was more than suspected
+o' being the principal cause o' us having a toll-bar
+placed so near us, so that we could neither go to lime, coals,
+nor market, without gaun through it. I was, therefore,
+almost glad that my wife had taken back the siller to him,
+lest&mdash;as I was against raising a disturbance about the
+matter&mdash;folk should say that my hands and tongue were
+tied wi' the siller which he had given me back; for, if I
+didna wish to be considered the slave o' my wife, as little
+did I desire to be thought the tool o' my landlord. But, ae
+day, I had been in at Dumfries in the month o' July, selling
+my wool; I had met wi' an excellent market, and a
+wool-buyer from Leeds and I got very hearty thegether. He
+had bought from me before; and, on that day, he bought
+all that I had. I knew him to be an excellent man, though
+a keen Yorkshireman&mdash;and, ye ken, that the Yorkshire folk
+and we Scotchmen are a gay tight match for ane anither&mdash;though
+I believe, after a', they rather beat us at keeping
+the grip o' the siller; but as I intended to say, I treated
+him, and he treated me, and a very agreeable day we had.
+I recollect when he was pressing me to hae the other gill,
+I sang him a bit hamely sang o' my ain composing. Ye
+shall hear it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span></p>
+
+<div style="padding-left:25%">
+Nay, dinna press, I winna stay,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">For drink shall ne'er abuse me;</span><br />
+It's time to rise and gang away&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sae neibors ye'll excuse me.</span><br />
+<br />
+It's true I like a social gill,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">A friendly crack wi' cronies;</span><br />
+But I like my wifie better still,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Our Jennies an' our Johnnies.</span><br />
+<br />
+There's something by my ain fireside&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">A saft, a haly sweetness;</span><br />
+I see, wi' mair than kingly pride,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">My hearth a heaven o' neatness</span><br />
+<br />
+Though whisky may gie care the fling,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">It's triumph's unco noisy;</span><br />
+A jiffy it may pleasure bring,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">But comfort it destroys aye.</span><br />
+<br />
+But I can view my ain fireside<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wi' a' a faither's rapture;&mdash;</span><br />
+Wee Jenny's hand in mine will slide,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">While Davy reads his chapter.</span><br />
+<br />
+I like your company and yer crack,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">But there's ane I loo dearer,</span><br />
+Ane wha will sit till I come back,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wi' ne'er a ane to cheer her.</span><br />
+<br />
+A waff o' joy comes owre her face<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The moment that she hears me;</span><br />
+The supper&mdash;a' thing's in its place,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">An' wi' her smiles she cheers me.</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<p>However, I declare to you, it was very near ten o'clock
+before I left the house we are sitting in at present, and put
+my foot in the stirrup. But, as my friend Robin says&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<p><span style="padding-left:25%">'Weel mounted on my grey mare Meg,'<br /></span></p>
+
+
+<p>I feared for naething; and, though I had sixteen lang Scots
+miles to ride, I thought naething aboot it; for, as he says
+again&mdash;</p>
+
+<div style="padding-left:25%">
+'Kings may be great, but I was glorious,<br />
+Owre a' the ills o' life victorious!'<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>But, just as I had reached within about half a mile o' the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
+toll-bar that had been erected near my farm, I saw a sort o'
+light rising frae the ground, and reflected on the sky. My
+heart sank within me in an instant. I remembered the
+last time I had seen such a light. I thought o' my burning
+stackyard, o' my ruined machine, and o' Kirsty! My first
+impulse was to gallop forward, but a thousand thoughts, a
+thousand fears cam owre me in an instant; and I thought
+that evil tidings come quick enough o' their ain accord,
+without galloping to meet them. As I approached the toll-bar,
+the flame and the reflection grew brighter and brighter;
+and I heard the sound o' human voices, in loud and discordant
+clamour. My forebodings told me, to use Kirsty's
+words, what would be the upshot. I hadna reached
+within a hundred yards o' the bar, when, aboon a' the
+shouting and the uproar, I heard her voice, the voice o' my
+ain wife, crying&mdash;'Mak him promise that it shall ne'er be
+put up again&mdash;mak him swear to it&mdash;or let his yett gang
+the gaet o' the toll-yett!'</p>
+
+<p>"In a moment all that I had dreaded I found to be
+true. At the sound o' her voice, hounding on the enraged
+multitude, (though I didna altogether disapprove o' what
+they were doing,) I plunged my spurs into my horse, and
+galloped into the middle o' the outrageous crowd, crying&mdash;'Kirsty!
+I say, Kirsty! awa hame wi' ye! What right or
+what authority had ye to be there?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Hear him! hear him!' cried the crowd, 'Willie has
+turned a toll-bar man, and a laird man, because the Laird
+once offered him the half o' his rent back again! Never
+mind him, Kirsty!&mdash;we'll stand yer friends!'</p>
+
+<p>"'I thank ye, neighbours,' said she, 'but I require nae
+body to stand as friends between my guidman and me.
+I ken it is my duty to obey him, that is, when he is
+himsel', and comes hame at a reasonable time o' nicht; but
+not when he is in a way that he doesna ken what he's
+saying, as he is the nicht.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"'Weel done, Mistress Wastle!' cried a dozen o' them;
+'we see ye hae the whip-hand o' him yet!'</p>
+
+<p>"'The mischief tak ye!' cried I, 'for a wheen ill-mannered
+scoundrels; but I'll let every mother's son and
+dochter among ye ken whase hand the whip is in!'</p>
+
+<p>"And, wi' that, I began to lay about me on every side;
+but, before I had brought the whip half-a-dozen o' times
+round my head, I found that the horse was out from under
+me; and there was I wi' my back upon the ground, while,
+on the one side, was a heavy foot upon my breast, and, on
+the other, Kirsty threatening ony ane that would injure a
+hair o' her husband's head; and my son David and James
+Patrick rushing forward, seized the man by the throat that
+had his foot upon my breast, and, in an instant, they had him
+lying where I had lain; for they were stout, powerfu' lads.</p>
+
+<p>"But when I got upon my feet, and began to recover from
+the surprise that I had met wi', there did I see the laird
+himsel, standing trembling like an ash leaf in the middle o'
+the unruly mob&mdash;and, as ringleader o' the whole, my wife
+Kirsty shaking her hand in his face, and endeavouring to
+extort from him a promise, that there never should be another
+toll-bar erected upon his grounds, while he was laird!</p>
+
+<p>"'Kirsty!'I exclaimed, 'what are ye after? Are ye mad?'</p>
+
+<p>"'No, William!' cried she, ' I am not mad, but I am
+standing out for our rights against injustice; and sorry am
+I to perceive that, at a time when everybody is crying out
+and raising their hand against the oppression that is attempted
+to be practised upon them, my guidman should be
+the only coward in the countryside.'</p>
+
+<p>"'William Wastle!' said the terrified laird, whom some
+o' them were handling very roughly, (and principally, I must
+confess, at the instigation o' Kirsty,) 'I am glad to see that
+I have one tenant upon my estate who is a true man; and
+I ask your protection.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Such protection as I can afford, sir,' said I, 'ye shall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
+have; but, after the rough handling winch I have experienced
+this very moment, I dout it is not much that is in
+my power to afford ye.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Get yer faither awa to his bed, bairns!' cried my wife,
+as I was driving my way through the crowd to the assistance
+o' the laird; and I'll declare, if my son David, and
+James Patrick, didna actually come behind me, and, lifting
+me aff my feet, carried me shouther-high a' the way to my
+bedroom; and, in spite o' my threats, expostulations, and
+commands, locked me into it.</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, thought I, as I threw myself down upon the bed,
+without taking aff my claes, (partly because I found my
+head wanted ballast to tak them aff,) I said unto mysel&mdash;'This
+comes o' having a wise and headstrong wife, and bairns
+o' her way o' bringing up. But if ever I marry again and
+hae a family, I shall ken better how to act.'</p>
+
+<p>"Notwithstanding all that I had undergone and witnessed,
+in the space o' ten minutes, I fell fast asleep; and the first
+thing that I awoke to recollect&mdash;that is, to be conscious o'&mdash;was
+my daughter Janet rushing to my bedside, and crying&mdash;'Faither!
+faither! my mother is a prisoner!&mdash;my poor
+dear mother, and James Patrick also!&mdash;and I heard the
+laird saying that they would baith be transported, as the
+very least that could happen them for last night's work,
+which I understand will be punished more severely than
+even highway robbery!'</p>
+
+<p>"I awoke like a man born to a consciousness o' horror,
+and o' naething but horror. All that I had seen and heard
+and encountered on the night before, was just as a dream
+to me, but a dismal dream I trow.</p>
+
+<p>"'Where is yer mother?' I gasped, 'or what is it that
+ye are saying, hinny? and&mdash;where is James Patrick?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh!' cried my darling daughter, 'before this time
+they are baith in Dumfries jail, for pu'ing down and burning
+the toll-yetts, and threatening the life o' the laird. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
+everybody says it will gang particularly hard against my
+mother and poor James; for, though every one was to blame,
+they were what they ca' ringleaders.'</p>
+
+<p>"I soon recollected enough o' the previous night's proceedings
+to comprehend what my daughter said. I hurried
+on my claes, and awa I flew to Dumfries. But I ought to
+tell ye, that the laird's servants had ridden in every direction
+for assistance; and having got three or four constables, and
+about a dozen o' the regular military, all armed wi' swords
+and pistols, they made poor Kirsty and James Patrick, wi'
+about a dozen others, prisoners, and conveyed them to
+Dumfries jail.</p>
+
+<p>"When I was shewn into the prison, Kirsty and James,
+and the whole o' them, were together. 'O Kirsty, woman!'
+said I, in great distress, 'could ye no hae keepit at hame
+while my back was turned! Why hae ye brought the like
+o' this upon us? I'm sure ye kenned better! <i>Was the destruction
+o' the machine and the stackyard no a warning to
+ye!</i>'</p>
+
+<p>"'William,' answered she, 'what is it that ye mean?&mdash;is
+this a time to cast upon me yer low-minded suspicions?
+Had ye last nicht acted as a man, we micht hae got the
+laird to comply wi' our request; but it is through you, and
+such as you, that everything in this unlucky country is
+gaun to destruction; and sorry am I to say that ill o' ye&mdash;for
+a kind, a good, and a faithfu' husband hae ye been to
+me, William.'</p>
+
+<p>"'O sir!' said James Patrick, coming forward and taking
+me by the hand, 'may I just beg that ye will tak my
+respects to yer dochter Janet; and, I hope, that whatever
+may be the issue o' this awkward affair, that she will in no
+way look down upon me, because I happen to be as a sort
+o' prisoner in a jail.' My heart rose to my mouth, and I
+hadna a word to say to either my wife or him.</p>
+
+<p>"'Weel," said I, as I left them, 'I must do the best I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
+can to bring baith o' ye aff; and, to accomplish it, the best
+lawyers in a' Scotland shall be employed.'</p>
+
+<p>"But to go on&mdash;at a very great expense, I, and the faither
+o' James Patrick, had employed the very principal advocates
+that went upon the Dumfries circuit; and they tauld us
+that we had naething to fear, and that we might keep ourselves
+quite at ease.</p>
+
+<p>"I was glad that my son David hadna been seized and
+imprisoned, as weel as his mother and James Patrick, for
+he also had been ane o' the ringleaders in the breaking doun
+and burning o' the toll-bars, and in the assault upon the
+laird. But he escaped apprehension at the time, and I
+suppose they thought that they had enough in custody to
+answer the ends o' justice and the law, and, therefore, he
+was permitted to remain unmolested.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, sir, comes the most melancholy part o' my story.
+I had a quantity o' wool to deliver to the Yorkshire buyer,
+I hae already mentioned, upon a certain day. My son
+David was to drive the carts wi' it to Annan. It was sair
+wark, and he had but little sleep for a fortnight thegether.
+It caused him to travel night and day, load after load. Now,
+I needna tell ye, that at that period the roads were literally
+bottomless. The horse just went plunge, plunging, and the
+cart jerking, now to ae side, and now to another, or giein a
+shake sufficient to drive the life out o' ony body that was
+in it. Now, the one wheel was on a hill, and the other in
+a hollow; or, again, baith were up to the axle-tree in mud,
+or the horse half-swimming in water! And yet people cried
+out against toll-bars! But, as I hae been telling ye, my
+son David had driven wool to Annan for a fortnight, and
+he was sair worn out. The roads were in a dreadful state&mdash;worse
+than if, now-a-days, ye were to attempt to drive
+through a bog.</p>
+
+<p>"Ae night, when he was expected hame, his sister Janet,
+and mysel' sat lang up waiting upon him, and wondering<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
+what could be keeping him, when a stranger rode up to the
+door, and asked if 'one Mr William Wastle lived there?' I
+replied 'Yes!' And, oh! what think ye were his tidings,
+but that my name had been seen upon the carts, that the
+horses had stuck fast in the roads, and that my son David,
+who had fallen from the shafts, had either been killed, or
+drowned among the horses' feet!</p>
+
+<p>"I thought his brothers and sisters, and especially Janet,
+would have gane oot o' their judgment. As for me, a' the
+trials I had had were but as a drap in a bucket when compared
+wi' this!</p>
+
+<p>"But, after I had mourned for a night, the worst was
+to come. Hoo was I to tell his poor imprisoned mother!&mdash;imprisoned
+as she wis for opposing the very thing that
+would hae saved her son's life!</p>
+
+<p>"Next day I went to Dumfries; but I declare that I never
+saw the light o' the sun hae sic a dismal appearance. The
+fields appeared to me as if I saw them through a mist.
+Even distance wasna as it used to be. I was admitted into
+the prison, but I winna&mdash;oh no! I canna repeat to ye the
+manner in which I communicated the tidings to his mother!
+It was too much for her then&mdash;it would be the same for me
+now! for naething in the whole coorse o' my life ever shook
+me so much as the death o' my poor David. But I remember
+o' saying to her, and I declare to you upon the word o'
+a man, unthinkingly&mdash;'O Kirsty, woman! had we had toll-bars,
+David might still hae been living!'</p>
+
+<p>"'William, William!' she cried, and fell upon my neck,
+'will ye kill me outright!' And, for the first time in my
+life, I saw the tears gushing down her cheeks. Those tears
+washed away the very remembrance o' the machine, and
+the burning o' the stacks. I pressed her to my heart, and
+my tears mingled wi' hers.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe it was partly through our laird that baith
+Kirsty and James Patrick were liberated without being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
+brought to a trial. Her imprisonment, and the death o' our
+son, had wrought a great change upon my wife; and I
+think it was hardly three months after her being set at
+liberty, that we were baith sent for to auld John Neilson
+the barnman's, whose wife Peggy lay upon her death-bed.
+When we approached her bedside, she raised herself upon
+her elbow, and said&mdash;'The burning o' yer barn and stackyard
+has always been a mystery&mdash;hear the real truth from
+the words o' a dying and guilty woman. Yer machine had
+thrown my husband out o' employment, and when yer wife
+there gied me back the pipe, a whuff o' which I said would
+do her good, <i>I let the burning dottle drap among the straw</i>&mdash;nane
+o' ye observed it&mdash;ye were a' leaving the barn. Now,
+ye ken the cause&mdash;on my death-bed I make the confession.'</p>
+
+<p>"I declare I thought my heart would hae louped out o'
+my body. I pressed my wife, against whom I had harboured
+such vile suspicions, to my breast. She saw my
+meaning&mdash;she read my feelings.</p>
+
+<p>"'William,' said she, kindly, 'if ye hae onything on yer
+mind that ye wish to forget, so hae I; let us baith forget
+and forgie!'</p>
+
+<p>"I felt Kirsty's bosom heaving upon mine, and I was
+happy.</p>
+
+<p>"Within six months after this, James Patrick and our
+dochter Janet were married; and an enviable couple they
+then were, and such they are unto this day. And, as for
+my Kirsty, auld though she is, and though the sang says&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+'I wadna gie a button for her,'<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>auld, I say, as she is, and wi' a' her faults, I would gie a'
+the buttons upon my coat for her still, and a' the siller that
+ever was in my pouch into the bargain."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span></p>
+<h2>THE STONE-BREAKER.</h2>
+
+
+<p>If any of our readers had had occasion to go out, for a
+couple of miles or so, on the road leading from Edinburgh
+to the village of Carlops, any time during the summer of
+the year 1836, they would have seen a little old man&mdash;very
+old&mdash;employed in breaking metal for the roads. The
+exact spot where <i>we</i> saw him, was at the turn of the eastern
+shoulder of the Pentland Hills; but the nature of his employment
+rendering him somewhat migratory, he may have
+been seen by others in a different locality. In the appearance
+of the old stone-breaker, there was nothing particularly
+interesting&mdash;nothing to attract the attention of the
+passer-by&mdash;unless it might be his great age. This, however,
+certainly was calculated to do so; and when it did, it
+must have been accompanied by a painful feeling at seeing
+one so old and feeble still toiling for the day that was passing
+over him; and toiling, too, at one of the most dreary,
+laborious, and miserable occupations which can well be conceived.
+Had the old man no children who could provide
+for the little wants of their aged parent, without the necessity
+of his still labouring for them&mdash;who could secure him
+in that ease which exhausted nature demanded? It appeared
+not. Perhaps it was a spirit of independence that
+nerved his weak arm, and kept him toiling so far beyond
+the usual term of human capability. Probably the proud-spirited
+old man would break no bread but that which he
+had earned by the sweat of his brow and the labour of his
+hands. Perhaps it was so. At any rate, this we know, that,
+at the early hour of five in the morning, as regularly as the
+morning came, the old stone-breaker had already commenced
+his monotonous labour. But this was not all. He had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
+also, by this early hour, walked upwards of four miles&mdash;for
+so far distant was the scene of his occupation from the
+place of his residence, Edinburgh. He must, therefore,
+have left home between three and four o'clock, and this was
+his daily round, without intermission, without variation,
+and without relaxation. A bottle of butter-milk and a
+penny loaf formed each day's sustenance. His daily earnings,
+labouring from five in the morning till six at night,
+averaged about ninepence! Hear ye this, ye who ride in
+emblazoned carriages! Hear ye this, ye loungers on the
+well-stuffed couch!&mdash;and hear it, ye revellers at the festive
+board, who have never toiled for the luxuries ye enjoy!
+Hear it, and think of it! But of this person we have other
+things to tell; and to these we proceed.</p>
+
+<p>One morning, just after he had commenced the labours of
+the day, a young man, of about four or five and twenty
+years of age, accosted him, wished him a good morning,
+and seated himself on the heap of broken metal on which
+the old man was at work, and did so seemingly with the
+intention of entering into conversation with him. This was
+a proceeding to which the latter was much accustomed, it
+being a frequent practice with the humbler class of wayfarers.
+The advances of the stranger, therefore, in the present
+instance, did not for a moment interrupt his labours, or
+slacken his assiduity. He hammered on without raising his
+head, even while returning the greetings that were made him.</p>
+
+<p>"A delightful view from this spot," said the young man,
+breaking in upon a silence which had continued for some
+time after the first salutations had passed between them.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the old man, drily; and, continuing his
+operations, he again relapsed into his usual taciturnity; for,
+in truth, he was naturally of a morose and uncommunicative
+disposition. Undeterred by his cold, repulsive manner,
+the stranger again broke silence, and said, with a deep-drawn
+sigh<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"How I envy these little birds that hop so joyously from
+spray to spray! Their life is a happy one. Would to God
+I were one of them!"</p>
+
+<p>The oddness of the expressions, and the earnestness with
+which they were pronounced, had an effect on the labourer
+which few things had. They induced him to pause in his
+work, to raise his head, and to look in the face of the
+speaker, which he did with a smile of undefinable meaning.
+It was the first full look he had taken of him, and it
+discovered to him a countenance open and pleasing in its
+expression, but marked with deep melancholy, and telling,
+in language not to be misunderstood, a tale of heart-sickness
+of the most racking and depressing kind.</p>
+
+<p>"Has your lot been ill cast, young man, that ye envy
+the bits o' burds o' the air the freedom and the liberty that
+God has gien them?" said the old man, eyeing the stranger
+scrutinizingly, with a keen, penetrating grey eye, that had
+not even yet lost all its fire.</p>
+
+<p>"It has," replied the latter. "I have been unfortunate
+in the world. I have struggled hard with my fate, but it
+has at length overwhelmed me."</p>
+
+<p>The old man muttered something unintelligibly, and,
+without vouchsafing any other reply, resumed his labours.
+After another pause of some duration, which, however, he
+had evidently employed in <i>thinking</i> on the declaration of
+unhappiness which had just been made him&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Some folly o' your ain, young man, very likely," said
+he, carelessly, and still knapping the stones, whose bulk it
+was his employment to reduce.</p>
+
+<p>"No," replied the young man, blushing; but it was a
+blush which he who caused it did not see. "I cannot
+blame myself."</p>
+
+<p>"Nae man does," interposed the stone-breaker; "he aye
+blames his neighbours."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps so," rejoined the stranger; "but you will
+allow that it is perfectly possible for a man to be unfortunate
+without any fault on his own part."</p>
+
+<p>"I hae seldom seen't," replied the ungracious and unaccommodating
+old man; and he hammered on.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, perhaps so," said the youth; "but I hope you
+will not deny that such things <i>may</i> be."</p>
+
+<p>"Canna say," was the brief, but sufficiently discouraging
+rejoinder.</p>
+
+<p>"Then let us drop the subject," said the stranger, smilingly.
+"Each will still judge of the world by his own experience.
+But, methinks, your own case, my friend, is a
+hard enough one. To see a man of your years labouring at
+this miserable employment, is a painful sight. Your debt
+to fortune is also light, I should believe."</p>
+
+<p>"I hae aye trusted mair to my ain industry than to fortune,
+young man. I never pat it in her power to jilt me.
+I never trusted her, and therefore, she has never deceived
+me; so her and me are quits." And the old man plied
+away with his long, light hammer.</p>
+
+<p>"Yet your earnings must be scanty?"</p>
+
+<p>"I dinna compleen o' them."</p>
+
+<p>"I daresay not; but will you not take it amiss my offering
+this small addition to them?" And he tendered him a
+half-crown piece. "I have but little to spare, and that
+must be my apology for offering you so trifling a gift."</p>
+
+<p>The man here again paused in his operations, and again
+looked full in the face of the stranger, but without making
+any motion towards accepting the proffered donation.</p>
+
+<p>"I thocht ye said ye war in straits, young man," he said,
+and now resting his elbow on the end of his hammer.</p>
+
+<p>"And I said truly," replied the former, again colouring.</p>
+
+<p>"Then hoo come ye to be sportin yer siller sae freely?
+I wad hae thocht ye wad hae as muckle need o' a half-croon
+as I hae?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps I may," replied the stranger; "but that's not
+to hinder me from feeling for others, nor from relieving
+their distresses so far as I can."</p>
+
+<p>"Foolish doctrine, young man, an' no' for this warl.
+It's nae wunner that ye're in difficulties. I guessed the faut
+was yer ain, and noo I'm sure o't. Put up yer half-croon,
+sir. I dinna tak charity."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope, however, I have not offended you by the offer?
+It was well meant."</p>
+
+<p>"Ou, I daresay&mdash;I'm no the least offended; but tak an
+auld man's advice, an' dinna let yer feelins hae the command
+o' yer purse-strings, otherwise ye'll never hae muckle
+in't."</p>
+
+<p>And the churlish old stone-breaker resumed his labours,
+and again relapsed into taciturnity. Silent as he was, however,
+it was evident that he was busily thinking, although
+none but himself could possibly tell what was the subject
+of his thoughts; but this soon discovered itself. After a
+short time, he again spoke&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"What may the nature an' cause o' yer defeeculties be,
+young man, an' I may speer?" he said&mdash;"and I fancy I
+may, since ye hae been sae far free on the subject o yer ain
+accord."</p>
+
+<p>"That's soon told," replied the stranger. "Three years
+ago, an aunt, with whom I was an especial favourite, left
+me two hundred and fifty pounds. "With this sum I set
+up in business in Edinburgh in the ironmongery line, to
+which I was bred. My little trade prospered, and gradually
+attained such an extent that I found I could not do
+without an efficient assistant, who should look after the
+shop while I was out on the necessary calls of business.
+In this predicament I bethought me of my brother, who
+was a year older than myself, and accordingly sent for him
+to Selkirkshire, where he resided with our father, assisting
+him in his small farming operations; this being the business<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
+of the latter. My brother came; and, for some time,
+was everything I could have wished&mdash;sober, regular, and
+attentive; and we thus got on swimmingly. This, however,
+was a state of matters which was not long to continue.
+When my brother had about completed a year with me, I
+began to perceive a gradual falling off in his anxiety about
+the interests of our little business. I remonstrated with
+him on one or two occasions of palpable neglect; but this,
+instead of inducing him to greater vigilance, had the effect
+only of rendering him more and more careless. But I did
+not then know the worst. I did not then know that, in
+place of aiding, he was robbing me. This was the truth,
+however. He had formed an infamous connection with a
+woman of disreputable character, and the consequence was
+the adoption of a regular system of plunder on my little
+property, to answer the calls which she was constantly
+making on my unfortunate relative.</p>
+
+<p>"About this time I took ill, and, not suspecting the integrity
+of my brother, although aware of his carelessness, I
+did not hesitate to trust him with the entire conduct of my
+affairs. Indeed, I could not help myself in this particular;
+he best knowing my business, and being, besides, the natural
+substitute for myself in such a case. For three months was
+I confined, unable to leave my own room; and, when I did
+come out, I found myself a ruined man. In this time, my
+brother had appropriated almost every farthing that had
+been drawn to his own purposes; and had, moreover, done
+the same by some of my largest and best outstanding
+accounts; and, to sum up all, he had fled, I knew not
+whither, on the day previous to that on which I made my
+first appearance in my shop after my recovery. That is
+about ten days since."</p>
+
+<p>"Did the rascal harry ye oot an' oot?" here interposed
+the old stone-breaker, knapping away with great earnestness.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No; there was a little on which he could not lay his
+hands&mdash;some considerable accounts which are payable only
+yearly; there was also some stock in the shop; but these,
+of course, are now the property of my creditors."</p>
+
+<p>"But could ye no get a settlement wi' them, an' go on?"
+inquired the other, still knapping away assiduously. "I'm
+sure if you stated your case, your creditors wadna be owre
+hard on ye."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps they might not; but there is one circumstance
+that puts it out of my power to make any attempt at arrangement.
+There is one bill of fifty pounds, due to a Sheffield
+house, on which diligence has been raised, and on which I
+am threatened with instant incarceration. In truth, it is
+this proceeding that has brought me here so early this morning.
+I expected to have been taken in my bed, as the
+charge was out yesterday, and I am here to keep out of the
+way of the messengers. I am thus deprived of the power
+of helping myself&mdash;of taking any steps towards the adjustment
+of my affairs."</p>
+
+<p>"An' could ye do any guid, think ye, if that debt wur
+paid, or in some way arranged?" inquired the other.</p>
+
+<p>"I think I could;" said the party questioned. "My good
+outstanding debts are yet considerable, and so is the stock
+in the shop; so that, had a little time been allowed me, I
+could have got round. But all that is knocked on the head,
+by the impending diligence against me. That settles the
+matter at once, by depriving me of the necessary liberty to
+go about my affairs."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a pity," said the man, drily. "Wha's the man o'
+business in Edinburgh that thae Sheffield folk hae employed
+to prosecute ye? What ca' ye him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr Langridge."</p>
+
+<p>"Ou ay, I hae heard o' him. An will he no gie ye ony
+indulgence?"</p>
+
+<p>"He cannot. His instructions are imperative, otherwise<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
+he would, I am convinced; for he is an excellent sort of
+man, and knows all about me and my affairs. Indeed, so
+willing was he to have assisted me, that, when the bill was
+first put into his hands, he wrote to his clients, strongly
+recommending lenient measures and bearing testimony, on
+his own knowledge, to the hardship of my case; but their
+reply was brief and peremptory. It was to proceed against
+me instantly, and threatening him with the loss of their
+business if he did not. For this uncompromising severity
+they assigned as a reason, their having been lately 'taken
+in,' as they expressed it, to a large extent, by a number
+of their Scotch customers. So Mr. Langridge had no alternative
+but to do his duty, and let matters take their course."</p>
+
+<p>"True," replied the monosyllabic stone-breaker. It was
+all he said, or, if he had intended to say more, which, however,
+is not probable, no opportunity was afforded him;
+for at this moment three labouring men of his acquaintance,
+who were on their way to their work, came up and
+began conversing. On this interruption taking place, the
+young man rose, wished him a good morning, which was
+merely replied to by a slight nod, and went his way.</p>
+
+<p>At this point in our story, we change the scene to the
+writing chambers of Mr. Langridge, and the time we advance
+to the evening of the day on which our tale opens.</p>
+
+<p>It will surprise the reader to find our old stone-breaker,
+still wearing the patched and threadbare clothes, the battered
+and torn hat, and the coarse, strong shoes, which had
+never rejoiced in the contact of blacking brush, in which
+he prosecuted his daily labours, ringing the door-bell of Mr
+Langridge's house, about eight o'clock in the evening. It
+will still more surprise him, perhaps, to find this man received,
+notwithstanding the homeliness, we might have said
+wretchedness, of his appearance, by Mr Langridge himself
+with great courtesy, and even with a slight air of deference.</p>
+
+<p>On his entering the apartment in which that gentleman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
+was, the latter immediately rose from his seat, and advanced,
+with extended hand, towards him.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Mr Lumsden," he exclaimed, "how do you do? I
+hope I see you well. Come, my dear sir, take a chair."
+And he ran with eager civility for the convenience he named,
+and placed it for the accommodation of his visiter.</p>
+
+<p>When the old man was seated&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Well, my dear sir," said Mr Langridge, "I am sorry to
+say that <i>your rents</i> have not come so well in this last half-year
+as usual. We are considerably short." And the man
+of business hurried to a large green painted tin box, that
+stood amongst some others on a shelf, and bore on its front
+the name of Lumsden, and from this drew forth what appeared
+to be a list or rent roll, which he spread out on the
+table. "We are considerably short," he said. "There's
+six or eight of your folks who have paid nothing yet, and
+as many more who have made only partial payments."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," said the man, crustily, "what's the meanin' o
+that? Ye maun just screw them up, Mr Langridge; for I
+canna want my siller, and I winna want it. Hae thae folk
+Thamsons, paid yet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a shilling more than you know of," replied Mr
+Langridge.</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, then, Mr Langridge, ye maun just tak the necessary
+steps to recover; for I'm determined to hae my rent.
+I'm no gaun to aloo mysel' to be ruined this way. They
+wadna leave me a sark to my back, if I wad let them. Ye
+maun just sequestrate, Mr Langridge&mdash;ye maun just sequestrate,
+an' we'll help oorsels to payment, since they winna
+help us."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, surely, surely, my dear sir. All fair and right.
+But I would just mention to you, that though, latterly,
+they have been dilatory payers&mdash;I would say, shamefully
+so&mdash;they are yet decent, honest, well-meaning people, these
+Thomsons; and that, moreover, there is some reason for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
+their having been so remiss of late, although it is, certainly,
+none whatever why you should want your rent."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I fancy no," here interposed the other, with a
+triumphant chuckle.</p>
+
+<p>"No, certainly not," went on Mr Langridge, who seemed
+to know well how to manage his eccentric client; "but
+only, I would just mention to you, that the <i>reason</i> of the
+dilatoriness of the Thomsons, is the husband's having been
+unable, from illness, to work for the last three months, and
+that, in that time, they have also lost no less than two
+children. It is rather a piteous case."</p>
+
+<p>"An' what hae I to do wi' a' that?" exclaimed the
+other, impatiently. "What hae I to do wi' a' that, I wad
+like to ken? Am I to be ca'ed on to relieve a' the distress
+in the world? That wad be a bonny set o't. Am I to be
+robbed o' my richts that others may be at ease? That
+I winna, I warrant you. See that ye recover me thae
+folk's arrears, Mr Langridge, by hook or by crook, and that
+immediately, though ye shouldna leave them a stool to sit
+upon. That's <i>my</i> instructions to <i>you</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"And they shall be obeyed, Mr Lumsden," replied the
+man of business&mdash;"obeyed to the letter. I merely mentioned
+the circumstance to you, in order that you might be
+fully apprized of everything relating to your tenants, which
+it is proper you should know."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, weel, but there's nae use in troublin' me wi'
+thae stories. I dinna want to be plagued wi' folk makin'
+puir mouths. There's aye a design on ane's pouch below't.
+By the bye, Mr Langridge," continued he, after
+a momentary pause, "hae ye a young chield o' an airnmonger
+in your hauns enow about some bill or anither that
+he canna pay."</p>
+
+<p>"The name?" inquired Mr Langridge, musingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Troth that I cannot tell you; for I never heard it, and
+forgot to speer."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Let me see&mdash;oh, ay&mdash;you will mean, I dare say, a
+young man of the name of John Reid, poor fellow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very likely," said the client; "Is he a young man, an
+airnmonger to business, and hae ye diligence against him
+enow on a fifty pound bill, due to a Sheffield hoose?"</p>
+
+<p>"The same," replied Mr Longridge. "These are exactly
+the circumstances. How came you, Mr Lumsden," he
+added, smilingly, "to be so well informed of them?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll maybe explain that afterwards; but, in the meantime,
+will ye tell me what sort o' a lad this Mr Reid is?
+Is he a decent, weel-doin' young man?"</p>
+
+<p>"Remarkably so," replied Mr Langridge, "remarkably
+so, Mr Lumsden. I can answer for that; for I have known
+him now for a good while, and have had many opportunities
+of estimating his character."</p>
+
+<p>"Then hoo cam he into his present difficulties?"</p>
+
+<p>"Through the misconduct of a brother&mdash;entirely through
+the misconduct of a brother." And Mr Langridge proceeded
+to give precisely the same account of the young
+man's misfortunes, and of the present state of his affairs,
+that he himself had given to the old stone-breaker, as
+already detailed to the reader. When he had concluded&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to me rather a hard sort o' case," said the
+client. "But could you no help him a wee on the score o'
+lenity?"</p>
+
+<p>"I would willingly do it if I could; but it's not in my
+power. My instructions are peremptory. I dare not do it
+but with a certainty of losing the business of the pursuers,
+the best clients I have."</p>
+
+<p>"Naething, then, 'll do but payin' the siller, I suppose?"
+said the other.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing, nothing, I fear. My clients seem quite determined.
+They are enraged at some smart losses which
+they have lately sustained in Scotland, and will give no
+quarter."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Then I suppose if they <i>war</i> paid, they would be satisfied,"
+said the stone-breaker.</p>
+
+<p>"Ha, ha, ha! Mr Lumsden, no doubt of <i>that</i>," exclaimed
+Mr Langridge, laughing. "That would settle the business
+at once."</p>
+
+<p>"I fancy sae," said the other, musingly. Then, after a
+pause&mdash;"An' think ye the lad wad get on if this stane were
+taen frae aboot his neck?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have no doubt of it&mdash;not the least," replied Mr Langridge,
+"for I have every confidence in the young man's
+industry and uprightness of principle. But he has no
+friend to back him, poor fellow: no one to help him out
+of the scrape."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye canna be quite sure o' that, Mr Langridge," said the
+old man. "What if I hae taen a fancy to help him mysel?"</p>
+
+<p>"You, Mr Lumsden!&mdash;you!" exclaimed Mr Langridge
+in great surprise. "What motive on earth can you have
+for assisting him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I didna say that I meant to assist him&mdash;I only asked
+ye, what if I took a fancy to do't?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, to that I can only say that, if you have, he is all
+right, and will get his head above water yet. But you
+surprise me, Mr Lumsden, by this interest in Reid. May
+I ask how it comes about?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll tell you a' that presently, but I'll first tell you that
+I <i>do</i> mean to assist the young man in his straits. I'll advance
+the money to pay that bill for him. Will ye see to
+that, then, Mr Langridge? Put me doon for the amount oot
+o' the funds in your hauns, and stay further proceedins."</p>
+
+<p>Mr Langridge could not express the surprise he felt on
+this extraordinary intimation from a man who, although
+there were some good points in his character, notwithstanding
+of the outward crust of churlishness in which it
+was encased, he never believed capable of any very striking
+act of generosity. Mr Langridge, we say, could not express<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
+the surprise which this unlooked-for instance of that quality
+in Mr Lumsden inspired, nor did he attempt it;
+for he justly considered that such expression would be
+offensive to the old man, as implying a belief that he had
+been deemed incapable of doing a benevolent thing. Mr
+Langridge, therefore, kept his feelings, on the occasion, to
+himself, and contented himself with promising compliance,
+and venturing a muttered compliment or two, which, however,
+were ungraciously enough received, on the old man's
+generosity.</p>
+
+<p>"But whar's the young man to be fand?" inquired the
+latter.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, that I cannot well tell you," replied Mr Langridge;
+"for I was informed, in the course of the day, by
+the messengers whom I employed to apprehend him, that
+he had left his lodging early in the morning, no doubt in
+order to avoid them, and they could not ascertain where he
+had gone to."</p>
+
+<p>"Humph, that's awkward," replied the client. "I wad
+like to find him."</p>
+
+<p>"I fear that will be difficult," replied Mr Langridge;
+"but I will call off the bloodhounds in the meantime, and
+terminate proceedings."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, do sae, do sae. But can we no get haud o' the lad
+ony way?"</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, a rap at the door of the apartment in
+which was Mr Langridge and his client, interrupted further
+conversation on the subject.</p>
+
+<p>"Come in," exclaimed the former.</p>
+
+<p>The door opened, and in walked two messengers, with
+Reid a prisoner between them. We leave it to the reader
+to conceive the latter's surprise, on beholding his acquaintance
+of the morning, the old stone-breaker, seated in an
+arm-chair in Mr Langridge's writing-chamber. But while
+he looked this surprise, he also seemed to feel acutely the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
+humiliation of his position. After a nod of recognition, he
+said, with an attempt at a smile, and addressing himself to
+the old man&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You see they have got me after all, my friend. But it
+was my own doing. On reflection, I saw no use in endeavouring
+to avoid them, and gave myself up, at least, threw
+myself in their way, in order to encounter the worst at once,
+and be done with it."</p>
+
+<p>"I daresay ye was richt, after a'," replied the stone-breaker;
+"it was the best way. Mr Langridge," he added,
+and now rising from his seat, "wad ye speak wi' me for a
+minnit, in another room?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, Mr Lumsden," replied Mr Langridge.</p>
+
+<p>"Will we proceed with the prisoner?" inquired one of
+the messengers.</p>
+
+<p>"No, remain where you are a moment, till I return;"
+and Mr Langridge led the way out of the apartment, followed
+by the old stone-breaker. When they had reached
+another room, and the door had been secured&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Noo, Mr Langridge, anent what I was speaking to ye
+about regarding this young man wha has come in sae curiously
+upon us, juist whan we were wanting him&mdash;I dinna
+care to be seen in the matter, sae ye maun juist manag't for
+me yersel."</p>
+
+<p>"Had ye no better enjoy the satisfaction of your own
+good deed in person, Mr Lumsden, by telling Mr Reid of
+the important service you intend doing him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll do naething o' the kind," replied the old stone-breaker,
+testily. "I dinna want to be bothered wi't. Sae
+juist pay ye his bill and charges, Mr Langridge, an' keep an
+e'e on his proceedins afterwards, an' let me ken frae time to
+time hoo he's gettin on."</p>
+
+<p>With these instructions Mr Langridge promised compliance;
+and, on his having done so, the stone-breaker proposed
+to depart; but, just as he was about doing so, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
+turned suddenly round to his man of business, and
+said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"About the Tamsons, Mr Langridge, ye needna, for a
+wee while, tak thae staps again them that I was speakin
+aboot. Let them alane a wee till they get roun a bit."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll do so, Mr Lumsden," replied the worthy writer,
+who, the reader will observe, had accomplished his generous
+purpose dexterously. He knew his man, and acted
+accordingly.</p>
+
+<p>"What's their arrears, again?" inquired the other.</p>
+
+<p>"Half-a-year's rent&mdash;£3, 17s.," replied Mr Langridge.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, it's a heap o' siller&mdash;no to be fan at every dyke
+side. An' then, there's this half-year rinning on, an' very
+near due. That'll mak&mdash;hoo much?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just £7, 14s. exactly, Mr Lumsden."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, exactly," replied the latter, who had been making
+a mental calculation of the amount, and had arrived, although
+more slowly than his experienced lawyer, at the
+same result. "A serious soom," added the client.</p>
+
+<p>"No trifle, indeed, Mr Lumsden," said Mr Langridge;
+"but it's safe enough. They're honest people."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye'r aye harpin on that string," replied the stone-breaker,
+surlily; "but what signifies their honesty to me, if
+they'll no pay me my rent?"</p>
+
+<p>"True, very true," said the law agent. "That's the only
+practical honesty."</p>
+
+<p>"See you an' get thae arrears, at ony rate, oot o' them,
+<i>if</i> ye can, Mr Langridge; an', if ye canna, I suppose we
+maun juist want them. Ye needna push owre hard for
+them either, since they're in the state ye say. But ye'll
+surely mak the present half-year oot o' them. That maun
+be paid. Mind <i>that</i>, at ony rate, maun be paid, Mr Langridge."
+And saying this, he placed his old tattered hat,
+which he had hitherto held in his hand, on his head, and
+left the house.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>On his departure, Mr Langridge hastily entered the apartment
+in which, he had left the messengers with their prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>"We're just waiting marching orders, Mr Langridge,"
+said the latter, on his entering, and making an attempt at
+playfulness, with which his spirit but ill accorded. "My
+friends here are getting tired of their charge, and anxious to
+be relieved of him."</p>
+
+<p>"Are they so, Mr Reid?" replied Mr Langridge, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, then, we had best relieve them at once." Then
+turning to the principal officer&mdash;"Quit your prisoner, Maxwell&mdash;the
+debt is settled. Mr Reid, you are at liberty."</p>
+
+<p>The blood rushed to poor Reid's face, and then withdrew,
+leaving it as pale as death, and yet he could express no
+part of the feelings which caused these violent alternations.
+At length&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Mr Langridge," he said, "what is the meaning of this?
+How do I come to be liberated?"</p>
+
+<p>"By the simplest and most effectual of all processes, Mr
+Reid," replied the worthy writer, smiling; "by the payment
+of the debt."</p>
+
+<p>"But <i>I</i> have not paid the debt, Mr Langridge. I <i>could</i>
+not pay the debt."</p>
+
+<p>"No; but somebody else might. The short and the long
+of it is, Mr Reid, that a <i>friend</i> has come forward, and settled
+the claim on which diligence was raised against you. The
+bill, with interest and all expenses, <i>is</i> paid, and you are
+again a free man."</p>
+
+<p>Again overwhelmed by his feelings, which were a thousand
+times more eloquently expressed by a flood of silent
+tears than they could have been by the most carefully
+rounded periods, it was some time before the young man
+could pursue the conversation, or ask for the further information
+which he yet intensely longed to possess. On recovering
+from the burst of emotion which had, for the
+moment, deprived him of the power of utterance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"And <i>who</i>, pray, Mr Langridge, is this friend&mdash;this
+friend indeed?</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I do not know exactly whether I am at liberty
+to tell you, Mr Reid," replied Mr Langridge. "The friend
+you allude to declined transacting this matter personally
+with you, which seems to imply that he did not care that
+you should know who he was; yet, as he certainly did not
+expressly forbid me to disclose him, and as I think it but
+right that you should know to whom you are indebted, I
+will venture to tell you. Had you some conversation, at an
+early hour this morning, with an old stone-breaker, on the
+highway side, about three or four miles from town?"</p>
+
+<p>"I had. The old man that was sitting here when I
+came in."</p>
+
+<p>"The same. Well, what would you think if <i>he</i> should
+have been the friend in question? Would you expect from
+his manner, that he <i>would</i> do such a thing? or, from his
+appearance and occupation, that he could?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not&mdash;certainly not. The old man&mdash;the poor
+old man, to whom I offered half-a-crown&mdash;who works for
+ninepence a-day&mdash;who never saw me in his life before this
+morning&mdash;who knows nothing of me! Impossible, Mr
+Langridge&mdash;impossible; he cannot be the man. You do
+not say that he is?"</p>
+
+<p>"But I do though, Mr Reid, and that most distinctly.
+It is he, and no other, I assure you, who has done you this
+friendly service."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, if it be so, I know not what to say to it, Mr
+Langridge. I can say nothing. I trust, however, I shall
+not be found wanting on the score of gratitude. I can say
+no more. But will you be so good as inform me, if you
+can, how the good man has come to do me so friendly a
+service? Who on earth, or what is he?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sit down, sit down, Mr Reid, and I'll answer all your
+questions&mdash;I'll tell you all about him," replied Mr Langridge.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Mr Reid having complied with this invitation, the latter
+began:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The history of the old stone-breaker, my good sir, is a
+very short and a very simple one. It contains no vicissitude,
+and to few, besides ourselves, would be found possessing
+any particular interest. Your friend was, in his youth,
+a soldier, and served, I believe, in the American war. At
+his return home on the conclusion of that war, he was discharged,
+still a young man, and shortly after married a
+woman with a fortune" (smilingly) "of some five-and-twenty
+or thirty pounds. With this sum the thrifty pair purchased
+two or three cows, and commenced the business of cowfeeders.
+They prospered; for they were both saving and
+industrious, and, in time, realized a considerable sum of
+money, which they went on increasing. This they invested
+in house property from time to time, till their possessions of
+this kind became very valuable.</p>
+
+<p>"For upwards of forty years they continued in this way,
+when Mrs Lumsden died, leaving her husband a lonely
+widower; for they had no children. On the death of the
+former, the latter, who was now an old man, and unequal to
+conducting, alone, the business in which his wife's activity
+and industry had hitherto aided him, sold off his cows, and
+proposed to live in retirement on the rents of his property;
+and this he did for some time. Accustomed, however, to a
+life of constant labour and exertion, the old man soon found
+the idleness on which he had thrown himself, intolerably
+irksome. He became miserable from a mere want of having
+something to do. While in this state of ennui, chancing
+one day to stroll into the country, (this is what he told
+me himself,) he saw some labouring men knapping stones
+by the way-side; and strange as the fancy may seem, he
+was instantly struck with a desire of taking to this occupation.
+He did so, and has, from that day to the present,
+now upwards of ten years, pursued it with as much assiduity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
+as if it was his only resource for a subsistence. He
+has, as I already told you, no family of his own; neither has
+he, I believe, any relation living; or, if there be, they must
+be very remote; and, as he strictly confines his expenditure
+to his daily earnings as a stone-breaker&mdash;some ninepence
+a-day, I believe&mdash;his wealth is rapidly increasing, and is, at
+this moment, no trifle, I assure you. Now, my good sir, when
+I tell you that I am the law agent of this strange, eccentric
+person, and that I manage all his business for him, I have told
+you everything about him that is worth mentioning."</p>
+
+<p>"There is just one thing, Mr Langridge," said Mr Reid,
+who had been an attentive listener to the tale just told
+him, "that wants explanation: can you give me the smallest
+shadow of a reason for the part he has acted towards me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, there you puzzle me; I cannot. It appears as
+unaccountable to me as to you, although I have known Mr
+Lumsden now for upwards of fifteen years."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you ever know him do a thing of this kind before?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never! and I must say candidly, that, although he is
+by no means deficient in kindness of heart, notwithstanding
+his rough exterior, I did not believe him capable of such an
+act of generosity."</p>
+
+<p>"It is an extraordinary matter," said Mr Reid; "and
+although I can have but little right to inquire into the
+<i>motives</i> for an act by which I am so largely benefited&mdash;it
+seems ungracious to do so&mdash;yet would I give a good round
+sum, if I had it to spare, to know the real cause of this
+good man's friendship towards me."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, that I suspect neither you nor I shall ever know.
+I question much, indeed, if the principal actor in this affair
+himself could give a reason for what he has done. It seems
+to me just one of those odd and unaccountable things which
+eccentric men, like Mr Lumsden, will sometimes do; and
+with this solution of the mystery, and the benefit it has produced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
+to you, I rather think, Mr Reid, you must be content.
+I would, however, add, in order to redeem Mr Lumsden's
+act of generosity from the character of a mere whim,
+that your case was one eminently calculated to excite any
+latent feeling of benevolence which he might possess; and
+that your manner and appearance&mdash;no flattery&mdash;are equally
+well calculated to second a claim so established. Yourself,
+and your peculiar circumstances, in short, had chanced to
+touch the right chord in a right man's breast, and hence
+the response on which we are speculating."</p>
+
+<p>Having thus discussed the knotty point of the old stonebreaker's
+sudden act of generosity, Mr Langridge invited
+Mr Reid to put his affairs into his hands, promising that
+they should have the advantage, on his part, of something
+more than mere professional zeal. This friendly invitation
+the latter gladly accepted, and shortly after consigned all
+his business matters to the care of the worthy writer, who
+exerted himself in behalf of his client with an efficiency
+that soon placed the latter once more in the way of well-doing.
+And well he did; having subsequently realised a
+very handsome independency. In the success of the young
+man, no one rejoiced more than the old stone-breaker, who
+frequently visited him in his shop; sometimes merely for
+the purpose of seeing him; at others, to purchase some of
+those little articles of ironmongery which the due preservation
+of his dwelling-house property demanded. Let us state, too,
+that, amongst his purchases, were, at different times, the hammer-heads
+which he used in his occupation of stone-breaking.</p>
+
+<p>In their first transaction in this way, there was something
+curiously characteristic of the old man's peculiarities
+of temper. Mr Reid, not yet perfectly aware of these
+peculiarities, declined, for some time, putting any price on
+a couple of hammer-heads which his friend had picked out.
+He would have made him a present of them; and, to the
+latter's inquiry as to their price, replied, evasively, and laughing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
+while he spoke, that he would tell him that afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>"I tak nae credit, young man," said the stone-breaker,
+crustily, "tell me enow their cost." And he pulled out a
+small greasy leathern purse, and was undoing its strings,
+when Mr Reid laid his hand on his arm to prevent him,
+at the same time telling him that he would do him a favour
+by accepting the hammer-heads in a present. "What is
+such a trifle between you and me, Mr Lumsden&mdash;you to
+whom I owe everything?"</p>
+
+<p>"You owe me a great deal mair than ye're ever likely
+to pay me, at ony rate, young man, if this be the way ye
+transact business," replied the other, with evident signs
+of displeasure. "Tell me the price o' thae hammer-heads at
+ance, an' be dune wi't. I hae nae broo o' folk that fling
+awa their guids as ye seem inclined to do."</p>
+
+<p>Mr Reid blushed at the reproof, but, seeing at once how
+the land lay, with regard to his customer's temper, he now
+plumply named the price of the hammers, sevenpence each.</p>
+
+<p>"Sevenpence!" exclaimed the old man. "I'll gie ye
+nae such price. Doonricht robbery! I can get them as
+guid in ony shop in the toon for saxpence ha'penny. If
+ye like to tak that price for them, ye may hae't. If no, ye
+can keep them."</p>
+
+<p>Mr Reid, now knowing his man somewhat better than
+he did at first, demurred, but at length agreed to the abatement,
+and the transaction was thus brought to a close.</p>
+
+<p>We need hardly add, that the £50 advanced by the old
+man to Mr Reid were subsequently repaid; but the call is
+more imperative on us to state, that, on the former's death,
+which took place about two years after, the latter found
+himself named in his will for a very considerable sum. One,
+somewhat larger, was bequeathed by the same document to
+Mr Langridge. The remainder was appropriated to various
+charities. And here, good reader, ends the story of the
+Stone-Breaker.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span></p>
+<h2>LAIRD RORIESON'S WILL.</h2>
+
+
+<p>In the little town of Maybole there lived, some fifty years
+ago or more, an old man of the name of George Rorieson,
+more commonly called Laird Rorieson. He had been a
+kind of general merchant, or trafficker in any kind of commodities
+which he thought would yield him a profit; and,
+by dint of great sagacity, had made some very fortunate
+hits, and realised a large sum of money. Having begun the
+world with a penny, he was emphatically the maker of his
+own fortunes&mdash;a circumstance he was very proud of, and
+loved to sound in the ears of certain individuals who envied
+him his riches. Having amassed his money by an accumulation
+of small sums, for a long course of years, he had
+gradually become narrower and narrower, as his wealth
+increased; and, by the time he arrived at the age of sixty,
+his penurious feelings had become so strong and deeprooted
+that he could scarcely afford himself the means of a
+comfortable subsistence.</p>
+
+<p>It is almost needless to say that Laird Rorieson never had
+courage or liberality of sentiment sufficient to give him an
+impulse towards matrimony; and truly it was alleged that he
+never oven looked on womankind with any feelings different
+from those with which he contemplated his fellow-creatures
+generally; and these had always some connection, one way
+or another, with making profit of them. But, though he
+had no wife, he had a good store of nephews and nieces&mdash;somewhere
+about twenty&mdash;all poor enough, God knows!
+but all as hopeful as brides and bridegrooms of a great store
+of wealth and bliss being awaiting them on the death of
+Uncle Geordie.</p>
+
+<p>The affection which these twenty nephews and nieces<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
+shewed to Uncle George was remarkable; but, somehow
+or another, the good uncle hated them mortally, and, the
+bitterer he became, the more loving they waxed&mdash;so that
+it was very wonderful to see so much human love and
+sympathy thrown away upon an old churl who could
+have seen all the devoted creatures at the devil.</p>
+
+<p>It was indeed alleged that this crabbed miser had no
+love for any one, all his affection being expended upon
+his money-bags: but we are bound to say that this is not
+quite the truth; for there was a neighbour of the name of
+Saunders Gibbieson, a bachelor, for whom the Laird really
+felt some small twinges of human kindness. Saunders
+Gibbieson was as true a Scotchman as ever threw the
+pawkie glamour of a twinkling grey eye over the open
+face of an English victim. He was, as already said, a
+bachelor; but unlike his friend Geordie, he loved the fair
+sex, and vowed he would marry the bonniest lass o' Maybole
+the moment he was able to sustain her "in bed, board,
+and washing." He had scraped together a few pounds, maybe
+to the extent of a hundred or two, and looked forward to
+making himself happy at no very distant period. He was a
+famous hand at a political argument; and there was not a
+man in Maybole who could touch him at driving a bargain.</p>
+
+<p>As already said, Geordie had a kind of feeling towards
+Saunders, and there can be no doubt that Saunders had as
+strong an affection for the "auld rich grub," as he called
+him in his throat, as ever had any of the twenty nephews
+and nieces already alluded to. In the evenings he often
+went in and sat with him; and, by dint of curious jokes,
+"humorous lees," and political anecdotes, he contrived to
+wile, for a few minutes, the creature's heart from his
+money-bags, and unbend his puckered cheeks and lips into
+a species of compromise between a laugh and a grin.
+It was no wonder, then, that Geordie had a kind of liking
+for Saunders&mdash;seeing he got value in amusement from him,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
+without so much cost as even a piece of old dry cheese, of
+a waught of thin ale. On the other hand, it was difficult
+to see how Saunders could love the laird; and, indeed, it
+was a matter of gossip what could induce a man so much
+in request as Saunders Gibbieson to take so much pains in
+pouring into the "leather lugs" of an old miser the precious
+jokes that would have set the biggest table in Maybole
+in a roar.</p>
+
+<p>Now the time came when Laird Rorieson began to feel
+the first touches of that big black angel who loves to hug
+so fondly the sons of men. He was ill&mdash;he was indeed
+very ill&mdash;and it would have done any man's heart good to
+see the kindness and sympathy which his twenty nephews
+and nieces paid him. Every hour one or other of them
+was calling at his house; and his ears were regaled by the
+sympathetic tones which their love for their dear uncle
+wrung from their tender hearts. Oh, it was beautiful to
+behold! Such things do credit to our fallen nature. But
+the old grub loved it not; and it was even said he cursed
+and swore in the very faces of the kind creatures, just as if
+they had had an eye on the heavy coffers of gold that lay in
+his house. This kindness on the part of his nephews and
+nieces was thus converted into a kind of poison; for every
+time they called, their uncle got into such a passion that
+his remaining strength was well-nigh worn out. But he
+had still enough left to sign his name; and the ungrateful
+creature resolved upon leaving all his gold to found an hospital.
+He sent for a man of the law, and had a consultation
+with locked doors, and all things seemed in a fair way
+for the poor nephews and nieces being sacrificed for ever.</p>
+
+<p>This circumstance came to the ears of Saunders Gibbieson,
+who had not been an unattentive spectator of the extraordinary
+proceedings going on in the house of his neighbour.
+As soon as he heard the news, he retired and meditated,
+and communed with himself three hours on matters<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
+of deep concernment to him and the generations that might
+descend from him. The result of all this study was a resolution
+alike remarkable for its eccentricity and sagacity;
+but Saunders' spirit dipped generally so deep in the wells of
+wisdom that there was no wonder it should come forth
+drunk, as it were, with the golden policy of cunning.</p>
+
+<p>Now, all of a sudden, Saunders grew (as he said) very
+ill&mdash;as ill indeed, or nearly as ill, as Laird Rorieson himself,
+but, so full was he of brotherly love towards his neighbour,
+that his sudden illness did not prevent him calling upon the
+latter one night, when there seemed to be no great chance
+of their being disturbed by any of the sympathetic nephews
+and nieces. He found Geordie very weakly, and sat down
+by the bedside, to pour the balm of his friendship and consolation
+into the sick man's ear. The Laird received him
+kindly, and as was his custom, Saunders got him into a
+pleasant humour, by telling him something of a curious
+nature that had occurred, or had been supposed by Saunders
+to have occurred, during the day. He then began the more
+important part of his work.</p>
+
+<p>"You are ill, Laird," said he; "but I question muckle
+if ye're sae ill as I am myself. For a long time I've been
+in a dwinin way, and, though I hae kept up a fair appearance
+and good spirits, I've been gradually getting thinner
+and weaker. I fear I'm in a fair way for anither warld."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry to hear't," replied the Laird. "It's a sad
+thing to dee." And he shook as he uttered the word.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, an' it's a sad thing," said Saunders, "to be tormented
+in your illness, wi' thae cursed corbies o' puir relations.
+The moment I began to complain I've been tormented
+wi' a host o' nephews and nieces, wha come and stare
+into my hollow een, as if they would count the draps o' blude
+that are yet left in my heart."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay, are you in that plight too, Saunders?" groaned
+the Laird. "The ravens have been croaking owre me for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
+twa lang years. They come and perch on the very bedposts,
+they croak, they whet their nebs, they look into my
+face, and peer into my very heart. It's dreadful&mdash;and
+there's nae remedy. I've tried to terrify them awa; but
+they come aye back again. They've worn me fairly out."</p>
+
+<p>"I've had many a meditation on the subject, Laird," said
+Saunders; "and, between you and me, if there's a goose
+quill in a' Scotland, I'll hae a shot at them. I haena
+muckle i' the warld&mdash;a thousand or twa maybe, hard won,
+Geordie, as a' gowd is in thae hard times; but the deil a
+plack o't they'll ever touch."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye'll be to found an hospital?" said the Laird.</p>
+
+<p>"Na, na," answered Saunders. "I'll found nae beggar's
+palace. I've studied political economy owre lang to be
+ignorant o' the bad effects o' public charities. They relax
+the sinews o' industry, and mak learned mendicants. Besides,
+wha thanks the founder o' an hospital for his charity?
+Nane!&mdash;nane! A puff or twa in the newspapers about
+Gibbieson's mortification would be the hail upshot o' my
+reward; and sensible folk would set me doun as an auld
+curmudgeon, wha hadna heart to love and benefit a friend."</p>
+
+<p>"There's some truth in that," muttered the Laird. "It's
+a pity a body canna tak his gear wi' him. Sair hae I
+toiled for it, and, oh! it's miserable! cruel! cruel! that I
+should be obliged to leav't to a thankless warld! But
+what are ye to do wi'fc, Saivjders?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, I'm just to leave it a' to you, Laird," said
+Saunders. "I have lang liked ye wi' a' the luve o' honest,
+leal friendship; and, after muckle meditation, I canna fix
+on a mortal creature wha is mair deservin o't than you,
+my guid auld freend. You have a fair chance o' recovering;
+I have nane. Ye may enjoy my gear lang after the
+turf has grown thegither owre my grave; and God bless
+the gift!"</p>
+
+<p>"Kind, guid man!" cried the Laird, in a voice evincing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
+strong emotion, either of love or greed. "That <i>is</i> kindness&mdash;ay,
+very different frae the friendship o' my sisters' and
+brothers' bairns. After a', I believe yer richt, Saunders&mdash;an
+hospital has nae gratitude; and what have we to do wi'
+a cauld and heartless warld?"</p>
+
+<p>"There's just ae difficulty I hae," said Saunders. "The
+will's written and signed; but I dinna weel ken whar to
+lay it; for, when I'm dead, thae deevils o' corbies may smell
+the bit paper and put it in the fire. Maybe you would tak
+the charge o't for me, Laird."</p>
+
+<p>"Ou ay," answered the Laird. "I'll keep it. The deil
+o' are o' them will get it oot o' my clutches."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, weel, my dear friend," said Saunders. "I'll put
+it into a tin box; the key ye'll find, after my breath's out,
+in the little cupboard that's at the foot o' my bed&mdash;ye ken
+the place. They can mak naething o' the key without the
+box; and, if you canna find the key, you can force the box
+open. Oh, I would like to see you reading the will in the
+midst o' the harpies."</p>
+
+<p>"That's weel arranged, Saunders; ye can set about it as
+soon as you like."</p>
+
+<p>"I intend to do it instantly, Laird," replied the man.
+"I'll about it this moment." And he rose and went out of
+the house.</p>
+
+<p>In a short time, Saunders returned, holding in his hand
+a small tin box. He laid it down upon the table, and, taking
+out a small key, opened it, and took out a paper, entitled&mdash;"Last
+Will and Testament."</p>
+
+<p>"There it is, my good friend," he said; and, replacing the
+paper in the box, he locked it and placed it in an escritoire
+pointed out by the Laird. He then went away.</p>
+
+<p>Next day, the lawyer came to carry into effect the
+charitable resolution of Laird Rorieson; but he found that
+a great change had taken place upon the old man's sentiments.
+He was now adverse to a mortification, and said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
+he was resolved upon leaving his fortune to one whom he
+considered to be a <i>real friend</i>, and, indeed, the only real
+friend he had upon earth. The lawyer was surprised when
+he ascertained that this friend was Saunders Gibbieson; but
+it was not his province to object&mdash;so he departed straightway
+to carry into effect the new resolution of the testator.</p>
+
+<p>Two days afterwards, the Laird sent a message to Saunders
+to come and speak with him. Saunders obeyed; walking
+in to him slowly, and apparently with great effort, as if he
+had been labouring under a strong disease.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been thinking again and again, Saunders," said
+the Laird, "o' yer great kindness. You are the first man
+that ever left me a farthing. The warld has rugged aff me
+since ever I had a feather to pick. Nane has ever offered
+me either a bite or a sup. You are the only friend I've
+ever met upon earth."</p>
+
+<p>"I hae only obeyed the dictates o' my heart," replied
+Saunders; "and I am glad I have dune it, for I feel mysel
+very weakly, and fear the clock o' this world's time will be
+wound up wi' me in a very short period."</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe no so sune as ye think, Saunders," replied the
+Laird. "But my purpose is executed. Saunders, you are
+my heir. Hand me that box there."</p>
+
+<p>Saunders took up a small mahogany box that lay on the
+table, and handed it to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," continued the Laird, taking out a paper; "here
+is my will. It's a' in your favour, Saunders&mdash;lands, houses,
+guids, and chattels, heritable and moveable. Say naething;
+you are my heir. Ha! ha! let the corbies croak. You've
+dune me a guid service; I winna be ahint ye. Tak the
+box into yer ain keeping. I'll keep the key. Awa wi't
+this instant. Ha! ha! let the corbies croak."</p>
+
+<p>Saunders obeyed. He carried the box into his own
+house, placed it in his cupboard, locked the door, and put
+the key into his pocket.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In about a month afterwards, old Laird Rorieson departed
+this life. On the day of his death, his nephews
+and nieces were in great commotion, and there was a
+terrible running to and fro, and much whispering, and
+wondering, and gossiping&mdash;all on the great subject of the
+death of Uncle Geordie. On the day of his funeral, they
+were all collected, to see whether there was any will. They,
+of course, wished that there should be none, because they,
+being his heirs, would succeed to all, if there was no disposition
+of the old man's effects. By some means, Saunders
+Gibbieson contrived to be present along with the expectants.
+Perhaps he was allowed to be among them in the character
+of a witness; but indeed, so certain were the nephews and
+nieces of having succeeded in their efforts to please the dear
+old man, that they could afford to allow the presence of any
+number of witnesses who could vouch for the sacred gravity
+of their countenances, and the deep sorrows of their bereaved
+hearts. Nor was Saunders less under the affection
+of lugubriousness himself; so that it was altogether one of
+those beautiful sights so often witnessed on such melancholy
+occasions, where every indication of selfishness is banished,
+and nothing can be observed save that Christian solemnity
+which proveth that "the devil hath been cast out of the
+heart of man, even when he did appear to be strong." The
+nephews and the nieces looked at Saunders, and Saunders
+looked at them, and so solemn were these looks, that though
+the writer was searching about for a will, no one seemed to
+care whether he found one or not. It has been said that
+"the heart of man is deceitful above all things;" but of
+a surety the adage could not have been spoken there,
+except with the determination to get it disproved for once
+in the world, and the blessed object of shewing to us sons of
+the seed of Abraham that we are not so wicked as we are
+called.</p>
+
+<p>At length the ominous little box was laid hold of and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
+broken open, amidst a pretty nonchalance, and lo! there was
+indeed a paper, bearing the fearful word "Will," and the
+faces of the heirs turned as pale as the paper itself. It was
+opened; but it was a fair, clean sheet of paper, and not a
+drop of ink had stained its purity. "All safe, all safe,"
+muttered the heirs.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is another box," said Saunders Gibbieson, holding
+up the mahogany one; "let us try it." And he opened
+it, and took out Geordie's will. The writer read it aloud.
+Saunders was sole heir to all the old miser's possessions,
+amounting to £10,000. No one could tell the reason why
+there were two papers marked "Will," and one of them a
+blank sheet; and Saunders, simple man, did not trouble
+himself to give any explanation.</p>
+
+
+<h4><br />END OF VOL. XVIII.<br /><br /></h4>
+
+
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> This story will suggest the remembrance of a popular ballad, but the similarity
+is casual; for the circumstances are here true, if they may not be found of
+every-day occurrence somewhere about the temple of Mammon.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> <span class="smcap">Hibbert's</span> <i>Philosophy of Apparitions</i>; <span class="smcap">Brewster's</span> <i>Letters on Natural
+Magic</i>; <span class="smcap">Scott's</span> <i>Letters on Witchcraft, &amp;c.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> See "The Man-of-war's Man."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Mr Allan Cunningham, in his Life of Burns, states the following particulars
+respecting Willie's wife:&mdash;viz., that "He was a farmer, who lived near Burns, at
+Ellisland. She was a very singular woman&mdash;tea, she said, would be the ruin of
+the nation; sugar was a sore evil; wheaten bread was only fit for babes; earthenware
+was a pickpocket; wooden floors were but fit for thrashing upon; slated
+roofs, cold; feathers good enough for fowls. In short, she abhorred change: and
+whenever anything new appeared&mdash;such as harrows with iron teeth&mdash;'Ay! ay!'
+she would exclaim, 'ye'll see the upshot!' Of all modern things she disliked
+china most&mdash;she called it 'burnt clay,' and said 'it was only fit for haudin' the
+broo o' stinkin' weeds,' as she called tea. On one occasion, an English dealer in
+cups and saucers asked so much for his wares, that he exasperated a peasant, who
+said, 'I canna purchase, but I ken ane that will. Gang there,' said he, pointing
+to the house of Willie's wife, 'dinna be blate or burd-moothed; ask a guid penny&mdash;she
+has the siller!' Away went the poor dealer, spread out his wares before
+her, and summed up all by asking a double price. A blow from her crummock
+was his instant reward, which not only fell on his person, but damaged his china.
+'I'll learn ye,' quoth she, as she heard the saucers jingle, 'to come wi' yer
+brazent English face, and yer bits o' burnt clay to me!' She was an unlovely
+dame&mdash;her daughters, however, were beautiful."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p></div>
+
+</div>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div class='tnote'>
+<p class="center">Transcriber's Notes: Hyphen variations left as printed.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of
+Scotland Volume 18, by Alexander Leighton
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WILSON'S TALES OF THE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 39759-h.htm or 39759-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/9/7/5/39759/
+
+Produced by David Clarke, Mary Meehan and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/39759-h/images/tp.jpg b/39759-h/images/tp.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0dff0e4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39759-h/images/tp.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/39759.txt b/39759.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8cafcc4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39759.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,9645 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of
+Scotland Volume 18, by Alexander Leighton
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
+
+
+Title: Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of Scotland Volume 18
+ Historical, Traditionary, & Imaginative.
+
+Author: Alexander Leighton
+
+Release Date: May 22, 2012 [EBook #39759]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WILSON'S TALES OF THE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Clarke, Mary Meehan and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Wilson's
+ Tales of the Borders
+ AND OF SCOTLAND.
+
+ HISTORICAL, TRADITIONARY, & IMAGINATIVE.
+
+ WITH A GLOSSARY.
+
+ REVISED BY
+ ALEXANDER LEIGHTON,
+ _One of the Original Editors and Contributors._
+
+ VOL. XVIII.
+
+ LONDON:
+ WALTER SCOTT, 14 PATERNOSTER SQUARE,
+ AND NEWCASTLE-UPON-TYNE.
+ 1884.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+ Page
+
+ THOMAS OF CHARTRES, (_Hugh Miller_), 1
+
+ THE FUGITIVE, (_John Mackay Wilson_), 33
+
+ THE BRIDE OF BRAMBLEHAUGH, (_Alexander Leighton_), 63
+
+ GLEANINGS OF THE COVENANT, (_Professor Thomas Gillespie_)--
+
+ XIV. JAMES RENWICK, 95
+
+ XV. OLD ISBEL KIRK, 105
+
+ XVI. THE CURLERS, 110
+
+ XVII. THE VIOLATED COFFIN, 119
+
+ THE SURGEON'S TALES, (_Alexander Leighton_)--
+
+ THE MONOMANIAC, 127
+
+ THE FOUNDLING AT SEA, (_Alexander Campbell_), 159
+
+ THE ASSASSIN, (_Alexander Campbell_), 178
+
+ THE PRISONER OF WAR, (_John Howell_), 191
+
+ WILLIE WASTLE'S ACCOUNT OF HIS WIFE, (_John Mackay Wilson_), 223
+
+ THE STONE-BREAKER, (_Alexander Campbell_), 255
+
+ LAIRD RORIESON'S WILL, (_Alexander Leighton_), 276
+
+
+
+
+WILSON'S TALES OF THE BORDERS AND OF SCOTLAND.
+
+
+
+
+THOMAS OF CHARTRES.
+
+
+One morning, early in the spring of 1298, a small Scottish vessel lay
+becalmed in the middle of the Irish Channel, about fifteen leagues to
+the south of the Isle of Man. During the whole of the previous night,
+she had been borne steadily southward, by a light breeze from off the
+fast receding island; but it had sunk as the sun rose, and she was now
+heaving slowly to the swell, which still continued to roll onward, in
+long glassy ridges from the north. A thick fog had risen as the wind
+fell--one of those low sea fogs which, leaving the central heavens
+comparatively clear, hangs its dense, impervious volumes around the
+horizon; and the little vessel lay as if imprisoned within a circular
+wall of darkness, while the sun, reddened by the haze, looked down
+cheerily upon her from above. She was a small and very rude-looking
+vessel, furnished with two lug-sails of dark brown, much in the manner
+of a modern Dutch lugger; with a poop and forecastle singularly high,
+compared with her height in the waist; and with sides which, attaining
+their full breadth scarcely a foot over the water, sloped abruptly
+inwards, towards the deck, like the wall of a mole or pier. The
+parapet-like bulwarks of both poop and forecastle were cut into deep
+embrasures, and ran, like those of a tower, all around the areas they
+enclosed, looking down nearly as loftily on the midships as on the
+water. The sides were black as pitch could render them--the sails
+scarcely less dark; but, as if to shew man's love of the ornamental in
+even the rudest stage of art, a huge misshapen lion flared in vermillion
+on the prow, and over the stern hung the blue flag of Scotland, with the
+silver cross of St Andrew stretching from corner to corner.
+
+From eight to ten seamen lounged about the decks. They were
+uncouth-looking men, heavily attired in jerkins and caps of blue
+woollen, with long, thick beards, and strongly-marked features. The
+master, a man considerably advanced in life--for, though his eye seemed
+as bright as ever, his hair and beard had become white as snow--was
+rather better dressed. He wore above his jerkin a short cloak of blue
+which confessed, in its finer texture, the superiority of the looms of
+Flanders over those of his own country; and a slender cord of silver ran
+round a cap of the same material. His nether garments, however, were
+coarse and rude as those of his seamen; and the shoes he wore were
+fashioned, like theirs, of the undressed skin of the deer, with the hair
+still attached; giving to the foot that brush-like appearance which had
+acquired to his countrymen of the age, from their more polished
+neighbours, the appellation of rough-footed Scots. Neither the number,
+nor the appearance of the crew, singular and wild as the latter was,
+gave the vessel aught of a warlike aspect; and yet there were
+appearances that might have led one to doubt whether she was quite so
+unprepared for attack or defence as at the first view might be premised.
+There ran round the butt of each mast a rack filled with spears, of more
+knightly appearance than could have belonged to a few rude seamen--for
+of some of these the handles were chased with silver, and to some there
+were strips of pennon attached; and a rich crimson cloak, with several
+pieces of mail, were spread out to the morning sun, on one of the
+shrouds.
+
+The crew, we have said, were lounging about the deck, unemployed in the
+calm, when a strong, iron-studded door opened in the poop, and a young
+and very handsome man stepped forward.
+
+"Has my unfortunate cloak escaped stain?" he said to the master. "Your
+sea-water is no brightener of colour."
+
+"It will not yet much ashame you, Clelland," said the master, "even amid
+the gallants of France; but, were it worse, there is little fear, with
+these eyes of yours, of being overlooked by the ladies."
+
+"Nay, now, Brichan, that's but a light compliment from so grave a man as
+you," said Clelland. "You forget how small a chance I shall have beside
+my cousin."
+
+"Not jealous of the Governor, Clelland, I hope?" said the old man,
+gaily. "Nay, trust me, you are in little danger. Sir William is perhaps
+quite as handsome a man as you, and taller by the head and shoulders;
+but, trust me, no one will ever think of him as a pretty fellow. He
+stands too much alone for that. Has he risen yet?"
+
+"Risen!--he has been with the chaplain for I know not how long. Their
+Latin broke in upon my dreams two hours ago. But what have we yonder, on
+the edge of that bank of fog! Is it one of the mermaidens you were
+telling me of yesterday?"
+
+"Nay," said the master, "it is but a poor seal, risen to take the air.
+But what have we beyond it? By heavens I see the dim outline of a large
+vessel, through the fog! and yonder, not half a bow-shot beyond, there
+is another! Saints forbid that it be not the English fleet, or the ships
+of Thomas of Chartres! Clelland, good Clelland, do call up the Governor
+and his company!"
+
+Clelland stepped up to the door in the poop, and shouted hastily to his
+companions within--"Strange sails in sight!--supposed enemies--it were
+well to don your armours." And then turning to a seaman. "Assist me,
+good fellow," he said, "in bracing on mine."
+
+"Thomas of Chartres, to a certainty!" exclaimed the master--"and not a
+breath to bear us away! Would to heavens that I were dead and buried, or
+had never been born!"
+
+"Why all this ado, Brichan?" said Clelland, who, assisted by the sailor,
+was coolly buckling on his mail. "It was never your wont before, to be
+thus annoyed by danger."
+
+"It is not for myself I fear, noble Clelland," said the master, "if the
+Governor were but away and safe. But, oh, to think that the pride and
+stay of Scotland should fall into the merciless hands of a pirate dog!
+Would that my own life, and the lives of all my crew, could but purchase
+his safety!"
+
+"Take heart, old man," said Clelland, with dignity. "Heaven watches over
+the fortunes of the Governor of Scotland; nor will it suffer him to fall
+obscurely by the hands of a mere plunderer of merchants and seamen.--Rax
+me my long spear."
+
+As he spoke, the Governor himself stepped forward from the door in the
+poop, enveloped from head to foot in complete armour. He was a man of
+more than kingly presence--taller, by nearly a foot, than even the
+tallest man on deck, and broader across the shoulders by full six
+inches; but so admirably was his frame moulded, that, though his stature
+rose to the gigantic, no one could think of him as a giant. His visor
+was up, and exhibited a set of high handsome features, and two of the
+finest blue eyes that ever served as indexes to the feelings of a human
+soul. His chin and upper lip were thickly covered with hair of that
+golden colour so often sung by the elder poets; and a few curling locks
+of rather darker shade escaped from under his helmet. A man of middle
+stature and grave saturnine aspect, who wore a monk's frock over a coat
+of mail, came up behind him.
+
+"What is to befall us now, cousin Clelland?" said the Governor. "Does
+not the truce extend over the channel, think you?"
+
+"Ah, these are not English enemies, noble sir," replied the master. "We
+have fallen on the fleet of the infamous Thomas of Chartres."
+
+"And who is Thomas of Chartres?" asked the Governor.
+
+"A cruel and bloodthirsty pirate--the terror of these seas for the last
+sixteen years. Wo is me!--we have neither force enough to fight, nor
+wind to bear us away!"
+
+"Two large vessels," said the Governor, stepping up to the side, "full
+of armed men, too; but we muster fifty, besides the sailors; and, if
+they attempt boarding us, it must be by boat. Is it not so, master? The
+calm which fixes us here, must prevent them from laying alongside and
+overmastering us."
+
+"Ah, yes, noble sir," said the master; "but we see only a part of the
+fleet."
+
+"Were there ten fleets," exclaimed Clelland, impatiently, "I have met
+with as great odds ashore--and here comes Crawford."
+
+The door in the poop was again thrown open, and from forty to fifty
+warriors, in complete armour, headed by a tall and powerful-looking man,
+came crowding out, and then thronged around the masts, to disengage
+their spears. They were all robust and hardy-looking men--the flower
+apparently of a country side; and the coolness and promptitude with
+which they ranged themselves round their leader, to wait his commands,
+shewed that it was not now for the first time they had been called on to
+prepare for battle. They were, in truth, tried veterans of the long and
+bloody struggle which their country had maintained with Edward--men who,
+ere they had united under a leader worthy to command them, had resisted
+the enemy individually, and preserved, amid their woods and fastnesses,
+at least their personal independence. Such a party of such men, however
+great the odds opposed to them, could not, in any circumstances, be
+deemed other than formidable.
+
+"We are not born for peace, countryman," said the Governor--"war follows
+us even here. Meanwhile, lie down, that the enemy mark not our numbers.
+That foremost vessel is lowering her boat, and yonder tall man in
+scarlet, who takes his seat in the bows, seems to be a leader."
+
+"It is Thomas of Chartres, himself," said the master. "I know him well.
+Some five-and-twenty years ago, we sailed together from Palestine."
+
+"And what," asked the Governor, "could have brought a false pirate
+there?"
+
+"He was no false pirate then," replied the master, "but a true Christian
+knight; and bravely did he fight for the sepulchre. But, on his return
+to France, where he had been pledged to meet with his lady-love, he fell
+under the displeasure of the King, his master; and, ever since, he has
+been a wanderer and a pirate. You will see, as he approaches, the
+scallop in his basnet; and be sure he will be the first man to board
+us."
+
+"Excellent," exclaimed the Governor, gaily; "we shall hold him hostage
+for the good behaviour of his fleet. Mark me, cousin Crawford. His barge
+shoves off, and the men bend to their oars. He will be here in a
+twinkling. Do you stand by our good Ancient--would there were but wind
+enough to unfurl it!--and the instant he bids us strike, why, lower it
+to the deck; but be as sure you hoist it again when you see him fairly
+aboard. And you, dear Clelland, do you take your stand here on the deck
+beside me, and see to it, when I am dealing with the pirate, that you
+keep your long spear between us and his crew. It will be strange if he
+boast of his victory this bout."
+
+The men, at the command of their leader, had prostrated themselves on
+the deck, while his two brethren in arms, Crawford and Clelland,
+stationed themselves at his bidding--the one on the vessel's poop,
+directly under the pennon, the other at his side in the midships. The
+pirate's barge, glittering to the sun with arms and armour, and crowded
+with men, rowed lustily towards them; but, while yet a full hundred
+yards away, a sudden breeze from the west began to murmur through the
+shrouds, and the bellying sails swelled slowly over the side.
+
+"Heaven's mercy be praised!" exclaimed the master, "we shall escape them
+yet. Lay her easy to the wind, good Crawford--lay her easy to the wind,
+and we shall bear out through them all."
+
+"Nay, cousin, nay," said the Governor, his eyes flashing with eagerness,
+"the pirate must not escape us so. Lay the vessel to. Turn her head full
+to the wind. And you, captain, draw off your men to the hold. We must
+not lose our good sailors; and these woollens of yours will scarcely
+turn a French arrow. Nay, 'tis I who am master now"--for the old man
+seemed disposed to linger. "I may resign my charge, perhaps, by and by;
+but you must obey me now."
+
+The master and his sailors left the deck. The barge of the pirate came
+sweeping onward till within two spears' length of the vessel, and then
+hailed her with no courtly summons of surrender. "Strike, dogs, strike!
+or you shall fare the worse!" It was the pirate himself who spoke, and
+Crawford, at his bidding, pulled down the Ancient. The barge dashed
+alongside. Thomas of Chartres, a very tall and very powerful man, seized
+hold of the bulwark rail with one hand, and bearing a naked sword in the
+other, leaped fearlessly aboard, within half a yard of where the
+Governor stood, half-concealed by the shrouds and the bulwarks. In a
+moment the sword was struck down, and the intruder locked in the
+tremendous grasp of the first champion of his time. Crawford hoisted the
+Ancient, yard-high, to the new-risen breeze; while Clelland struck his
+long spear against the pirate who had leaped on the gunwale to follow
+his leader, with such hearty good-will that the steel passed through
+targe and corselet, and he fell back a dead man into the boat. In an
+instant the concealed party had sprung from the deck, and fifty Scottish
+spears bristled over the gunwale, interposing their impenetrable hedge
+between the pirate crew and their leader. For a moment, the latter had
+striven to move his antagonist; but, powerful and sinewy as he was, he
+might as well have attempted to uproot an oak of an hundred summers.
+While yet every muscle was strained in the exertion, the Governor swung
+him from off his feet, suspended him at arm's length for full half a
+moment in the air, and then dashed him violently against the deck. A
+stream of blood gushed from mouth and nostril, and he lay stunned and
+senseless where he fell. Meanwhile, the crew of the barge, taken by
+surprise, and outnumbered, shoved off a boat's length beyond reach of
+the spears, and then rested on their oars.
+
+"He revives," said the warrior in the monk's frock, going up to the
+fallen pirate. "Reiver though he be, he has fought for the holy
+sepulchre, and has worn golden spurs."
+
+"I will deal with him right knightly," said the Governor. "Yield thee,
+Sir Thomas of Chartres," he continued, bending over the prisoner, and
+holding up a dagger to his face--"yield thee true hostage for the good
+conduct of thy fleet--or shall I call the confessor?"
+
+"I yield me true hostage," said the fallen man. "But who art thou,
+terrible warrior, that o'ermasterest De Longoville of France as if he
+were a stripling of twelve summers? Art Wallace, the Scottish
+Champion!"
+
+"Thou yieldest, De Longoville," said the Governor, "to Sir William
+Wallace of Elderslie. But how is it that I meet, in the infamous Thomas
+of Chartres, that true soldier of the Cross, De Longoville? I have heard
+minstrels sing of thy deeds against the Saracen, Sir Knight, while I was
+yet a boy; and yet here art thou now, the dread of the wandering sailor
+and the merchant--a chief among thieves and pirates."
+
+"Alas! noble Wallace, thou sayest too truly," said Sir Thomas; "but yet
+wouldst thou deem me as worthy of pity as of censure, didst thou but
+know all, and the remorse I even now endure. For a full year have I
+determined to quit this wild, unknightly mode of life, and go a pilgrim
+as of old; not to fight for the sepulchre--for the battles of the Cross
+are over--not to fight, but to die for it. But I accept, noble champion,
+this my first defeat on sea, as a message from heaven. Accept of me as
+true soldier under thee, and I will fight for thee in thy country's
+quarrel, to the death."
+
+"Most willingly, brave De Longoville," said the Governor, as he raised
+him from the deck; "Scotland needs sorely the use of such swords as
+thine."
+
+"And deem not her cause less holy," said the monk--for monk he was, the
+well-known Chaplain Blair--"deem not her cause less holy than that of
+the sepulchre itself; nor think that thou shalt eradicate the stain of
+past dishonour less surely in her battles. The cause of justice, De
+Longoville, is the cause of God, contend for it where we may."
+
+Wallace returned to De Longoville the sword of which he had so lately
+disarmed him; and the pirate admiral, on learning that the champion was
+bound for Rochelle, issued orders to his fleet, which, now that the mist
+rose, was found to consist of six large vessels, to follow close in
+their wake. The breeze blew steadily from the north-west, and the ships
+went careering along, each in her own long furrow of white, towards the
+port of their destination; the pirate vessels keeping aloof full two
+bowshots from the Scotsman--for so De Longoville had ordered, to prevent
+suspicion of treachery. He had set aside his armour, and now appeared to
+his new associates as a man of noble and knightly bearing, tall and
+stalwart as any warrior aboard, save the Governor; and, though his hair
+was blanched around his temples, and indicated the approach of age, the
+light step and quick sparkling eye gave evidence that his vigour of
+frame still remained undiminished. He sat apart, with the Governor and
+his two kinsmen, Clelland and Crawford, in the cabin under the poop. It
+was a rude, unornamented apartment, as might be expected, from the
+general appearance of the vessel; but the profusion of arms and pieces
+of armour which hung from the sides, glittering to the light that found
+entrance through a casement in the deck, bestowed on the place an air of
+higher pretension. A table with food and wine was placed before the
+warriors.
+
+"It is now twenty-six years, or thereby," said De Longoville, "since I
+quitted Palestine for France, with the good Louis. I had fought by his
+side on the disastrous field of Massouna, and did all that a man of
+mould might to rescue him from the Saracens, when he fell into their
+hands, exhausted by his wounds and his sore sickness. But that day was
+written a day of defeat and disaster to the soldiers of the Cross. Nor
+need I say how I took my stand, with the best of my countrymen, on the
+walls of Damietta, and maintained them for the good cause, despite of
+the assembled forces of the Moslem, until we had bought back our king
+from captivity, by yielding up the city we defended for his ransom. It
+is enough for a disgraced man and a captive to say that my services were
+not overlooked by those whose notice was most an honour; and that, ere I
+embarked for France, I received the badge of knighthood from the hand
+of the good Louis himself.
+
+"You all know of how different a character Charles of Anjou was from his
+brother the king. I had returned from the crusade rich, only in honour,
+and found the lady of my affections under close thrall by her parents,
+who had resolved that she should marry Loithaire, Lord of Languedoc. I
+knew that her heart was all my own; but I knew, besides, that I must
+become wealthy ere I could hope to compete for her with a rival such as
+Loithaire; and the good Pope Nicholas having made over the crown of the
+Two Sicilies to Charles of Anjou, in an evil hour I entered the army
+with which Charles was to wrest it from the bastard Manfred--having
+certain assurance, from the tyrant himself, that, if he succeeded, I
+should become one of the nobles of Sicily. We encountered Manfred at
+Beneventura, and the bastard was defeated and slain. But I must blush,
+as a knight, for the honour of knighthood--as a Frenchman, for the fair
+fame of my country--when I think of the cruelties which followed. Not
+the worst tyrants of old Rome could have surpassed Charles of Anjou in
+his butcheries. The blood plashed under the hoofs of his charger as he
+passed through the cities of his future kingdom; and, when he had borne
+down all opposition, 'twould seem as if, in his eagerness to destroy all
+who might resist, he had also determined to extirpate all who could
+obey. But his policy proved as unsound as 'twas cruel and unjust, as the
+terrible _Eve of the Vespers_ has since shown. The Princes of Germany,
+headed by the chivalrous Conradine of Swabia, united against us in the
+cause of the people. But the arms of France were again triumphant; the
+confederacy was broken, and the gallant Conradine fell into the hands of
+Charles. It was I, warriors of Scotland! to whom he surrendered; and I
+had granted him, as became a knight, an assurance of knightly
+protection. But would that my arms had been hewn off at the shoulders
+when I first beat down his sword, and intercepted his retreat! The
+infamous Charles treated my knightly assurance with scorn; and--can you
+credit such baseness, noble Wallace!--he ordered Conradine of Swabia--a
+true knight, and an independent prince--for instant execution, as if he
+were a common malefactor. My blood boils, even now, when I recall that
+terrible scene of injustice and cruelty. The soldiers of France crowded
+round the scaffold; and I was among them, burning with shame and rage.
+Ere Conradine bent him to the executioner, he took off his glove, and
+throwing it amongst us, adjured us, if we were not all as dead to honour
+as our leader, to bear it to some of his kinsmen, who would receive it
+as a pledge of investiture in his rights, and as beqeathing the
+obligation to revenge his death. Will you blame me, noble Wallace! that,
+Frenchman as I was, I seized the glove of Conradine, and fled the army
+of Charles; and that, ere I returned to France, I delivered it up to
+Pedro of Arragon, the near kinsman of the last Prince of Swabia?
+
+"My king and friend, the good Louis, had sailed from France for
+Palestine, on his last hapless voyage, ere I had executed my mission. On
+my return to France, however, I found a galley of Toulon on the eve of
+quitting port, to join with his fleet, then on the coast of Africa, and,
+snatching a hurried interview with the lady of my affections, maugre the
+vigilance of her relatives, I embarked to fight under Louis, as of old,
+for the blessed sepulchre. We landed near Tunis, and saw the tents of
+France glittering to the sun. But all was silent as midnight, and the
+royal standard hung reversed over the pavilion of the good Louis. He had
+died that morning of the plague; and his base and cruel brother, the
+false Charles of Anjou, sat beside the corpse. I felt that I had fallen
+among my enemies; for though the young King was there, he was weak and
+inexperienced, and open to the influence of his uncle. The first knight
+I met, as I entered the camp, was Loithaire of Languedoc--now the wily
+friend and counsellor of Charles. There were lying witnesses suborned
+against me, who accused me of the most incredible and unheard-of
+practices; and of these Loithaire was the chief. 'Twas in vain I
+demanded the combat, as a test of my innocence. The combat was denied
+me; my sword was broken before the assembled chivalry of France; my
+shield reversed; and sentence was passed that I should be burnt at a
+stake, and my ashes scattered to the four winds of heaven. But it was
+not written that I should perish so. Scarce an hour before the opening
+of the day appointed for my execution, I broke from prison, assisted by
+a brother soldier, whose life I had saved in Palestine, and escaped to
+France.
+
+"I was a broken and ruined man. But how wondrous the force of true
+affection! My Agnes knew this; and yet, knowing all, she contrived to
+elude her guardians, and fled with me to the sea-shore, where we
+embarked, in a ship of Normandy, for the south of Ireland. From that
+hour De Longoville has fought under no banner but his own. I renounced,
+in my anger, my allegiance to my country-nay, declared war with the
+sovereign who had so injured me. The years passed, and desperate and
+dishonoured men like myself came flocking to me as their leader, till
+not Philip himself, or my old enemy Charles, had more kingly authority
+on land than De Longoville on the sea. But let no man again deceive
+himself as I have done. I had reasoned on the lax morality and doubtful
+honour of kings, and asked myself why I might not, as the admiral and
+prince of my fleet, achieve a less guilty, though not less splendid
+glory than the bastard William of Normandy, or Edward of England, or my
+old enemy Charles of Anjou. But I have long since been taught that what
+were high achievements and honourable conquest in the admiral of a
+hundred vessels, is but sheer piracy in the captain of six. I can trust,
+however, that the last days of De Longoville may yet be deemed equal to
+the first; and that the middle term of his life may be forgiven him for
+its beginning and its close. Not a month since, I carried my wife and
+daughter to France, and took final leave of them, with the purpose of
+setting out on my pilgrimage to Palestine. That intention, noble
+Wallace! is now altered; and I must again seek them out, that they may
+accompany me to Scotland."
+
+"The foul stain of treason, brave Longoville, must be removed," said the
+Governor. "Charles of Anjou has long since gone to his account: does the
+Lord of Languedoc still survive!"
+
+"He still lives," replied the admiral; "his years do not outnumber my
+own."
+
+"Then must he either retract the vile calumny, or grant you the combat.
+The young Philip has pledged his knightly word, when he solicited the
+visit I am now voyaging to pay him, that he would grant me the first
+boon I craved in person, should it involve the alienation of his fairest
+province. That boon, brave De Longoville, will, at least, present you
+with the means of regaining your fair fame."
+
+De Longoville knelt on the cabin floor, and kissed the hand of the
+Governor. The conversation glided imperceptibly to other and lighter
+matters; time passed gaily in the recital of stories of chivalrous
+endurance or exploit; and the gale, which still blew steadily from the
+north-west, promised a speedy accomplishment of their voyage. For four
+days they sailed without shifting back or lowering sail; and, on the
+morning of the fifth, cast anchor in the harbour of Rochelle.
+
+On the evening of the second day after their arrival, a single knight
+was pricking his steed through one of the glades of the immense forest
+which, at this period, covered the greater part of the province of
+Poitiers. He had been passing, ever since morning, through what seemed
+an interminable wilderness of wood--here clustered into almost
+impenetrable thickets shagged with an undergrowth of thorn, there
+opening into long bosky glades and avenues that seemed, however, only to
+lead into recesses still more solitary and remote than those that
+darkened around him. During the early part of the day, the sun had
+looked down gaily among the trees, checkering the sward below with a
+carpeting of alternate light and shadow; and the knight, a lover of
+falconry and the chase, had rode jocundly on through the peopled
+solitude; ever and anon grasping his spear, with the eager spirit of the
+huntsman, as the fawn started up beside his courser, and shot like a
+meteor across the avenue, or the wild boar or wolf rustled in the
+neighbouring brake. Towards evening, however, the eternal sameness of
+the landscape had begun to fatigue him; the sun, too, had disappeared,
+long before his setting, in a veil of impenetrable vapour, mottled with
+grey, ponderous clouds, betokening an approaching storm; and the
+horseman pressed eagerly onward, in the hope of reaching, ere its
+bursting, the hostelry in which he had purposed to pass the evening. He
+had either, however, mistaken his way or miscalculated his distance; for
+after passing dell and dingle, glade and thicket, in monotonous
+succession, for hours on hours, the forest still seemed as dense and
+unending, and the hostelry as distant as ever. A brown and sleepy horror
+seemed to settle over the trees as the evening darkened; the thunder
+began to bellow in long peals, far to the south, and a few heavy drops
+to patter from time to time on the leaves, giving indication of the
+approaching deluge. The knight had just resigned himself to encounter
+all the horrors of the storm, when, on descending into a little bosky
+hollow, through which there passed a minute streamlet, he found himself
+in front of a deserted hermitage. It was a cell, opening, like an
+Egyptian tomb, in the face of a low precipice. A rude stone-cross,
+tapestried with ivy, rose immediately over the narrow door-way.
+
+"The saints be praised!" exclaimed the knight, leaping lightly from his
+horse. "I shall e'en avail myself of the good shelter they have
+provided. But thou, poor Biscay," he continued, patting his steed,
+"wouldst that thou wert with thy master, mine host of the Three _Fleurs
+de Lis!_--there is scant stabling for thee here. This way, however, good
+Biscay--this way. Thou must bide the storm as thou best may'st in yonder
+hollow of the rock." And, leading the animal to the hollow, he fastened
+him to the stem of a huge ivy, and then entered the hermitage.
+
+It consisted of one small rude apartment, hewn, apparently with immense
+labour, in the living rock. A seat and bed of stone occupied the
+opposite sides; and in the extreme end, fronting the door, there was a
+rude image of the Virgin, with a small altar of mouldering stone, placed
+before it. The evening was oppressively sultry, and, taking his seat on
+the bedside, the knight unlaced and set aside his helmet, exhibiting to
+the fast-dying light, the brown curling hair and handsome features of
+our old acquaintance Clelland--for it was no other than he. The thunder
+began to roll in louder and longer peals, and the lightning to illumine,
+at brief intervals, every glade and dingle without, and every minute
+object within; when a loud scream of dismay and terror, blent with the
+infuriated howl of some wild animal, rose from the upper part of the
+dell, and Clelland had but snatched up his spear and leaped out into the
+storm, when a young female, closely pursued by an enormous wolf, came
+rushing down the declivity, in the direction of the hermitage; but, in
+crossing the little stream, overcome apparently by fatigue and terror,
+she stumbled and fell. To interpose his person between the poor girl and
+her ravenous pursuer was with Clelland the work of one moment; to make
+such prompt and efficient use of his spear that the steel head passed
+through and through the monster, and then buried itself in the earth
+beneath, was his employment in the next. The black blood came spouting
+out along the shaft, crimsoning both his hands to the wrists; and the
+transfixed savage, writhing itself round on the wood in its mortal
+agony, and gnashing its immense fangs, just uttered one tremendous howl
+that could be heard even above the pealing of the thunder, and then
+belched out his life at his feet. He raised the fallen girl, who seemed
+for a moment to have sunk into a state of partial swoon, and,
+disengaging his good weapon from the bleeding carcass, he supported her
+to the hermitage in the rock.
+
+She was attired in the garb of a common peasant of the age and country;
+but there was even yet light enough to shew that her beauty was of a
+more dignified expression than is almost ever to be found in a
+cottage--exquisite in colour and form as that which we meet with in the
+latter, may often be. There was a subdued elegance, too, in her few
+brief, but earnest expressions of gratitude to her deliverer, that
+consorted equally ill with her attire. On entering the hermitage, she
+knelt before the altar, and prayed in silence; while Clelland took his
+seat on the stone couch where he had before placed his helmet, leaving
+to his new companion the settle on the opposite side. Meanwhile the
+storm without had increased tenfold. The thunder rolled overhead, peal
+after peal, without break or pause; so that the outbursting of every
+fresh clap was mingled with the echoes in which the wide-spread forest
+had replied to the last. At times, the opposite acclivity, with all its
+thickets, seemed as if enveloped in an atmosphere of fire--at times one
+immense seam of forked lightning came ploughing the pitchy gloom of the
+heavens, from the centre to the horizon. The wild beasts of the forest
+were abroad. Clelland could hear their fierce howlings mingled with the
+terrific bellowings of the heavens. The dead sultry calm was suddenly
+broken. A hurricane went raging through the woods. There was a creaking,
+crackling, rushing sound among the trees, as they strained and quivered
+to the blast; and a roaring, like that of some huge cataract, showed
+that a waterspout had burst in the upper part of the dell, and that the
+little stream was coming down in thunder--a wide and impetuous torrent.
+Clelland's fair companion still remained kneeling before the altar.
+'Twould seem as her prayer of thanks for her great deliverance had
+changed into an earnest and oft-reiterated petition for still further
+protection.
+
+In a pause of the storm, the frightful howlings of a flock of wolves
+were heard rising from over the hermitage, as if hundreds had assembled
+on its roof of rock. Clelland sprung from his seat, and, grasping his
+spear, stood in the doorway.
+
+"We shall have to bide siege," he said to his companion. "I knew not
+that these fierce creatures mustered so thickly here."
+
+"Heaven be our protection!" said the maiden. "They fill every recess of
+the forest. I had left my mother's this evening for but an
+instant--'twas in quest of a tame fawn--when the monster from whose
+murderous fangs you delivered me, started up between me and my home; and
+I had to fly from instant destruction into the thick of the forest."
+
+"And so your place of residence is quite at hand?" said Clelland. "In
+the course of a long day's journey, I have not met with a single human
+habitation."
+
+"The hermitage," replied the maiden, "is but a short half-mile from my
+mother's--would that we were but safe there!"
+
+As she spoke, the howling of the wolves burst out again, in frightful
+chorus, from above, and at least a score of the ravenous animals came
+leaping down over the rock, brushing in their descent the ivy and the
+underwood. Clelland couched his spear, so that nothing could enter by
+the narrow doorway without encountering its sharp point. But the wolves
+came not to the attack; and their yells and howlings from the hollow of
+the rock, blent with the terrified snortings and pawings of poor Biscay,
+shewed that they were bent on an easier conquest, and bulkier, though
+less noble prey. The animal, in his first struggle, broke loose from his
+fastenings, and went galloping madly past; and an intensely bright flash
+of lightning, that illumined the whole scene of terror without, shewed
+him in the act of straining up the opposite bank, with a huge wolf
+fastened to his lacerated back, and closely pursued by full twenty more.
+
+It was, in truth, a night of dread and terror. Towards morning, however,
+the storm gradually sunk into a calm as dead as that which had preceded
+it, and a clear, starry sky looked down on the again silent forest. The
+maiden, now that there was less of danger, was rendered thoroughly
+unhappy by thoughts of her mother. She had left her, she said, but for
+an instant--left her solitary in her dwelling; and how must she have
+passed so terrible a night! Clelland strove to quiet her fears. There
+was a little cloud in the east, he said, already reddening on its lower
+edge; in an hour longer, it would be broad day, and he could then
+conduct her to her mother's.
+
+"You have not always worn such a dress as that which you now wear," he
+continued; "nor have you spent all your days on the edge of the forest.
+Does your father still live?"
+
+There was a pause for a moment.
+
+"I am a native of France," she at length said; "but I have passed most
+of my time in other countries. My father, in fulfilment of a vow, is now
+bound on a pilgrimage to Palestine."
+
+"And may I not crave your name?" asked Clelland.
+
+"My name," she replied, "is Bertha de Longoville. Brave and courtly
+warrior, but for whose generous and knightly daring I would have found
+yester-evening a horrid tomb in the ravenous maw of the wolf, do not, I
+pray you, ask me more. A vow binds me to secrecy for the time."
+
+"Nay, fear not, gentle maiden," said Clelland, "that what you but wish
+to keep secret, I shall once urge you to reveal. But hear me, lady, and
+then judge how far I am to be trusted. You are the only daughter of Sir
+Thomas de Longoville, once a true soldier of the blessed Cross, but, in
+his latter days, less fortunate in his quarrels. Your father is now in
+France, and in two weeks hence will be in Paris."
+
+"Saints and angels!" exclaimed the maiden, "he has fallen into the hands
+of his enemies!"
+
+"Not so, lady; he is among his best friends. The knightly word of Sir
+William Wallace of Elderslie, who never broke faith with friend or
+enemy, is pledged for his safe-keeping. With my kinsman, he is secure of
+at least safety--perhaps even of grace and pardon. But the day has
+broken, maiden; suffer me to conduct you to your mother's."
+
+They left the hermitage together, and ascended the side of the dell. As
+they passed the hollow in the rock, a bright patch of blood caught the
+eye of Clelland.
+
+"Ah, poor Biscay!" he exclaimed; "there is all that now remains of him;
+and how to procure another steed in this wild district, I know not. My
+kinsman will be at Paris long ere his herald gets there. Well, there
+have been greater mishaps. Yonder is the carcass of the wolf I slew
+yester-evening, half eaten by his savage companions."
+
+The morning, we have said, was calm and still; but the storm of the
+preceding night had left behind it no doubtful vestiges of its fury.
+The stream had fallen to its old level, and went tinkling along its
+channel, with a murmur that only served to shew how complete was the
+silence; but the banks were torn and hollowed by the recent torrent, and
+tangled wreaths of brushwood and foliage lay high on the sides of the
+dell. The broken and ragged appearance of the forest gave evidence of
+the force of the hurricane. The fallen trees lay thick on the sides of
+the more exposed acclivities--some reclining like spears, half bent to
+the charge, athwart the spreading boughs of such of their neighbours as
+the storm had spared; others lay as if levelled by the woodman, save
+that their long flexile roots had thrown up vast fragments of turf,
+resembling the broken ruins of cottages. And, in an opening of the wood,
+a gigantic oak, the slow growth of centuries, lay scattered over the
+soil, in raw and splintery fragments, that gave strange evidence of the
+irresistible force of the agent employed in its destruction. The trees
+opened as they advanced, and they emerged from the forest as the first
+beams of the sun had begun to glitter on the topmost boughs. A low,
+moory plain, walled in by a range of distant hills, and mottled with a
+few patches of corn, and a few miserable cottages, lay before them. A
+grey detached tower, somewhat resembling that of an English village
+church, rose on the forest edge, scarce a hundred yards away.
+
+"Yonder tower, Sir Knight," said the maiden, "is the dwelling of my
+mother. Alas! what must she not have endured during the protracted
+horrors of the night!"
+
+"There is, at least, joy waiting her now," said Clelland; "and all will
+soon be well."
+
+They approached the tower. It was a small and very picturesque erection,
+of three low stories in height, with projecting turrets at the front
+corners, connected by a hanging bartizan, over which there rose a sharp
+serrated gable, to the height of about two stories more. A row of
+circular shot-holes, and a low, narrow door-way, were the only openings
+in the lower storey--the few windows in the upper, long and narrow, and
+scarce equal in size to a Norman shield, were thickly barred with iron.
+The building had altogether a dilapidated and deserted appearance; for
+the turrets were broken-edged and mouldering, and some of the large
+square flags had slidden from off the stone roof, and lay in the moat,
+which, from a reservoir, had degenerated into a quagmire, mantled over
+with aquatic plants, and with, here and there, a bush of willow
+springing out from the sides. A single plank afforded a rather doubtful
+passage across; and the iron-studded door of the fortalice lay wide
+open. Clelland hung back as the maiden entered.
+
+"My daughter! my Bertha!" exclaimed a female voice from within; "and do
+you yet live! and are you again restored to me!"
+
+The Knight entered, and found the maiden in the embrace of her mother.
+
+"That I still live," said Bertha, "I owe it to this brave and courtly
+knight. But for his generous daring, your daughter would have found
+strange burial in the ravenous maw of a wolf."
+
+The mother turned round to Clelland, and grasped his mailed hand in both
+hers.
+
+"The saints be your blessing and reward!" she exclaimed; "for I cannot
+repay you. God himself be your reward!--for earth bears no price
+adequate to the benefit. You have restored to the lonely and the broken
+in spirit her only stay and comfort."
+
+"Nay, madam," said Clelland, "I would have done as much for the meanest
+serf; for Bertha de Longoville I could have laid down my life."
+
+The mother again grasped his hand. She was a tall and a still beautiful
+woman, though considerably turned of forty, and though she yet bore
+impressed on her countenance no unequivocal traces of the distress of
+the night. She told them of her sufferings; and was made acquainted in
+turn with the frightful adventure in the hermitage, and, more startling
+still, with the resolution of her husband to confront his calumniators
+at the court of France.
+
+"We must set out instantly on our journey to Paris, Bertha," said the
+matron; "your father, in his imminent peril, must not lack some one, at
+least to comfort, if not to assist him."
+
+"Nay," said Clelland, "ere your setting out, you must first take rest
+enough, to recover the fatigues and watching of the night. And, besides,
+how could two unprotected females travel through such a country as this?
+Hear me, lady: I was hastening to Paris in advance of my party; but now
+that I have missed my way and lost my good steed, they will be all there
+before me. It matters but little. My kinsman can well afford wanting a
+herald. I shall cast myself on your hospitality for the day; and,
+to-morrow, should you feel yourself fully recovered, you shall set out
+for Paris, under such convoy as I can afford you."
+
+Both ladies expressed their warmest gratitude for the kind and generous
+offer; and there was that in the thanks of the younger which Clelland
+would have deemed price sufficient for a service much less redolent of
+pleasure than that he had just tendered. She was in truth one of the
+loveliest women he had ever seen; tall and graceful, and with a
+countenance exquisite in form and colour. But, with all of the bodily
+and the material that constitutes beauty, it was mainly to expression,
+that index of the soul, that she owed her power. There was a steady
+light in the dark hazel eye, joined to an air of quiet, unobtrusive
+self-possession, which seemed to sit on the polished and finely formed
+forehead, that gave evidence of a strong and equable mind; while the
+sweet smile that seemed to lurk about the mouth, and the air of softness
+spread over the lower part of the face, shewed that there mingled with
+the stronger traits of her character the feminine gentleness and
+sweetness of disposition, so fascinating in the sex. A little girl from
+one of the distant cottages entered the building with a milking pail in
+her hands.
+
+"Ah, my good Annette," said the matron, "you left me by much too soon
+yester-evening; but it matters not now. You must busy yourself in
+getting breakfast for us--meanwhile, good Sir Knight, this way. The
+tower is a wild ruin, but all its apartments are not equally ruinous."
+
+They ascended, by a stair hollowed in the thickness of the wall, to an
+upper story. There was but one apartment on each floor; so that the
+entire building consisted but of four, and the two closet-like recesses
+in the turrets. The apartment they now entered was lined with dark oak;
+a massy table of the same material occupied the centre; and a row of
+ponderous stools, like those which Cowper describes in his "Task," ran
+along the wall. An immense chimney, supported by two rude pillars of
+stone, and piled with half-charred billets of wood, projected over the
+floor; the lintel, an oblong tablet about three feet in height, was
+roughened by uncouth heraldic sculptures of merwomen playing on harps,
+and two knights in complete armour fronting each other as in the
+tilt-yard. The windows were small and dark, and barred with iron; and
+through one of these that opened to the east, the morning sun, now risen
+half a spear's length over the forest, found entrance, in a square
+slanting rule of yellow light, which fell on the floor under a square
+recess in the opposite wall. The little girl entered immediately after
+the ladies and Clelland, bearing fire and fuel; a cheerful blaze soon
+roared in the chimney; and, as the morning felt keen and chill after the
+recent storm, they seated themselves before it. An hour passed in
+courtly and animated dialogue, and then breakfast was served up.
+
+The younger lady would fain have prolonged the conversation--for it had
+turned on the struggles of the Scots, and the wonderful exploits of
+Wallace--had not her mother reminded her that they stood much in need of
+rest to strengthen them for their approaching journey. They both,
+therefore, retired to their sleeping apartments in the turrets; while
+the knight, providing himself with a bow and a few arrows, sallied out
+into the forest. The practice in woodcraft, which he had acquired under
+his kinsman, who, in his reverses, could levy on only the woods and
+moors, stood him in so good stead, that, when dinner-time came round, a
+noble haunch of venison and two plump pheasants smoked on the board. But
+Bertha alone made her appearance. Her mother, she said, still felt
+fatigued, and slightly indisposed; but she trusted to be able to join
+them in the course of the evening.
+
+There was nothing Clelland had so anxiously wished for, when spending
+the earlier part of the day in the wood, as some such opportunity of
+passing a few hours with Bertha. And yet, now that the opportunity had
+occurred, he scarce knew how to employ it. The radiant smile of the
+maiden--her light, elegant form, and lovely features--had haunted him
+all the morning; and he wisely enough thought there could be but little
+harm in frankly telling her so. But, now that the fair occasion had
+offered, he found that all his usual frankness had left him, and that he
+could scarce say anything, even on matters more indifferent. And, what
+seemed not a little strange, too, the maiden was scarcely more at her
+ease than himself, and could find not a great deal more to say. Dinner
+passed almost in silence; and Bertha, rising to the square recess in the
+wall, drew from it a flagon filled with wine, which she placed before
+her guest and a vellum volume, bound in velvet and gold.
+
+"This," she said, "is a wonderful romaunt, written by a countryman of
+yours, of whom I have heard the strangest stories. Can you tell me aught
+regarding him?"
+
+"Ah!" said the knight, taking up the volume, "the book of Tristram. I am
+not too young, lady, to have seen the writer--the good Thomas of
+Erceldoune."
+
+"Seen Thomas of Erceldoune! Thomas the Rhymer!" exclaimed the lady. "And
+is it sooth that his prophecies never fail, and that he now lives in
+Elf-land?"
+
+"Nay, lady, the good Thomas sleeps in Lauderdale, with his fathers. But
+we trust much to his prophecies. They have given us heart and hope amid
+our darkest reverses. He predicted the years of oppression and suffering
+which, through the death of our good Alexander, have wasted our country;
+but he prophesied, also, our deliverance through my kinsman, Sir William
+of Elderslie. We have already seen much of the evil he foresaw, and
+much, also, of the good. Scotland, though still threatened by the power
+of Edward, is at this moment free."
+
+"I have long wished," said Bertha, "to see those warriors of Scotland
+whose fame is filling all Europe. And now that wish is gratified--nay,
+more than gratified."
+
+"You see but one of her minor warriors," said Clelland; "but at Paris
+you shall meet with the Governor himself. Your father, Bertha, should he
+succeed in clearing his fair fame--and I know he will--sets out with us
+for Scotland. Will not you and the lady your mother also accompany us?"
+
+"I had deemed my father bound on a pilgrimage to the holy sepulchre,"
+said Bertha.
+
+"But he has since thought," said Clelland, "how much better it were to
+live gloriously fighting in a just quarrel beside the first warrior of
+the world, than to perish obscurely in some loathsome pesthouse of the
+Far East. I myself heard him tender his services to my kinsman."
+
+"Then be sure," said Bertha, "my mother and I will not be separated from
+him. Might one find in Scotland, Sir Knight, some such quiet tower as
+this, where two defenceless women may bide the issue of the contest?"
+
+"Why defenceless, lady? There are many gallant swords in Scotland that
+would needs be beaten down ere you could come to harm. And why not now
+accept of Clelland's? Scotland has greater warriors and better swords;
+but, trust me, lady, she cannot boast of a truer heart. Accept of me,
+lady, as your bounden knight."
+
+A rich flush of crimson suffused the face and neck of the maiden, as she
+held out her hand to Clelland, who raised it respectfully to his lips.
+
+"I accept of thee, noble warrior," she said, "as true and faithful
+knight, seeing that thy own generous tender of service doth but second
+what Heaven had purposed, when, in my imminent peril in the wood, it
+sent thee to my rescue. Trust me, warrior, never yet had lady knight
+whom she respected more."
+
+Clelland again raised her hand to his lips.
+
+"I have a sister, lady," he said, "whose years do not outnumber your
+own. She lives lonely, since the death of my mother, in the home of my
+fathers--a tower roomier and stronger than this, and on the edge of a
+forest nearly as widely spread. You will be her companion, lady, and her
+friend; and your mother will be mistress of the mansion. On the morrow,
+we set out for Paris."
+
+The style in which the party travelled was sufficiently humble. Four
+small and very shaggy palfreys were provided from the neighbouring
+cottages: the ladies and Clelland were mounted on three of these; and
+the fourth, led by a hind, carried the luggage of the party. Before
+setting out, the lady had entrusted to the charge of the knight, a
+small, but very ponderous casket of ebony.
+
+"It needs, in these unsettled times," she said, "some such person to
+care for it; and Bertha and I would fare all the worse for wanting it."
+
+The journey was long and tedious, and the daily stages of the party
+necessarily short. Their route lay through a wild, half-cultivated
+country, which seemed to owe much to the hand of nature, but little to
+that of man. There was an ever-recurring succession, day after day, of
+dreary, wide-spreading forests, with comparatively narrow spaces
+between, which, from the imperfect and doubtful traces of industry which
+they exhibited, seemed as if but lately reclaimed from a state of
+nature. Groups of miserable serfs, bound to the soil even more rigidly
+than their fellow-slaves the cattle, were plying their unskilful and
+unproductive labours in the fields. They passed scattered assemblages of
+dingy hovels, with here and there a grim feudal tower rising in the
+midst--giving evidence, by the strength of its defences, of the
+insecurity and turbulence of the time. The travellers they met with were
+but few. Occasionally a strolling troubadour or harper accompanied them
+part of the way, on his journey from one baronial castle to another. At
+times, they met with armed parties of travelling merchants, bound for
+some distant fair; at times with disbanded artisans, wandering about in
+quest of employment; soldiers in search of a master; or pilgrims newly
+returned from Palestine, attired in cloaks of grey, and bearing the
+scallop in their caps. The hind, their attendant, bore in his scrip,
+from stage to stage, their provisions for the day; and their evenings
+were passed in some rude hostelry by the way-side. The third week had
+passed, ere, one evening on the edge of twilight, they alighted at the
+hostel of St Denis, and ascertained, from mine host, that they were now
+within half a stage of Paris.
+
+The hostel was crowded with travellers; and the ladies and Clelland, for
+the early part of the evening, were fain to take their places in the
+common room beside the fire. A young and handsome troubadour, whose
+jemmy jerkin, and cap of green, edged with silver, shewed that he was
+either one of the more wealthy of his class, or under the patronage of
+some rich nobleman, and who had courteously risen to yield place to
+Bertha, had succeeded in reseating himself beside the knight.
+
+"The hostel swarms with company," said Clelland, addressing him--"pray,
+good minstrel, canst tell me the occasion? Is there a fair holds
+to-morrow?"
+
+"Ah, Sir Knight," said the minstrel, "I should rather ask of thee,
+seeing thy tongue shews thee to be a Scot. Dost not know that thy
+countryman, the brave Wallace of Elderslie, is at court, and that all
+who can, in any wise, leave their homes for a season, are leaving them,
+to see him? It is not once in a lifetime that such a knight may be
+looked at. And, besides, have you not heard that the combat comes on
+to-morrow?"
+
+"I have heard of nothing," said Clelland; "my route has lain, of late,
+through the remoter parts of the country. What combat?"
+
+"Sir Thomas de Longoville, so long a true soldier of the cross--so long,
+too, a wandering pirate--has defied to mortal combat, Loithaire of
+Languedoc; and our fair Philip, through the intercession of Wallace, has
+granted him the lists."
+
+Both the ladies started at the intelligence; and the elder, wrapping up
+her face in her mantle, bent her head well nigh to her knee.
+
+"And how, good minstrel," said Bertha, in a voice tremulous from
+anxiety, "how is it thought the combat will go?"
+
+"That rests with Heaven, fair lady," said the minstrel. "Loithaire is
+known far and wide, as a striker in the lists; but who has not also
+heard of De Longoville, and his wars with the fierce Saracen? Many seem
+to think, too, that he has been foully injured by Loithaire. That soul
+of knightly honour, the good Lord Jonville, has already renewed his
+friendship with him, as his friend and comrade in the battles of
+Palestine, and will attend him to-morrow in the lists."
+
+"May all the saints reward him!" ejaculated the elder lady.
+
+"And at what hour, Sir Minstrel," asked the knight, "does the combat
+come on?"
+
+"At the turn of noon," replied the minstrel, "when the shadow first
+veers to the east. I go to Paris, to find new theme for a ballad, and to
+see the good Wallace, who is himself the theme of so many."
+
+The travellers were early on the road. With all their haste and anxiety,
+however, they saw the sun climbing towards the middle heavens, while the
+city was yet several miles distant. They spurred on their jaded
+palfreys, and entered the suburbs about noon. What was properly the city
+of Paris in this age, occupied one of the larger islands of the Seine,
+and was surrounded by a high wall, flanked at the angles by massy
+towers, and strengthened by rows of thickly-set buttresses; but, on
+either side the river, there were immense assemblages of the dirtiest
+and meanest hovels that the necessities of man had ever huddled
+together. The travellers, however, found but little time for remark in
+passing through. All Paris had poured out her inhabitants, to witness
+the combat, and they now crowded an upper island of the Seine, which the
+chivalry of the age had appropriated as a scene of games, tournaments,
+and duels. Clelland and the ladies had but reached the opposite bank,
+when a flourish of trumpets told them that the combatants had taken
+their places in the lists, and were waiting the signal to engage.
+
+"No further, ladies, no further," said the knight, "or we shall entangle
+ourselves in the outer skirts of the crowd, and see nothing. This way;
+let us ascend this eminence, and the scene, though somewhat distant,
+will be all before us."
+
+They ascended a smooth green knoll, the burial mound of some chieftain
+of the olden time, that overlooked the river. The island lay but a short
+furlong away. They could look over the heads of the congregated
+thousands into the open lists, and see the brilliant assemblage of the
+beauty and gallantry of France, which the fame of De Longoville and his
+opponent, and the singular nature of their quarrel, had drawn together.
+The sun glanced gaily on arms and armour, on many a robe of rich
+embroidery and many a costly jewel, and high over the whole, the
+oriflame of France, so famous in story, waved its flames of crimson and
+gold to the breeze. Knights and squires traversed the area, in gay and
+glittering confusion; and at either end there sat a warrior on
+horseback, as still and motionless as if sculptured in bronze. The
+champion at the northern end was cased from head to foot in sable
+armour, and beside him, under the blue pennon of Scotland, there stood a
+group of knights, who, though tall and stately as any in the lists,
+seemed lessened almost to boys in the presence of a gigantic warrior in
+bright mail, who, like Saul among the people, raised his head and
+shoulders over the proud crests of the assembled chivalry of France.
+
+"Yonder, ladies--yonder is my kinsman," exclaimed Clelland; "yonder is
+Wallace of Elderslie; and the champion beside him is Sir Thomas de
+Longoville."
+
+There was a second flourish of trumpets. Bertha flung herself on her
+knees on the sward, and raised her hands to her eyes. Her mother almost
+fainted outright.
+
+"Nay," said Clelland, "that is but the signal to clear the lists; the
+knights hurry behind the palisades, and the champions are left alone.
+Fear not, dearest Bertha!--there is a God in heaven, and----Ah, there is
+the third flourish! The champions strike their spurs deep into their
+chargers; and see how they rush forward, like thunder clouds before a
+hurricane! They close!--they close!--hark to the crash!--their steeds
+are thrown back on their haunches! Look up, Bertha! look up!--your
+father has won--he has won! Loithaire is flung from his saddle, the
+spear of De Longoville has passed through hauberk and corslet; I saw the
+steel head glitter red at the felon's back. Look up, ladies! look
+up!--De Longoville is safe; nay, more--restored to the honour and fair
+fame of his early manhood. Let us hasten and join him, that we may add
+our congratulations to those of his friends."
+
+Why dwell longer on the story of Thomas de Longoville? No Scotsman
+acquainted with Blind Harry need be told how frequent and honourable the
+mention of his name occurs in the latter pages of that historian.
+Scotland became his adopted country, and well and chivalrously did he
+fight in her battles; till, at length, when well nigh worn out by the
+fatigues and hardships of a long and active life, the decisive victory
+at Bannockburn gave him to enjoy an old age of peace and leisure, in the
+society of his lady, on the lands of his son-in-law. Need we add it was
+the gallant Clelland who stood in this relation to him? The chosen
+knight of Bertha had become her favoured lover, and the favoured lover a
+fond and devoted husband. Of the Governor more anon. There was a time,
+at least, when Scotsmen did not soon weary of stories of the Wight
+Wallace.
+
+
+
+
+THE FUGITIVE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+When Prince Charles Edward, at the head of his hardy Highlanders, took
+up his head-quarters in Edinburgh, issuing proclamations and holding
+levees, amongst those who attended the latter was a young Englishman,
+named Henry Blackett, then a student at the university, and the son of a
+Sir John Blackett of Winburn Priory, in Cheshire. His mother had been a
+Miss Cameron, a native of Inverness-shire, and the daughter of a poor
+but proud military officer. From her he had imbibed principles or
+prejudices in favour of the house of Stuart; and when he had been
+introduced to the young adventurer at Holyrood, and witnessed the zeal
+of his army, his enthusiasm was kindled--there was a romance in the
+undertaking which pleased his love of enterprise, and he resolved to
+offer his sword to the Prince, and hazard his fortunes with him. The
+offer was at once graciously and gratefully accepted, and Henry Blackett
+was enrolled as an officer in the rebel army.
+
+He followed the Prince through prosperity and adversity, and when
+Charles became a fugitive in the land of his fathers, Henry Blackett was
+one of the last to forsake him. He, too, was hunted from one
+hiding-place to another; like him whom he had served, he was a fugitive,
+and a price was set upon his head.
+
+As has been stated, he imbibed his principles in favour of the house of
+Stuart from his mother; but she had been dead for several years. His
+father was a weak man--one of whom it may be said that he had no
+principles at all; but being knighted by King George, on the occasion
+of his performing some civic duty, he became a violent defender of the
+house of Brunswick, and he vowed that, if the law did not, he would
+disinherit his son for having taken up arras in defence of Charles. But
+what chiefly strengthened him in this resolution, was not so much his
+devotion for the reigning family, as his attachment to one Miss Norton,
+the daughter of a Squire Norton of Norton Hall. She was a young lady of
+much beauty, and mistress of what are called accomplishments; but, in
+saying this much, I have recorded all her virtues. Her father's
+character might be summed up in one brief sentence--he was a deep,
+designing, needy villain. He was a gambler--a gentleman by birth--a
+knave in practice. He had long been on terms of familiarity with Sir
+John Blackett--he knew his weakness, and he knew his wealth, and he
+rejoiced in the attachment which he saw him manifesting for his
+daughter, in the hope that it would be the means of bringing his estates
+within his control. But the property of Sir John being entailed, it
+consequently would devolve on Henry as his only surviving son. He,
+therefore, was an obstacle to the accomplishment of the schemes on which
+Norton brooded; and when the latter found that he had joined the army of
+the young Chevalier, he was chiefly instrumental in having his name
+included in the list of those for whose apprehension rewards were
+offered; and he privately, and at his own expense, employed spies to go
+in quest of him. He also endeavoured to excite his father more bitterly
+against him. Nor did his designs rest here--but, as he beheld the
+fondness of the knight for his daughter increase, he, with the cunning
+of a demon, proposed to him to break the entail; and when the other
+inquired how it could be done, he replied--"Nothing is more simple; deny
+him to be your heir--pronounce him illegitimate. There is no living
+witness of your marriage with his mother. The only document to prove it
+is some thumbed leaf in the register of an obscure parish church in the
+Highlands of Scotland; and we can secure it."
+
+To this most unnatural proposal the weak and wicked old man consented;
+and I shall now describe the means employed by Norton to become
+possessed of the parish register referred to.
+
+Squire Norton had a son who was in all respects worthy of such a
+father--he was the image of his mind and person. In short, he was one of
+the _things_ who, in those days, resembled those who in our own call
+themselves _men of the world_, forsooth! and who, under that
+name, infest and corrupt society--making a boast of their
+worthlessness--poisoning innocence--triumphing in their work of
+ruin--and laughing, like spirits of desolation, over the daughter's
+misery and disgrace, the father's anguish, the wretched mother's tears,
+and the shame of a family, which they have accomplished. There are such
+creatures, who disgrace both the soul and the shape of man, who are mere
+shreds and patches of debauchery--sweepings from the shops of the
+tailor, the milliner, and the hair-dresser--who live upon the plunder
+obtained under false pretences from the industrious--who giggle, ogle,
+pat a snuff-box, or affect to nod in a church, to be thought sceptics or
+fine gentlemen. One of such was young Norton; and he was sent down to
+Scotland to destroy the only proof which Henry Blackett, in the event of
+his being pardoned, could bring forward in support of his legitimacy.
+
+He arrived at a lonely village in Inverness-shire, near which the
+cottage formerly occupied by Major Cameron, the grandfather of Henry,
+was situated; and of whom he found that few of the inhabitants
+remembered more than that "there lived a man." Finding the only inn that
+was in the village much more cleanly and comfortable than he had
+anticipated, he resolved to make it his hotel during his residence, and
+inquired of the landlady if there were any one in the village with whom
+a gentleman could spend an evening, and obtain information respecting
+the neighbourhood.
+
+"Fu' shurely! fu' shurely, sir!" replied his Highland hostess--"there pe
+te auld tominie."
+
+"Who?" inquired he, not exactly comprehending her Celtic accent.
+
+"Wha put te auld tominie?" returned she; "an' a tiscreet, goot
+shentleman he pe as in a' te toun."
+
+"The dominie?--the dominie?" he repeated, in a tone of perplexity.
+
+"Oigh! oigh! te tominie," added she, "tat teaches te pits o' pairns, an'
+raises te psalm in te kirk."
+
+He now comprehended her meaning; and from her coupling the dominie's
+name with the kirk, believed that he might be of use to him in the
+accomplishment of his object, and desired that he might be sent for.
+
+"Oigh!" returned she, smiling, "an' he no pe lang, for he like te
+trappie unco weel."
+
+Within five minutes, Dugald Mackay, precentor, teacher, and parish-clerk
+of Glencleugh, entered the parlour of Mrs Macnab. Never was a more
+striking contrast exhibited in castle or in cottage. Here stood young
+Norton, bedecked with all the foppery of an exquisite of his day; and
+there stood Dugald Mackay, his thick bushy grey hair falling on his
+shoulders, holding in his hand a hat not half the size of his head,
+which had neither been made nor bought for him, and which had become
+brown with service, and was now stitched in many places, to keep it
+together. Round it was wrapped a narrow stripe of crape browner than
+itself, and over all winded several yards of gut and hair-line, with
+hooks attached, betokening his angling propensities. Dugald was a
+thickset old man, with a face blooming like his native heather. His feet
+were thrust into immense brogues, as brown as his hat, and their
+formidable patches shewed that their wearer could use the _lingle_ and
+_elshun_, although his profession was to "teach the young idea how to
+shoot." He wore tartan hose--black breeches, fastened at the knees by
+silver gilt buckles, and much the worse for the wear, while, from the
+accumulation of ink and dust, they might have stood upright. His vest
+was huge and double-breasted, its colour not recognised by painters; and
+his shoulders were covered by a very small tartan coat, the tails of
+which hardly reached his waist. Such was Dugald Mackay; and the youth,
+plying him with the bottle, endeavoured to ascertain how far he could
+render him subservient to his purpose.
+
+"You appear fond of angling," said Norton.
+
+"Fond o' fishing?" returned the man of letters; "ou ay; ou ay!--hur hae
+mony time filt te creel o' te shentlemen frae Inverness, for te
+sixpence, and te shilling, and te pig crown, not to let tem gaun pack
+wi' te empty pasket. And hur will teach your honour, or tress your
+honour's hooks, should you be stopping to fish. Here pe goot sport to
+your honour," continued he, raising a bumper to his lips.
+
+The other, glad to assign a plausible pretext for his visit, said that
+he had come a few days for the sake of fishing, and inquired how long
+his guest had been in the neighbourhood.
+
+"Hur peen schulemaister and parish-clerk in Glencleugh for forty year,"
+replied Dugald.
+
+"Parish-clerk!" said Norton, eagerly, and checking himself,
+continued--"that is--in the church you mean, you raise the tunes?"
+
+"Ou ay, hur nainsel' pe precenter too," answered Dugald; "put hur be
+schulemaister and parish-clerk into te pargain."
+
+"And what are your duties as parish-clerk?" inquired the other, in a
+tone of indifference.
+
+"Ou, it pe to keep te pooks wi' te marriages, te christenings, and te
+deaths. Here pe to your honour's very goot luck again," said he,
+swallowing another bumper.
+
+Thus the holder of the birch and parish chronicler began to help himself
+to one glass after another, until the candles began to dance reels and
+strathspeys before him. At length the angler, expressing a wish to see
+such a curiosity as the matrimonial and baptismal register of a hamlet
+so remote, out sallied Dugald, describing curved lines as he went, and
+shortly returned, bearing the eventful quartos under his arm. Norton
+looked through them, laughing, jesting, and professing to be amused, and
+his eye quickly fell upon the page which he sought. Dugald laughed,
+drank, and talked, until his rough head sank upon his breast, and
+certain nasal sounds gave notice that the schoolmaster was abroad. In a
+moment, Norton transferred the leaf which contained the certificate of
+Lady Blackett's marriage, from the volume to his pocket. His father had
+ordered him to destroy it; but the son, vicious as the father,
+determined to keep it, and to hold it over him as an instrument of
+terror to extort money. The dominie being roused to take one glass more
+by way of a night-cap, was led home, as usual, by Mrs Macnab's
+servant-of-all-work, who carried the volumes.
+
+Shortly after this, the marriage between Sir John Blackett and Miss
+Norton took place; her father rejoiced in the success of his schemes,
+and Henry was disinherited and disowned.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+While the latter events which we have recorded in the last chapter were
+taking place, Henry Blackett, the rebel soldier, was a fugitive, flying
+from hiding-place to hiding-place, seeking concealment in the mountains
+and in the glens, in the forest and crowded city, assuming every
+disguise, and hunted from covert to covert. A reward was not offered for
+his apprehension, in particular by government, but he was included
+amongst those whom loyal subjects were forbidden to conceal; and two
+emissaries, sent out by Norton, sought him continually, to deliver him
+up. Ignorant of his father's marriage, or of the villain's part he had
+acted towards him, though conscious of his anger at his having joined
+Prince Charles, he was wandering in Dumfries-shire, by the shores of the
+Solway, disguised as a sailor, and watching an opportunity to return
+home, when the hunters after his life suddenly sprang upon him,
+exclaiming--"Ha! Blackett, the traitor!--the five hundred pounds are
+ours!"
+
+Armed only with the branch of a tree, which he carried partly for
+defence, and as a walking-stick, he repelled them with the desperate
+fierceness of a man whose life is at stake. One he disabled, and the
+other being unable to contend against him singly, permitted him to
+escape. He rushed at his utmost speed across the fields for many miles,
+avoiding the highways and public paths, until he sank panting and
+exhausted on the ground. He had not lain long in this situation when he
+was discovered by a wealthy farmer, who was known in the neighbourhood
+by the appellation of "canny Willie Galloway."
+
+"Puir young chield," said Willie, casting on him a look of compassion,
+"ye seem sadly distressed. Do ye think I could be o' ony service to ye?
+From yer appearance, ye wadna be the waur o' a nicht's lodging, and I
+can only say that ye are heartily welcome to't."
+
+Henry had been so long the object of pursuit and persecution, that he
+regarded every one with suspicion; and starting to his feet and grasping
+the branch firmer in his hand, he said--"Know you what you say?--or
+would you betray the wretched?"
+
+"It is o' nae manner o' use gripping your stick," said Willie, calmly,
+"for I'm allooed to be a first-rate cudgel-player--the best atween
+Stranraer and Dumfries. But, as to kennin' what I said, I was offerin'
+ye a nicht's lodgings; and as to betrayin' the wretched, I wadna see a
+hawk strike doon a sparrow, not a spider a midge, if I could prevent
+it."
+
+"You seem honest," said Henry; "I am miserable, and will trust you."
+
+"Be thankit," answered the other; "I dare to say I'm as honest as my
+neebors; and, as ye seem in distress, I will be very happy to serve ye,
+if I can do't in a creditable way."
+
+Willie Galloway was a bachelor of five and forty, and his house was kept
+by an old woman, a distant relative, called Janet White. Henry
+accompanied him home, and communicated to him his story. Willie took a
+liking for him, and vowed that he would not only shelter him, while he
+had a roof over his head, but that he would defend him against every
+enemy, while he had a hand that he could lift; and, the better to ensure
+his concealment, he proposed that he should pass as his sister's son,
+and not even write to his father to intimate where he was, until the
+persecution against those who had "been _out_ with poor Charlie," was
+past.
+
+In the neighbourhood of Willie's farm, there resided an elderly
+gentleman, named Laird Howison. He was an eccentric but most
+kind-hearted man, of whom many believed and said that his imagination
+was stronger then his reason; and in so saying, it was probable that
+they were not far from the truth. But of that the reader will determine
+as he sees more of the laird. There resided with him a beautiful orphan
+girl, named Helen Marshall, the daughter of the late parish clergyman,
+and to whom he had been left guardian from her childhood. But, as she
+grew up in loveliness before him, she became as a dream of futurity that
+soothed and cheered his existence; and, although he was already on the
+wrong side of fifty, he resolved that, as soon as she was twenty-one,
+he would offer her his hand and fortune. Janet White, the housekeeper
+and relative of Willie Galloway, had nursed Helen in infancy; and the
+lovely maiden was, therefore, a frequent visitor at his house. She there
+met Henry, and neither saw nor listened to him with indifference; and
+her beauty, sense, and gentleness, made a like impression upon him.
+Willie, though a bachelor, had penetration enough to perceive that when
+they met there was meaning in their eyes; and he began to rally
+Henry--saying, "Now, there would be a match for ye!--when the storm has
+blawn owre your head, just tak ye that bonny Scotch lassie hame to
+England wi' ye as yer wife, and ye will find her a treasure, such as ye
+may wander the world round and no find her marrow."
+
+As their intimacy and affection increased, Henry communicated to Helen
+the secret of his birth and situation; and, like a true woman, she loved
+him the more for the dangers to which he was exposed. He had remained
+more than eight months with his friend and protector; and, imagining
+that the persecution against himself, and others who had acted in the
+same cause, was now abated in its fury, he forwarded a letter to his
+father, at Winburn Priory, announcing his intention of venturing home in
+a few days, and begging his forgiveness and protection, until his pardon
+could be procured. He, however, intimated to Willie Galloway, his desire
+to secure the hand of Helen before he left.
+
+"Weel, if she be agreeable," said Willie "--and I hae every reason to
+believe she is--I wadna blame ye for taking that step ava; for her auld
+gowk o' a guardian, Laird Howison, (though a very worthy man in some
+respecks), vows that he is determined to marry her himsel, as soon as
+she is ane and twenty; and, as he is up aboot London at present, ye
+couldna hae a better opportunity. Therefore, only ye and Helen say the
+word, and I'll arrange the business for ye in less than nae time."
+
+The fair maiden consented; a clergyman had joined their hands, and
+pronounced the benediction over them--the ceremony was concluded, but it
+was only concluded, when the two ruffians, who have been already
+mentioned as hired by Norton to search for him and secure his
+apprehension, and who before had met him by the side of the Solway,
+followed by two soldiers, burst into the apartment, crying--"Secure the
+traitor! It is he!--Harry Blackett!"
+
+Helen screamed aloud and clasped her hands.
+
+"Ye lie! ye lie!" cried Willie--"it is my sister's son--meddle wi' him
+wha daur, and us twa will fecht you four, even in the presence o' the
+minister."
+
+So saying, he seized hold of a chair, and raised it to repel them. Henry
+followed his example. The soldiers threateningly raised their fire-arms.
+Willie suddenly swang round the chair with his utmost strength, and
+dashed down their arms. Henry hastily kissed the brow of his fair bride,
+and, rushing through the midst of them, darted from the house, while
+Willie, as rapidly following him, closed the door behind him, and
+holding it fast, cried--"Run, Harry, my lad!--run for bare life, and
+I'll keep them fast here!"
+
+For several days, the soldiers searched the neighbourhood for the
+fugitive; but they found him not, and no one knew where he had fled.
+Within a week, Helen disappeared from Primrose Hall, the seat of her
+guardian, Laird Howison; and the general belief was, that she had set
+out for Cheshire, to the father of her bridegroom, to intercede with him
+to use his influence in his son's behalf. "And," said Willie, "if she
+doesna move him to forgie his son, and do his duty towards him, then I
+say that he has a heart harder than a whin-rock."
+
+But no one knew the object of her departure, nor whither she had gone.
+Laird Howison had not returned; and, after several weeks had passed, and
+Willie Galloway was unable to hear ought of either Helen or Henry, he
+resolved to proceed to Cheshire, to make inquiries after them; and for
+this purpose purchased an entire suit of new and fashionable raiment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+On a beautiful summer morning, an old man, slightly stooping in his
+gait, was slowly walking down a green lane which led in the direction
+from Warrington to Winburn Priory. Behind him, at a rapid pace, followed
+a younger man, of a muscular frame, exceedingly well-dressed, and
+carrying over his arm a thick chequered plaid, like those worn in the
+pastoral districts of Scotland. He overtook the elder pedestrian, and
+accosted him, saying--
+
+"Here's a bonny morning, freend."
+
+"Sir?" said the old man inquiringly, slightly lifting his hat, and not
+exactly comprehending his companion.
+
+"Losh, but he's a mannerly auld body that," thought the other; "I see
+the siller upon this suit o' claes has been weel-wared;" and added
+aloud, "I was observing it's a delightful morning, sir, and as
+delightful a country-side; it wad be a paradise, were it no sae flat."
+
+"Ah, sir!" replied the old man; "but I fear as how the country looks
+like a paradise without its innocence."
+
+"Ye talk very rationally, honest man," said the other, whom the reader
+will have recognised to be Willie Galloway; "and, if I am no mistaen, ye
+maun hae some cause to mak the remark. But, dear me, sir, only look
+round ye, and see the trees in a' their glory, the flowers in a' their
+innocence; or just look at the rowing burn there, wimplin alang by oor
+side, like refined silver, beneath a sun only less glorious than the
+Hand that made it; and see hoo the bits o' fish are whittering round,
+wagging their tails, and whisking back and forrit, as happy as kings!
+Look at the lovely and the cheerfu' face o' a' Nature--or just listen
+to the music o' thae sinless creatures in the hedges, and in the blue
+lift--and ye will say that, but for the inventions and deceitfulness o'
+man's heart, this earth wad be a paradise still. But I tell ye what,
+freend--I believe that were an irreligious man just to get up before
+sunrise at a season like this, and gang into the fields and listen to
+the laverock, and look around on the earth, and on the majesty o' the
+heavens rising, he wadna stand for half-an-hoor until, if naebody were
+seeing him, he would drap doun on his knees and pray."
+
+Much of Willie's sermon was lost on the old man; he, however,
+comprehended a part, and said, "Why, sir, I know as how I always find my
+mind more in tune for the service of the church, by a walk in the
+fields, and the singing of the birds, than by all the instruments of the
+orchestra."
+
+"Orchestra!" said Willie, "what do ye mean?--that's a strange place to
+gather devotion frae!"
+
+"The orchestra of the church," returned the other.
+
+"The orchestra o' the church!" said Willie, in surprise--"what's that? I
+never heard o't before. There's the poopit, and the precentor's desk,
+the pews and the square seats, and doun stairs and the gallery--but ye
+nonplus me about the orchestra."
+
+"Why, our lord of the manor," continued the old man, "is one who cares
+for nothing that's good, and he will give nothing; and as we are not
+rich enough to buy an organ, we have only a bass viol, two tenors, and a
+flute."
+
+"Fiddles and a flute in a place o' worship!" exclaimed Willie.
+
+"Yes, sir," replied the other, marvelling at his manner.
+
+"Weel," returned Willie, standing suddenly still, and striking his staff
+upon the ground, "that beats a'! And will ye tell me, sir, hoo it is
+possible to worship yer Creator by scraping catgut, or blawing wind
+through a hollow stick?"
+
+"Why, master," said the old man, "the use of instruments in worship is
+as old as the times of the prophets, and I can't see why it should be
+given up. But dost thou think, now, that thou couldst go into Chester
+cathedral at twilight, while the organ filled all round about thee with
+its deep music, without feeling in thy heart that thou wast in a house
+of praise. Why, sir, at such a time thou couldst not commit a wicked
+action. The very sound, while it lifted up thy soul with delight, would
+awe thee."
+
+When their controversy had ended, Willie inquired--"Do ye ken a family
+o' the name o' Blackett, that lives aboot this neeborhood?"
+
+"I should," answered the old man; "forty years did I eat of their
+bread."
+
+"Then, after sic lang service, ye'll just be like ane o' the family?"
+replied Willie.
+
+"Alas!" said the other, shaking his head.
+
+"Ye dinna mean to say," resumed Willie, in a tone of surprise, "that
+they hae turned ye aff, in your auld age, as some heartless wretch wad
+sell the noble animal that had carried him when a callant, to a cadger,
+because it had grown howe-backet, and lost its speed o' foot. But I hope
+that young Mr Henry had nae hand in it?"
+
+"Henry!--no! no!" cried the old man eagerly--"bless him! Did you know Mr
+Henry, your honour?"
+
+"I did," said Willie; "and I hae come from Scotland ance errand to see
+him."
+
+"But, sir," inquired the old man, tremulously, "do you know where to
+find him?"
+
+"I expect to find him, by this time, at his father's house."
+
+"Alas!" answered the old domestic, "there has been no one at the priory
+for more than twelve months. I don't know where the old knight is. Henry
+has not been here since he went to Edinburgh, and that is nigh to five
+years gone now."
+
+"Ye dumfounder me, auld man," exclaimed Willie; "but where, in the name
+o' guidness, where's the wife?--where's Mrs Blackett?"
+
+"You will mean your countrywoman, I suppose," said the other.
+
+"To be sure I mean her," said Willie--"wha else could I mean?"
+
+"Ah! wo is me!" sighed his companion, and he burst into tears as he
+spoke, "dost see the churchyard, just before us?--and they have raised
+no stone to mark the spot."
+
+"Dead!" ejaculated Willie, becoming pale with horror, and fixing upon
+his fellow-pedestrian a look of agony--"Ye dinna say--dead!"
+
+"Even so!--even so!" said the old domestic, sobbing aloud.
+
+"And hoo was it?" cried Willie; "was it a fair strae death--or just
+grief, puir thing--just grief?"
+
+"Why, I can't say how it was," answered his informant; "but I wish I
+durst tell all I think."
+
+"Say it!--say it!" exclaimed Willie, vehemently, "what do you mean by,
+if you durst say all you think? If there be the shadow o' foul play, I
+will sift it to the bottom, though it cost me a thousand pounds; and
+there is anither that will gie mair."
+
+"Ah, sir, I am but a friendless old man," replied the other, "that could
+not stand the weight of a stronger arm."
+
+"Plague take their arms!" cried Willie, handling his cudgel, as if to
+shew the strength of his own--"tell what ye think, and they'll have
+strong arms that dare touch a hair o' yer head."
+
+"Well, master," was the reply, "I don't like to say too much to
+strangers, but if thou makest any stay in these parts, I may tell thee
+something; and I fear that wherever poor Henry is, he is in need of
+friends. But perhaps your honour would wish to see her grave?"
+
+"Her grave!" ejaculated Willie--"yes! yes! yes!--her grave!--O misery!
+have I come frae Dumfries-shire to see a sicht like this?"
+
+The old man led the way over the stile, hanging his head and sighing as
+he went. Willie followed him, drawing his sleeve across his eyes, as was
+his custom when his heart was touched, and forgetting the dress of the
+gentleman which he wore, in the feelings of the man.
+
+"The family vault is in yonder corner," said his conductor, as they
+turned across the churchyard.
+
+"Save us, friend!" exclaimed Willie, looking towards the spot, "saw ye
+ever the like o' yon?--a poor miserable dementit creature, wringing his
+hands as though his heart would break!"
+
+"Tis he! 'tis he!" shouted the old man, springing forward with the
+alacrity of youth, "my child!--my dear young master!"
+
+"Oh! conscience o' man!" exclaimed Willie, "what sort o' a dream is
+this? It canna be possible! _Her_ dead, and _him_, oot o' his judgment,
+mourning owre her grave in the garb o' a beggar!"
+
+"Ha! discovered again!" cried Henry fiercely, and starting round as he
+spoke; but immediately recognising the old domestic, on whom time had
+not wrought such a metamorphosis as dress had upon Willie Galloway--"Ha,
+Jonathan! old Jonathan Holditch!" he added, "do I again see the face of
+a friend!" and instantly discovering Willie, he sprang forward and
+grasped his extended hand in both of his.
+
+The old man sat down upon the grave and wept.
+
+"Don't weep, Jonathan," said Henry, "I trust that we shall soon have
+cause to rejoice."
+
+"I wish a' may be richt yet," thought Willie; "I took him to be rather
+dementit at the first glance, and _rejoice_ is rather a strange word to
+use owre a young wife's grave. Puir fellow!"
+
+"Yes, Master Henry," said Jonathan, "I do rejoice that the worst is
+past; but I must weep too, for there be many things in all this that I
+do not understand."
+
+"Nor me either," said Willie; "but ye say ye think more than ye dare
+tell."
+
+"Why is it, Jonathan," continued Henry, "that there is no stone to mark
+my mother's grave? There is room enough in our burial place. Why is
+there nothing to her memory?" he continued, bending his eyes upon her
+sepulchre. "Her _memory_!" he added; "cold, cruel grave; and is memory
+all that is left me of such a parent? Is the dumb dust, beneath this
+unlettered stone--all!--all! that I can now call mother? Has she no
+monument but the tears of her only surviving child?"
+
+"A' about his mother," muttered Willie, "who has been dead for four
+years, and no a word aboot puir Helen! As sure as I'm a living man this
+is beyont my comprehension--I dinna think he can be _a'thegither
+there_!"
+
+Henry turned towards him and said, "I have much to ask, my dear friend,
+but my heart is so filled with griefs and forebodings already, that the
+words I would utter tremble on my tongue; but what of my Helen--tell me,
+what of her?"
+
+"She--she's--weel," gasped Willie, bewildered; "that is--I--I hope--I
+trust--that--oh, losh, Mr Blackett, I dinna ken whare I am, nor what I
+am saying, for my brain is as daized as a body's that is driven owre wi'
+a drift, and rowed amang the snaw! Has there been onybody buried here
+lately?"
+
+"Mr Galloway!--Mr Galloway!" exclaimed Henry, half-choked with
+agitation, and wringing his hand in his, while the perspiration burst
+upon his brow--"in the name of wretchedness--what--what do you mean?"
+
+"Oh, dinna speak to me!" said Willie, waving his hand; "ask that auld
+man."
+
+"Jonathan?" exclaimed Henry.
+
+"I don't know what the gentleman means," said the old man; "but no one
+has been buried here since your honoured mother, and that is four years
+ago."
+
+"And whase grave--whase grave did ye bring me to look at?" inquired
+Willie, eagerly.
+
+"My lady's," answered he.
+
+"Yer leddy's!" returned Willie--"do you mean Mr Blackett's mother?"
+
+"Whom else could I mean?" asked old Jonathan, in a tone of wonder.
+
+"Wha else could you mean!" repeated Willie; "then, be thankit! _she's_
+no dead!--ye say _she's_ no dead!" and he literally leapt for joy.
+
+"Who dead?" inquired the old man, with increased astonishment.
+
+"Wha dead, ye stupid auld body!--did I no say _his wife_, as plain as I
+could speak?"
+
+"_Whose_ wife?" inquired Jonathan, looking from Willie to his master in
+bewilderment.
+
+"Whose wife!" reiterated Willie, weeping, laughing, and twirling his
+stick; "shame fa' ye--ye may ask that noo, after knocking my heart oot
+o' the place o't wi' yer palaver. Whase wife do ye say?--ask Mr Henry."
+
+"Mr Galloway!" interrupted Henry, "am I to understand that you believed
+this to be the grave of my beloved Helen?--or, how could you suppose it?
+Has she left Primrose Hall?--or, has our marriage----Tell me all you
+know, for I wist not what I would ask."
+
+Willie then related to him what the reader already knows--namely, that
+she had left Dumfries-shire, and was supposed to have gone to his
+father's.
+
+"Blessings on the day that these eyes beheld the dear lady, then,"
+exclaimed old Jonathan; "for I could vow that she is under my roof now."
+
+"Under _your_ roof!" cried Henry.
+
+"Was ye doited, auld man, that ye didna tell me that before?" said
+Willie.
+
+"I knew no more of my young master's marriage, until just now, than
+these gravestones do," said Jonathan; "the dear lady who is with us told
+nothing to me. Only my wife told me that she knew she loved our young
+master."
+
+"But why is she lodging with you, Jonathan? I have learned that my
+father is abroad, and is it that he is soon expected home?"
+
+"A fever caused her to be an inmate of my poor roof," answered Jonathan,
+"after she had been rudely driven from the gate as a common beggar. But
+I am no longer thy father's servant--and I wish, for thy sake, I could
+forget he was thy father; for he has done that which might make the
+blessed bones beneath our feet start from their grave. And there is no
+one about the Priory now, but the creatures of the villain Norton."
+
+Henry entreated that the old man would not speak harshly of his father,
+though he had so treated them; and he briefly informed them, that, on
+flying from Scotland to escape his pursuers even at his father's lodge,
+he again met one of the individuals who had hunted him as "Blackett, the
+traitor," and who had attempted to seize him in the hour of his
+marriage--and that even there the cry was again raised against him; and
+a band, thirsting for his blood-money, joined in the pursuit. He had
+fled to the churchyard, and found concealment in the family vault, where
+he had remained until they then discovered him, as, in the early
+morning, he had ventured out.
+
+Willie counselled that there was now small vengeance to be apprehended
+from the persecution of the government; and when Jonathan stated that
+Sir John had married the daughter of Norton, and disinherited Henry by
+denying his marriage with his mother, Willie exclaimed--"I see it a', Mr
+Henry, just as clear as the A, B, C. This rascal, ye ca' Norton, or your
+faither, (forgie me for saying sae,) has employed the villains wha
+hunted for yer life; it has been mair them than the government that has
+been to blame. Therefore, my advice is, let us go and drive the thieves
+out o' the house by force."
+
+Henry, who was speechless with grief, horror, and disgust, agreed to the
+proposition of his friend, and they proceeded to the Priory by a shorter
+road than the lodge.
+
+Henry knocked loudly at the door, which was opened by a man-servant, who
+attempted to shut it in his face; but, in a moment the door was driven
+back upon its hinges, and the menial lay extended along the lobby; and
+Henry, with his sturdy ally, and old Jonathan, rushed in. Alarmed by the
+sound, the other servants, male and female, hurried to the spot; and
+epithets, too opprobrious to be written, were the mildest they applied
+to the young heir, as he demanded admission.
+
+"Then let us gie them club-law for it," cried Willie, "if they will have
+it; and they shall have it to their heart's content, if I ance begin
+it."
+
+Armed with such weapons as they could seize at the moment, the servants
+menacingly opposed their entrance; but Henry, dashing through them,
+rushed towards the stairs, where he was followed by four men-servants,
+two armed with swords, and the others with kitchen utensils.
+
+But Willie, following at their heels, cried--"Come back!" and, bringing
+his cudgel round his head, with one tremendous swoop caused it to rattle
+across the unprotected legs of the two last of the pursuers, and, almost
+at the same instant, before their comrades had ascended five steps from
+the ground, they, from the same cause, descended backwards, rolling and
+roaring over their companions. Within three seconds, all four were
+conquered, disarmed, and unable to rise. As the discomfited garrison of
+the Priory gathered themselves together, (much in the attitude of Turks
+or tailors,) groaning, writhing, and ruefully rubbing their stockings,
+Willie, with the composed look of a philosopher, addressed to them this
+consoling and important information--"Noo, sirs, I hope ye are a'
+_sensibly_ convinced, what guid service a bit hazel may do in a willing
+hand; and if ony o' yer banes are broken, I would recommend ye to send
+for the doctor before the swelling gets stiff about them. But ye couldna
+hae broken banes at a cannier place on a' the leg than just where I gied
+ye the bits o' clinks; they were hearty licks, and would gie them a
+clean snap, so that, in the matter o' six weeks, ye may be on your feet
+again."
+
+Old Jonathan had already followed Henry up stairs; and Willie having
+finished his exhortation, proceeded in quest of them. Henry succeeded in
+obtaining a change of raiment; and having sent for one who had been long
+a tenant upon the estate, he left the house in charge to him, with
+orders that he should immediately turn from it all the creatures of
+Norton, and engage other servants; and he and his friend, Willie,
+proceeded to the house of old Jonathan, where, as the latter supposed, a
+lady that he believed to be the wife of his young master, then was.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+Mrs Holditch (the wife of old Jonathan) was wandering up the lane in
+quest of her husband, wondering at the length of his absence, and
+fretting for his return; for "the sweet lady," as she termed Helen,
+"would not take breakfast without them." She had proceeded about half a
+mile from the cottage, when she was met by none other than Laird Howison
+of Primrose Hall, and the following dialogue took place:--
+
+"Will ye hae the kindness to inform me, ma'am, if the person that used
+to keep the gate of Sir John Blackett lives ony way aboot here?"
+
+"He does, sir," replied she, with low obeisance.
+
+"And, oh!" interrupted he, earnestly, "know ye if there be a young leddy
+frae Scotland stopping there at present--for I have heard that there is?
+Ye'll no think me inquisitive, ma'am; for really if ye kenned what
+motive I hae for asking, ye would think it motive enough."
+
+"There be, your honour," returned she, "and a dear excellent young lady
+she is."
+
+"Oh! if it be her that I mean," said he, "that she is _dear_, indeed, I
+have owre guid reason to ken, and her excellence is written on every
+line o' her beautiful countenance. But, if I'm no detaining ye, ma'am,
+may I just ask her name?"
+
+"She bade us call her Helen, sir," replied she; "we know no other."
+
+"Yes! yes!" cried he, "it's just Helen!--Helen, and nothing else to me!
+Mony a time has that name been offered up wi' my prayers. But I thought,
+ma'am, ye said she bade _you_ call her Helen."
+
+"Yes, your honour," said she; "I be the wife of old Jonathan Holditch,
+and she be staying with us now."
+
+"Bless you!" he exclaimed, "for the shelter which yer roof has afforded
+to the head o' an orphan. But, oh! what like is _your_ Helen? Is her
+neck whiter than the drifted snaw? Does her hair fa' in gowden ringlets,
+like the clouds that curl round the brows o' the setting sun? Is her
+form delicate as the willow, but stately as the young pine? Is her
+countenance beautiful as the light o' laughing day, when it chases
+sickness and darkness together from the chamber o' the invalid? If she
+isna a' this--if her voice isna sweeter than the sough o' music on a
+river--dear and excellent she may be, and they may call her Helen--but,
+oh! she isna my _Helen_!--for there is none in the world like unto
+_mine_. But, no! no!--she is _not mine now_! O Helen, woman! did I
+expect this? Excuse me, ma'am, ye'll think my conduct strange; but, when
+my poor seared-up heart thinks o' past enjoyment, it makes me forget
+mysel'. Do you think your Helen is the same that I hae come to seek?"
+
+"A sweeter and a lovelier lady," said she, "never called Christian man
+father. She had business at Winburn Priory; but my husband says she was
+driven away from the gate like a dog."
+
+"It is her!" exclaimed he, "and she's no been at the Priory, then?"
+
+"No, sir," returned she.
+
+"Nor seen ony o' the Blackett family?" added he, eagerly.
+
+"No, sir; for there be none of them in the neighbourhood," answered she.
+
+"What's this I hear!" cried he:--"Gracious! if I may again hope!--and
+why for no? But how is it that she is stopping wi' you?--wherefore did
+she not return to the home where she has been cherished from infancy,
+and where she will aye be welcome. Has Helen forgot me a'thegither?"
+
+"Alas, sir!" said she; "it was partly grief, I believe, that brought on
+a bad fever, and I had fears the sweet, patient creature would have died
+in my hands. I sat by her bedside, watching night after night; and, oh!
+sir, I daresay as how it was about you that she sometimes talked, and
+wept, and laughed, and talked again, poor thing."
+
+"And did _ye_," he inquired, fumbling with, a pocket book; "did _ye_
+watch owre her? I'm your debtor for that. And ye think she spoke about
+_me_--my name's Howison, ma'am--Thomas Howison of Primrose Hall, in the
+county o' Dumfries. She would, maybe, call me _Thomas_!"
+
+"Mr Howison!" replied the old woman: "yes, your honour, she often
+mentioned such a name--very often."
+
+"Did she really," added he; "did she mention me?--and often spoke about
+me--often? Then she's no forgotten me a'thegither!"
+
+He thrust a bank-note into the hands of Mrs Holditch, which she refused
+to accept, saying that "the dear lady had more than paid her for all
+that she had done already." But, while she spoke, they had arrived
+within sight of the cottage, and he suddenly bounded forward,
+exclaiming--"Oh! haud my heart!" as he beheld Helen, sitting looking
+from the window--"yonder she is! yonder she is! O Helen! Helen!" he
+cried, rushing towards the door--"wherefore did ye leave me?--why hae ye
+forsaken me? But, joy o' my heart, I winna upbraid ye; for I hae found
+ye again."
+
+With an agitated step, she advanced to meet him--she extended her hand
+towards him--she faltered--"My kind, kind benefactor."
+
+He heard the words she uttered--with a glance he beheld the
+marriage-ring upon her finger--he stood still in the midst of his
+transport--his outstretched arms fell motionless by his side--"O Helen,
+woman!" he cried in agony, "do ye really say _benefactor_?--that isna
+the word I wish to hear frae ye. Ye never ca'ed me _benefactor_ before!"
+
+The few words spoken by the old woman had called up his buried hopes;
+but the word _benefactor_ had again whelmed him in despair.
+
+"Oh!" he continued, dashing away the tears from his eyes, "my poor mind
+is flung away upon a whirlwind, and my brain is the sport o' every
+shadow! O Helen! I thought ye had forgotten me!"
+
+"Forgotten you, my kind dear friend!" said she; "I have not, I will not,
+I cannot forget you; and wherefore would you forget that I can only
+remember you as a friend?"
+
+"Poor, miserable, and deluded being that I am," added he; "I expected,
+from what the mistress o' this house told me, that I wouldna be welcomed
+by the cauldrife names o' _friend_ or _benefactor_. Do ye mind since ye
+used to call me _Thomas_?"
+
+"Mr Howison," answered she, "I know this visit has been made in
+kindness--let me believe in parental anxiety. You have not now to learn
+that I am a wife, and you can have heard nothing here to lead you to
+think otherwise. I will not pretend to misunderstand your language. But
+by what name can I call you save that of friend?--it was the first and
+the only one by which I have ever known you."
+
+"No, Helen," cried he, wringing her hand; "there was a time when ye only
+said _Thomas!_ and the sound o' that ae word frae yer lips was a waff o'
+music, which echoed, like the vibrations o' an angel's harp, about my
+heart for hours and for hours!"
+
+"If," added she, "from having been taught by you to call you by that
+name in childhood, when I regarded you as my guardian, and you
+condescended to be my playmate, will you upbraid me with ceasing to use
+it now, when respect to you and to myself demand the use of another? Or
+can you, by any act of mine, place another meaning upon my having used
+it, than obedience to your wishes, and the familiarity of a thoughtless
+girl? And, knowing this, is it possible that the best of men will heap
+sorrow upon sorrow on the head of a friendless and afflicted woman?"
+
+"Oh, dinna say friendless, Helen," cried he; "friendless ye canna be
+while I am in existence. Ye hae torn the scales from my eyes, and the
+first use o' sicht has been to show me that the past has been delusion,
+and that the future is misery, solitary madness, or despair! And hae I
+really a' this time mistaen sweetness for love, and familiarity for
+affection? Do ye really say that it was only familiarity, Helen?"
+
+"The feelings of a sister for a brother," she answered; "of a daughter
+for a father."
+
+"True," said he; "I see it now; I was, indeed, older than your father--I
+didna recollect that."
+
+He sat thoughtful for a few minutes, when Helen, to change the subject,
+inquired after her old nurse, Janet White.
+
+"Poor body," said he, raising his head, "her spirits are clean gone. I
+understand she sits mourning for you by the fire, cowering thegither
+like a pigeon that's lost its mate, or a ewe whose lamb has been struck
+dead by its side. It would wring tears from a heart o' stane to hear her
+lamenting, morning, noon, and night, for her 'dear bairn,' as she aye
+ca'ed ye--rocking her head and chirming owre her sorrow, like a hen bird
+owre its rifled nest. I had her owre at the Hall the day after I cam
+back frae London, and just afore I cam here to seek for ye. But there is
+naething aboot it that she taks delight in noo. And, when I strove to
+amuse her, by taking her through the garden and plantations, (though I
+stood mair in need o' comfort mysel'), she would stand still and lean
+her head against a tree, in the very middle o' some o' the bonniest
+spots, while a tear came rowing down her cheeks, and look in my face wi'
+such a sorrowfu' expression, that a thousand arrows, entering my breast
+at ance, couldna hae caused me mair agony. I felt that I was a puir,
+solitary, and despised being, only cast into the midst o' a paradise,
+that my comfortless bosom might appear the blacker and the more dismal.
+The puir auld body saw what was passing within me, and she shook her
+head, saying, 'Oh, sir! had I seen ye leading my bairn down thir bonny
+avenues as your wife, Janet White would have been a happy woman.' Then
+she wrung her withered hands, and the tears hailed down her cheeks
+faster and faster; while I hadna a word o' consolation to say to her,
+had it been to save my life. For the very chirping o' the birds grew
+irksome, and the young leaves and the silky flowers painful to look
+upon. O Helen! if ye only kenned what we a' suffer on yer account! If ye
+only kenned what it is to have hope spired up, and affection preying
+upon your ain heart for nourishment, ye wadna be angry at onything I
+say."
+
+"Think not it is possible," she replied, while her tears flowed faster
+than her words; "but wherefore feed a hopeless passion, the indulgence
+of which is now criminal?"
+
+"Oh! forgie ye!" he exclaimed, vehemently; "dinna say that, Helen!
+Hopeless it may be, but not _criminal_! That is the only cruel word I
+ever heard frae yer lips! I didna think onybody would hae said that to
+me! Did you really say _criminal_? But, oh! as matters stand, if ye'd
+only alloo me to say anither word or twa anent the subject, and if ye
+wadna just crush me as a moth, and tak pleasure in my agonies--or hae me
+to perish wi' the sunless desolation o' my ain breast--ye'll alloo me to
+say them. They relate to my last consolation--the last tie that links me
+and the world together!"
+
+"Speak," said Helen; "let not me be the cause of misery I can have power
+to prevent."
+
+"Oh, then!" replied he, "be not angry at what I'm going to say; and
+mind, that, on your answer depends the future happiness or misery o' a
+fellow-being. Yes, Helen! upon your word depends life and hope--madness
+and misery; I say life and hope--for, if ye destroy the one, the other
+winna hand lang oot; and I say madness--for, oh! if ye had been a
+witness o' the wild and the melancholy days and nights that I hae
+passed since I learned that ye had left me, and felt my heart burning
+and beating, and my brain loup, louping for ever, like a living
+substance, and shooting and stinging through my head, like stings o'
+fire, till I neither kenned whar I was, nor what I did; but stood still,
+or rushed out in agony, and screamed to the wind, or gripped at the echo
+o' my voice!--I say, if ye had seen this, ye wadna think it strange that
+I made use o' the words. And, now, as ye have heard nothing from----from
+Henry Blackett, from the night that the ceremony o' marriage was
+performed--and if ye should hear nothing o' him for seven years to come,
+ye will then, ye ken, be at liberty--and will ye say that I may hope,
+then? O Helen, woman! say but the word, and I'll wait the seven years,
+as Jacob did for Rachel, and count them but a day if my Helen will bless
+me wi' a smile o' hope!"
+
+As he thus spoke, Mrs Holditch bustled into the room, exclaiming--"O
+sweet lady, here be one coming thee knows--see! see! there be my
+husband, and our own dear young master Henry, come to make us happy
+again!"
+
+"My Henry!" exclaimed Helen, springing towards the door--"where--oh,
+where?".
+
+"Here, my beloved! here!" replied Henry, meeting her on the threshold.
+
+Poor Laird Howison stood dumb, his mouth open, his eyes extended,
+staring on vacancy. He beheld the object of his delirious love sink into
+her husband's arms, and saw no more. He clasped his hands together, and,
+with a deep groan, reeled against the wall. Henry and Helen, in the
+ecstasy of meeting each other, were unconscious of all around, and
+Willie Galloway was the first to observe his countryman.
+
+"Preserve us! you here, too, Mr Howison!" said he. But the features of
+the laird remained rivetted in agony, and betrayed no symptom of
+recognition. The mention of the laird's name by Willie, arrested the
+attention of Henry, and approaching him, he said--"Sir, to you I ought
+to offer an apology."
+
+The unhappy man wildly grasped the hand of Henry, and seizing also
+Helen's, he exclaimed--"It is a' owre now! The chain is forged, and the
+iron is round my soul. But I bless you baith. Tak her! tak her!--and
+hear me, Henry Blackett--as ye would escape wrath and judgment, be kind
+to her as the westlin' winds and the morning dews to the leaves o'
+spring. Let it be your part to clothe her countenance wi' smiles and her
+bosom wi' joy! Fareweel, Helen!--look up!--let me, for the last time,
+look upon your face, and I will carry that look upon my memory to the
+grave!"
+
+She gazed upon him wildly, crying--"Stay!--stay!--you must not leave
+us!"
+
+"Now!--now, it is past!" he cried; "it was a sair struggle, but reason
+mastered it! Fareweel, Helen!--fareweel!"
+
+Thus saying, he rushed out of the house, and Willie Galloway followed
+him; but, although fleet of foot, he was compelled to give up the
+pursuit.
+
+A few minutes after the abrupt and wild departure of the laird, and
+before Helen had recovered from the shock, the ruffians, who, at the
+instigation of Norton, had hunted after Henry to deliver him up to the
+government, and from whom he had already twice escaped, rushed into the
+room, exclaiming--"Secure the traitor!"
+
+Henry sprang back to defend himself, and Willie Galloway, who had
+returned, threw himself into a pugilistic attitude. But Helen, stepping
+between her husband and his pursuers, drew a paper from her bosom, and
+placing it in his hands, said--"My Henry is free! he is pardoned!--the
+king hath signed it!--laugh at the bloodhounds!" And, as she spoke, she
+sank upon his breast. He opened the paper; it was his pardon under the
+royal signature and the royal seal! "My own!--my wife!--my wife!" cried
+Henry, pressing her to his heart, and weeping on her neck.
+
+"That crowns a'!" exclaimed Willie Galloway; "O Helen!--what a lassie ye
+are!"
+
+The ruffians slunk from the room in confusion, and Willie informed them
+that the sooner they were out of sight it would be the better for them.
+
+Helen, on leaving Scotland, had proceeded to London, where, through the
+interest of a friend of Laird Howison's, she gained access to the Duke
+of Cumberland, and throwing herself at his feet, had, through him,
+obtained her husband's pardon, and that pardon she had carried next her
+bosom to his father's house, hoping to find him there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Having divided this tale into chapters, we now come to the
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+
+Henry being now pardoned, Willie Galloway advised that he should take
+his wife to his father's house, and remain there, adding--"Mind ye,
+Maister Henry, that possession is nine points o' law--and if ye be in
+want o' the matter o' five hundred pounds for present use, or for mair
+to prove your birthright at law, I am the man that will advance it, and
+that will leave no stone unturned till I see you righted."
+
+Willie's suggestion was acted upon; and Henry and Helen took up their
+abode in the Priory, where they had been but a few weeks, when he
+obtained information that his father had fallen in a duel, and that his
+adversary was none other than Squire Norton, the father of his then
+wife; but with his dying breath he declared, in the presence of his
+seconds, and invoked them to record it, that his injured son Henry was
+his only and lawful heir.
+
+"That," exclaimed Norton, with a savage laugh over his dying antagonist,
+"it will cost him some trouble to prove!"
+
+The murderer, in the name of a child which his daughter had borne to Sir
+John, had the hardihood to enter legal proceedings to obtain the estate.
+
+Henry applied to the parish of Glencleugh for the register of his
+mother's marriage; but no such record was found. Old Dugald Mackay had a
+dreamy recollection of such a marriage taking place; but he said--"It pe
+very strange that it isna in te pook; hur canna swear to it."
+
+Many thought that the day would be given against Henry, and pitied him;
+but before judgment was pronounced in the case, young Norton was found
+guilty of forgery, and condemned to undergo the just severity of the
+law. Previous to his ignominious death, in the presence of witnesses, he
+confessed the injury he had done to Henry by tearing the leaves from the
+parish register, and directed where they might be found. They were
+found--old Norton fled from the country, and Henry obtained undisputed
+possession of the estate; but on his father's widow and child he settled
+a competency.
+
+Laird Howison's sorrow moderated as his years increased; and when Henry
+and Helen had children, and when they had grown up to run about, he
+requested that they should be sent to him every year, to pull the
+primroses around Primrose Hall; and they were sent. One of them, a girl,
+the image of her mother, he often wept over, and said, he hoped to live
+to love her, as he had loved her mother. Willie Galloway often visited
+his friends in Cheshire, and remained "canny Willie" to the end of the
+chapter.
+
+
+
+
+THE BRIDE OF BRAMBLEHAUGH.[1]
+
+
+It has been stated by the greatest critics the world ever saw--whose
+names we would mention, if we did not wish to avoid interfering with the
+simplicity of our humble annals--that no fictitious character ought to
+be made at once virtuous and unfortunate; and the reason given for it is
+that mankind, having a natural tendency to a belief of an adjustment,
+even in this world, of the claims of virtue and the deserts of vice, are
+displeased with a representation which at once overturns this belief,
+and creates dissatisfaction with the ways of Providence. This may be
+very good criticism, and we have no wish to find fault with it as
+applied to works intended to produce a certain effect on the minds of
+readers; but, so long as Nature and Providence work with machinery whose
+secret springs are hid from our view, and evince--doubtless for wise
+purposes--a disregard of the adjustment of rewards and punishments for
+virtue and vice, we shall not want a higher authority than critics for
+exhibiting things as they are, and portraying on the page of truth, wet
+with unavailing tears, goodness that went to the grave, not only
+unrewarded, but struck down with griefs that should have dried the heart
+and grizzled the hairs of the wicked.
+
+In a little haugh that runs parallel to the Tweed--at a part of its
+course not far from Peebles, and through which there creeps, over a bed
+of white pebbles, a little burn, whose voice is so small, except at
+certain places where a larger stone raises its "sweet anger" to the
+height of a tiny "buller," that the lowest note of the goldfinch drowns
+it and charms it to silence--there stood, about the middle of the last
+century, a cottage. Its white walls and dark roof, with some white roses
+and honeysuckle flowering on its walls, bespoke the humble retreat of
+contentment and comfort. The place went by the name of Bramblehaugh,
+from the sides of the small burn being lined, for several miles, with
+the bramble. The sloping collateral ground was covered with shrubs and
+trees of various kinds, which harboured, in the summer months, a great
+collection of birds--the blackbird, the starling, the mavis, and others
+of the tuneful choir--whose notes rendered harmonious the secluded scene
+where they sang unmolested. The spot is one of those which, scattered
+sparingly over a wild country, woo the footsteps of lovers of nature,
+and, by a few months of their simple charms, regenerate the health,
+while they quicken and gratify the business-clouded fancies of the
+denizens of smoky towns.
+
+The cottage we have now described was occupied by David Mearns, and his
+wife Elizabeth, called, by our national contraction, Betty. These
+individuals earned a livelihood, and nothing more, by the mode in which
+poor cotters in Scotland contrive to spin out an existence; the leading
+feature of which, contentment, the result of necessity, is often falsely
+denominated happiness by those whose positive pleasures, chequered by a
+few misfortunes, are forgotten in the contemplation of a state of life
+almost entirely negative. Difficulties that cannot be overcome deaden
+the energies that have in vain been exerted to surmount them; and, when
+all efforts to better our condition are relinquished, we acquire a
+credit for contentedness, which is only a forced adaptation of limited
+means to an unchangeable end. David Mearns, who had, in his younger
+days, been ruined by a high farm, had learned from misfortune what he
+would not have been very apt to have received from the much-applauded
+philosophy which is said to generate a disposition to be pleased with
+our lot. The bitterness of disappointment, and the wish to get beyond
+the reach of obligations he could not discharge, suggested the remedy of
+a reliance simply on his capability of earning a cotter's subsistence;
+and having procured a cheap lease of the little domicile of
+Bramblehaugh, he set himself down, with the partner of his hopes and
+misfortunes, to eat, with that simulated contentment we have noticed,
+the food of his hard labour, with the relish of health, and to extract
+from the lot thus forced upon him as much happiness as it would yield.
+The cottage and the small piece of ground attached to it, was the
+property of an old man, who, having made a great deal of money by the
+very means that had failed in the hands of David Mearns, had purchased
+the property of Burnbank, lying on the side of the small rivulet already
+mentioned, and, in consequence, it was said, of Betty Mearns bearing the
+same name, (Cherrytrees,) though there was no relationship between them,
+had let to David the small premises at a low rent.
+
+A single child had blessed the marriage of David Mearns and his wife--a
+daughter, called Euphemia, though generally, for the sake of brevity and
+kindliness, called Effie; an interesting girl, who, at the period we
+speak of, had arrived at the age of sixteen years. In a place where
+there were few to raise the rude standard of beauty formed in the minds
+of a limited country population, she was accounted "bonny"--a
+much-abused word, no doubt, in Scotland, but yet having a very fair and
+legitimate application to an interesting young creature, whose blue
+eyes, however little real town beauty they may have expressed or
+illuminated, gave out much tenderness and feeling, accompanied by that
+inexpressible look of pure, unaffected modesty, which is the first, but
+the most difficult gesture of the female manner attempted to be imitated
+by those who are destitute of the feeling that produces it. An
+expression of pensiveness--perhaps the fruit of the early misfortunes of
+her parents operating on the tender mind of infancy, ever quick in
+catching, with instinctive sympathy, the feeling that saddens or
+enlivens the spirits of a mother--was seldom abroad from her
+countenance, imparting to it a deep interest, and, by suggesting a wish
+to relieve the cause of so early an indication of incipient melancholy,
+creating an instant friendship, which subsequent intercourse did not
+diminish.
+
+Walter Cherrytrees, the Laird of Burnbank, a man approaching seventy
+years of age, had a daughter, Lucy, about the same age as Effie Mearns.
+He had lost his wife about fifteen years before; and--though a feeling
+of anxiousness often found its way to his heart, suggesting to his
+vacant mind, as the cure of his listlessness and the balm of his
+bereavement, another wife--he had for a long time been nearly equally
+poised between the hope of Lucy becoming his comfort in his old age, and
+the wish for a tender partner of pleasures which, without participation,
+lose their relish. His daughter, Lucy, was a sprightly, showy girl, who,
+having got a good education, might, with the prospect she had of
+inheriting her father's property, have been entitled to look for a
+husband among the sons of the neighbouring proprietors, if her father's
+secluded mode of life, and plain, blunt manners, had not to a great
+extent limited her intercourse to a few acquaintances, by no means equal
+to him in point of wealth or status, however estimable they might have
+been in other respects. A more pleasant companion to the old Laird of
+Burnbank could not be found, from the one end of Bramblehaugh to the
+other, than David Mearns, his tenant, whose honesty and bluntness, set
+off by a fertility of simple anecdote, had charms for one of the same
+habits of thought and feeling, which all the disadvantages of his
+poverty could not counterbalance. The intimacy of the fathers produced,
+at a very early period, a friendship between the daughters, who,
+notwithstanding, could not boast of the resemblance of thought and
+manners, and community of feeling, which formed the foundation of the
+attachment existing between the parents.
+
+This friendship was not exclusive of some acquaintanceships with the
+neighbouring young men and women, which, however, were in general
+mutual; neither of the two young maidens having formed any intimacy with
+another without, her friend participating in the friendship. Among
+others, Lewis Campbell, the son of a neighbouring farmer, who had been a
+large creditor of David Mearns at the time of his failure, called
+sometimes at the cottage of Bramblehaugh, and was soon smitten with a
+strong love for Effie. They sometimes indulged in long walks by the side
+of the river.
+
+We may anticipate, when we say that the hours spent in these
+excursions--in which the greatest beauties of external nature, and the
+strongest and purest emotions of two loving hearts, acting in
+co-operation and harmony, formed a present and a future such as poets
+dream of, and the world never realizes, but in momentary glimpses--were
+the happiest of these lovers. Effie's inseparable companion, Lucy,
+frequently met them as they sauntered along by the house of Burnbank;
+and the soft breathings of ardent affection were relieved by the gay and
+innocent prattle of the companions, who enjoyed, though in different
+degrees, the conversation and manners of the young lover. The simplicity
+and single-heartedness of Effie were entirely exclusive of a single
+thought unfavourable to an equal openness and frankness on the part of
+her companion, whom she had informed, in her artless way, of the state
+of her affections. But what might not have resulted from a mere
+acquaintanceship between Lucy and Effie's lover, was called forth by the
+pride of the former, whose spirit of emulation, excited by the good
+fortune of her poor friend, suggested a secret wish to alienate the
+affections of Lewis from her companion, and direct them to herself. The
+wish to be beloved, though the mere effect of emulation, is the surest
+of the artificial modes by which love itself is generated in the heart
+of the wisher; and Lucy soon became, unknown for a time to Effie, as
+much enamoured of young Lewis as was her unsuspecting friend.
+
+The first intimation that Effie received of the state of Lucy's feelings
+towards her lover, was from Lewis himself. Sitting at a part of the
+haugh called the Cross Knowe, from the circumstance of an old Romish
+cruciform stone that stood on the top of a gentle elevation--a place
+much resorted to by the lovers--Lewis, unable to conceal a single
+thought or feeling from one who so well deserved his confidence, first
+told her of the perfidy of her friend.
+
+"You are not so well supplied with sweethearts, Effie," he began, "as I
+am; for I can boast of two besides you."
+
+"That speaks little in your favour, Lewie," replied she; "for, if it was
+my wish, I could hae a' the young men o' the haugh makin love to me frae
+mornin to e'en."
+
+"That remark, Effie," said Lewis, "implies that I have courted, or at
+least received marks of affection, from others besides you, while I was
+leading you to suppose that my heart was entirely yours. Now, that is
+not justified by what I said; for one may have sweethearts, and neither
+know nor acknowledge them as such."
+
+"Maybe I am wrang, Lewie," said Effie; "but what was I to think but that
+the twa ither sweethearts ye mentioned were acknowledged by ye? It's no
+in the pooer o' my puir heart to conceive how a young woman could love
+are that neither kenned nor acknowledged her love. But I speak frae my
+ain simple, an' maybe worthless thoughts. The world's wide, an' haulds
+black an' fair, weak an' strong, heigh and laigh; an' wharfore no also
+hearts an' minds as different as their bodies? The birds o' this haugh
+hae only their ain single luves; but they're a' coloured alike that
+belang to ae kind. Would that it had been God's pleasure to mak mankind
+like thae bonny birds!"
+
+"I fear, Effie," replied Lewis, "that a statement of mine, intended to
+be partly in jest, has been construed by you in such a manner as to
+produce to you pain. God is my witness that I am as single-hearted in my
+affection as the birds of this haugh; and gaudier colours, sweeter
+notes, and better scented bowers will never interfere with the love I
+bear to Effie Mearns."
+
+"What meant ye, then, Lewie, by sayin ye had twa sweethearts besides
+Effie Mearns?" said she.
+
+"That you shall immediately know," replied Lewis "and you will think
+more highly of me when I shew you, by my revealing secrets, not indeed
+confided to me, but still secrets, that you have all my heart and the
+thoughts that it contains. The first of my other lovers you will not be
+jealous of, for she is old Lizzy Buchanan, or, as she calls herself,
+Buwhanan, my nurse, who loves me as well as you do, Effie; but the
+other, I fear, may create in you an unpleasant feeling of confidence
+misplaced, and friendship repaid by something like treachery. Surely I
+need say no more."
+
+"Is it indeed sae, Lewie?" said she. "It's lang sin I whispered--and my
+heart beat and my limbs trembled as I did it--in the ear o' Lucy
+Cherrytrees, that my puir, silly thoughts were never aff Lewie Campbell.
+And what think ye she said to me? She said I needna look far ayont
+Bramblehaugh for a bonnier and a brawer lover."
+
+"Then," replied Lewis, "I am not much better off than you are; for she
+told me that your simplicity, she feared, was art, and that your poverty
+made any beauty you had; and she doubted if that bonny face was not a
+great snare for the ruin of a penniless lover."
+
+"Sae, sae," said she, sighing deeply; "and has the fair face o' life's
+friendship put on the looks o' the hypocrite at the very time when
+greater confidence was required? I hae read in Laird Cherrytrees' books
+he is sae kind as lend me, many an example o' fause and faithless
+creatures, baith men and women, o' the world, o' the great cities that
+lie far ayont oor humble sphere; but little did I think that here in
+Bramblehaugh, where our bughts ken nae nicht-thieves, and our hen-roosts
+nae reynards, there was ane, and that ane my friend, wha could smile in
+my face at the very moment she was tryin to ruin me in the eyes o' ane
+wha is dearest to me on earth."
+
+As she thus poured forth her feelings with greater loquacity than she
+generally exhibited--being for the most part quiet and gentle--the tears
+flowed down her cheeks in great profusion, and she sobbed bitterly, in
+spite of all the efforts of Lewis to satisfy her that Lucy's endeavours
+to lessen her in his estimation were entirely fruitless.
+
+"Apprehend nothing, dear Effie, from the discovered treachery of a false
+friend," said he, as he pressed her to his bosom. "It has less power
+with me than the whispers of that gentle burn have on the sleeping
+echoes of the Eagle's Rock that only answers to the voice of the
+tempest."
+
+"It's no that, Lewie," replied she, wiping away her tears, "that gies me
+pain. I hae nae fear o' faith and troth that has been pledged, and
+better than pledged; for I hae seen it i' yer looks, and heard it i' the
+soonds o' yer deep-drawn sighs. Thae tears are for a broken
+friendship--for the return o' evil for guid--for the withered blossoms
+o' a bonny flower I hae cherished and watered, in the hope it wad yield
+me a sweet smell when I kissed its leaves i' the daffin o' youth or the
+kindliness o' age. If it is sae sair to lose a friend, what, Lewie--what
+wad it be to lose a lover?"
+
+"The very existence of great evils, Effie," said he, "makes us happy,
+in the thought that they are beyond our reach."
+
+"But did I no think," said she, "that I was beyond the reach o' the pain
+o' experiencing the fauseness o' Lucy Cherrytrees--the very creature o'
+a' ithers, I hae chosen as my bosom friend--to whom I confided a' my
+thochts and the very secret o' my love?"
+
+"But it is an ill wind that blaws naebody guid, as they say, Effie,"
+said Lewis. "I can better appreciate your goodness, now that I have
+experienced the faithlessness of another."
+
+"An' if I hae lost a friend," replied Effie, "I am the mair sure o' my
+lover. Ye dinna ken, Lewie, how muckle this has raised you even in my
+mind, whar ye hae aye occupied the highest place. Ye hae rejected the
+offered luve o' the braw heiress o' Burnbank, for the humble dochter o'
+David Mearns, wha earns his bread in the sweat o' his brow. Oh! what can
+a puir, penniless cottager's dochter gie in return to the man wha, for
+her sake, turns his back on a big ha', a thoosand braid acres, an' a
+braw heiress?"
+
+"Her simple, genuine, unsophisticated heart," replied Lewis, "with one
+unchangeable, devoted affection beating in its core. Were Burnbank Hall
+as big as the Parliament House, and Burnbank itself longer than the
+lands watered by the Brambleburn, and Lucy Cherrytrees as fair as our
+unfortunate Mary Stuart, I would not give my simple Effie, with no more
+property of her own than the bandeau that binds her fair locks, for Lucy
+Cherrytrees and all her lands."
+
+The two lovers continued their evening walks, indulging in conversations
+which, embracing the subject of their affection, and anticipating the
+pleasures of their ultimate union, realized that fullest enjoyment of
+hope which is said to transcend possession. No notice was taken of their
+mutual sentiments on the subject of Lucy Cherrytrees' affection for
+Lewis, and her unjustifiable attempts to displace her old friend, to
+make room for herself in the heart of the contested object of their
+wishes.
+
+Matters continued in this state for some time, Effie being regularly
+gratified by a visit from Lewis three times a-week. On one occasion a
+whole week passed without any intelligence of her lover. Her inquiries
+had produced no satisfactory explanation of the unusual occurrence; and
+Fancy, under the spell of the genius of Fear, was busy in her vocation
+of drawing dark pictures of coming evil. At last she was told by her
+father, who had procured the intelligence from a friend of George
+Campbell, the father, that young Lewis had been suspected of an
+intention to marry the poor daughter of the cottager, David Mearns, and
+had been despatched, without a minute's premonition, 'to an uncle, who
+was a merchant in Rio de Janeiro. No time had been given to him to write
+to Effie; and care had been taken to prevent him from sending her any
+intelligence while he remained at Liverpool, previous to his departure.
+The statement was corroborated by intelligence to the same effect,
+procured by one of Laird Cherrytrees' servants from one of the servants
+of George Campbell, who told it to Lucy, and who again told it to Effie,
+with tears in her eyes, which she took every care to conceal. The effect
+produced on the mind of Effie Mearns, by this unexpected misfortune, was
+proportioned to its magnitude, and the susceptibility of the feelings of
+the delicate individual on whom it operated. For many days she wept
+incessantly, refusing the ordinary sustenance of a life which she now
+deemed of no importance to herself or to any one else. All attempts at
+comforting a bruised heart were--as they generally are in cases of
+disappointed love--unavailing; and the effects of time seemed only
+apparent in a quieter, though not in any degree less poignant sorrow.
+Every object kept alive the remembrance of the youth who had first made
+an impression on her heart, and whose image was graven on every spot of
+the neighbourhood which had been consecrated by the exchange of a mutual
+passion. The scenes of their wanderings, hallowed as they had been in
+her memory, were now peopled with undefined terrors; and every time that
+she was forced abroad to take that air and exercise which latterly
+seemed indispensable to her existence, her sorrow received an accession
+of power from every tree under which they had sat, and every knowe or
+dell where they had listened to the musical loves of the birds, as they
+exchanged their own in not less eloquent sighs.
+
+The first circumstance that produced any effect on the mind of the
+disconsolate maiden, was a misfortune of another kind, which, realizing
+the old adage, seemed to follow with all due rapidity the footsteps of
+its precursor. Her mother, who sat on one side of the fire, while Effie
+occupied her usual seat in a corner of the cottage in the other, had
+been using all the force of her rude but impressive eloquence to get her
+daughter to adopt the means that were in her power for the amelioration
+of a grief which might render her childless.
+
+"I am gettin auld, Effie," she said, "an' you are the only are I can
+look to for administerin to yer faither an' to me that comfort we hae a
+richt to expect at the hands o' a dochter wha never yet was deficient in
+her duty. Our poverty, which winna be made ony less severe, as ye may
+weel ken, by the income o' years, will mak yer attention to us mair
+necessary; an' it may even be--God meise the means!--that your weak
+hands may yet be required to work for the support o' yer auld parents. I
+hae lang intended to speak to you in this way, and it was only pity for
+my puir heart-broken Effie that put me aff frae day to day, in the
+expectation that either some news wad come frae Lewie, or that ye wad
+get consolation frae anither and a higher source, to support ye for
+trials ye may yet hae to bear up against, for the sake o' them that
+brocht ye into the world. A' ither means hae been tried to get ye to
+determine to live, an' no lay yersel doun to dee, an' they havin failed,
+what can I do but try the last remedy in my pooer--to speak, as I hae
+now dune, to yer guid sense, an' lay afore ye the duties o' a dutifu'
+bairn, which are far aboon the thochts o' a disappointed love. Promise,
+now, my bonny Effie, that ye will try to gie up yer mournin, for the
+sake o' parents whase love for ye is nae less than Lewie Campbell's."
+
+As Betty finished her impressive admonition to Effie, who acknowledged
+its force, and inwardly determined on complying with the request of her
+mother, an unusual noise at the door of the cottage startled her anxious
+ear. It seemed that a number of people were approaching the cottage, and
+the groans of one in deep distress and pain were mixed with the low talk
+of the crowd, who, from those inexpressible indications which the ear
+can catch and analyse ere the mind is conscious of the operation, seemed
+already to sympathise with one to whom they were bearing a grief. Housed
+by that anticipative fear of evil which all unfortunate people feel,
+Betty ran to the door, followed by her daughter, and opened it--to let
+in the mangled body of her husband; who, in felling an oak, on the
+property of Burnbank, had fallen under the weight of the tree, and got
+his leg broken, and one of his arms dislocated at the shoulder-joint. He
+was conveyed, by the kind neighbours, to a bed; and, by the time they
+got him undressed, for the purpose of his wounds being submitted to the
+curative process of the doctor, that individual arrived, and proceeded
+to perform the painful operation of setting the broken bones. The full
+effect of this misfortune to Effie and her mother was for a time
+suspended by the call made upon them to relieve the sufferings of the
+father and husband; and it was not till the bustle ceased, and the
+neighbours (excepting two women, whose services, in addition to those
+of the wife and daughter, might still be required) went away, that they
+felt the full force of the gigantic evil that had befallen them, the
+consequences of which might extend through the remaining years of their
+existence.
+
+A period of no less than eighteen months passed away, and David Mearns
+was still unable to do more than, with assistance, to rise from his bed,
+and sit, during a part of the day, by the fire, or at the window. During
+the whole of this time, he had been tended by his daughter with
+assiduous care. Her filial sympathies, called into active operation by
+the sorrows of her parent, filled up the void that had been made in her
+heart by the departure of her lover; and a new source of grief effected
+(however paradoxical it may seem) a change in the morbid melancholy to
+which she had been enslaved, which, although not for mental health or
+ease, was so much in favour of exertion and remedial exercise, that she
+came to present the appearance of one inclined to endeavour to sustain
+her sorrow, rather than resign herself to the fatal power of an
+irremediable woe. Among the visitors who took an interest in a family
+reduced by one stroke to want and all its attendant evils, Laird
+Cherrytrees evinced the strongest concern for the fate of his friend;
+and, by a timeous contribution of necessary assistance, ameliorated, in
+so far as man could, the unhappy condition of virtue under the load of
+misery. The many visits of the good old laird, and the long periods of
+time he passed by the bedside of the patient, enabled him to see and
+appreciate the devoted attention of Effie to her parent; and often, as
+she flew at the slightest indication of a wish for something to assuage
+pain, or remove the uneasiness produced by the long confinement, he
+would stop the current of his narrative, and fix his eyes on the kind
+maiden, so long as her tender office engaged her attention and feelings
+These long looks, not unaccompanied at times with a deep sigh, were
+attributed, as they well might, to admiration and approbation of so much
+filial affection and devotedness exercised towards one whom the old
+laird respected above all his friends.
+
+The visits of Laird Cherrytrees were at first twice or thrice a-week.
+His infirm body already begun to exhibit the effects of old age,
+prevented him from walking; and such was the anxiety he felt for the
+unhappy patient, that he mounted his old pony, Donald, nearly as frail
+as his master, to enable him to administer consolation so much required.
+He came always at the same hour; Effie, who expected him, was often at
+the door ready to receive him; and, while she held old Donald's head
+till he dismounted, welcomed her father's friend with so much sincerity
+and pleasure, that if she had failed in her ostlership, he would have
+felt a disappointment he would not have liked to express. Even when at a
+distance from the cottage, he strained his eyes to endeavour to catch a
+glimpse of the faithful attendant; and, if he did not see her, the rein
+of Donald was relaxed, and he was allowed to saunter along at his own
+pleasure, or even to eat grass by the roadside, (a luxury he delighted
+in from his having once belonged to a cadger,) so as to give Effie time
+to get to her post.
+
+The three days of the week on which Laird Cherrytrees was in the habit
+of visiting David Mearns, were Monday, Thursday, and Saturday; and he
+seldom came without bringing something to the poor family--either some
+money for old Betty; some preserves, prepared by Lucy, for the invalid;
+or a book, or a flower from Burnbank garden, for Effie. When his
+conversation with David was finished--and every day it seemed to get
+shorter and shorter, though there seemed no lack of either subjects or
+ideas--he commenced to talk with Effie, chiefly on the nature and
+contents of the books he brought her to read; and nothing seemed to
+delight him more than to sit in the large arm-chair by David's bedside,
+and hear Effie discoursing, _ex cathedra_, (on a three-footed stool at
+the foot of the bed, opposite to the Laird's chair,) with her
+characteristic simplicity and good sense, on the subjects he himself had
+suggested. But, notwithstanding all her efforts to appear well-pleased
+in presence of the man who was supporting her family, her train of
+thoughts was often broken in upon by the recollections of Lewis
+Campbell, and she would sit for an hour at a time, with the eyes of the
+Laird fixed on her melancholy face, as if he had been all that time in
+mute cogitation, suggesting some remedy for her sorrow. His ideas and
+feelings seemed to be operated upon by the same power that ruled the
+mind of the maiden; for his face followed, in its changing expressions,
+the mutations of her countenance. Her melancholy seemed to be
+communicated by a glance of her watery eye, as the thought of Lewis
+entered her mind; and when she recovered from her gloomy reverie, a
+corresponding indication of relief lighted up the grey, twinkling orbs
+of the old Laird. This custom of "glowrin," for whole hours at a time,
+on the face of the sensitive girl, at first painful to her, became a
+matter of indifference; and the position and attitudes of the three
+individuals--Betty being generally engaged about the house--undergoing,
+while the Laird was present, no change, came to assume something like
+the natural properties of the parties, as if they had been fixtures, or
+lay figures for the study of a painter.
+
+Every time the Laird came to the cottage, he extended the period of his
+stay, and, latterly, he did not stir till a servant from Burnbank, sent
+by Lucy, came to take him home. It seemed as if he could not get enough
+of "glowrin;" for, latterly, all his occupation, which at first
+consisted of rational conversation, merged in that mute eloquence of the
+eye, or rather in that inebriation of the orb, "drinking of light,"
+which lovers of sights, especially female countenances, are so fond of.
+The visits had been so regular, not a day being ever missed, that, as
+Effie held the stirrup till he mounted Donald, during all which time the
+process of "glowrin" went on as regularly as at the bedside of David,
+she never thought of asking, and he never thought of stating, when he
+would call again. Time had stamped the act of calling with the impress
+of unchangeable custom. The caseless clock of David's cottage was not
+more regular; the only change being that already observed--that the time
+of the Laird's stay gradually and gradually lengthened.
+
+The homage paid by Effie to Laird Cherrytrees was, as may easily be
+conceived, the respect, attention, and kindness of an open-hearted girl,
+filled with gratitude to the preserver of the lives of her and her
+parents. Every evening she offered up, at her bedside, prayers for the
+preservation and happiness of the man but for whose kindness starvation
+might have overtaken the helpless invalid, and not much less helpless
+wife and daughter. In their prayers the "amen" of David and his wife was
+the most heart-felt expression of love and gratitude that ever came from
+the lips of mortal. This feeling, however, did not prevent David Mearns
+and Betty from sometimes indulging, in the absence of Effie (in all
+likelihood giving freedom to her tears, as she sat in some favourite
+retreat of her absent lover,) in some remarks on the extraordinary
+conduct of Laird Cherrytrees. They soon saw through the secret, and
+resolved upon drawing him out; for which purpose Effie was to be called
+away on the occasion of the next visit.
+
+The Laird came as he used to do, took his seat, and resumed his gazing.
+Effie pleased him exceedingly, by an account she gave him of the last
+book he brought to her; and, throwing himself back in the arm chair, he
+seemed, for a time, wrapped in meditation. Effie obeyed, in the
+meantime, her mother's request, to come for a few minutes to the green
+to assist her in her work; and, when the Laird again applied his eyes
+to their accustomed vocation, he was surprised, but not (for once)
+displeased, at her disappearance. A great struggle now commenced between
+some wish and a restraint. He looked round the cottage, and then turned
+his eyes on David; acts which he repeated several times. Incipient
+syllables of words half-formed died away in his struggling throat. He
+moved restlessly in the large chair, and twirled his silver-headed cane
+in his hand. He even rose, went to the door, looked out, came back
+again, and took his seat without saying a word. Holding away his face
+from David, he at last made out a few words, uttered with great
+difficulty.
+
+"She's a fine lassie, Effie," he said.
+
+"A bonnier an' a better never was brocht up in Bramblehaugh, savin yer
+ain Lucy," replied David.
+
+"Hoo auld is she noo?" said the Laird, still holding away his face.
+
+"She will be nineteen come the time," replied David.
+
+"It's a pity she's sae young," rejoined the Laird, with a great
+struggle, and making a noise with his cane, as if he had repented of his
+words, and wished to drown them before they reached the ears of David.
+
+"I dinna think sae, beggin yer Honour's pardon," replied David. "We need
+her assistance, in this trial; an' I'm just thinkin o' some way she
+micht use her hands--an she's willing aneugh, puir cratur--for our
+assistance."
+
+"Are ye no pleased wi' my assistance?" said the Laird, displeased at
+something in David's reply.
+
+"Yer Honour has saved our lives," replied David, feelingly, "an' it wad
+only be because we are ashamed o yer guidness that we wad wish our
+dochter to tak a part o' that burden aff ane wha is under nae obligation
+to serve us."
+
+"If I hae been yer friend, ye hae been mine," said the Laird. "I hae got
+guid advices frae ye; an', even noo, I hae something to ask ye
+concernin mysel, that nae ither man i' the haugh could sae weel answer."
+
+"What is that, yer Honour?" said David.
+
+"What do ye think, David Mearns, I should do," said the Laird, moving
+about in the chair in evident perplexity, "if my dochter Lucy were to
+tak a husband an' leave Burnbank? I carena aboot fa'in into the hands o'
+Jenny Mucklewham, wha, for this some time past, has neither cleaned my
+buckles nor brushed my coat as I wad wish. She says I'm mair fashious;
+but that's a mere excuse."
+
+"I hae seen aulder men marry again," said David, thinking he would
+please the Laird, by giving him such an answer as he was clearly fishing
+for.
+
+"Aulder men, David, man!" replied the Laird, looking down at his person,
+and adjusting his wig. "Did I ask ye onything aboot my age? I wanted
+merely your advice, what I should do in certain circumstances, an' ye
+gie me a comparison for an answer.--Do ye think I should marry?"
+
+"If yer Honour has ony wish in that way, I think ye should," said David.
+
+"I never yet did wrang in following your advice, David Mearns," said the
+Laird. "--She's a fine lassie, Effie."
+
+"Ou, ay," responded David, at a loss what more to say.
+
+"Very fine," again said the Laird, turning his face partially from the
+window, so as the tail of his eye reached David's face, and waiting for
+something more.
+
+David could, however, say nothing. The very circumstance of the Laird's
+wishing him to say something pertinent to the purpose already so broadly
+hinted at, prevented him from touching so delicate a subject; and,
+notwithstanding of another application of the tail of the Laird's eye,
+he was silent.
+
+"Ye hae gien me ae advice, David," said the Laird, in despair of getting
+anything more out of David without a question: "could ye no tell me
+_wha_ I should marry, man?" And having achieved this announcement, he
+rose and walked to the window.
+
+"That's owre delicate a subject for me to gie an advice on, yer Honour,"
+replied David. "The doo lays aside ninety-nine guid straes, an' taks the
+hundredth, though a crooked ane, for its nest. Ye maun judge for
+yersel."
+
+"What say ye to yer ain Effie, then?" said the Laird, relieved at last
+from a dreadful burden.
+
+"If yer Honour likes the lassie, an' she'll tak yer Honour, I can hae
+nae objections," replied David.
+
+The Laird, who seemed twenty years younger after this declaration, took
+David by the hand, and shook it till the pain of his dislocated arm
+almost made him cry.
+
+"Will ye speak to her aboot it. David!" said he, still holding his hand.
+"The best farm o' Burnbank will be your reward. Plead for me, David, my
+best friend. Tell Betty aboot it, and get her to use a mother's pooer.
+If I can trust my een, Effie doesna dislike me. If a' gaes weel, ye may
+hae Ravelrigg, or Braidacre, or Muirfield--onything that's in my pooer
+to gie, David." And the old lover, exhausted by the struggle and
+excitement he had suffered, sank back into the chair.
+
+"I will do my best," replied David. And the old Laird sighed, and
+absolutely groaned with pure, unmixed satisfaction.
+
+At the end of this scene, Effie and her mother came in. The damsel took
+her old seat on the three-footed stool at the foot of the bed; the eyes
+of the Laird sought again her face, where he thought they had a better
+right now to rest. No more was spoken; enough for a day had been said
+and done; and, with a parting look to David, to keep him in remembrance
+of his promise, and a purse of money slipped into the hand of Betty, as
+a solvent of any obstacle that might exist in her mind, the lover went
+to the door to receive Donald from the soft hands of Effie, who, as was
+her custom, had gone out before him, to lead the old cadger to the door,
+and hold the bridle till he with an effort got into the saddle. The only
+difference Effie could observe in his departure this day, was a kind of
+mock-gallant wave of the hand, as he, with more than usual spirit,
+struck his spurless heels into Donald's sides, and tried to rise in the
+saddle, in response to the hobble of the old Highlander.
+
+The Laird had been scarcely out of the house, when David had a communing
+with his wife, in absence of Effie, on the extraordinary intimation made
+by the old lover. Betty was agreeable to the match; but the tear came
+into her eye as she thought of the sacrifice poor Effie was to be called
+upon to make. Neither of them could answer for the consent of Effie,
+whose melancholy, though somewhat ameliorated, was little diminished,
+and whose recollections of Lewis Campbell were as vivid as they were on
+the day of his departure. When she returned from one of her solitary
+rambles, which fed her passion and increased her grief, she was
+delicately told of the intentions of Laird Cherrytrees. The announcement
+of the extraordinary intelligence produced an effect which neither her
+father nor mother could have anticipated. A quick operation of her mind
+placed before her all the affectionate acts of attention she had for
+years been in the habit of applying to the old friend of her father, and
+the preserver of their lives. Gratitude, operating in one of the most
+grateful hearts that ever beat in the bosom of mortal, had produced in
+her an exuberant kindness, a devotedness of a species of affection due
+by a child to its godfather, a playful freedom of the confidence of one
+who relied on the disparity of years for a license from even the
+suspicion of a possibility of any other relation existing between them.
+That now came back upon her, loaded with self-reproach and shame, and
+attributing to her misconstrued attentions the extraordinary passion
+that had taken hold of the heart of the old Laird. She was totally
+unable to make any reply to her parents. The image of Lewis Campbell,
+never absent from her mind, assumed a new form, and swam in the tears
+which flowed from her eyes. The natural contrast between age and youth,
+love and gratitude, assumed its legitimate strength. The first feeling
+of her mind was, that she would suffer the death that had for a time
+been impending over her, and whose finger was already on her breaking
+heart, rather than comply with the wishes of her father and mother. They
+saw the struggle that was in her mind, and abstained from pressing what
+they had suggested. They did not ask her even to give her sentiments;
+but the silent tears that stole down her cheek and dropped in her lap
+from her drooping head, required no spoken commentary to tell them the
+extent of her grief, and the resolution at least of a heart that might
+entirely break, as it appeared to be breaking, but never could forget.
+
+There was little sleep for the eyes of Effie on the succeeding night.
+Her sobs reached the ears of her parents, who, unable to yield her
+consolation, were obliged to leave her to wrestle with her grief;
+sending up a silent prayer to the Author of all good dispensations, that
+He might assuage the sorrow of one who had already, with exemplary
+patience, submitted to the rod of affliction. The sacredness of her
+feelings was too well appreciated by her parents to admit of any offer
+of counsel, where deep-seated affection, the work of mysterious
+instinct, stood in solemn derision of the vulgar ideas of this world's
+expediency. The struggle in her mind arose from the strength of her
+love, and the power of her filial devotion. No part of the attendant
+circumstances or probable consequences of her decision escaped her mind.
+She knew that she never could be happy as the wife of any other
+individual, even of suitable age, than Lewis Campbell. But this
+concerned only herself; and she knew, and trembled as she thought, that
+the result of her decision might be the destitution, the want, perhaps
+the death of her parents; their all depended on the breath of the man
+whom she, by the sign of her finger, might change from a friend to a
+foe; and she might thereby become the destroyer of those who gave her
+being.
+
+The morning came, but brought neither sleep nor relief to the unhappy
+maiden. Her parents seemed inclined not to advert to the subject that
+day, but to let her struggle on with her own thoughts. The hour of the
+Laird's visit approached, and he was already on the road for the home of
+his beloved, whom his ardent fancy pictured standing smiling at the
+door, ready as usual to receive him and lead him into the house.
+Donald--who knew a reverie in his master bettor than he did himself, and
+did not fail to take advantage of it--ambled on with diminished speed.
+The Laird approached the cottage. No Effie was there. His bright visions
+took flight, and were succeeded by a cold shiver, the precursor of a
+gloomy train of ideas, which pictured a refusal and all its attendant
+horrors. He drew up the head of Donald, and even invited him to partake
+of the long grass which grew by the way-side. He counted the moments as
+Donald devoured the food; and, from time to time, lifted his eyes to see
+if Effie was yet at the cottage door. She was not, to be seen--and she
+had not been absent before for many months. His mind was unprepared for
+a refusal; the ground-swell of his previous excited fancy distracted him
+amidst the dead stillness of despair. He looked again, and for the last
+time that day. Effie was not yet there. He turned the head of the
+delighted, and no doubt astonished Donald, and quietly sought again the
+house of Burnbank.
+
+The same procedure was gone through on the succeeding day. Laird
+Cherrytrees again proceeded to the cottage of David Mearns; and, as he
+sauntered along, he thought it impossible that Effie should again be
+absent from her post. He was too good a man, and too conceited a lover,
+as all old lovers are, to allow his mind to dwell on the probable
+operation of necessity and the fear of injuring her father's patron, on
+the mind of the daughter; and yet a lurking, rebellious idea suggested
+that he would rather see Effie at the door, impelled by that cause, than
+absent altogether. His hopes again beat high, and Donald was pricked on
+to the goal of his wishes with an asperity he did not relish so well as
+a reverie. The spot was attained. Effie was still absent. Donald was
+again remitted to the long grass, and all the resources of a lover's
+mind were called up, to enable him to face the evil that awaited him.
+But all was in vain--he found it impossible to proceed.
+
+"I am rejected," he muttered to himself, with a sigh; "a cottager's
+dochter has refused the Laird o' Burnbank; but her cauldness an' cruelty
+mak me like her the mair. Effie Mearns, Effie Mearns! hoo little do ye
+ken what commotion ye hae produced in this puir, burstin heart! But,
+though ye winna hae me, I winna desert yer faither. Hame, Donald, to
+Burnbank." And, as he pulled up the bridle with his left hand, he wiped
+away the tears that had collected in his eyes, and, casting many a look
+back to the cottage, cantered slowly home.
+
+These proceedings of the Laird had been noticed by Betty Mearns from the
+window of the cottage, and she and David were at no loss to guess the
+cause of them. They knew his timid, sensitive disposition, and truly
+attributed his return to his not seeing Effie at the door waiting for
+him as usual. Apprehensions now seized the good mother, that the Laird
+might withdraw his attentions and assistance from the family, the result
+of which would be nothing but misery and ruin; as David's fractured
+limbs were yet far from being healed, and a long period must yet pass
+before he could earn a penny to keep in their lives. These fears were
+increased by a third and a fourth day having passed without a visit
+from the Laird, who had, notwithstanding, been seen reconnoitering as
+usual at a distance from the cottage. Effie herself saw how matters
+stood, and learned, from the looks of her father and mother, sentiments
+they seemed unwilling to declare. She was still much convulsed with the
+struggle of the antagonist duties, wishes, emotions, and fears, that
+rose in her mind; and the apprehensions of her parents, which she
+considered well-founded, added to her sorrow an additional source of
+anguish.
+
+"This house," said David, at last overcome by his feelings, "has become
+mair like an hospital that has lost its mortification than an honest
+man's cottage. Effie sits greetin an' sabbin the hail day, an' you,
+Betty, look forward to starvation, wi' the gruesome face o' despair. I
+am unhappy mysel, besides being an invalid. What is this to end in? What
+are we to do? How are we to live withoot meat, now that Burnbank, guid
+man, has deserted us?"
+
+"There has come naething frae Burnbank for five days," replied Betty;
+"an' the siller I got frae the guid auld man, the last time he was here,
+I payed awa i' the village for necessaries I had taen on afore we got
+that help. Our girnel winna haud oot lang against three mous; an' if
+Laird Cherrytrees bides awa muckle langer, I see naething for it but to
+beg."
+
+The tear started to the eye of David. He looked at Effie. She wept and
+sobbed, and covered her face with her hands.
+
+"Effie, woman," said David, "a' this micht hae been averted if ye had
+just gane to the door, an' welcomed the auld Laird, as ye were wont.
+He's a blate man, though a guid carl; an' he has, nae doot, thocht he
+was unwelcome when yer auld practice o' waitin for him was gien up."
+
+"I tauld her that, David," said Betty, "an' pressed her to gang to the
+door, though it was only to gie the blate Laird a glimpse o' her, whilk
+was a' he wanted to bring him in; but she only sabbed the mair. Unhappy
+hour she first saw that callant, wha may now be dead or married for
+ought she kens!--an yet for his sake maun a hail family dree the dule o'
+this day's misery. Effie, woman, can ye no forget are wha hasna thocht
+ye worth the trouble o tellin ye, by ae scrape o' his pen, whether he be
+i' the land o' the livin!"
+
+A sob was the only reply Effie could make to this appeal.
+
+"I hae tauld Effie," said David, "what wad save us frae the ruin an'
+starvation that stare us i' the face; but my mind's made up to suffer to
+the end, though I should lie here wi' my broken banes, and dree the
+pains o' hunger, rather than force my dochter to marry a man against her
+ain choice. But, O Effie, woman, wad ye see yer puir faither, broken as
+he is baith in mind and body, lie starvin here in his bed, wi' nae mair
+pooer to earn a bite o' bread than the unspeaned bairn, and no mak a
+sacrifice to save him?"
+
+"Ay, faither," replied Effie, "I wad dee to save ye."
+
+"But deein winna save either him or me," said Betty. "Naething will hae
+that effect but yer agreein to be the leddy o' the braw hoose an' braid
+acres o' Burnbank. Wae's me! what a difference between that condition,
+wi' servants at yer nod, an' a' the comforts an' luxuries o' life at yer
+command, an', abune a', the pooer o' makin happy yer auld faither and
+mother, an' this awfu prospect o' dreein the very warst an' last o' a'
+the evils o' life--want an' auld age--ill-matched pair! Effie, woman, my
+bonny bairn, hae ye nae love in yer heart, but for Lewie Campbell? Wad
+ye, for his sake, see a' this misfortune fa' on the heads o' yer
+parents, whom, by the laws o' God an' man, ye are bound to honour,
+serve, and obey?"
+
+It was easier for Effie to say she would die to save her parents, than
+that she would comply with the wish of her mother; but the feeling
+appeal of her parent increased her agony, which induced another paroxysm
+of hysterical sobs--the only answer she could yet make to her mother.
+
+"Effie doesna care for either you or me, Betty," said David, "or she wad
+hae little hesitation aboot marryin a guid, fresh, clean, rich, auld
+man, to save her faither and mother frae poverty and starvation. I see
+nae great sacrifice i' the matter. Her young heart mayna rejoice i' the
+pleasures o' a daft love, but her guid sense will be gratified by a
+feelin o' duty far aboon the vain, frawart freaks o' a silly, giddy,
+youthfu passion. Let her refuse Laird Cherrytrees, an' when Lewie
+Campbell comes hame, the owrecome bread o' the funeral o' her faither
+may grace a waddin bought wi' the price o' his life."
+
+"Dinna speak that way, faither," cried Effie, lifting up her hands; "I
+canna stand that. You said ye wadna force me, an' ye _are_ forcin me.
+Oh, my puir heart, wha or what will support ye when grief for my parents
+turns me against ye? Faither, faither, when I am dead, Laird Cherrytrees
+will be again yer friend. A little time will do't: will ye no wait?"
+
+"Hunger waits only eight days, as the sayin is," replied he, "an ye'll
+live mair than that time, I hope an' trow. I will be dead afore ye,
+Effie, an' ye'll hae the consolation, as ye maybe drap a tear on the
+mossy grey stane that covers the Mearnses i' the kirkyard o' our parish,
+to think, if ye shouldna like to say, in case ye micht be heard--though
+thinkin an' speakin's a' ane to God--that 'that stane was lifted ten
+years suner than it micht hae been, because I liked Lewie Campbell
+better than auld Laird Cherrytrees.'"
+
+"An' it's no likely," said the mother, "that I wad be there to hear
+Effie mak sae waefu a speech. If I binna lyin wi' the Mearns, I'll be
+wi' the Cherrytrees o' Mossnook--nae relations o' the Burnbanks, though
+maybe as guid a family. But, afore I'm mixed wi' the dust o' that auld
+hoose, Effie--an' it mayna be lang--ye may join the twa Cherrytrees, an'
+let the gravestanes o' the Mearns, as weel as the Mossnooks, lie yet a
+score years langer withoot bein moved. It's a pity to disturb the lang
+grass. Its sough i' the nichtwind keeps the bats frae pickin the auld
+banes, an' maybe it may save yer mother's, if ye send her there afore
+her time."
+
+Effie's feelings could no longer withstand these appeals. Her sobbing
+ceased suddenly; and, starting up from her seat, she looked to the old
+clock that stood against the wall of the cottage. She noticed that it
+was upon the hour of the Laird's usual visit.
+
+"It is twelve o'clock, faither," she said, firmly--"this hoor decides
+the fate o' Effie Mearns."
+
+Walking to the door, she placed herself in the position she used to
+occupy when she intended to welcome her father's friend. Now she was to
+welcome a husband. Laird Cherrytrees was, as might have been expected,
+allowing Donald to take his liberty of the road-side, grazing while he
+was busy reconnoitering the cottage. The moment he saw the form of Effie
+standing where he had for several long days wished to see her, he pulled
+up Donald's bridle with the alacrity of youth, and, striking his sides
+with his unarmed heels, made all the speed of a bridegroom to get to his
+bride. The sight of the object he had gazed upon so unceasingly for so
+long a time, and whom he had strained his eyes in vain to see during
+these eventful days, operated like a charm on the old lover. He
+discovered at first sight the red, swollen eyes of Effie; but he was too
+happy in thinking he had been successful, as he had no doubt he had, to
+meditate on the struggle which produced his bliss. Having taken a long
+draught of the fountain of his hopes and happiness, and feasted his eyes
+on the face of the maiden, who attempted to smile through her tears,
+which he did sitting on his horse, and, without speaking a word--for,
+loquacious in politics or rural economy, he was mute in love--he
+dismounted, while Effie, as usual, held the reins. He lost no time in
+getting into his chair, falling back into it like a breathless traveller
+who has at last attained the end of his journey. David and Betty, who
+construed Effie's conduct into a consent, took an early opportunity,
+while she was still at the door, of letting the happy Laird know that
+their daughter, as they conceived, was inclined to the match. The Laird
+received the intelligence as if it had been too much for mortal to bear.
+He was at first beyond the vulgar habit of speech. He sighed, turned his
+eyes in their sockets, groaned, and wrung his hands. On recovering
+himself, he exclaimed----
+
+"Whar is she, Betty? Let me see the dear creature. David, ye'll hae
+Ravelrigg; it's the best o' them a'. Whan is't to be, Betty? Ye maun fix
+the day; an' ye maun brak the thing to Lucy, and to Jenny Mucklewham;
+for I hae nae pooer. Let me see her--let me see the sweet creature this
+instant."
+
+Effie, at the request of her mother, came in and resumed her seat on the
+three-footed stool. Her eyes were still swollen, and she looked
+sorrowfully at her father. The Laird fixed his eyes on her; but his
+loquacity was gone. He had not a word to say; but his "glowrin" was in
+some degree changed, being accompanied by a soft smile of
+self-complacency and contentment, and freed from the nervous
+irritability with which he used to solicit with his eyes a look from the
+object of his affections. His visit this day was shorter than it used to
+be. Next day, Betty was to visit Burnbank, to arrange for the marriage.
+
+Meanwhile, the unfortunate girl resigned herself as a self-sacrifice
+into the hands of her mother. Bound with the silken bands of filial
+affection, she renounced all desire of exercising her own free-will, or
+indulging in those feelings of the female heart which are deemed so
+strong as to demand the sacrifice often of all other earthly
+considerations. The fate of Iphiginia has occupied the pens and tongues
+of pitying mortals for thousands of years. A lovely woman sacrificed for
+a fair wind, doomed to have the blood that mantled in the blushing
+cheeks of beauty sprinkled on the altar of a false religion, is a
+spectacle which the imagination cannot contemplate without a
+participation of the strongest sympathies of the heart; yet there are,
+in the common every-day world we now live in, many a scene in the act of
+being performed, where, though there is no bloodshed and no smoking
+altar exhibited, the sacrifice is not less than that of the Grecian
+victim. Our blessed, holy altar of matrimony is often, by the wayward
+feelings of man--for we here say nothing of vice or corrupt
+conduct--made more cruel than those of Moloch and Chiun. There is many a
+bloodless Iphiginia in those days, whose sufferings are unknown and
+unsung, because confined to the heart that broke over them and concealed
+them in death. The young, tender, and devoted female, who, for the love
+she bears to her parents, consents to intermarry with rich age, to
+embrace dry bones, to extend her sympathies to churlishness, caprice,
+and ill-nature, or, what is worse, to the asthmatic giggle of a
+superannuated love, while all the while her heart, cheated of its
+tribute and swelling with indignation, requires to be watched by her
+with vigilance and firmness, the cruelty of which she herself
+feels--presents a form of self-sacrifice possessing claims on the pity
+of mankind beyond those of the boasted self-immolation of ancient
+devotees.
+
+The silence and dejection of our bride were construed, by her parents,
+into that seemly and becoming sedateness which sensible young women
+think it proper to assume on the eve of so important a change in their
+condition as marriage; while the happy bridegroom had come to that time
+of life when he is pleased with submission, though it be expressed
+through tears. No chemical menstruum has so much power in the
+dissolution of the hardest metals as the self-complacency of an old
+lover has in construing, according to his wishes, the actions, words, or
+looks of the young woman who is destined to be his bride. Silence and
+tears are expressive of happiness as well as of grief; and, so long as
+the desire of the ancient philosopher is uncomplied with by the gods,
+and there is no window to the heart, that organ in the young victim may
+break while the sexagenarian bridegroom is enjoying the imputed silent,
+restrained happiness of the object of his ill-timed affection.
+
+The sadness and melancholy of the apparently-resigned Effie Mearns had
+no effect on the noise and show of the preparations for her marriage
+with her old lover. The marriages of old men are well known to be
+celebrated with higher bugle notes from the trumpet of fame than any
+others. A sumptuous dinner was to be given to the neighbouring lairds,
+and the cotters were to be fed and regaled on the green opposite to the
+mansion. Dancing and music were to add their charms to the gay scene;
+and it was even alleged that the light of a bonfire would lend its
+peculiar aid, in raising the joy of the guests, predisposed to hilarity
+by plenteous potations, to the proper height suited to the conquest of
+the old bridegroom over, at once, a young woman and old Time.
+
+For days previous to the eventful one, Effie Mearns was not heard to
+open her lips. She looked on all the gay preparations for her marriage
+as if they had been the mournful acts of the undertaker employed in
+laying the silver trimming on the coffin lid of a lover. The bedside of
+her sick parent, who was still unable to rise, was the place where she
+sat "shrouded in silence." She heard the conversations of her father and
+mother about the progress of the preparations, without exhibiting so
+much interest as to show that she understood them. Misgivings crossed
+the minds of the old couple, and brought tears to their eyes, as they
+contemplated the animated corpse that sat there, waiting the nod of the
+master of ceremonies, and ready to perform the part assigned to it in
+the forthcoming orgies of mournful joy; but they had gone too far to
+recede, and it was even a subject of satisfaction to them that the
+period of the celebration was so near, for otherwise they might have had
+reason to fear that their daughter would not have survived the
+intermediate time. When the bridegroom called, his ears were alarmed by
+the voices of the parents, who saw the necessity of endeavouring to hide
+the condition of their daughter; and he was satisfied, if he got, free
+and unrestrained, "a feast of the eyes." His love was still expressed by
+silent gazing; for it was too deep in his old heart for either words or
+tears; if, indeed, there was moisture enough in the seat of his
+affection for the suppliance of the _softest_ expression of the soft
+passion.
+
+The eventful day arrived. The marriage was to take place in the cottage,
+where David Mearns still lay confined to bed. The sick man wore a
+marriage favour attached to the breast of his shirt!--for Laird
+Cherrytrees would be contented with no less a demonstration of his
+participation in his unparalleled happiness. The still silent bride
+_submitted_ passively to all the acts of her nimble dressers, whose
+laugh seemed to strike her ears like funeral bells; yet she tried--poor
+victim! to smile, though the clouded beam came through a tear which, by
+its steadfastness, seemed to belong to the orb. The bridegroom came at
+the very instant when he ought to have come--the hand of the clock not
+having had time to leave the mark of notation. He was dressed in the
+style of his earliest days, with cocked hat, laced coat, and a sky-blue
+vest, embroidered in the richest manner; while a new wig, ordered from
+the metropolis, imparted to him the freshness of youth. His cheek was
+flushed with the blood which joy had forced, for a moment, from where it
+was more needed, at the drying fountain of life; and his eye spoke a
+happiness which his parched tongue could not have achieved, without
+causing shame even to himself. Everything was new, spruce, perking,
+self-complacent. The clergyman next came, and all was prepared.
+
+Throughout all this time and all these preparations, not the slightest
+change had been observed on the bride. After she was dressed, she took
+her seat again, silently by the side of her father's sickbed, where she
+sat like a statue. The ceremony was now to commence, and she stood up,
+when required by the clergyman, as if she obeyed the command of an
+executioner. It was noticed that she seemed to incline to be as near as
+possible to her father's bed; and her unwillingness or inability to come
+forward forced the clergyman and the bridegroom some paces from the
+situation they at first held. The ceremony proceeded till it came to the
+part where the consent of the parties is asked. The happy bridegroom
+pronounced his response, quick, sharp, and with an air of conceit, which
+brought a smile to the faces of the parties present. There was now a
+pause for the consent of the bride. All eyes were fixed on her
+death-like face. A severe struggle was going on in her bosom; yet her
+countenance was unmoved, and no one conjectured that she suffered more
+than sensitive females often do in her situation. The clergyman repeated
+his question. There was still a pause--the eyes of all were riveted on
+her. "I _canna_, I _canna_!" at last she exclaimed, in a voice of agony,
+and fell back on the bed--a corpse!
+
+Six months after the death of Effie Mearns, Lucy Cherrytrees was
+married, without faint or swoon, to Lewis Campbell, who returned home,
+in spite of his reported death. The union was against the consent of the
+Laird, who soon died of either a broken heart or old age--no doctor
+could have told which.
+
+[Footnote 1: This story will suggest the remembrance of a popular ballad, but the
+similarity is casual; for the circumstances are here true, if they may
+not be found of every-day occurrence somewhere about the temple of
+Mammon.--ED.]
+
+
+
+
+GLEANINGS OF THE COVENANT.
+
+
+
+
+XIV.--JAMES RENWICK.
+
+
+In the times in which we live, party spirit is carried very far. Many
+honest tradesmen, merchants, and shopkeepers, are ruined by their votes
+at elections. The ordinary intercourse of social life is obstructed and
+deranged. Friends go up to the polling station with friends, but
+separate there, and become, it may be, the most inveterate enemies.
+This, our later reformation of 1832, has cost us much; but our
+sufferings are nothing to those which marked the two previous
+reformations from Popery and Prelacy. In the one instance, fire and
+faggot were the ordinary means adopted for defending political
+arrangements; in the other, the gallows and the maiden did the same
+work, and the boots and the thumbikins acted as ministering engines of
+torture. The whole of society was convulsed; men's blood boiled in their
+veins at the revolting sights which were almost daily obtruding upon
+their attention; and their judgments being greatly influenced by their
+feelings, it is not to be wondered at that they should, in a few
+instances, have overshot, as it were, the mark--have sacrificed their
+lives to the support of opinions which appear now not materially
+different from those which their enemies pressed upon their acceptance.
+It is a sad mistake to suppose that the friends of Presbytery, during
+the fearful twenty-eight years' persecution of Charles and James, died
+in the support of certain doctrines and forms of church government
+merely. With these were, unhappily, or rather, as things have turned
+out, fortunately, combined, political or civil liberty, the
+establishment and support of a supreme power, vested in King, Lords,
+and Commons--instead of being vested, by usurpation, merely in the King
+alone. By avoiding to call Parliaments, and by obtaining supplies of
+money from France and otherwise, the two last of the Stuart Despots had,
+in fact, broken the compact of Government, and had exposed themselves
+all along, through the twenty-eight years of persecution, to
+dethronement for high treason. This was the strong view taken by those
+who fought and who fell at Bothwell Bridge, and this was the view taken
+by nine-tenths of the inhabitants of Scotland--of the descendants and
+admirers of Bruce and Wallace--of Knox and Carstairs. James Renwick, the
+last of the martyrs in the cause of religion and liberty, was executed
+in Edinburgh in his twenty-sixth year. He was a young man of liberal
+education, conducted both at the college of Edinburgh, and Groningen,
+abroad--of the most amiable disposition, and the most unblemished moral
+character--yet, simply because he avowed, and supported, and publicly
+preached doctrines on which, in twelve months after his execution, the
+British Government was based, he was adjudged to the death, and
+ignominiously executed in the presence of his poor mother and other
+relatives, as well as of the Edinburgh public. Mr Woodrow, in his
+history of this man's life, alludes to some papers which he had seen,
+containing notices of Mr Renwick's trials and hair-breadth escapes;
+prior to his capture and execution--which, however, he refrains from
+giving to the public. It so happens that, from my acquaintance with a
+lineal descendent of the last of the Martyrs, I have it in my power, in
+some measure, to supply the deficiency; his own note, or
+memorandum-book, being still in existence, though it never has been, nor
+ever will, probably, be published.
+
+It was in the month of January 1688, that Mr Renwick was preaching,
+after nightfall, to a few followers, at Braid Craigs, in the
+neighbourhood of Edinburgh. The night was stormy--a cold east wind, with
+occasional blasts of snow--whilst the moon, in her second quarter,
+looked out, at intervals, on plaids and bonnets nestled to the leeward
+of rocks and furze. It was a piteous sight to view rational and immortal
+creatures reduced to a state upon the level with the hares and the
+foxes. Renwick discoursed to them from the point of a rock which
+protruded over the lee side of the Craigieknowe. His manner was solemn
+and impressive. He was a young man of about twenty-five years of age;
+and his mother, Elspeth Carson, sat immediately before him--an old woman
+of threescore and upwards--in her tartan plaid and velvet hood. Her son
+had been born to a larger promise, and had enjoyed an excellent academic
+education; and much it had originally grieved the old woman's heart to
+find all her hopes of seeing him minister of her native parish of
+Glencairn, blasted; but his conscience would not allow him to conform;
+and she had followed him in his wanderings and field-preachings, through
+Ayrshire, Renfrewshire, and all along by the Pentland Hills, to
+Edinburgh, where a sister of hers was married, and lived in a
+respectable way on the Castle Hill. This evening, after psalm-singing
+and prayer, Mr. Renwick had chosen for his text these words, in the
+fourth verse of the eighteenth chapter of the book of Revelation--"Come
+out of her, my people." The kindly phrase, "my people," was beautifully
+insisted upon.
+
+"There ye are," said Renwick, stretching out his hand to the darkening
+sleet; "there ye are, a poor, shivering, fainting, despised, persecuted
+remnant, whom the great ones despise, and the men of might, and of war,
+and of blood, cut down with their swords, and rack with their tortures.
+Ye are, like ye'r great Master, despised and rejected of men; but the
+Master whom ye serve, and whom angels serve with veiled faces, and even
+He who created and supports the sun, the moon, and the stars,
+He--blessed be His name!--is not ashamed to acknowledge ye, under all
+your humiliation, as _His_ people. 'Come out of her,' says He, '_my
+people_.' O, sirs, this is a sweet and a loving invitation. Ye are '_His
+people_,' the sheep of His pasture, after all; and who would have
+thought it, that heard ye, but yesterday, denounced at the cross of
+Edinburgh as traitors, and rebels, and non-conformists, as the
+offscourings of the earth, the filth and the abomination in the eyes and
+in the nostrils of the great and the mighty? 'Come out!' says the text,
+and out ye have come--'done ere ye bade, guid Lord!' Ye may truly and
+reverentially say--Here we are, guid Lord; we have come out from the
+West Port, and from the Grassmarket, and from the Nether Bow, and from
+the Canongate--out we have come, because we are thy people. We know thy
+voice, and thy servants' voice, and a stranger and a hireling, with his
+stipend and his worldly rewards, will we not follow; but we will listen
+to him whose reward is with him; whose stipend is Thy divine
+approbation; whose manse is the wilderness; and whose glebe land is the
+barren rock and the shelterless knowe. Come out of _her_. There _she_
+sits," (pointing towards Edinburgh, now visible in the scattered rays of
+the moon,) "there she sits, like a lady, in her delicacies, and her
+drawing-rooms, and her ball-rooms, and her closetings, and her
+abominations. Ye can almost hear the hum of her many voices on the wings
+of the tempest. There she sits in her easy chair, stretching her feet
+downwards, from west to east, from castle to palace! But she has lost
+her first love, and has deserted her covenanted husband. She hath gone
+astray--she hath gone astray!--and He who made her hath denounced
+her--He whose she was in the day of her betrothment, hath said--She is
+no longer mine; 'come out of her, my people'--be not misled by her
+witcheries, and her dalliance, and her smiles--be not terrified by her
+threats, and cruelties, and her murderings--she is drunk, she is
+drunk--and with the most dangerous and intoxicating beverage, too--she
+is drunk with the blood of the saints. When shipwrecked and famishing
+sailors kill each other, and drink the blood, it is written that they
+immediately become mad, and, uttering all manner of blasphemies, expire!
+Thus it is with the 'Lady of the rock'--she is now in her terrible
+blasphemies, and will, by and by, expire in her frenzy. And who sits
+upon her throne?--even the bloody Papist, who misrules these unhappy
+lands--he, the usurper of a throne from which by law he is
+debarred--even the cruel and Papistical _Duke_, whom men, in their folly
+or in their fears, denominate 'KING'--he, too, is doomed--the decree
+hath gone forth, and he will perish with her, because he would not _come
+out_."
+
+"Will he, indeed, Mr Bletherwell? But there are some here who must
+perish first." So said the wily and infuriated Claverhouse, as he poured
+in his men by a signal from the adjoining glen, (where the lonely
+hermitage now stands in its silent beauty,) and in an instant had made
+Renwick, and about ten of his followers--the old woman, his mother,
+included--prisoners. This was done in an instant, for the arrangements
+had been made prior to the hour of meeting, and Claverhouse, attired in
+plaid and bonnet, had actually sat during the whole discourse, listening
+to the speaker till once he should utter something treasonable, when, by
+rising on a rock, and shaking the corners of his plaid, he brought the
+troop up from their hiding-places, amidst the whins and the broom by
+which the glen was at that time covered. Renwick, seeing all resistance
+useless, and indeed forbidding his followers, who were not unprovided
+for the occasion, to fire upon the military, marched onwards, in
+silence, towards Edinburgh. As they passed along by the land now
+denominated "Canaan," they halted at a small public-house kept by a
+woman well known at the time by the nickname of "Red-herrings," on
+account of her making frequent use of these viands to stimulate a desire
+for her strong drink. Over her door-way, indeed, a red-herring and a
+foaming tankard were rudely sketched on a sign-board, (like cause and
+effect, or mere sequence!) in loving unity. The prisoners were
+accommodated with standing-room in Tibby's kitchen; while the soldiers,
+with their leader, occupied the ben-room and the only doorway--thus
+securing their prisoners from all possibility of escape. Refreshments,
+such as Tibby could muster, consisting principally of brandy and ale,
+mixed up in about equal proportions of each, were distributed amongst
+the soldiers--who were, in fact, from their long exposure in the open
+air, in need of some such stimulants; whilst the poor prisoners were
+only watched, and made a subject of great merriment by the soldiers. The
+halt, however, was very temporary; but, temporary as it was, it enabled
+several of the members of the field-meeting to reach Edinburgh, and to
+apprise their friends, and what is termed the mob of the streets, of the
+doings at "Braid Craigs." Onwards advanced the party--soldiers before
+and behind, and their captives in the middle--till they reached the West
+Port, at the foot of the Grassmarket. It was near about ten o'clock, and
+the streets were in a buz with idle 'prentices, bakers' boys,
+shoemakers' lads, &c. The march along the Grassmarket seemed to alarm
+Clavers, for he halted his men, made them examine their firelocks,
+spread themselves all around the prisoners, and, advancing himself in
+front, and on his famous black horse, with drawn sword and holster
+pistols, seemed to set all opposition at defiance. The party had already
+gained the middle of that narrow and winding pass, the West Bow, when a
+waggon, heavily loaded with stones, was hurled downwards upon the party,
+with irresistible force and rapidity--Clavers's horse shied, and escaped
+the moving destruction; but it came full force into the very midst of
+the soldiers, who, from a natural instinct, turned off into open doors
+and side closes; in this they were imitated by the poor prisoners, who
+were better acquainted with the localities of the West Bow than the
+soldiery. In an instant afterwards, a dense and armed mob rushed
+headlong down the street, carrying all before them, and shouting aloud,
+"Renwick for ever! Renwick for ever!" This was taken as a hint by the
+prisoners, who, in an instant, had mixed with the mob; or sunk, as it
+were, through the earth, into dark passages and cellars. "Fire!" was
+Claverhouse's immediate order, so soon as the human torrent had reached
+him; and _fire_ some of the soldiers did, but not to the injury of any
+of the prisoners, but to that of a person--a bride, as it turned
+out--who, in her curiosity or fear, had looked from a window above; she
+was shot through the head, and died instantly. But, in the meantime, the
+rescue was complete--Claverhouse, afraid manifestly of being shot from a
+window, galloped up the brae, and made the best of his way to the
+Castle, there to demand fresh troops to quell what he called an
+insurrection: whilst, in the meantime, the men, after a very temporary
+search or pursuit, marched onwards, with their muskets presented to the
+open windows, in case any head should protrude. But no heads were to be
+seen; and the soldiers escaped to the guard-house (to the Heart of
+Midlothian) in safety. Here, however, a scene ensued of a most
+heart-rending nature. Scarcely had the men grounded their muskets in the
+guard-house, when a seeming maniac rushed upon them with an open knife,
+and cut right and left like a fury. He was immediately secured, but not
+till after many of the soldiers were bleeding profusely. They thrust him
+immediately, bound hand and foot, into the black-hole, to await the
+decision of next morning; but next morning death had decided his
+fate--he had manifestly died of apoplexy, brought on by extreme
+excitement. His mother, who had followed her son when he issued forth
+deprived seemingly of reason, having lost sight of him in the darkness,
+had learned next morning of his fate and situation. She came,
+therefore, with the return of light, to the prison door, and had been
+waiting hours before it was opened. At last Clavers arrived, and ordered
+the maniac to be brought into his presence, and that of the Court, for
+examination. But it was all over; and the distorted limbs and features
+of a young and handsome man were all the mark by which a fond mother
+could certify the identity of an only son. From this poor woman's
+examination, it turned out that her son was to have been married on that
+very day to a young woman whom he had long loved; but that he had been
+called to see her corpse, after she was shot by the soldiery, and had
+rushed out in the frantic and armed manner already described. The poor
+woman, from that hour, became melancholy; refused to take food; and,
+always calling upon the names of her "bonny murdered bairns," was found
+dead one morning in her bed.
+
+In the meantime, James Renwick had made the best of his way down the
+Cowgate, and across, by a narrow wynd, into the Canongate, where a
+friend of his kept a small public-house. He had gone to bed; but his
+wife was still at the bar, and two men sat drinking in a small side
+apartment. He asked immediately for her husband, and was recognised, but
+with a wink and a look which but too plainly spoke her suspicion of the
+persons who were witnesses of his entrance. Hereupon he called for some
+refreshment, as if he had been a perfect stranger, and, seating himself
+at a small table, began to read in a little note-book which he took from
+his side pocket--"four, five, six, seven--yes, seven," said he--"and it
+has cost me seven pounds my journey to Edinburgh." This he said so
+audibly as to be heard by the persons who were sitting in the adjoining
+box, that they might regard him as a stranger, and unconnected with
+Edinburgh. But, as he afterwards expressed it, he deeply repented of the
+attempt to mislead. The Lord, he said, had justly punished him for
+distrusting his power to extricate him, as he had already done, from his
+troubles. The men, after one had accosted him in a friendly tone about
+the weather, or some indifferent subject, took their departure; and Mrs
+Chalmers and he, now joined by the husband, enjoyed one hour's canny
+crack ere bedtime, over some warm repast. The whole truth was made known
+to them; but, though perfectly trustworthy themselves, they expressed a
+doubt of their customers, who were known to be little better than hired
+informers, who went about to public-houses, at the expense of the
+Government, listening and prying if they could find any evidence against
+the poor Covenanters. Next day, even before daylight, the house was
+surrounded by armed men, and Renwick was demanded by name. Mr Chalmers
+did not deny that he was in the house, but said that he came to him as
+to a distant relation, and that he was no way connected with his
+doctrines or opinions. In the meantime, Renwick was aroused, and had
+resolved to sell his life as dearly as possible. He was a young and an
+active man, and trusted, as he owned with great regret afterwards, to
+his strength and activity, rather than to the mercy and the wisdom of
+his Maker. So, rushing suddenly down stairs, and throwing himself,
+whilst discharging a pistol, (which, however, did no harm), into the
+street, he was out of sight in a twinkling; but, in passing along, his
+hat fell off; and this circumstance drew the attention and suspicion of
+every one whom he passed, to his appearance. One foot, in particular,
+pressed hard upon him from behind, and a voice kept constantly crying,
+"Stop thief!--stop thief!" He ran down a blind alley, on the other side
+of the Canongate, and was at last taken, without resistance, by three
+men, one of whom--and it was the one who had all along pursued him--was
+the person who had accosted him last night in the public-house,
+respecting the weather. He was immediately carried to prison, where he
+remained--visited indeed by his mother--till next assizes, when he was
+tried, condemned, and afterwards executed--the Last of the Martyrs!
+
+The conversation which he had with his mother, his public confessions of
+faith, and adherence to the covenanted cause, as well as his last
+address, drowned at the time in the sound of drums--all these are given
+at full length in Woodrow, (the edition of Dr Burns of Paisley), to
+which I must refer the reader who is curious upon such subjects. In this
+valuable work will likewise be found the inscription placed upon a very
+handsome cippus, or monument of stone, erected to his memory. We give it
+to the reader. There is another, if we mistake not, in the Greyfriars of
+Edinburgh, somewhat in the same style. They are both equally simple and
+touching.
+
+ In memory of the late
+ REVEREND JAMES RENWICK,
+ the last who suffered to the death for attachment to the
+ Covenanted Cause of Christ
+ in Scotland.
+ Born near this spot, 15th February, 1662,
+ and executed at the
+ Grassmarket, Edinburgh,
+ 1688.
+ "The righteous shall be in everlasting remembrance."
+ Ps. cxli. and 6.
+ Erected by subscription, 1828.
+
+The late James Hastings, Esq. gave a donation of the ground. The
+subscriptions, amounting to about L100, were collected at large from
+Christians of all denominations; and the gentleman who took the most
+active part in suggesting and carrying through the undertaking, was the
+Rev. Gavin Mowat, minister of the Reformed Presbyterian Congregation at
+Whithorn, and formerly at Scar-brig, in Penpont, Dumfries-shire. The
+monument is placed upon the farm of Knees, at no great distance from the
+farm-house where the martyr was born. It stands upon an eminence, from
+which it may be seen at the distance of several miles down the glen, in
+which the village of Monyaive is situated. It was visited last summer by
+the author of this narrative; when the resolution, which has now been
+very imperfectly fulfilled, was taken.
+
+
+
+
+XV.--OLD ISBEL KIRK.
+
+
+Isbel Kirk lived in Pothouse, Closeburn, in that very house where that
+distinguished scholar, the late Professor Hunter of St Andrew's, was
+born. She had never been married, and lived in a small lonely cottage,
+with no companions but her cat and cricket, which chirped occasionally
+from beneath the hudstone, against which her peat-fire was built. There
+sat old, and now nearly blind, Isbel Kirk, spinning or carding wool,
+crooning occasionally an old Scotch song, or, it might be, one of
+David's psalms, and enjoying at intervals her pipe, a visit from her
+next neighbour, Nancy Nivison, or her champit-potatoes--a luxury which
+the west country, and that alone, has hitherto enjoyed. Two old Irish
+women had settled some time before this on the skirts of the opposite
+brae, where they had built a small turf cabin, and lived nobody could
+well tell how. They were generally understood to make a kind of
+precarious living, by going about the country periodically, giving
+_pigs_ or crockery-ware in exchange for wool. Isbel Kirk was a most
+simple, honest creature, living on little, but procuring that little by
+her industry in spinning sale yarn, weaving garters, and using her
+needle occasionally, to assist the guidwife of Gilchristland in
+shirt-making for a large family. But the M'Dermots were the aversion of
+everybody, and seldom visited even by the guidman of Barmoor, on whose
+farm, or rather on the debatable skirts of it, they had sat down, almost
+in spite of his teeth. He was a humane man; and, though he loved not
+such visitors, yet he tolerated the nuisance, as his wife reckoned them
+skilled in curing children's diseases, and in spaeing the young women's
+fortunes. John Watson pastured sheep, where corn harvests now wave in
+abundance; and his flocks spread about to the doors of the M'Dermots and
+Isbel Kirk. These flocks gradually decreased, and much suspicion was
+attached to his Irish and heathenish neighbours, for they attended no
+place of worship, not even the conformed Curate's; but there was no
+proof against them. At last, a search was suddenly and secretly
+instituted under the authority of the Laird of Closeburn; and, although
+much wool was found, still there were no entire fleeces, nor any means
+left of bringing it home to the M'Dermots.
+
+"Na, na, guidman," said the elder of the two harridans. "Na--ye needna
+stir aboot the kail-pot in that way--ye'll find naething there but a
+fine bit o' the dead braxy I gat frae the guidman o' Gilchristland, for
+helping the mistress wi' her kirn, that wadna mak butter; but there are
+folks that ye dinna suspect, and that are maybe no that far off either,
+wha could very weel tell ye gin they liked whar yer braw gimmer yows
+gang till."
+
+Being pushed to be more particular, they were seemingly compelled at
+last to intimate that auld Isbel Kirk, she and her friend, Nanny
+Nivison, could give an account of the stolen sheep, if they liked. The
+guidman would not credit such allegations; but the old women persisted
+in their averment, and even offered to give the guidman of Barmoor
+occular demonstration of the guilt of the twa _saunts_, as they called
+them. A few days passed, and still a lamb or an old sheep would
+disappear--they melted away gradually, and the guidman began to think
+that his flocks must be bewitched, and that the devil himself must keep
+a kitchen somewhere about the Chaise Craig, over which Archy Tait had
+often seen the _old gentleman_ driving six-in-hand about twelve o'clock
+at night. Returning, therefore, one morning to the M'Dermots, and
+renewing the conversation respecting Isbel Kirk and Nanny Nivison, it
+was agreed that one of the Irish sisterhood should walk over to Isbel's
+with him next forenoon, and that she would give him evidence of the fate
+of his flocks. Isbel was sitting before her door, in the sunshine of a
+fine spring morning, when the guidman and Esther M'Dermot arrived. She
+welcomed them kindly into her small but clean and neat cottage; and,
+with all the despatch which her blindness would permit of, dusted for
+their use an old-fashioned chair, and a round stool, which served the
+double purpose of stool and table. The conversation went on as usual
+about the weather, and the last sufferer in the cause of the Covenant,
+when Esther M'Dermot went into a dark corner, and forthwith drew out
+into the guidman's view, and to his infinite astonishment, a sheep's
+head, which bore the well-known mark of the farm on its ears.
+
+"Look there, guidman," said Esther, "isna that proof positive of the way
+in which your braw hirsel is disposed of? By Jasus and the holy St
+Patrick! and here is a foot too, and twa horns!"
+
+Poor Isbel Kirk could scarcely be made to apprehend the meaning of all
+this--indeed she could scarcely see the evidences of her guilt--and
+assured the guidman, in the most unequivocal manner imaginable, that she
+was innocent as the child unborn; indeed, she said, what should she do
+with dead sheep, or how should she get hold of them, seeing she was old
+and blind, and had not enjoyed a bit of mutton, or any other flesh,
+meat, since the new year?
+
+"Ay," responded old Esther; "but ye hae friends that can help ye; dinna
+I whiles see, after dark, twa tall figures stealing o'er your way frae
+the Whitside linn yonder! I'se warrant they dinna live on deaf nits,
+after lying a' day in a dark and damp cave." Isbel held up her hands in
+prayer, entreating the Lord to be merciful to her and to his ain
+inheritance, and to discomfit the plans of his and her enemies.
+
+"Ye may pray," said Elspat, "as ye like, but ye'll no mak the guidman
+here distrust his ain een, wi' yer praying and yer Whiggery." This last
+suggestion of the nightly visitors staggered Mr Watson not a little; he
+well knew how friendly old Isbel was to the poor Covenanters, and
+brought himself to conclude, under the weighty and conclusive evidence
+before him, that Isbel might have persuaded herself that she was
+rendering God good service by feeding his chosen people with the best of
+his flock. Isbel could only protest her innocence and ignorance of the
+way in which these evidences against her came there; whilst the guidman
+and Esther took their leave--he threatening that the matter should not
+rest where it was, and the old Irish jade pretending to commiserate
+Isbel on the unfortunate discovery.
+
+Next morning, the pothouse was surrounded, and carefully searched by a
+detachment of Lag's men, to whom information of Isbel's harbouring
+rebels had been (the reader may guess how) communicated. Having been
+unsuccessful in their search, they put the poor blind creature to the
+torture, because she would not discover, or, perhaps, could not reveal,
+the retreat of the persecuted people. A burning match was put betwixt
+her fingers, and she was firmly tied to a bedpost, whilst the fire was
+blown into a flame by one of the soldiers. Not a feature in Isbel's
+countenance changed; but her lips moved, and she was evidently deeply
+absorbed in devotional exercise.
+
+"Come, come, old Bleary," said one, "out with it! or we will roast you
+on the coals, like a red herring, for Beelzebub's breakfast."
+
+"Ye can only do what ye're permitted to do," said the poor sufferer,
+now writhing with pain, and suffering all the agonies of martyrdom. "Ye
+may burn this poor auld body, and reduce it to its natural dust; but ye
+will never hear my tongue betray any of the poor persecuted remnant."
+
+It is horrible to relate, but the fact cannot be disputed, that these
+monsters stood by and blew the match till the poor creature's fingers
+were actually burnt off--yet she only once cried for mercy; but, when
+they mentioned the conditions, she fainted; and thus nature relieved her
+from her sufferings. When she came again to herself, she found that they
+had killed the only living creature which she could call companion, and
+actually hung the body of the dead cat around her neck; but they were
+gone, and her hands were untied.
+
+During the ensuing night a watch was set upon poor Isbel's house,
+thinking, as the persecutors did, that they would catch the nightly
+visitants, who were yet ignorant of their friend's sufferings in their
+behalf. The men lay concealed among brackens, on the bank opposite to
+the pothouse, and near to Staffybiggin, the residence of the M'Dermots.
+To their surprise, a figure, about twelve o'clock, came warily and
+stealthily around a flock of sheep which lay ruminating in the hollow.
+It was a female figure, if not the devil in a female garb. They
+continued to keep silent and lie still. At last they saw the whole flock
+driven over and across a thick-set bush of fern. One of the sheep
+immediately began to struggle; but it was manifestly held by the
+foot--in a few instants, two figures were seen dragging it into
+M'Dermot's door. This naturally excited their surprise, and, rushing
+immediately into the hut, they found the two old women in the act of
+preparing in a pit--which, during the day time, was concealed--mutton
+for their own use. The murder was now out. These wretched women had been
+in the habit, for some years, of supplying themselves from the Barmoor
+flocks; the one lying flat down upon her back amongst the furze, and
+the other driving the sheep over her breast. Thus the sister who caught,
+had an opportunity of selecting; and the best of the wedders had thus
+from time to time disappeared.
+
+Poor Isbel Kirk!--her innocence was now fully established; but it was
+too late. Her kind friend Nanny Nivison attended her in her last
+illness, and the guidman of Barmoor paid every humane attention. But the
+ruffians of a mistaken and ill-advised government had deranged her
+nervous system. Besides, the burn never properly healed; it at last
+mortified, and she died almost insensible, either of pain or presence.
+Her soul seemed to have left its frail tabernacle ere life was extinct.
+The example we have here given is taken from that humble source, which
+the historian leaves open to the gleaner. Indeed, the histories of those
+times give but a very imperfect idea of the atrocities of that
+remarkable period. The cottage door must be opened to get at the truth;
+but the stately political historian seldom enters.
+
+
+
+
+XVI.--THE CURLERS.
+
+
+Winter 1684-5 was, like the last, cold, frosty, and stormy. The ice was
+on lake and muir from new year's day till the month of March. Curling
+was then, as it is still, the great winter amusement in the south and
+west of Scotland. The ploughman lad rose by two o'clock of a frosty
+morning, had the day's fodder threshed for the cattle, and was on the
+ice, besom in hand, by nine o'clock. The farmer, after seeing things
+right in the stable and the byre, was not long behind his servant. The
+minister left his study and his M.S., his concordance, and his desk, for
+the loch, and the rink, and the channel-stane. Even the laird himself
+was not proof against the temptation, but often preferred full twelve
+hours of rousing game on the ice, to all the fascinations of the drawing
+or the billiard-room, or the study. Even the schoolmaster was incapable
+of resisting the tempting and animating sound; and, at every peal of
+laughter which broke upon his own and his pupils' ears, turned his eyes
+and his steps towards the window which looked upon the adjoining loch;
+and, at last, entirely overcome by the shout over a contested shot; off
+he and his bevy swarmed, helter-skelter, across the Carse Meadow, to the
+ice. From all accounts which I have heard of it, this was a notable
+amongst many notable days. The factor was never in such play; the master
+greatly outdid himself; the laird played hind-hand in beautiful style;
+and Sutor John came up the rink "like Jehu in time o' need." Shots were
+laid just a yard, right and left, before and behind the tee; shots were
+taken out, and run off the ice with wonderful precision; guards, that
+most ticklish of all plays, were rested just over the hog-score, so as
+completely to cover the winner; inwicks were taken to a hair, and the
+player's stone whirled in most gracefully, (like a lady in a country
+dance), and settled, three-deep-guarded, upon the top of the tee. Chance
+had her triumphs as well as good play. A random shot, driven with such
+fury that the stone rebounded and split in two, deprived the opposite
+side of four shots, and took the game. The sky was blue as indigo, and
+the sun shot his beams over the Keir Hills in penetrating and
+invigorating splendour. Old women frequented the loch with baskets; boys
+and young lads skated gracefully around; the whisky-bottle did its duty;
+and even the herons at the spring-wells had their necks greatly
+elongated by the roaring fun. It was a capital day's sport. Little did
+this happy scene exhibit of the suffering and the misery which was all
+this while perpetrated by the men of violence. Clavers, the
+ever-infamous, was in Wigtonshire with his Lambs; Grierson was lying in
+his den of Lag, like a lion on the spring; Johnstone was on the Annan;
+and Winram on the Doon; whilst Douglas was here, and there, and
+everywhere, flying, like a malevolent spirit, from strath to strath, and
+from hill to dale. The snow lay, and had long been lying, more than a
+foot deep, crisp and white, over the bleak but beauteous wild; the sheep
+were perishing for want of pasture; and many poor creatures were in
+absolute want of the necessaries of life. (The potato, that true friend
+of the people, had not yet made its way to any extent into Scotland).
+Caves, dens, and outhouses were crowded with the persecuted flock. The
+ousted ministers were still lifting up their voice in the wilderness,
+and the distant hum of psalmody was heard afar amongst the hills, and by
+the side of the frozen stream and the bare hawthorn. What a contrast did
+all this present to the fun, frolic, and downright ecstacy of this day's
+sport! But the night came, with its beef and its greens, and its song,
+and its punch, and its anecdote, and its thrice-played games, and its
+warm words, and its half-muttered threats, and its dispersion about
+three in the morning.
+
+"Wha was yon stranger?" said John Harkness to Sandy Gibson, as they met
+next day on the hill. "I didna like the look o' him; an' yet he played
+his stane weel, an' took a great lead in the conversation. I wish he
+mayna be a spy, after a'; for I never heard o' ony Watsons in
+Ecclefechan, till yon creature cast up."
+
+"Indeed," said lang Sandy, "I didna like the creature--it got sae fou
+an' impudent, late at nicht; an' then that puir haverel, Will Paterson,
+cam in, an' let oot that the cave at Glencairn had been surprised, an'
+the auld minister murdered. If it be na the case--as I believe it isna
+hitherto--there was enough said last nicht to mak it necessary to hae
+the puir, persecuted saint informed o' his danger."
+
+"An' that's as true," responded John; "an' I think you an' I canna do
+better than wear awa wast o'er whan the sun gaes down, an' let honest
+Mr Lawson ken that his retreat is known. That Watson creature--didna ye
+tent?--went aff, wi' the curate, a wee afore the lave; they were heard
+busy talking together, in a low tone of voice, as they went hame to the
+manse. I wonder what maks the laird--wha is a perfect gentleman, an' a
+friend, too, o' the Covenanted truth--keep company, on the ice, or off
+it, wi' that rotten-hearted, roupit creature, the curate o' Closeburn?"
+
+"Indeed," replied the other, "he is sae clean daft aboot playing at
+channel-stane, that, I believe, baith him, an' the dominie, an' the
+factor--forby Souter Ferguson--would play wi' auld Symnie himself,
+provided he was a keen and a guid shot! But it will be mirk dark--an'
+there's nae moon--ere we mak Glencairn cave o't."
+
+John Harkness and Sandy Gibson arrived at Monyaive, in Glencairn, a
+little after dark. The cave was about a mile distant from the town; and,
+with the view of refreshment, as well as of concerting the best way of
+avoiding suspicion, they entered a small ale-house kept by an old woman
+at the farther end of the bridge. They were shewn into a narrow and
+meanly-furnished apartment, and called for a bottle of the best beer,
+with a suitable accompaniment of bread and cheese. The landlady,
+by-and-by, was sent for, and was asked to partake of her own beverage,
+and questioned, in a careless and incidental manner, respecting the
+news. She looked somewhat embarrassed; and, fixing her eyes upon a
+keyhole, in a door which conducted to an adjoining apartment, she said,
+in a whisper--
+
+"I ken brawly wha ye are, an maybe, too, what ye're after; but ye hae
+need to be active, lads; for there are those in that ither room that
+wadna care though a yer heads, as well as those o' some ither folks that
+shall be nameless were stuck on the West Port o' Edinbro."
+
+In an instant, the two young farmers were _butt_ the house, and beside
+Tibby Haddow's peat fire. In the course of a short, and, to all but
+themselves, an inaudible conversation, they learned that Lag himself,
+disguised as a common soldier, was in the next room, in close colloquy
+with a person clothed in grey duffle, with a broad bonnet on his head.
+From the description of the person, the two Closeburnians had no manner
+of doubt that the information obtained last night, in regard to the
+existence of a place of refuge in Glencairn, was now in the act of being
+communicated.
+
+"At one o'clock!" said a well-known voice--it was that of Lag, to a
+certainty.
+
+"Yes, at one," responded the stranger, Watson--whose voice was equally
+well-known to the farmers--"at one!" And they parted--the one going
+east, and the other west--and were lost in the darkness of night.
+
+It was now past seven, with a clear, frosty night. What was to be done?
+It was manifest that the cave was betrayed--at least, that the
+_whereabouts_ was known--and it was likewise necessary that this
+information should be conveyed to the poor inmate. But where was he to
+find a refuge, after the cave had been vacated? It struck them, in
+consulting, that if they could get the old woman to be friendly and
+assisting, the escape might be effected before the time evidently fixed
+upon for taking the cave by surprise. This was, however, a somewhat
+dangerous experiment; for, although Tibby M'Murdo was known to be
+favourable--as who amongst the lower classes was not?--to the
+non-conformists, yet she might not choose to run the immense risk of
+ruin and even death, which might result from her knowingly giving
+harbour to a rebel. So, by way of sounding the old woman--who lived in
+the house by herself, her granddaughter, who was at service in the town,
+only visiting her occasionally--they proposed to stay all night in the
+house, as they were in hourly expectation of a wool-dealer who had made
+an appointment to meet them here, but who, owing to the heavy roads, had
+manifestly been detained beyond the appointed time. The old woman had
+various objections to this arrangement; but was at last persuaded to
+make an addition to her fire, to put half-a-dozen bottles of her best
+ale on the table, with a tappit hen, and what she termed "a wee drap o'
+the creature," and to retire to rest about eight o'clock, her usual
+hour, they having already paid for all, and promised not to leave the
+house till she rose in the morning. At this time, about eight o'clock,
+the night had suddenly became dark and cloudy, and there was a strange
+noise up amongst the rocks overhead. It was manifest that there was a
+change of weather fast approaching. At last the snow descended, the wind
+arose, and it became a perfect tempest. Next morning, there were three
+human beings in Tibby's small _ben_, busily employed in discussing the
+good things already purchased, as well as in higgling and bothering
+about the price of wool. The weather, which had been exceedingly
+boisterous all night, had again cleared up into frost, and the
+inhabitants of Monyaive were busied in cutting away the accumulated snow
+from their doors, when in burst old Tibby's granddaughter, and, all at
+once, with exceeding animation, made the following communication:--
+
+"Ay, granny, ye never heard what has taen place this last nicht. I had
+it a' frae Jock Johnston. Ye ken Jock--he's oor maister's foreman, an'
+unco weel acquent wi' the dragoons that lodge in the Spread Eagle. Weel,
+Jock tells me that Lag was here last nicht, in disguise like, an' that
+they had gotten information, frae ane o' their spies like, aboot a cave
+up by yonder where some o' the puir persecuted folks is concealed; an'
+that, aboot ane o'clock o' this morning--an' an awsome morning it
+was--they had marched on, three abreast, through the drift, carrying
+strae alang wi' them an lighted matches; an' that they gaed straight to
+the cave, an' immediately summoned the puir folks to come out and be
+shot; and that they only answered by a groan, which tellt them as
+plainly as could be, that the puir creatures were there; and that they
+immediately set fire to the straes at the mooth o' the cave, and fairly
+smoked them (Jock tells me) to death. Did ye ever hear the like o't?"
+
+"O woman!" responded the grandmother, "but that is fearfu'!--these are
+indeed fearfu' times; there is naebody sure o' their lives for
+half-an-hour thegither, wha doesna gae to hear the fushionless curates!"
+
+At this instant, one of the dragoons drew up his horse at the door,
+asking if a man, such as he described, with a blue bonnet and a grey
+duffle coat, had returned late last night, or rather this morning, to
+bed. Old Tibby answered, in a quavering voice, that the man mentioned
+had left her house about eight o'clock, and had not yet returned. The
+dragoon appeared somewhat incredulous; and, giving his horse to the girl
+to hold, he dashed at once and boldly into the room, where the three
+persons already mentioned were seated. The young farmers questioned
+immediately the propriety of his conduct; but he drew his sword, and
+swore that he would make cats' meat of the first that should lay hold
+upon him. He had no sooner said so, than a man sprang upon him from the
+fireside, and, striking his sword-arm down with the poker, immediately
+secured his person by such means as the place and time presented. The
+fellow roared like a bull, blaspheming and vociferating mightily of the
+crime of arresting a king's soldier in the discharge of his duty. But he
+was hurried into a concealed bed, tied firmly down with ropes and even
+blankets, and made to know that, unless he was silent, he might have to
+pay for his disobedience with his life. When old Tibby saw how things
+were going on, and that her house might suffer by such transactions,
+she sallied forth as fast as her feeble limbs and well-worn staff would
+carry her, exclaiming as she went--"We'll a' be slain--we'll a' be
+slain!--the laird o' Lag will be here--and Clavers will be here--and the
+King himself will be here--an' we'll a' be murdered--we'll a' be
+murdered!" At this moment, the trooper appeared in his regimentals,
+mounted his horse, and was off at full gallop. The granddaughter, now
+relieved from holding the dragoon's horse, followed her grandmother, and
+brought her lamp to the house; but, to their infinite surprise, there
+was nobody there save the very cursing trooper whom she had seen so
+recently ride off. His voice was loud, and his complainings fearful; but
+neither Tibby nor her granddaughter durst go near him, as they were
+fully convinced that he was a devil, and no man, since he had the power
+at once of mounting a horse and flying rather than riding away, and, at
+the same time, of lying cursing and swearing in a press bed in the
+_ben_. At last a neighbour heard the tale, and, being less
+superstitions, relieved the unfortunate prisoner from his rather awkward
+predicament. He swore revenge, and to cut poor old Tibby into two with
+his sword; but he found, upon searching for his weapon, that it was
+absent, as well as his clothes, which had been forcibly stripped from
+him when he was tied--and that without leave--and that he had nothing
+for it but to thrust himself into canonicals--in which garb he actually
+walked home to his quarters, amidst the shouts of his companions, and to
+the astonishment of all the staring villagers.
+
+As he was making the best of his way to hide his disgrace in the Spread
+Eagle, he was told that his commanding officer, Sir Robert Grierson, had
+been wishing to speak with him, for some time past. Upon appearing
+immediately in the presence of authority, he was questioned in regard to
+the mission on which he had been despatched, and was scarcely credited
+when he narrated the treatment which he had met with, and the loss which
+he had sustained. A detachment was immediately despatched in quest of
+the thief, the _wool-merchant_, who had so cleverly supplied himself
+with a passport from the king; and, after our soldier's person had been
+unrobed, and attired for the present in his stable undress, Lag set out
+with a few followers, to examine the cave, in order to be assured of Mr
+Lawson's death. "They may gallop off with our horses," said Lag, in a
+jocular manner, by the way; "but they will not easily gallop off with
+the old choked hound, who has led us so many dances over the hills of
+Queensberry and Auchenleck." At last, they arrived at the mouth of the
+cave, and entered. Black and blue, and severely bruised, lay the dead
+body before them. "Ah, ha!" said Lag, making his boot, as he expressed
+it, acquainted with old Canticle's posteriors. "Ah, ha! my fleet bird of
+the mountain, and we have caught you at last, and caught you
+_napping_--ha, ha! Why don't you speak, old fire and brimstone? What!
+not a word now!--and yet you had plenty when you preached from the Gouk
+Thorn, to upwards of two thousand of your prick-eared, purse-mouthed,
+canting followers. Come, my lads, we have less work to do now; we will
+e'en back to quarters, and drink a safe voyage into the Holy Land, to
+old Dumb-and-flat there!" So saying, he reined up his horse, and was on
+the point of withdrawing the men, when one of them, who had eyed the
+body, which was imperfectly seen in the dark cave, more nearly than the
+rest, exclaimed--"And, by the Lord Harry, and we are all at fault, and
+the game is off, on four living legs, after all--off and away! and we
+standing drivelling here, when we should be many miles off in hot
+pursuit of this cunning fox who has contrived to give us the slip once
+more."
+
+"What means the idiot?" vociferated Grierson.
+
+"Mean!--why, what should I mean, Sir Robert, but that this here piece
+of carrion is no more the stinking corpse of old Closeburn, than I am a
+son of the Covenant!"
+
+It turned out, upon investigation, that this was the body of the
+informer Watson, who had preceded Lag to the cave during the terrible
+drift; had been observed by John Harkness and Sandy Gibson, who were
+then employed in removing Lawson to the small inn; and, after a drubbing
+which disabled him from moving, he had been left the only tenant of the
+cave. When Grierson came, as above mentioned, from the drift and the
+cold, as well as the beating, he was unable to speak; but his groans
+brought his miserable death upon him; and Lawson, by assuming the
+dragoon's garb and steed, was enabled to escape, and to officiate, as
+has been already mentioned in a former paper, for several years before
+his death, in his own church, from which he had been so long and so
+unjustly driven. Thus did it please God to punish the infamous conduct
+of Watson, and to enable his own servant to effect his escape. The
+dragoon's horse was found, one morning at day-light, neighing and
+beating the hoof at old Tibby's door. It soon found an owner, but told
+no stories respecting its late occupant, who was now snugly lodged in
+William Graham's parlour in the guid town of Kendal. Graham and he were
+cousins-german.
+
+
+
+
+XVII.--THE VIOLATED COFFIN.
+
+
+AN effort has, of late, been made to repel the allegations which, for
+past ages, have been made against the infamous instruments of cruelty
+during the twenty-eight years' persecution. The Covenanters have been
+represented as factious democrats, setting at defiance all constituted
+authority, and exposing themselves to the vengeance of law and justice.
+These sentiments are apt to identify themselves with modern politics;
+but we hope we will never see our country again devastated by
+oppression, cruelty, and all the shootings, and headings, and hangings
+of the Stuart despotism repeated. It becomes, therefore, the duty of
+every friend of good and equal government to put his hand to the work,
+and to support those principles under which Britain has flourished so
+long, and every man has sat in safety and in peace under his own vine
+and his own fig-tree. No train of reasoning, or of demonstration,
+however, will suffice for this. The judgment is, in many occasions,
+convinced of error and injustice, whilst the heart and the conduct
+remain the same. There must be something in accordance with the
+decisions of the judgment pressed home upon the feelings. There must be
+vivid pictures of the workings of a system of misrule placed before the
+mind's eye, so that a deep and a human interest may be felt in the
+picture. The reader must open the doors of our suffering peasantry, and
+witness their family and fireside bereavements. He must become their
+companion under the snow-wreath and the damp cave--he must mount the
+scaffold with them, and even listen to their last act and testimony. How
+vast is the impression which a painter can, in this way, make upon the
+spirit of the spectator! Let Allan's famous Circassian slave be an
+instance in point; but the painter is limited to a single point of time,
+and the relation which that bears and exhibits to what has gone before
+or will come after; but the writer of narrative possesses the power of
+shifting his telescope from eminence to eminence--of varying, _ad
+libitum_, time, place, and circumstances--and thus of making up for the
+acknowledged inferiority of written description of narratives to what is
+submitted, as Horace says, "_Oculis fidelibus_," by his vast and
+unlimited power of variety. The means, therefore, by which past
+generations have been made to feel and acknowledge the inhumanities, the
+scandalous atrocities of those blood-stained times, still remain
+subservient to their original and long tried purposes; and it becomes
+the imperious duty of every succeeding age to transmit and perpetuate
+the impressions of abhorrence with which those times were regarded and
+recollected. This duty, too, becomes so much the more necessary, as the
+times become the more remote. The object which is rapidly passed and
+distanced by the speed of the steam-engine, does not more naturally
+diminish in dimensions to the eye, as it recedes into the depths of
+distance, than do the events which, in passing, figured largely and
+impressively, lose their bulk and their interest when removed from us by
+the dim and darkening interval of successive centuries; and the only
+method by which their natural and universal law can be modified, or in
+any degree counteracted, is by a continuous and uninterrupted reference
+to the past--by making what is old, recent by description and
+imagination; and by more carefully tracing and acknowledging the
+connection which past agents and times have, or may be supposed to have,
+upon the present advancement and happiness of man. Had the devotedness
+of the Covenanter and Nonconformist been less entire than it was--had
+the arbitrary desires of a bigoted priesthood and a tyrant prince been
+submitted to--then had the Duke of York been king to the end of his
+days--Rome had again triumphed in her priesthood; and we at this hour,
+if at all awakened from the influence of surrounding advancement to a
+sense of our degradation, had been only enacting bloody Reformation,
+instead of bloodless Reform, and suffering the incalculable miseries
+which our forefathers, centuries ago, anticipated. Nay, more, but for
+the lesson taught us by the friends of the Covenant and the conventicle,
+where had been the great encouragement to resist political oppression in
+all time to come, when the proudly elevated finger may point to the
+record, which said, and still says, in letters indeed of blood--"A
+people resolved to be free, can never be ultimately enslaved." The
+Covenant had its use--and, immense in its own day, and in its immediate
+efforts, it placed William, and law, and freedom on the throne of
+Britain; but that is as nothing in the balance, when compared with the
+less visible and more remote effects of this distinguished triumph:--It,
+throughout all the last century, maintained a firm and unyielding
+struggle with despotism, sometimes indeed worsted, but never altogether
+subdued; and it has, of late years, issued in events and triumphs too
+recent and too agitating to be now fairly and fully discussed. Nor will
+the influence of the Covenant cease to be felt in our land, till God
+shall have deserted her, and left her entirely to the freedom of her own
+will, to the debasing influence of that luxury and corruption which has
+formed the grave of every kingdom that has yet lived out its limited
+period.
+
+These Gleanings of the Covenant have been written under the impression,
+and with the view above expressed; and it is hoped that the following
+narrative, true in all its leading circumstances, and more than true in
+the "vraisemblable," may contribute something to the object thus
+distinctly stated.
+
+The funeral of Thomas Thomson had advanced from the Gaitend to the
+Lakehead. The accompaniment was numerous--the group was denser. Thomas
+had lived respected, and died regretted. He was the father of five
+helpless children, all females, and his wife was manifestly about to be
+delivered of a sixth. Just as the procession had advanced to the house
+of Will Coultart, a troop of ten men rode up. They had evidently been
+drinking, and spoke not only blasphemously, but in terms of
+intimidation.--"Stop, you cursed crew," said the leader. "He has escaped
+law, but he shall not escape justice. Come here, lad;" and at once they
+alighted from their horses, seized the coffin, and opening the lid, were
+about to penetrate the corpse through and through. "Stop a little," said
+John Ferguson, the famous souter of Closeburn; "there are maybe twa at
+a bargain-making;" so saying, he lifted an axe which he took up at a
+wright's door, and dared any one to disturb them in their Christian
+duty. A "pell-mell" took place, in the midst of which poor Ferguson was
+killed. He had two sons in the company, who, seeing how their father had
+been used, rushed upon the dragoons, and were both of them severely
+wounded. In the meantime, Douglas of Drumlanrig came up, and,
+understanding how things went, ordered the soldiers to give in, and the
+wounded men to be taken care off. All this was wondrous well; but what
+follows is not so. The body of Ferguson was carried to Croalchapel; and
+the two sons accompanied it, with many tears. Douglas seemed to feel
+what had happened, and could not avoid accompanying the party home. He
+entered the house of mourning, where there was a dead father, a weeping
+widow, and two wounded sons. He entered, but he saw nothing but Peggy.
+Poor Peggy was an only sister of these lads--an only daughter of her
+murdered father. Douglas was a man of the world! Oh, my God, what a term
+that is! and how much misery and horror does it not contain. Peggy was
+really beautiful; not like Georgina Gordon, or Lady William, or Mrs
+Norton, or Lady Blessington; for her beauty depended in no degree upon
+art. Had you arrayed her in rags, and placed her in a poor's-house, she
+would have appeared to advantage. Peggy, too, (the God who made her
+knows,) was pure in soul, and innocent in act as is the angel Gabriel!
+she never once thought of sinning, as a woman may, and does (sometimes)
+sin; she lived for her father, whom she loved--and for her mother, whom
+she did not greatly dislike. But her mother was a stepmother, and Peggy
+liked her father. Guess, then, her grief, when Peggy saw her father
+murdered, her brothers wounded, and knew the cause thereof. "Lift her,"
+said Douglas to his men, after he had, in seeming humanity, seen the
+corpse and brothers home; "lift her into Red Hob's saddle, and carry
+her to Drumlanrig." No sooner said than done. The weeping, screaming
+girl was lifted into the saddle, and conveyed, per force, to Drumlanrig.
+At that gate there stood a figure clothed in dyed garments. It was the
+elder brother of Peggy, he who had been least injured of the two. He
+stood with his sword in his hand, and dared any one who would conduct
+his sister into the abode of dishonour. Douglas snapped, and then fired
+a pistol at him, but neither took effect. In the meantime, the brother
+was secured, and the sister was carried into the "Blue Room," well known
+afterwards as the infamous sleeping-chamber of old "Q." The not less
+infamous, though ultimately repentant Douglas, advanced into the
+chamber. The poor girl seemed as if she had seen a snake; she shrunk
+from his approach and from his blandishments. She had previously opened
+the window into the green walk; she had taken her resolve, and, in a few
+instants, lay a maimed, almost mangled being, on the beautiful walks of
+Drumlanrig. Douglas was manifestly struck by the incident, but not
+converted. He took sufficient care to have the poor girl conveyed home,
+and to have the brothers provided for, but his hour was not yet come. It
+was not till after his frequent conversations with the minister of
+Closeburn, that he came to a proper sense of his horrible conduct. But
+what was the awful devastation of this family. The poor beauteous flower
+Peggy, who was about to have been married to a farmer's son,
+(Kirkpatrick of Auchincairn,) was by him rejected. He called at the
+house sometime afterwards, with a view to see her; but he came full of
+suspicion, and therefore unwilling to receive the truth. He had heard
+the whole story, and must have known that his Peggy was at least as pure
+in mind as she had been beautiful in person; but he belonged not
+naturally to the noble stock of the family to which he was to have been
+allied, and gave himself up to prejudice. The girl was still in bed, to
+which, from her bruises, she had been confined for months. The meeting
+might have been one which a poet would have gloried in describing, or a
+painter in delineating and embellishing, with hues stolen from the arc
+of Heaven! Alas! it was one only worthy of the pencil of a
+Ribera--fraught with cruelty, and abounding in selfishness and
+dishonour. The girl, as she turned her pale yet beautiful face on him,
+told him the truth, and watched, with tears in her eyes, the effect of
+her narrative on one whose image had never been absent from her mind, if
+indeed it had not supported her in her struggle, and nerved her to the
+purpose which preferred death to dishonour. Her bruises and wounds spoke
+for her, and, to any one but her lover, would have proved that he was a
+part of the object of her sacrifice. It was all to no purpose. The
+eloquence of truth, of love, of nature, were lost upon him; nothing
+would persuade him that the object of his love had not been degraded. He
+turned a cold glance of doubt upon her, and turned to leave the room.
+Peggy rushed out of bed, and, maimed and weak as she was, would have
+stopped him. Her energies failed her--her lover was gone; and her
+mother, roused by the cries of her pain, came and assisted her again
+into bed. Poor Peggy heard no more of Kirkpatrick. She sickened and
+died?--no! far worse!--she became desperate, married a blackguard, and
+lived a drunkard; the sons were banished for firing at Douglas, as he
+passed in his carriage through Thornhill; and the poor mother of the
+whole family became--shall I tell it I--an object of charity! Thus was,
+to my certain knowledge, at least to that of my ancestors, a most
+creditable and well-doing family ruined, root and branch, by the
+persecutors--or, in other words, by those who, without knowing what they
+did, regarded the "Covenant" as an unholy thing, and fought the foremost
+in the ranks of oppression and uniformity.
+
+Now, there is not a word of this in Woodrow, or Burns, or even in the
+MS. of the Advocate's Library; and yet we can assure the reader, that
+the material facts are as true as is the death of Darnley, or the murder
+of Rizzio! God bless you, madam! you have, and can have, and ought to
+have no notion whatever of the united current of _horribility_, which
+ran through the whole ocean of cruelty during these awful and most
+terrific times! May the God that made, the Saviour that redeemed, and
+the Holy Spirit that prepares us for heaven, make us thankful that in
+_those times_ we do not live; and that such men as Woodrow and Burns
+(the first and the last) have been raised up, to vindicate and to
+justify such men as then suffered in their families, or in their
+persons, for the covenanted cause of the Great Head of our Presbyterian
+Church!
+
+
+
+
+THE SURGEON'S TALES.
+
+
+
+
+THE MONOMANIAC.
+
+
+In some of my prior papers, I have had occasion to make some oblique
+references to that disease called _pseudoblepsis imaginaria_--in other
+words, a vision of objects not present. Cullen places it among local
+diseases, as one of a depraved action of the organs contributing to
+vision; whereby, of course, he would disjoin it from those cases of
+madness where a depraved action of the brain itself produces the same
+effect. In this, Cullen displays his ordinary acuteness; for we see many
+instances where there is a fancied vision of objects not present,
+without insanity; and, indeed, the whole doctrine of spirits has
+latterly been founded on this distinction.[2] From the very intimate
+connection, however, which exists between the visual organs and the
+brain itself, it must always be a matter of great difficulty--if indeed,
+in many cases, it be not entirely impossible--to make the distinction
+available; for there are cases--such as that of the conscience-spectre,
+and those that generally depend upon thoughts and feelings of more than
+ordinary intensity--that seem to lie between the two extremes of merely
+diseased visual organs and diseased brains; and, in so far as my
+experience goes, I am free to say that I have seen more cases of
+imaginary visions of distant objects, resulting from some terrible
+excitement of the emotions, than from the better defined causes set
+forth by the medical writers. Among the passions and emotions, again,
+that in their undue influence over the sane condition of the mind, are
+most likely to give rise to the diseased vision of _phantasmata_, I
+would be inclined to place that which usually exerts so much absorbing
+power over the young female heart. The cause lies on the surface. In the
+case of the passions--of anger, revenge, fear, and so forth--the feeling
+generally works itself out; and, in many cases, the object is so
+unpleasant that the mind seeks relief from it, and flies it; while, in
+the emotions of love, there is a morbid brooding over the cherished
+image that takes hold of the fancy; the object is called up by the spell
+of the passion placed before the mind's eye, and held there for hours,
+days, and years, till the image becomes almost a stationary impression,
+and is invested with all the attributes of a real presence. I do not
+feel that I would be justified in saying that I am able to substantiate
+the remark I have now made by many cases falling under my own
+observation; the examples of _monomania_ in sane persons are not very
+often to be met with; and I have heard many of my professional brethren
+say, that they never experienced a single instance in all their
+practice.
+
+The case I am now to detail, occurred within two miles of the town of
+----. The patient was a lady, Mrs C----, an individual of a nervous,
+irritable temperament, and possessed of a glowing fancy, that, against
+her will, brought up by-past scenes with a distinctness that was painful
+to her. She had lately returned from India, whither she had accompanied
+her husband, whom she left buried in a deep, watery grave in the channel
+of the Mozambique. I had been attending her for a nervous ailment, which
+had shattered her frame terribly, while it increased the powers of her
+creative fancy, as well as the sensibility by which the mental images
+were invested with their chief powers over her. She suffered also from a
+tenderness in the _retina_, which forced her to shun the light. How this
+latter complaint was associated with the other, I cannot explain,
+unless upon the principle which regulates the connection between the
+sensibility of the eye and the heated brains of those who labour under
+inflammation of that organ. I was informed by her mother, Mrs L----, as
+well as her sister, that she had come from India a perfect wreck, both
+of mind and body; and, for a period of eighteen months afterwards, could
+scarcely be prevailed upon to see any of her friends--shutting herself
+up for whole days in her room, the windows of which were kept dark, to
+prevent the light, which operated like a sharp sting, from falling upon
+her irritable eyes. It was chiefly with a view to the removal of this
+opthalmic affection, that I was requested to visit her; and I could very
+soon perceive, that the visionary state of her mind was closely
+connected with the habit of dark seclusion to which she was necessitated
+to resort, for the purpose of avoiding the pain produced by the rays of
+the sun. On my first interview, I found her sitting alone in the
+darkened room, brooding over thoughts that seemed to exert a strong
+influence over her; but she soon joined me in a conversation which,
+diverging from the subject of her complaint, embraced topics that
+brought out the peculiarity of her mind--a strong enthusiastic power of
+portraying scenes of grief which she had witnessed, and which, as she
+proceeded, seemed to rise before her with almost the vividness of
+presence; yet, with her, judgment was as strong and healthy as that of
+any day-dreamer among the wide class of mute poets, of whom there are
+more in the world than of philosophers.
+
+I could not detect properly her ailment, and resolved to question her
+mother alone.
+
+"Did you not notice anything peculiar about my daughter?" she said.
+
+"The love of a shaded room, resulting from an irritability in the organs
+of sight, is to me no great rarity," I replied.
+
+"Though her fit has not been upon her," rejoined she, with an air of
+melancholy, "it is not an hour gone since her scream rung shrilly
+through this house, as if she had been in the hands of fiends; and, to
+be plain with you, I left you to discover yourself what may be too soon
+apparent. I fear for her mind, sir."
+
+"I have seen no reason for the apprehension; but her scream, was it not
+bodily pain?"
+
+"I could wish that it had been mere bodily pain; but it was not. You
+have not heard Isabella's history," she continued, in a low, whispering
+tone. "She has experienced what might have turned the brain of any one.
+I discovered something extraordinary in her about six months ago. One
+evening, when the candles were shaded for the relief of her eyes, and I
+and Maria were sitting by her, she stopped suddenly in the midst of our
+conversation, and sat gazing intensely at something between her and the
+wall; pointing out her finger, her mouth open, and scarcely drawing her
+breath. I was terror-struck; for the idea immediately rushed into my
+mind, that it was a symptom of insanity; but I had no time for
+thought--a scream burst from her, and she fell at my feet in a faint.
+When she recovered, she told us that she had seen, in the shaded light
+of the candle, which assumed the blue tinge of the moonlight, the figure
+of a dead body sitting upright in the waters, with the sailcloth in
+which he was committed to the deep wrapped around him, and his pale face
+directed towards her. At the recollection of the vision, she shuddered,
+would not recur to the subject again, but betrayed otherwise no
+wandering of the fancy. Several times since, the same object has
+presented itself to her; and, what is extraordinary, it is always when
+the candle is shaded; yet she exhibits the same judgment, and I could
+never detect the slightest indication of a defect in the workings of her
+mind. I sent for you to treat her eyes, and left it to you to see if
+you could discover any symptoms of a diseased mind."
+
+"Was the object she thus supposes present to her, ever exposed in
+reality to the true waking sense?" said I, suspecting a case of
+_monomania_.
+
+"Did she not tell you?" rejoined she. "Come."
+
+And leading me again into her daughter's darkened apartment, she
+whispered something in her ear, retired, and left us together.
+
+"Your mother informs, me, madam," said I, "that you have seen _what
+exists not_; and I am anxious, from professional reasons, to know from
+yourself whether I am to attribute it to the creative powers of an
+active fancy, or to an affection of the visual organs, that I have read
+more of than I have witnessed."
+
+She started, and I saw I had touched a tender part--probably that
+connected with her own suspicions that her mother and sister deemed her
+insane.
+
+"It was for this purpose, then, that you have been called to see me?"
+she replied, hastily. "It is well; I shall be tested by one who at least
+is not prejudiced. My mother and sister think that I am deranged. I need
+not tell you that I consider myself sane, although I confess that this
+illusion of the sense, to which I am subjected, makes me sometimes
+suspicious of myself. Will you listen to my story?"
+
+I replied that I would; and thus she began:--
+
+Experience, sir, is a world merely to those who live in it--it exists
+not--its laws cannot be communicated to the heart of youth; the
+transfusion of the blood of the aged into the veins of the young to
+produce wisdom, is not more vain than the displacing of the hopes of the
+young mind by the cold maxims of what man has felt, trembled to feel,
+and wished he could have anticipated, that he might have been prepared
+for it. Such has ever been, such is, such will ever be, the history of
+the sons and daughters of Adam. What but the changes into which I--still
+comparatively a young woman--have passed--not, it would almost seem,
+mutations of the same principle, but rather new states of
+existence--could have wrung from a heart, where hope should still have
+lighted her lamp, and illuminated my paths, these sentiments of a dearly
+purchased experience? When I and George Cunningham, my schoolfellow, my
+first and last lover, and subsequently my husband, passed those
+brilliant days of youth's sunshine among the green holms and shaggy
+dells of ----; following the same pursuits--conning the same
+lessons--indulging in the same dreams of future happiness, and training
+each other's hearts into a community of feeling and sentiment, till we
+seemed one being, actuated by the same living principle: in how happy a
+state of ignorance of those changes that awaited me in the world, did I
+exist? I would fall into the hackneyed strain of artificial fiction
+writing, were I to portray the pleasures of a companionship and love
+that had its beginning in the very first impulses of feeling; with a
+view to set off by contrast the subsequent events that awaited us, when
+our happiness should have been realized.
+
+When a woman of sensibility says she loves a man, she has told, through
+a medium that works out the conditions of the responding powers of our
+common nature, the heart, more than all the eulogistic eloquence of the
+tongue could achieve, to show the estimate she forms of the qualities of
+the object of her affections; but when she adds that that love
+originated in the friendship of children, grew with the increase of the
+powers of mind and body, and entered as a part into every feeling that
+actuated the young hearts, she has expressed the terms of an endearment
+so pure, tender, exclusive, and lasting, that it transcends all the
+ordinary forms of the communion of spirits on earth. The attachment is
+different from all others--it stands by itself; and to endeavour to
+conceive its purity and force by any factitious mixture of friendship,
+and the ordinary endearments of limited time and favourable
+circumstances of meeting, would be as vain as all hypothetical
+investigation into the nature of feeling must ever be. I cannot tell
+when I first knew the young man whose name I have mentioned under an
+emotion that shakes my frame; the syllables were a part of my early
+lispings, and I cannot yet think that they are unconnected with a being
+that has now no local habitation upon earth. Our parents were intimate
+neighbours; and the woods and waters of ----, if their voices--sweeter
+than articulated intelligence--could imitate the accents of man, would
+tell best when they wooed us into that communion, which they cherished,
+and witnessed, with an apparent participation of our joy, to open into
+an early affection. The power of mutual objects of pleasure and
+interest, especially if they are a part of the lovely province of
+nature--the rural landscape, secluded and secreted from the eyes of all
+the world besides, with its dells and fountains, birds and flowers--in
+increasing the attachment of young hearts, has been often observed and
+described; but we felt it. These inanimate objects are generally, and
+were to us, not only a tie, but they shared a part of our love, as if in
+some mysterious way they had become connected with, and a part of us.
+The often imputed association of ideas is a poor and inadequate solution
+of this work of nature: it is the effect put for the cause; the common,
+boasted philosophy of man, who invents terms of familiar sound to
+explain secrets eternally hidden from him. If we who felt, as few have
+ever felt, the influence of these green, umbrageous shades--with their
+nut-trees, bushes, flowers, and gowany leas; their singing birds, and
+nests with speckled eggs; their half-concealed fountains of limpid
+water, and running streams, and beds of white pebbles--in nourishing and
+increasing our young loves, could not tell how or why they were invested
+with such power; the philosopher, I deem, may resign the task, and say,
+with a sigh, that it was nature, and nature alone, who did all this; and
+the secret will remain unexplained.
+
+We enjoyed ten years of this intercourse--I calculate from the fifth to
+the fifteenth year of our youth--and every one of these years, as it
+evolved the ripening powers of our minds, so it strengthened the
+mingling affections of our hearts. We became lovers long before we knew
+the sanctions and rights, and duties of pledged faith; we were each
+other's by a troth, a thousand times spoken; exchanged and felt in the
+throbbing embrace, the burning sighs, and the eloquent looks, that were
+but the natural impulses of a feeling we rejoiced in, yet scarcely
+comprehended. My heart, recoiling from the thoughts of after years,
+luxuriates in the memory of these blissful hours; and, were not the
+theme exhausted a thousand times by the eloquence of rapt feeling,
+speaking with the tongue of inspiration, I could dwell on these early
+rejoicings of unsullied spirits for ever.
+
+My dream was not scattered--it was only changed in its form and hues,
+when my youthful betrothed was removed from home, to go through a course
+of navigation to fit him for the service of the sea, to which the
+intentions of his father, and his own early wishes, led him. I could
+have doubted my existence sooner than the faith of his heart; and he was
+only gone to make those preparations for attaining a position in society
+that would enable him to realize those fond and bright prospects we had
+indulged in contemplating among the woods that resounded to pledges
+exchanged in the face of heaven. The first place of his destination was
+London, from whence, for a period of about three years, I heard from him
+regularly by letters, which breathed with an increased warmth the same
+sentiments we had repeated and interchanged so often during the long
+period of our prior intercourse. Some time after this, he sailed to
+India; then were my thoughts first tinged by the changing hues of
+solitude; and my hopes and fears bound to the wayward circumstances of a
+world which had as yet been to me a paradise.
+
+I heard nothing from him for two long years after he left London. A
+portrayment of my thoughts during that period would be a thousand times
+more difficult than for the painter to seize and represent the changing
+hues of the gem that, thrown on a tropic strand, reflects the endless
+hues of the earth and sky. I trembled and hoped by turns but every idea
+and every feeling were so strongly mingled with reminiscences of former
+pleasures, the prospects of future happiness, the fears of a change in
+his affections, or of his death, that I could not pronounce my mind as
+being, at any given moment, aught but a medium of impressions that I
+could not seize or fix, so as to contemplate myself. All I can say is,
+that he was the presiding genius of every emotion with which my heart
+was influenced; and, to those who have loved, that may be sufficient to
+shew the utter devotion of every pulse of my being to the deified image
+enshrined within my bosom. Now came the period of the realizing of my
+dreams. George Cunninghame came back, and married me.
+
+We had scarcely been two months married when my husband, whom I loved
+more and more every day, got, by the influence of powerful friends, the
+command of a large vessel--the _Griffin_--engaged in the trade to India.
+It was arranged that I should accompany him, that, as we had been
+associated from our earliest infancy, (our separation had been only that
+of the body, and interfered not with the union of the immaterial
+essence), we should still be together. In this resolution I rejoiced;
+and, though by nature a coward, my love overcame all my terrors of the
+great deep. The day was fixed for our departure. A lady passenger and
+two servants were to go with us to the Cape, from whose society I
+expected pleasure; and every preparation which love could suggest was
+made to render me happy. We left the Downs on a calm day of December,
+and went down the Channel with a rattling gale from the north. Life on
+board of an Indiaman has been a thousand times described; and, would to
+heaven I had nothing to detail but the ordinary conduct of civilized
+men! Our chief officer was one Crawley, and our second a person of the
+name of Buist--the only individual my husband had no confidence in being
+Hans Kreutz, the steward, a German, who was whispered to have been
+engaged as a maritime venatic, or pirate, in the West Indies: and, if
+any man's character might be detected in his countenance, this
+foreigner's disposition might have been read in lineaments marked by the
+graver of passion. Part of what I have now said may have been the result
+of after experience; yet I could perceive shadowings of evil at this
+time, which I had not the knowledge of human nature to enable me to turn
+to any account.
+
+With a series of gentle breezes and fine weather, we came to the Cape,
+where Mrs Hardy and her two servants were put ashore. One of the
+servants had agreed to accompany me to Madras, and was to have come on
+board again, to join us, before we left Table Bay. Whether she had
+changed her mind, or been detained by some unforeseen cause, I know not,
+but the boat came off without her; and all the information that I could
+get was, that she was not to be found. I trembled to be left on board of
+a vessel without a female companion, and strongly insisted upon George
+to delay his departure until another effort should be made to endeavour
+to find a servant in Cape Town; but, a favourable wind having sprung up
+at that moment, Crawley remonstrated, in his peculiar mode of abject
+petitioning; and my husband, having himself seen the advantage of
+seizing the favourable opportunity for taking and accomplishing the
+passage of the Mozambique, we departed, under a stiff gale; and, in a
+short time, reached the middle of that famous Channel, where the fears
+of the seamen have been so often excited by the reputed cannibalism of
+the natives of Madagascar. At this time I was strangely beset by nightly
+visions of terror, which I could impute to no other cause than the
+stories that George had repeated to me of the wild character of these
+savages. During the day, but more especially during the blue,
+sulphurous, flame-coloured twilight of that region--I often fixed my eye
+on the long, dark, umbrageous coast--followed the ranges of receding
+heights--threaded the deep recesses of the valleys, that seemed to end
+in dark caves, and peopled every haunt with festive savages performing
+their unholy rites over a human victim, destined to form food for
+creatures bearing that external impress of God's finger which marks the
+lords of the creation. Those visions were always connected, in some way,
+with myself; and I could not banish the idea, which clung to me with a
+morbid power of adherence, that I might, alone and unprotected, be cast
+into some of these cimmerian recesses, and be subjected to the
+unutterable miseries of a fate a thousand times worse than death, and
+what might follow death, by the usages of of eaters of human beings.
+There was no cause for any such apprehensions; and I am now satisfied
+that these dark creations of my fancy were in some mysterious way
+connected with a disordered state of my physical economy; but I was not
+then aware of such predisposing causes of mental gloom, and still
+brooded over my imagined horrors, till I drove rest and sleep from my
+pillow, and disturbed my husband with my pictured images of a danger
+that he said was far removed from me. From him I got some support and
+relief; but the faces of the men I saw around me, and especially those
+of Crawley and Kreutz, seemed, to me, rather to reflect a corroboration
+of my fears, than to afford me encouragement and support. The grim
+visions retained their power over me; and, the wind having fallen off
+almost to a dead calm, I found myself fixed in the very midst of the
+scenes that thus nourished and perpetuated them. The depression of mind
+produced by these frightful day-dreams and nightmares, made me sickly
+and weak. I could scarcely take any food; every piece of flesh presented
+to me, reminded me of the feasts of the inhabitants of that dark, dismal
+island that lay stretching before me in the vapours of a tropical
+climate, like a land of enchantment called up by fiends from the great
+deep; the dyspeptic nausea of sickness was the very food of my gloomy
+thoughts; and the co-operative powers of mind and body tended to the
+increase of my misery, till I seemed a victim of confirmed hypochondria.
+
+We were still fixed immovably in the same place: all motive powers
+seemed to have forsaken the elements--the sea was like a sheet of glass,
+the sails hung loose from the masts, and the men lay listless about,
+overcome with heat, and yawning in lethargy. It was impossible to keep
+me below. I required air to keep me breathing, and felt a strange
+melancholy relief from fixing my eyes on the very scene of my terrors.
+Every effort to occupy my mind was vain; and I lay, for hours at a time,
+with my eyes fixed on the shore, piercing the deep, wooded hollows,
+following the faint traces of the savages as they disappeared among the
+thick trees, and investing every naked demon with all the
+characteristics of the followers of the mysterious midnight rites in
+which I conceived they engaged when the hour of their orgies came. I
+often saw individuals--rendered gigantic by the magnifying medium of the
+thick vapour--come down to the beach, and fix their gaze on us for a
+time, and then pace back again to the wooded recesses. Sometimes, when
+unable to sleep, I crept up from the cabin, and sat and surveyed the
+silent scene around me--the hazy moon, throwing her thick beams over the
+calm sea--the dark shadows of unknown birds sailing slowly through the
+air, and uttering at intervals sounds I had never heard before--the
+fires of the inhabitants among the trees on the coast, that sent up a
+long column of red light through the atmosphere, and exhibited the
+flitting bodies of the naked beings as they danced round the objects of
+their rites. It is impossible for me, by any language of which I have
+the power, to convey an adequate conception of my feelings during these
+hours. They were realities to me; and, therefore, whatever may be said
+against fanciful creations, I have a right to claim attention to states
+of the mind and feelings that belong to our nature in certain positions.
+At a late hour one night, I was engaged in those gloomy watchings and
+reveries, when Kreutz came to me, and said the captain had been taken
+suddenly ill. I turned my eyes from the scene along the shore I was
+surveying, and fixed them for a moment on his face, where the light of
+the moon sat in deep contrast with the long bushy hair that flowed round
+his temples. A shudder--that might have been accounted for from the
+state of my mind and the nature of the communication he had made to me,
+but which I instinctively attributed, at the time, to the expression of
+his face--passed over me, and, starting up, I hurried into the cabin off
+the cuddy, where I found George under the grasp of relentless spasms of
+the chest and stomach. He was stretched along on the floor, grasping the
+carpet, which he had wound up into a coil, and vomiting violently into a
+bason which he had hurriedly seized before he fell.
+
+'Good God, Isabella!' he exclaimed, 'what is this? I am dying. That
+villain Cr ----'
+
+And, whether from weakness or prudence, he stopped, with the guttural
+sound of these two letters, Cr, which applied equally to Crawley as to
+Kreutz, and left me in doubt which of them he meant. At this moment
+Buist the mate entered the cabin; and my agitation and the necessity of
+affording relief to the sufferer, took my mind off the fearful subject
+hinted at by the broken sentence I had heard. With the assistance of
+Buist, I got him placed on the bed. There was no doctor on board, and I
+was left to the suggestions of my own mind, for adopting means to save
+him. These were applied, but without imparting any relief. The painful
+symptoms continued, and he got every moment worse. Neither Crawley nor
+Kreutz appeared; and when Buist went out to bring what was deemed
+necessary for the patient, I hung over him, and asked him what he
+conceived to have been the cause of his illness; but my question
+startled him--he looked up wildly in my face; his mind was directed
+towards heaven; and the means of salvation through the redeeming
+influence of a believed divinity of Him who died on the cross, was the
+subject alone on which he would speak. The scene, at this moment, around
+me was extraordinary, and, though I cannot say I had any distinct
+perception of the individual circumstances that combined to make up the
+sum of my horrors, I can now see, as through a dark medium, the
+co-operating elements. There was no candle in the cabin; the light of
+the moon through the windows filling the apartment with a blue glare,
+and tinging his pallid face with its hues. My mind, wrought up by the
+dreamy visions I had indulged in previously, and labouring under a
+disease which imparted to every feeling its own eliminated gloom, saw
+even the darkest circumstances of my condition in a false and unnatural
+aspect. The scenes of our youth and early love; the impressions of the
+religious sentiments he was muttering in broken snatches; the view of
+his approaching death; the dark means by which it was accomplished; my
+condition after he should die, in the power of men I feared; the orgies
+of the natives I had been contemplating; the deep grave, so fearful in
+its dead calmness; and the monsters that revelled in it, to which he
+would be consigned--all flitted through my brain; but with such
+rapidity--driving out, by short energies, the more engrossing thoughts
+concerned in the manner of his recovery--that I could not particularize
+them, while I drew, by some synthetic process of the mind, their general
+attributes, and thus increased the terror of the scene.
+
+Two hours passed, and every moment made it more apparent that my husband
+was posting to death. There was no sound heard throughout the ship
+except the dull tread of the watch; and, at intervals, the whispers of
+Crawley, as he communed stealthily with Buist, who went out of the cabin
+repeatedly, to carry intelligence of the state of the sufferer. For
+about three quarters of an hour he had been raving wildly. The detached
+words he uttered raised, by their electric power, the working of my
+fancy which filled up, by a train of thoughts scarcely more within the
+province of reason, the chain of his wandering ideas. No connected
+discourse on the subject of his illness, though mixed up with all the
+reminiscences of an affection that had lasted since the period of
+infancy, or the prospects that awaited me in the unprecedented position
+in which I was about to be thrown, could have distracted me in the
+manner effected by these insulated vocables, wrung by madness from
+expiring life and reason. They ring in my ears even yet, when the beams
+of the moon shine through the casements; and, even now, I think I see
+that dimly lighted cabin, and my husband lying before me in the agonies
+of death. I became, as if by some secret sympathy, as much deranged as
+himself. As I watched him, I cast rapid looks around me--out upon the
+still deep, in the direction of the fearful island--upon the articles of
+domestic use lying in confusion, and exhibiting dimly-illuminated sides
+and dark shades. It seemed to me some frightful dream; and, when I
+turned my eyes again on the pale face which had been the object of my
+excited fancy for so many years, saw the struggles of expiring nature,
+and heard the wild accents that still came from his parched lips, I
+screamed, and tore my hair in handfuls from my head. In that condition,
+I saw him die; and the increase of my frenzy, produced by that
+consummation of all evils, made me rush out, and forward to the side of
+the ship. I felt all the stinging madness of the resolution to die--to
+fly from the man who, I feared, had murdered him--to escape from that
+island of cannibals, where I thought I would be left by my relentless
+foes, by plunging into the deep, when Crawley, who had heard of his
+demise, seized me, and dragged me back.
+
+This paroxysm was succeeded by a kind of stupor that seized my whole
+mind and body. I sat down on a cot in the side of the cabin, and saw
+Kreutz bring in a light. The glare of it startled me; but it was only as
+a vision that could not awake the sleeper. They proceeded to lay out my
+husband on a table. They undressed him--for his clothes were still on;
+and I saw them take a large sheet, wrap it round him, and pin it firmly
+at all the folds. When their labours were finished, they took each a
+large portion of brandy, and Crawley came forward and offered me a
+portion. I had no power to push it from me. He held it to my mouth; but
+my lips were motionless; and, tossing it off himself, he and the others
+went out of the cabin. No precaution was taken to keep me within; but
+the frenzy that had previously impelled me to self-destruction had
+subsided, and I shuddered at what a few moments before appeared to me to
+be a source of relief. I sat for hours in the position in which they
+left me, gazing upon the dead body before me, but without the energy to
+rise and look at the features of him who had formed the object of my
+earliest devotions, the subject of all my fondest dreams of early youth
+and matured womanhood, now lying there lifeless. I had scarcely, during
+that period, consciousness of any object, but of a long, white figure
+extended on the table, with the moonlight reflected from it. The stupor
+left me--I cannot tell at what hour; and the first movement of living
+energy in my brain was a stinging impulse to rush forward and seize the
+body. I obeyed it, without a power to resist; and, tearing off the
+folds, laid bare the face, which was as placid as I had ever seen it,
+when, watching over him, I used to steal a look of him, during the hours
+of night, as he slept by my side, in the moonlight that stole through
+the cabin-window. In my agony, I clung to him--kissed the cold
+lips--called out 'George! George!'--threw the folds of the sheet over
+the face--again looked round me for some one to comfort me--felt the
+consciousness of my perilous position--and, as a kind of refuge from the
+despair that met me on every hand, withdrew again the folds, and acted
+over again the frenzied parts of a madness that mocked the miseries of
+the inmates of an asylum.
+
+I must have exhausted myself by the excitement into which I was thrown;
+for, some time afterwards, I found myself lying upon the cot, and
+wakening again to a consciousness of all the ills that surrounded me.
+The light of the moon had given place to the dull beams of earliest
+dawn, which were only sufficient to shew me the extended figure on the
+table, and the confusion into which the furniture of the cabin was
+thrown. I heard the sounds of several footsteps in the cuddy. Sounds of
+voices struck my ear; and, rising up, I crawled forward to a situation
+where I could hear the communings from which my fate might be known.
+
+'When the wind starts,' said Crawley--'it will be from the north--we
+should turn and make all speed for Rio, where we may dispose of the
+cargo, and then run the vessel to the West Indies. How do the men feel
+disposed, Kreutz--all braced and steady?'
+
+'All but Wingate and Ryder, who are watched by the others,' replied the
+German. 'These dogs would mutiny, ha! ha!--mein gut friend Buist is
+against their valking the plank; but they must either come in or go out.
+Teufel! no mutineers aboard the Griffin.'
+
+'Right, Hans,' said Crawley. 'Get Murdoch to knock together the
+boards--we will bury him to-morrow; but the wife, man, what is to be
+done with her?'
+
+'Put her ashore, to be sure,' responded Kreutz. 'There is not von
+difficulty there. The natives will be glad of her, and we want her not.
+If this calm were gone, all would be gut and recht. That is the von
+thing only that troubles me.'
+
+'If there is no wind,' said Crawley, 'to carry us out of the channel,
+there is none to bring any one to us.'
+
+At this moment, I thought they heard some movements, produced by a
+nervous trembling that came over me, and forced me to hold by a chair.
+Some whisperings followed. Kreutz went away, and Crawley entered. I had
+just time to retreat to the other side of the body of my husband. His
+manner was now that which was natural to him--harsh and repulsive. He
+ordered me peremptorily to the lower cabin. I had no power to resist, or
+even to speak; but I saw, in the order, the eternal separation of me and
+George; and, rushing forward, I withdrew the covering from his face, to
+take the last look--to imprint the last kiss on his cold lips. The act
+operated like the stirrings of conscience on the cowardly man of blood.
+His averted eye glanced for an instant on the body, and, seizing the
+coverlet, he wrapped up the countenance, and, taking me by the arm,
+hurried me down to the apartment set apart for passengers. This cabin
+was darker than the captain's, from some of the windows having been
+changed into dead lights; and I considered myself pent up in a dungeon.
+Hitherto my feelings had been, in a great measure, the result of
+existing moving circumstances; but now I was left to reflection, in so
+far as that act of the mind could be concerned in the attempt to picture
+the extremities of a fate that seemed as unavoidable as unparalleled.
+The diseased visions that had distracted me before any real evil
+occurred, were changed, from their dreamy, shadowy character, to
+realities. The lengthened trains of images that were required to satisfy
+the cravings of hypochondria, fled; and, in their place, there was one
+general, overwhelming fear, that seemed to engross all my thinking
+energies, and left no power to particularize the visions of danger that
+awaited me among the savages. There was only one presiding, prevailing
+idea that served as the rallying point of my terrors; and that was the
+dead body of George, with the white sheet in which he was swathed, and
+the peculiarly-formed oaken table on which he was placed, and at which
+we used to dine upon all the dainties to be found on board an Indiaman.
+It was the steadfastness of this idea that excluded the images of the
+fearful deep recesses--the Bacchanalian orgies of the savages--their
+anthropophagous rites, their midnight revels; but retained, as it were,
+hanging round it, the fear they had engendered, as a more complex
+feeling. After Crawley had left me, I had thrown myself down on a
+couch--an act of which I retained no consciousness; for afterwards, when
+daylight began to break in through the only window that was not closed
+up, I started to my feet, and did not know, for some time, that I was
+separated from the corpse; the vision of which had, during the interval,
+been so vivid, that it combined the conditions of figure and locality as
+perfectly as if the object had been before me.
+
+On the deck I now heard the sound of several loud voices, and afterwards
+a scuffle, accompanied with the tramping of feet. There was then silence
+for a time; but my ears were stung, on a sudden, by a scream, succeeded
+by a plash, as if some one had been precipitated into the sea. A
+gurgling noise, as if the individual were drowning, followed; and the
+suspicion rushed into my mind, that they had made an example (to terrify
+the others) of one of the men who had rebelled against the authority of
+the mutineers. A silence, as deep as that of death, succeeded, which
+lasted about an hour, at the end of which period the sound of the saw
+and hammer were distinctly heard. I recollected the orders of Crawley,
+for Murdoch, the carpenter, to prepare George's coffin. The knocking
+continued for a considerable time, and produced such an effect upon me
+that the ideas, which had been, as it were, chained up by the freezing
+influence of the prevailing vision of the extended and rolled-up body,
+broke away and careered through my mind with the velocity,
+unconnectedness, and intensity, that belong to certain states of excited
+mania. Images of the past and the future were mixed up in confusion; and
+every succeeding thought stung me with increased pain, till the idea of
+suicide again suggested itself, bringing in its train that which
+destroyed it--the terror of an avenging God, who will pass judgment on
+the takers of their own lives. I started, and sought forgiveness; and,
+for the first time under this agony, felt the soft action of the balm of
+a confided trust in Him who has mercy in endless stores for the good,
+but who poured his fury even upon the house of Israel, for the blood
+they shed upon the land. But, must I confess it, the relief I felt from
+this high source was immediately again lost in the cold shiverings of
+instinctive fear, as I heard the knocking cease, knew the coffin was
+finished, and perceived, from the sounds in the cabin off the cuddy,
+that they were putting the body into the rudely constructed box, with a
+view of burying him in the deep sea.
+
+Some indescribable emotion, at this time, forced me towards the cabin
+window, although the sight of the water was frightful to me. It was
+still and calm as ever, and the light was already sufficient to enable
+me to see far down in its green recesses. I could not take my eye from
+it. There were numerous creatures swimming about in it, some of which I
+had got described to me, but many of them I had never seen before. They
+seemed more hideous to me now than they had ever appeared when, on
+former occasions, I sat and watched their motions. The large
+bull-mouthed shark was there, rolling his huge body in apparent
+lethargy, and turning up his white belly in grim playfulness, as if in
+mockery of my misery. It had a charm about its truculent savageness that
+riveted my attention, while it shook my frame. It was connected in my
+mind with the fate of George's body, which, every moment, I expected to
+hear plash in the sea, in the midst of that shoal of creatures with
+strange forms and ravenous maws. An exacerbation of these sickly
+feelings made me lift my eyes; but it was only to fix them on the not
+less fearful island that lay before in the far distance, and now, in the
+fogs of the morning, through which the red sun struggled to send his
+beams, appeared a huge mass of inspissated vapour lying motionless on
+the surface of the sea. The very indistinctness of this hazy vision
+stimulated my fancy to its former morbid activity, and I saw again the
+mystic wooded ravines, sacred to the rights of cannibalism, of which I
+myself was doomed to be the object.
+
+From this dream I was roused by the loud tread of men's feet over my
+head, as if the individuals were bearing a load that increased the
+heaviness of their steps. I was at no loss for the cause--they were
+carrying the coffin with the body in it to midship, where it was to be
+let down into its watery grave. In a short time afterwards, a gurgling
+of the waters met my ear, and, struggling to the foot of the companion
+ladder, I would have rushed upon deck if my strength would have
+permitted; but I fell upon the steps, and, lying there, heard a cry from
+some of them. I gathered, from the detached words I heard, that the
+bottom of the coffin had given way, from its insufficiency and the
+weight that had been put in it to make it sink; and that the body had
+gone down, while the chest swam on the surface. Several feet were now
+heard rapidly in motion, and the voice of Kreutz, who was running aft,
+fell on my ear.
+
+'Teufel!' I heard him say, 'we shall have that grim corpse when the
+gallenblase--ha!--ha!--the gall bladder has burst, rising like von geist
+from the bottom of the deep sea, and staring at us. Hell take the
+stumper, Murdoch!'
+
+These words, uttered by the German, were followed by some expression
+from Crawley, no part of which I could make out, except the oaths
+directed against the carpenter. The sounds died away; but I heard enough
+to satisfy me of the fact that George's body had been consigned to the
+deep with only the shroud to defend it against the attacks of the
+ravenous creatures I had been contemplating. My mind was again forced,
+and with increased energy, into the train of gloomy meditations
+suggested by what I had heard; and so vivid were the visions that obeyed
+the excited powers of my imagination, that I forgot, as I lay brooding
+over them on the sofa to which I had staggered, the danger that next
+awaited myself. I could not now look at the sea, for I feared to meet
+the fact which would add probation to my imaginations--that the animals
+I had seen there had disappeared to crowd round the prey that had been
+given to them. Yet the actual vision of that dear form, mutilated, torn,
+and devoured, could not, I am satisfied, have produced more insufferable
+agony, than accompanied and resulted from the diseased imaginings in
+which my fancy was engaged. The process that I pictured going on in the
+bottom of the sea, was coloured by hues so sickly, and attended by
+circumstances so distorted and grim, that all natural appearances,
+however harrowing, must have fallen short of the power they exercised
+over me. The positions in which I imagined him to be placed, were varied
+in a greater degree than ever I had seen the human body; the expressions
+of the countenance, though fixed by death, and not likely to be changed,
+became as Protean as the changing postures of the limbs; and the marine
+monsters that gambolled or fought around him for the prize, were
+invested with forms, colours, and attributes, of a kind not limited to
+what I had ever seen in the deep. The only idea that seemed to remain
+stationary, and not liable to the mutations into which all the others
+were every moment gliding, was the colour of the body, which was that of
+the green medium in which he lay. That sickly hue pervaded all parts;
+and even the dark or light colours of the inhabitants of the deep,
+partook, more or less, of the prevailing tint. It seemed to be the
+universal of all particulars, as time or space is the medium or
+condition of existence of all thought and matter; I felt the
+impossibility of any idea being true that did not partake of it; and, so
+strongly was the feeling of the ex-natural that accompanied it, that
+even now I cannot look at anything green without shuddering.
+
+I cannot tell how long I was under the dominion of this train of
+thought. I was, in a manner, torn from it by the entrance of Kreutz with
+some food for me. He growled out a few words of mixed German and
+English, and left it on the table. It is needless to say that I could
+eat nothing. Even before these misfortunes overtook me, my appetite had
+left me; but now I loathed all edibles. After having been roused from
+the train of morbid imaginings in which I had been engaged, and which I
+clung to as if they imparted to me some unnatural satisfaction, I felt
+(and it is a curious fact) a recoiling disinclination to resume the grim
+subject, and even resorted to some imbecile and despairing efforts to
+avoid it. It was not that I expected any relief from forbearing: every
+other subject that could be suggested by my position was equally fraught
+with tears and pains; but that having, as I now suppose, exhausted, for
+the time, the diseased workings, the view of an effort to call up again
+the thoughts that had been as it were supplied by disease, penetrated me
+with a sensation beyond the powers of endurance. For two or three hours
+afterwards, my attention was directed to the proceedings upon deck; but
+I could hear little beyond indistinct mutterings, and occasional sounds
+of the treading of feet over me. The calm, which had lasted for many
+days, still continued; and, until a wind sprung up, no effort could be
+made by the mutineers to retrace their progress through the channel, and
+proceed to their projected destination. At last the shades of night
+began to fall; exhausted nature claimed some relief from her sufferings;
+but the drowsiness that overcame me, was only a medium of a new series
+of imaginings still more grotesque and unnatural than those that had
+haunted me during the day.
+
+When the morning dawned, I expected every moment the execution of the
+purpose I had heard declared by Crawley, to put me ashore on the island;
+and, during moments of more rational reflection, I could not account for
+my not having been disposed of in this way on the previous day. The
+terrors of that destiny were as strong upon me as ever; but, I must
+confess, that the view of real evil, almost unprecedented, as it seemed,
+in its extent and peculiarity, produced feelings entirely different from
+what resulted from the prior musings of my hypochondriac fancy: I would
+not be believed were I to say that the expected reality was not much
+more painful than the sickly vision. The miseries were of different
+kinds, proceeding from different causes, operating upon a mind in two
+different states. There was something in my own power. I was not
+justified in committing suicide as a mode of escape from an affliction
+that God might have seen meet to put upon me; but all my reasonings on
+this subject fled before the view of this next calamity that awaited me.
+An extraordinary thought seized me, that I was not bound to hold life,
+when, through my own body and sensibilities, God's laws were to be
+overturned, and my sufferings were to be made a shame in the face of
+heaven. I secreted a knife in my bosom, and sat in silent expectation of
+the issue. I was again supplied with meat; but, on this occasion,
+Crawley brought it to me--and here began a new evil. He resumed,
+partially, his former dastardly sneaking manner; made love to me;
+offered me the honour of being still a captain's wife, and accompanied
+the offer with, obliquely-hinted threats of a due consequence of my
+rejection of his suit. I spurned him; but I cannot dwell on the details
+of this proceeding. His suit was persisted in for two or three days,
+when, roused to madness, he told me, that next day, if I consented not,
+I would be wedded to the natives of Madagascar. I traced the outline of
+the knife through the covering of my bosom, and defied him.
+
+The next night was clear, and somewhat chill--indications of a cessation
+of the calm. The rudeness of Crawley had had the effect of keeping my
+mind from falling into the grasp of the demon of diseased fantasy; but,
+now my fate was fixed, I had no more to fear from him; and towards
+midnight, I fell again into the train of imaginings that had formerly
+haunted me. I had opened the cabin window for air--having felt a
+suffocating oppression of the chest during the day, proceeding from the
+extreme heat and the confined apartment. My eyes were again fixed in the
+direction of the island. I could see the dark shade of the land lying
+upon the gilded waters. All was still; my thoughts sought again the
+deep--the grave of George, the fancied condition of his body; and, as my
+ideas diverged to the calm scene around, it appeared to me as if all
+nature were dead, and that my own pulsations were the only living
+movements on earth. Lights now began to move along the shore, and then a
+fire blazed up into the firmament. The bodies of the savages flitted
+before it; I had seen the same appearances before; but I was now
+connected with these orgies in a more _real_ manner than formerly. They
+ceased, and my mind again sought the recesses of the green deep, where
+all I loved on earth lay engulfed. My eye at times wandered over the
+surface of the waters; but I feared to look downwards into their bosom.
+My attention was suddenly fixed by an object in the sea. I put up my
+hands and rubbed my eyes. Was I deceived by a fancy? No! a dead body was
+there, not four yards distant from where I sat. It was that of my
+husband, rolled up in the same white sheet in which I had seen him
+extended on the oak table, and with his head raised somewhat above the
+surface, by the weights placed in the shroud having, as I afterwards
+thought, descended to the feet. A part of the sewing had been torn off
+the head, which was bare--the face was openly exposed to me, the moon
+shone upon it; I could perceive the very features, and even the
+lustreless eyes, that seemed fixed on the ship. There was not a breath
+of wind to ruffle the surface of the sea, which shone with a blue lustre
+in the light of the moon; and the body was as motionless as if it had
+been fixed on the earth. I have described, hitherto, what actually
+befell me, with the various states of my mind under extraordinary
+circumstances of pain and depression. My fancies belonged as much to
+nature as the facts which excited and nourished them, and must be
+believed by those who have studied the workings of the mind, even
+unconnected with the principles and facts of pathology. This was,
+however, no vision of the fancy, but a reality resulting from well-known
+physical laws. I sat, fixed immovably, at the window, and felt no more
+power of receding from it, than I formerly had of resigning my musings.
+My eyes were fixed upon that countenance which had been the _beau ideal_
+of love's idolatry--the fairest thing on earth, and the archetype of my
+dreams of heaven. I could not fly from it, horrible as it seemed in its
+blue glare and ghastly expression. I loved it while it shocked me; and
+all my powers of thinking were bound up in freezing terror. I felt the
+hair on my head move as the shrivelling skin became corrugated over my
+temples. That, and the occasional throbbings of my heart, were the only
+motions of any part of my being; but the body I gazed at seemed to be as
+immovable, and its eyes seemed not less steadfastly fixed on me than
+mine were on it.
+
+How long I sat in this position I know not. There was no internal
+impulse that moved me to desist. I could, I thought, have looked for
+ever. Certain fearful objects possess a charm over the mind--and this
+was one of them; but I have sometimes thought that the power lay in
+producing the negative state of mental paralysis; for the instant my
+attention was called to a strange noise upon the deck, I was suddenly
+recalled to a natural sense of the fear it inspired. The sounds I heard
+were a mixture of exclamations and objections, pronounced in tones of
+fear and anger. I turned away my face from the dead body, with a strong
+feeling of repugnance to contemplate it again; and, groping my way to
+the companion-ladder, listened to what was going on above. Kreutz and
+Crawley were in communication.
+
+'There is more than chance in that frightful appearance,' I heard
+Crawley say. 'And this calm too--it will never end. God have mercy on
+us! Is there no man that will undertake to sink the body? I cannot stand
+the gaze of these white balls. See! the face is directed towards me; and
+yet I did not do the deed, though I authorized it. Will no one save me
+from the glare of the grim avenger? I will give twenty gold pieces to
+the man who will remove it to the deep. Go forward, Kreutz, and try if
+you can prevail upon a bold heart to undertake the task!'
+
+'Pho, man!' responded the German--'all von phantasy--anybody would have
+risen in the same way--Teufel! I heed it not von peterpfenning. But the
+men are alarmed, and begin to say that the captain has not got fair
+play. Hush! seize your degen. There is von commotion before the mast.'
+
+I now heard a tumult in the fore part of the vessel and began to
+suspect that the crew had been led to believe that George had died a
+natural death, and had been by some means prevailed upon to work the
+vessel, when the wind rose in another direction, under the command of
+Crawley. The noise increased, and with it the fears of the cowardly
+villain whose conscience had been awakened by such strange means. Kreutz
+had left him to try to pacify the men; and the tones of his
+terror-struck voice continued to murmur around.
+
+'There it still is,' he groaned, as his attention seemed to be divided
+between the sight he contemplated and the tumult, 'gazing steadfastly
+with these lack-lustre eyes for revenge. It is on me they are
+fixed--immovably fixed--as a victim which the spirit that floats over
+the body in that dead light of the moon demands, and will get. There is
+a God above in that blue firmament, who sees all things. I am lost.
+These men obey the call of a power that chooses that grim apparition as
+its instrument to call down destruction on my head. Ha! Kreutz has no
+influence here; the avengers are prepared.'
+
+A step now came rapidly forward, and Kreutz's voice was again heard.
+
+'If you will not try to quell them,' said he, 'all is lost. They swear
+the captain has been murdered, and that verdamt traitor Buist heads them
+on. Donner! shall Hans Kreutz die like one muzzled dog? On with degen in
+hand, and it may not be too late! We have friends among the caitiffs;
+strike down the first man; his blut will terrify them more than that
+staring geist, which is, after all, only von natural body, with no more
+spirit in it than the bones of my grandmutter. Frisch! frisch! auf, man!
+come, come, dash in and strike the first mutineer!'
+
+The cowardly spirit of Crawley was acted upon by the stern German; for I
+heard him cry out--
+
+'Hold there, men! what means this tumult--'sdeath?'
+
+The rest of his words were drowned by the noise; but I heard the sounds
+of his and Kreutz's feet as they rushed forward. In an instant, the
+sound like that of a man falling prostrate on the deck, met my ear; and
+then there rose a yell that rung through every cranny of the ship. All
+seemed engaged in a desperate struggle. The words 'Revenge for our
+captain!' often rose high above all the other sounds. The clanging of
+many daggers followed; several bodies fell with a crash upon the deck,
+and loud groans, as if from persons in the agonies of death, were mixed
+with the cries of those who were struggling for victory. The tramping
+and confusion increased, till all distinct sound seemed lost in a
+general uproar. I got alarmed, and left my station at the foot of the
+companion-ladder; but I knew not whither to fly. I took again my seat at
+the window, as if I felt that there was an opening for me from which I
+might fly from the fearful scene. My agitation had banished from my mind
+for an instant the vision of the body; and I started again with
+increased fear as my eyes fell upon the corpse that had apparently been
+the cause of the uproar. It was still there, as motionless as before;
+yet, I thought, still nearer to me. I saw the features still more
+distinctly than ever, and found my mind again chained down by the charm
+it threw over me. The sounds for a time seemed to come upon my ear from
+a far, far distance, or like those heard in a dream; and like a dreamer,
+too, I struggled to get away from a vision that I at once loved and
+trembled at. The noises on deck seemed as those of the world, and the
+object before me the creation of the fancy that bound my soul, but left
+the sense of hearing open to living sounds. While in this state, I was
+suddenly roused by a rush of several men into the cabin; they held
+daggers in their hands and their countenances were besmeared with blood.
+I looked at them, under the impression that they were my enemies, and
+that the cause of Crawley had triumphed; but I was soon undeceived--they
+told me that both he and Kreutz lay dead upon the deck, and that the
+victorious party were determined to complete the voyage and take the
+ship to Madras. The removal of one evil from a mind borne down by the
+weight of many, only leaves a greater power of susceptibility of the
+pain of what remains. The moment I heard of my own personal safety, I
+recurred again to the subject that affected me more deeply than even the
+fears of being consigned to the natives of the island--the dead body of
+George was still in the waters. The men understood and appreciated my
+sufferings. I again went to the cabin window, and, pointing to the
+corpse, implored Buist, who was present, to get it taken up and buried.
+He replied, that that had already been agreed upon, and orders were
+given to that effect. Several of the men volunteered of themselves to
+assist. A boat was put out, and I watched the solemn process. I saw them
+drag up the body from the sea, and would have flown to the deck to
+embrace once more the dearest object of my earthly affections; but I was
+restrained from motives of humanity. I had reason to suppose that it had
+been dreadfully mutilated, and that was the reason why I was saved the
+pain of the sad sight. That same evening it was consigned again to the
+deep; and with it sunk the bodies of his murderers, Crawley and Kreutz.
+
+Next day, a breeze sprang up, and bore us away from that fatal place. My
+eyes were fixed on it till I could see no longer any traces of that
+island which had caused me so many fears. In a short time, we arrived in
+India, where I remained about two months, and returned again with the
+Griffin to Britain.
+
+"Now, sir," she continued, "all these things are in the course of man's
+doings in this strange world. It is also very natural that I should
+think of him. But a more dreadful effect has followed. I shudder when I
+think of it."
+
+She stopped and looked at me, as if she were afraid to touch upon the
+subject of the visual illusion. I told her that I understood the cause
+of her fears; and having questioned her, I satisfied myself from her
+answers that I had at last discovered a case of true _monomania_, in
+which the patient conceived that she saw, with the same distinctness as
+when she looked from the cabin window of the _Griffin_ the corpse of her
+husband swimming in the sea, with the head and chest above the waters,
+surrounded with the same blue moonlight, and every minute circumstance
+attending the real presence.
+
+I meditated a cure; but I frankly confess that it was my anxious wish to
+witness her under the influence of the fit; and, with that view, I
+purposed waiting upon her repeatedly in the evenings, when, under the
+shaded light of the candle, it generally came over her. I was baffled in
+this for several weeks, chiefly, I presume, from the circumstance of my
+presence operating as an engagement of her mind; but one evening when I
+was sitting with her mother in another room, the sister came suddenly,
+and beckoned me into that occupied by my patient. The door was opened
+quietly and, on looking in, I saw, for the first time, a vision-struck
+victim of this extraordinary disease. She sat as if under a spell, her
+arms extended, her eyes fixed on the imaginary object, and every sense
+bound up in that which contemplated the spectre vision. The fit
+ended with a loud scream; she fell back in her chair, crying
+wildly--"George!--George!" and lay, for a minute or two, apparently
+insensible.
+
+I continued my study of this extraordinary case for a considerable
+period; and, while I administered to her relief, I got her to explain to
+me some things which may be of use to our profession. I need not say
+that I was able to penetrate the dark secret of the seat of either the
+pathology or the metaphysique of the disease. That it was connected with
+the irritability of her nerves, and the affection of the eyes, there can
+be little doubt; because, as she mended in health, the fits diminished
+in number, and latterly went off. I may, however, state that, from all I
+could learn from her, the fit was something of the nature of a
+dream--all the objects around her, at the time, being as much unnoticed
+as if they existed not; and although she was possessed with an absolute
+conviction that the body of her husband was actually at the time
+present, it was precisely that kind of conviction that we feel in a
+vivid dream.
+
+[Footnote 2: HIBBERT'S _Philosophy of Apparitions_; BREWSTER'S _Letters on
+Natural Magic_; SCOTT'S _Letters on Witchcraft_, _&c._]
+
+
+
+
+THE FOUNDLING AT SEA.
+
+
+About the year 1708 or 1710, the good ship _Isabella_, Captain Hardy,
+sailed from the port of Greenock for Bombay, being chartered by the East
+India Company to carry out a quantity of arms and ammunition for the use
+of the Company's forces.
+
+The _Isabella_ carried out with her several passengers; amongst whom
+were a lady, her child--a girl about three years of age--and a
+servant-maid. This lady, whose name was Elderslie, was the wife of a
+lieutenant in the British army, who was then with his regiment at
+Calcutta, whither she was about to follow him; he having written home
+that, as he had been fortunate enough to obtain some semi-civil
+appointments in addition to his military services, he would, in all
+probability, be a residenter there for many years. The lieutenant added
+that, under these circumstances, he wished his "dear Betsy, and their
+darling little Julia, to join him as soon as possible." And this, he
+said, he had the less hesitation in requiring, that the appointments he
+alluded to would render their situation easy and comfortable. It was
+then in obedience to this invitation that Mrs Elderslie and her child
+were now passengers on board the _Isabella_.
+
+For about six weeks the gallant ship pursued her way prosperously--that
+whole period being marked only by alternatives of temporary calms and
+fair winds. The vessel was now off the coast of Guinea; and here an
+inscrutable Providence had decreed that her ill-fated voyage--for it was
+destined to be so, flattering as had been its outset--should terminate.
+A storm arose--a dreadful storm--one of those wild bursts of elemental
+fury which mock the might of man, and hoarsely laugh at his puny and
+feeble efforts to resist their destructive powers. For two days and
+nights the vessel, stript of every inch of canvass, drove wildly before
+the wind; and, on the morning of the third day, struck furiously on a
+reef of rocks, at about half a mile's distance from the shore. On the
+ship striking, the crew--not doubting that she would immediately go to
+pieces, for a dreadful sea was beating over her, and she was, besides,
+every now and then, surging heavily against the rock on which she now
+lay--instantly took to their boats, accompanied by the passengers. All
+the passengers? No, not all. There was one amissing. It was Mrs
+Elderslie. About ten minutes before the ship struck, that unfortunate
+lady, together with two men and a boy, were swept from the deck by a
+huge sea that broke over the stern; sending, with irresistible fury, a
+rushing deluge of water, of many feet in depth, over the entire length
+of the ship. Neither Mrs Elderslie nor any of the unhappy participators
+in her dismal fate were seen again.
+
+In the hurry and confusion of taking to the boats, none recollected that
+there was still a child on board--the child of the unfortunate lady who
+had just perished; or, if any did recollect this, none chose to run the
+risk of missing the opportunity of escape presented by the boats, by
+going in search of the hapless child, who was at that moment below in
+the cabin. In the meantime, the overloaded boats--for they were much too
+small to carry the numbers who were now crowded into them, especially in
+such a sea as was then raging--had pushed off, and were labouring to
+gain the shore. It was a destination they were doomed never to reach.
+Before they had got half-way, both boats were swamped--the one
+immediately after the other--and all on board perished, after a brief
+struggle with the roaring and tumbling waves that were bellowing around
+them.
+
+From this moment, the storm, as if now satisfied with the mischief it
+had wrought, began to abate. In half an hour it had altogether subsided;
+and the waves, though still rolling heavily, had lost the violence and
+energy of their former motion. They seemed worn out and exhausted by
+their late fury.
+
+The crew of the unfortunate vessel had left her, as we have said, in the
+expectation that she would shortly go to pieces; but it would have been
+better for them had they had more confidence in her strength, and
+remained by her; for, strange to tell, she withstood the fury of the
+elements, and, though sorely battered and shaken, her dark hull still
+rested securely on the rock on which she had struck. The wreck of the
+_Isabella_ had been witnessed from the shore by a crowd of the natives,
+who had assembled directly opposite the fatal reef on which she had
+struck. They would fain have gone out in their canoes to the unfortunate
+vessel when she first struck, as was made evident by some unsuccessful
+attempts they made to paddle towards her; but whether with a friendly or
+hostile purpose, cannot be known. On the storm subsiding, however, they
+renewed their attempts. A score of canoes started for the wreck, reached
+it, and, in an instant after, the deck of the unfortunate vessel was
+covered with wild Indians. Whooping and yelling in the savage excitement
+occasioned by the novelty of everything around, they flew madly about
+the deck, scrambled down into the hold, tore open bales and packages,
+and possessed themselves of whatever most attracted their whimsical and
+capricious fancies. While some were thus occupied in the hold, others
+were ransacking the cabin. It was here, and at this moment, that a scene
+of extraordinary interest took place. A huge savage, who was peering
+curiously into one of the cabin beds, suddenly uttered a yell, so
+piercing and unusual, that it attracted the notice of all his wild
+companions; then, plunging his hand into the bed, drew forth, and held
+up to the wondering gaze of the latter, a beautiful little girl of about
+three years old. It was the daughter of the unfortunate Mrs Elderslie.
+The unconscious child had slept during the whole of the catastrophe,
+which had deprived her, first of her parent, and subsequently of her
+protectors, and had only awoke with the shout of the savage who now held
+her in his powerful, but not unfriendly grasp; for he seemed delighted
+with his prize. He hugged the infant in his bosom, looked at it, laughed
+over it, and performed a thousand antics expressive of his admiration
+and affection for the fair and blooming child of which he had thus
+strangely become possessed. The child, for some time, expressed great
+terror of her new protector and his sable companions, calling loudly on
+her mother; but the anxious and eager endearments of the former
+gradually calmed her fears and quieted her cries.
+
+In the meantime, the plunder of the vessel was going on vigorously in
+all directions--above and below, in the cabin and forecastle, till, at
+length, as much was collected as the savages thought their canoes would
+safely carry. These, therefore, were now loaded with the booty; and the
+whole fleet, shortly after, made for the shore.
+
+In one of these canoes was little Julia Elderslie and her new protector,
+who, by still maintaining his friendly charge over her, shewed that he
+meant to appropriate her as a part of his share of the plunder.
+
+On reaching the shore, the kind-hearted savage, as his whole conduct in
+the affair shewed him to be, consigned his little protegee to the care
+of a female--one of the group of women who were on the beach awaiting
+the arrival of the canoes, and who appeared to be his wife.
+
+The woman received the child with similar expressions of surprise and
+delight with those which had marked her husband's conduct on his first
+finding her. She turned her gently round and round, examined her with a
+delighted curiosity, patted her cheeks, felt her legs and arms, and, in
+short, handled her as if she had been some strange toy, or as if she
+wished to be assured that she was really a thing of flesh and blood.
+
+For two days the natives continued their plunder of the wreck. By the
+third, the vessel had been cleared of every article of any value that
+could be carried away; and on this being ascertained, a general division
+of the spoil, accumulated on the shore, took place.
+
+It was a scene of dreadful confusion and uproar, and more than once
+threatened to terminate in bloodshed; but it eventually closed without
+any such catastrophe. The partition was effected, the encampment was
+broken up, and the whole band--men, women, and children, all loaded with
+plunder--commenced their march into the interior; the little Julia
+forming part of the burden of the man who had first appropriated her; a
+labour in which he was from time to time relieved by his wife.
+
+From three to four years after the occurrence of the events just
+related, a Scotch merchant ship, the _Dolphin_ of Ayr, Captain
+Clydesdale, bound for the Cape of Good Hope, while prosecuting her
+voyage, unexpectedly run short of water, in consequence of the bursting
+of a tank, when off the Gold Coast of Africa.
+
+On being informed of the accident, the captain determined on running for
+the land for the purpose of endeavouring to procure a further supply of
+the indispensable necessary of which he had just sustained so serious a
+loss.
+
+The vessel was, accordingly, directed towards the coast, which she
+neared in a few hours; and, finally, entered a small bay, which seemed
+likely to afford at once the article wanted, and a safe anchorage for
+the ship while she waited for its reception.
+
+By a curious chance, the bay which the _Dolphin_ now entered was the
+same in which the _Isabella_ had been wrecked upwards of three years
+before. But of that ill-fated vessel there was now no trace; a
+succession of storms, similar to that which had first hurled her on the
+rocks, had at length accomplished her entire destruction: she had, in
+time, been beaten to pieces, and had now wholly disappeared.
+
+There was then no appearance of any kind, no memorial nor vestige by
+which those on board the _Dolphin_ might learn, or at all suspect that
+the locality they were now in had been the scene of so deep a tragedy as
+that recorded in the early part of our tale.
+
+All unconscious of this, the _Dolphin_ came to within pistol-shot not
+only of the reef, but of the identical spot on which the _Isabella_ had
+been wrecked.
+
+Having come to anchor, a boat, filled with empty watercasks, was
+despatched from the ship for the shore. In this boat was the captain,
+first mate, and a pretty numerous party of men, all well armed, in case
+of any interruption from the natives.
+
+On landing, Captain Clydesdale, the mate, and two men, leaving the
+others in the boat, set out in quest of water. The search was not a
+tedious one. When they had walked about a quarter of a mile inland, the
+gratifying noise of a waterfall struck upon their ears. Following the
+delightful sound, they quickly reached a rocky dell into which a crystal
+sheet of water, of considerable breadth, was falling from a height of
+about fifteen feet; and, after sportively circling about for a moment in
+a deep but clear pool below, sought the channel which conducted to the
+sea, found it, and glided noiselessly away.
+
+Delighted with this opportune discovery, Captain Clydesdale despatched
+one of the men who was along with him to the boat, to order the others
+up with the water casks.
+
+Having seen the people commence the task of filling the latter, the
+captain and mate, each armed with a musket, cutlass, and brace of
+pistols, started for a walk a little farther inland, in order to obtain
+a view of the country. For nearly an hour they wandered on, now scaling
+heights, and now forcing their way through patches of tangled brushwood,
+without meeting with any adventure, or seeing anything at all
+extraordinary. They had now gained the banks of the stream which, lower
+down, formed the cascade at which the water casks were filling; and this
+they proposed to trace downwards, as its banks presented a clear and
+open route, till they should reach the point whence they had started.
+
+While jogging leisurely along this route, the adventurers, by turning a
+projecting rock, suddenly opened a small bight or hollow, sheltered on
+all sides, except towards the river, by the high grounds around it. In
+the centre of this little glen was an Indian encampment! Alarmed at this
+unexpected sight, the captain and mate abruptly halted, and would have
+again retreated behind the projecting rock or knoll which had first
+concealed them, and taken another route, but they perceived they were
+seen by a group of male natives who were lolling on the grass in front
+of the wigwams. On seeing the white men--who now stood fast, aware that
+it was useless to attempt to retreat--the Indians sprang to their feet
+with a loud yell, and rushed towards them. The captain and mate
+instinctively brought down their muskets; for reason would have shown
+them that resistance was equally useless with flight. The hostile
+attitude, however, which they had assumed, had the effect of checking
+the advance of the natives, who suddenly halted, and, to the great
+relief of the captain and mate, made friendly signs of welcome to them.
+
+Confiding in and returning these signs, the latter raised their muskets
+and advanced towards the party, who now also resumed their march towards
+the strangers. They met, when, after some attempts at conversation,
+conducted on the part of the natives with great good-humour, but, on
+both sides, altogether in vain, one of the former suddenly ran off at
+full speed towards the wigwams, into one of which he plunged, and
+instantly reappeared, leading a female child of six or seven years of
+age by the hand. As he advanced towards the captain and mate, he kept
+pointing to the child's face, then to his own, then towards those of the
+strangers, and laughing loudly the while.
+
+With an amazement which they would have found it difficult to express,
+Clydesdale and his companion perceived that the child, now produced, was
+fair, of regular features, smooth hair, and without any trace of African
+origin. Exposure to a tropical sun had deeply embrowned her little
+cheeks; but enough of bloom still remained, as, when coupled with other
+characteristics, left no doubt on the minds of the captain and his mate
+that the child, however it had come into its present situation, was of
+European parentage.
+
+His curiosity greatly excited by this extraordinary circumstance, Mr
+Clydesdale now endeavoured to obtain some account of the child from the
+natives; but he could make little or nothing of the attempted conference
+on this subject. From what, however, he did gather, he came to the
+conclusion--a very accurate one, as the reader may guess--that a
+shipwreck had taken place on the coast, and that the child had been
+saved by the natives.
+
+Believing this to be the case, Captain Clydesdale now became anxious to
+know whether any others had escaped; but could not make himself
+understood. At length one of the savages, of more apt comprehension than
+the others, seemed to have obtained a glimmering of the import of the
+captain's queries, and fell upon an ingenious mode of replying to them.
+Grasping Mr Clydesdale by the arm, he conducted him to a small pool of
+water that was hard by. He then took a piece of bark that was lying on
+the ground, placed about a dozen small pebbles on it, and launched it
+into the pool. Then stooping down, he edged it over, till the stones
+slid, one after the other, into the water, until one only remained.
+Allowing the piece of bark now to right itself, and to float on the
+water, he pointed to the single stone it carried, and then to the child;
+thus intimating, as Mr Clydesdale understood it, and as it was evidently
+meant to signify, that all had perished excepting the little girl.
+
+While this primitive mode of communication was going on, the man who had
+brought the child to Captain Clydesdale had returned to his wigwam, and
+now reappeared, carrying several articles in his hand, which he held up
+to the former. Mr Clydesdale took them in his hand, and found them to
+consist of fragments of a child's dress, made, as he thought, after the
+fashion of those in use in Scotland. On the corner of what appeared to
+be the remains of a little shift, he discovered the initials, J. E. But
+the most interesting relic produced on this occasion, was a small
+locket, containing some rich black hair on one side, and on the other
+the miniature of a young man in a military uniform, with the same
+initials, J. E., engraven on the rim. This locket, the man who brought
+it gave Captain Clydesdale to understand, had been found hanging around
+the neck of the child when first discovered.
+
+Satisfied now, beyond all doubt, of the child's European descent, Mr
+Clydesdale approached her, took her kindly by the hand, and, hoping to
+make something of her own testimony, began to put some questions to her;
+but, to his great disappointment, found that she did not understand him,
+although he spoke to her both in French and English. The little girl, in
+truth, he soon discovered, neither understood nor spoke any language but
+that of the tribe in whose hands she was.
+
+It appeared, however, sufficiently clear to Captain Clydesdale, that a
+shipwreck had taken place on the coast, and that at no very great
+distance of time, and that the child before him had been on board of the
+unfortunate vessel. Various circumstances, too, led him to the belief
+that the ship had been a British one; and in this opinion he was joined
+by the mate.
+
+The result of the Captain's reflections on these points, was a
+determination to take the child to Scotland with him, if he could
+prevail upon her present possessors to part with her, and to take his
+chance of making some discovery regarding her on his return home.
+
+Having come to this resolution, he hastened to make known to the natives
+his wish to have the little girl; and was well pleased to perceive that
+the proposal, which they seemed at once to comprehend, was not received
+with any surprise, far less indignation. Encouraged by this reception of
+his overture, Captain Clydesdale now addressed himself particularly to
+the man who appeared to be the guardian, or, perhaps, proprietor of the
+child, and, unbuckling his cutlass from his side, presented it to
+him--making him, at the same time, to understand that he offered it as
+the price of the little girl. The man demurred. Captain Clydesdale
+pulled a clasp-knife out of his pocket, and made signs that he would
+give that also, provided the locket and fragment of shift, with the
+initials on it, were given along with the child. This addition to the
+first offer had the desired effect. The cutlass and knife were accepted,
+the locket and shift given in exchange, and the little hand of the girl
+placed in Captain Clydesdale's, to signify that she was now his
+property. After some farther interchange of civilities with the natives,
+the captain, his mate, and the little Julia Elderslie--for, we presume,
+the reader has been all along perfectly aware that the child in question
+was no other than that unfortunate little personage--proceeded on their
+way towards the place where the watering party had been left. This spot
+they reached in safety, after about an hour's walking, and found the men
+waiting their return--the casks having been already all filled and
+shipped.
+
+In half an hour after, the boat was alongside the _Dolphin_, and little
+Julia was handed upon deck; and, in less than another hour, the ship was
+under weigh, and prosecuting her voyage to the Cape, where she
+ultimately arrived in safety. During this time, Captain Clydesdale had
+discovered in his Ponakonta--the name given to little Julia by the
+Africans, and by which he delighted to call her--a disposition so docile
+and affectionate, and a manner so gentle and unobtrusive, that he
+already loved her with all the tenderness of a parent, and had secretly
+resolved that he would adopt her as his own, and as such bring her up
+and educate her, if no one possessed of a better right to discharge this
+duty to her should ever appear.
+
+In about six months after the occurrence of the events just related, the
+good ship _Dolphin_ arrived safely at the harbour of Ayr, all well; and
+the little demi-savage, Ponakonta, in high spirits, and already
+beginning to jabber very passable English--an acquisition which still
+more endeared her to her kind-hearted protector, who took great delight
+in listening to her prattle, and in questioning her regarding her life
+amongst the Africans--of which she was now able to give a tolerably
+intelligible account. She had, however, no recollection whatever of the
+shipwreck, nor of any incident connected with it. Some dreamy
+reminiscences, indeed, she had of her mother; but, as might have been
+expected, considering how very young she was when that catastrophe
+happened which had deprived her of her parent, they were too vague and
+indefinite to be of the slightest avail towards throwing any light on
+her parentage.
+
+On arriving at Ayr, Captain Clydesdale's first step, with regard to his
+little charge, was to avail himself of every means he could think of to
+make her singular history, with all its particulars, publicly known, in
+the hope that it might bring some one forward who stood in some
+relationship to her. The worthy man, however, took this step merely as
+one that was right and proper in the case, and not, by any means, from
+any desire to get rid of his little protegee. On the contrary, if truth
+be told, he would have been sadly disappointed had any one appeared to
+claim her. Nothing of this kind occurring, after a lapse of several
+weeks, Captain Clydesdale--who, although pretty far advanced in years,
+was unmarried, and had no domestic establishment of his own, being
+almost constantly at sea--placed little Julia under the charge of some
+female relatives, with instructions to give her every sort of education
+befitting her years; for all of which--boarding, clothing, and
+tuition--he came under an obligation to pay quarterly--giving a handsome
+sum, in the meantime, to account. Having thus disposed of his protegee,
+and satisfied that he had placed her in good hands, which was indeed the
+case, Captain Clydesdale went again to sea--his destination, on this
+occasion, being South America.
+
+The worthy man, however, did not go away before having a parting
+interview with his little Ponakonta, whom he kissed a thousand times,
+nor before he had entreated for her every kindness and attention, during
+his absence, at the hands of those whom he had now constituted her
+guardians. It was upwards of two years before Captain Clydesdale
+returned from this voyage; for it included several trading trips between
+foreign ports; and thus was his absence prolonged.
+
+Great was the good man's delight with the improvement which he found had
+taken place on his little charge since his departure. She now spoke
+English fluently; had made rapid progress in her education; and gave
+promise of being more than ordinarily beautiful. Captain Clydesdale had
+the farther satisfaction of learning that she was a universal
+favourite--her gentle manners and affectionate disposition having
+endeared her to all.
+
+On first casting eyes on her protector, after his return from South
+America, little Julia at once recognised him, flew towards him, flung
+her arms about his neck, and wept for joy--calling him, in muttered
+sounds, her father, her dear father. Deeply affected by the warmth of
+the grateful child's regard, Captain Clydesdale, with streaming eyes,
+took her up in his arms, hugged her to his bosom, and kissed her with
+all the fervour of parental love. Soon after, Captain Clydesdale again
+went to sea; and, by and by, again returned. Voyage after voyage
+followed, of various lengths; and, after the termination of each, the
+worthy man found his interesting protegee still advancing in the way of
+improvement, and still strengthening her hold on the affections of those
+around her.
+
+Time thus passed on, until a period of nine years had slipped away; and
+when it had, Julia Elderslie--who now bore, and had all along, since her
+arrival in Scotland, borne, the name of Maria Clydesdale--was a blooming
+and highly accomplished girl of sixteen.
+
+It was about this period that Captain Clydesdale began to think of
+retiring from the sea, and of settling at home for the remainder of his
+life. He was now upwards of sixty years of age, and found himself fast
+getting incompetent to the arduous duties of his profession.
+Fortunately, he was in a condition, as regarded circumstances, to enable
+him to effect the retirement he meditated. He was by no means rich; but,
+having never married, he had accumulated sufficient to live upon, for
+the few remaining years that might be vouchsafed him.
+
+Part of Captain Clydesdale's little plan, on this occasion, was to rent
+or purchase a small house in the neighbourhood of the village of
+Fernlee, his native place, in the west of Scotland; to furnish it, and
+to take his adopted daughter to live with him as his housekeeper. All
+this was accordingly done; a house, a very pretty little cottage, with
+garden behind, and flower-plot in front, was taken, furnished, and
+occupied by Mr Clydesdale and his protegee. Here, for two years, they
+enjoyed all the happiness of which their position and circumstances were
+capable--and it was a happiness of a very enviable kind. No daughter,
+however deep her love, could have conducted herself towards her parent
+with more tenderness, or with more anxious solicitude for his ease and
+comfort, than did Maria Clydesdale towards her protector. Nor could any
+parent more sensibly feel, or more gratefully mark the affectionate
+attentions of a child, than did Captain Clydesdale those of his Maria.
+
+He doated on her, and to such a degree, that he never felt happy when
+she was out of his sight.
+
+More than satisfied with her lot, Maria sought no other scenes of
+enjoyment than those of her humble home; and coveted no other happiness
+than what she found in contributing to that of her benefactor.
+
+Thus happily, then, flew two delightful years over the old man and his
+adopted child; and, wrapped up in their felicity, they dreamt not of
+reverses. But reverses came; Misfortune found her way even into their
+lonely retirement. Within one week, Captain Clydesdale received
+intelligence of the total loss of two vessels of which he was the
+principal owner, and in which nearly all that he was worth was invested.
+The blow was a severe and unexpected one, and affected the old man
+deeply. Not on his own account, as he told his Maria, with a tear
+standing in his eye, but on hers. "I had hoped," he said, "to leave you
+in independence--an humble one indeed, but more than sufficient to place
+you far beyond the reach of want. But now----" And the old man wrung his
+hands in exquisite agony of grief.
+
+Infinitely more distressed by the sight of her benefactor's unhappiness
+than by the misfortune which occasioned it, Maria flung her arms about
+his neck, and said everything she could think of to assuage his grief
+and to reconcile him to what had happened. Amongst other things, she
+told him that the accomplishments which his generosity had put her in
+possession were more than sufficient to secure her an independence, or,
+at least, the means of living comfortably; and that she would
+immediately make them available for their common support.
+
+"There are a number of wealthy families around us, my dear father," she
+said, "from which I have no doubt of obtaining ample employment. I can
+teach music, drawing, French, sewing, etc.; and will instantly make
+application to the various quarters where I am likely to succeed in
+turning them to account. Besides, father," she continued, "it is
+probable that we shall soon have some great family in Park House; and,
+in such case, I might calculate on obtaining some employment
+there--perhaps enough of itself to occupy all my time."
+
+To all this the old man made no reply--he could make none. He merely
+took the amiable girl in his arms, embraced her, and bade God bless her.
+
+Although the mention by Miss Clydesdale of the particular residence
+above named appears a merely incidental circumstance, and one,
+seemingly, of no great importance, it is yet one, as the sequel will
+shew, so connected with our story, that a particular or two regarding it
+may not be deemed superfluous.
+
+Park House was a large, a magnificent mansion, with a splendid estate
+attached, both of which were, at this moment, in the market. The house
+was within a quarter of a mile of Captain Clydesdale's cottage, and the
+reference in the advertisements to those who wished to see the house and
+grounds, was made to the captain, who, with his usual readiness to
+oblige, had undertaken this duty--a duty which he had already discharged
+towards several visitors--none of whom, however, had become purchasers.
+It was about a week after the period last referred to--namely, that
+marked by the circumstance of Mr Clydesdale's losses--that a gentleman's
+carriage drove up to the little gate which conducted to that worthy
+man's residence. From this carriage descended a tall military-looking
+man, of apparently about sixty years of age, who immediately advanced
+towards the house. Captain Clydesdale, who saw him approaching, hastened
+out to meet him. The latter, on seeing the captain, bowed politely, and
+said--
+
+"Captain Clydesdale, I presume, sir?"
+
+"The same, at your service, sir," replied the honest seaman.
+
+"You are referred, to, sir, I think, as the person to whom those wishing
+to see Park House and grounds should apply."
+
+"I am," replied Mr Clydesdale; "and will be happy to shew them to you,
+sir."
+
+"Thank you," said the visitor. "It is precisely for that purpose I have
+taken the liberty of calling on you. I have some idea of purchasing the
+estate, if I find it to answer my expectations."
+
+"Will you have the goodness to step into the house, sir, for a few
+moments, and I will then be at your service?" said Captain Clydesdale.
+
+The gentleman bowed acquiescence, and, conducted by the former, walked
+into the house, and was ushered into a little front parlour, in which
+Miss Clydesdale was at the moment engaged in sewing. On the entrance of
+the visitor, she rose, in some confusion, and was about to retire, when
+the latter, entreating that he might not be the cause of driving her
+away, she resumed her seat and her work. Having also seated himself, the
+stranger now made some remarks of an ordinary character, by way of
+filling up the interval occasioned by the absence of Captain Clydesdale.
+Many words, however, had he not spoken, nor long had he looked on the
+fair countenance of his companion, when he seemed struck by something in
+her appearance which appeared at once to interest and perplex him. From
+the moment that this feeling took possession of the stranger, he spoke
+no more, but continued gazing earnestly at the downcast countenance of
+Maria Clydesdale; who, conscious of, and abashed by the gaze, kept her
+face close over the work in which she was engaged. From this awkward
+situation, however, she was quickly relieved by the entrance of Captain
+Clydesdale, who came to say that he was now ready to accompany his
+visitor to Park House. The latter rose, wished Miss Clydesdale a good
+morning; accompanying the expressions, however, with another of those
+looks of interest and perplexity with which he had been from time to
+time contemplating her for the last five or ten minutes, and followed
+the captain out of the apartment.
+
+"That interesting and very beautiful young lady whom I saw at your house
+is your daughter, sir, I presume?" said the stranger to Captain
+Clydesdale, as they proceeded together towards Park House.
+
+"Yes, sir, she is: that is, I may _say_ she is; for I have brought her
+up since she was a child; and she has never, at least, not since she was
+five or six years of age, had any other protector than myself. She never
+knew her parents."
+
+"Ah! a foundling," said the gentleman.
+
+"Yes, but under rather extraordinary circumstances. I found her amongst
+the savages of the coast of Guinea."
+
+"On the coast of Guinea!" exclaimed the stranger, in much amazement.
+"Very extraordinary, indeed. What are the circumstances, if I may
+inquire?"
+
+Captain Clydesdale related them as they are already before the reader;
+not omitting to mention the fragment of shift, with the initials on it,
+and the locket with hair and miniature, which he still carefully kept.
+
+On Captain Clydesdale concluding, the stranger suddenly stopped short,
+and, looking at the former with a countenance pale with emotion,
+said--"Good God, sir, what is this? I am bewildered, confounded. I know
+not what to think. It is possible. Yet it cannot be. My name, sir, is
+Elderslie, General Elderslie. I have just returned from the East Indies,
+where I have been for the last seventeen years. Shortly after my going
+out, my wife and child, a daughter, embarked on board the _Isabella_
+from Greenock, to join me at Calcutta. The ship never reached her
+destination; she was never more heard of; but there was a report that
+she was seen, if not bespoken, off the Gold Coast; and from there being
+no trace of her afterwards, it is more than probable that she was
+wrecked on these shores; and, O God! it is probable also, although I
+dare not allow myself to believe it, that this girl is--is my child! Let
+us return, let us return instantly," he added, with increasing
+agitation, and now grasping Captain Clydesdale by the arm, "that I may
+see this locket you speak of. I gave such a trinket to my beloved, my
+unfortunate wife. The initials you mention correspond exactly. My
+child's name was Julia Elderslie; my own Christian name is James; and
+the same initials are thus also on the rim of the locket."
+
+"It is precisely so!" said Captain Clydesdale, with a degree of surprise
+and emotion not less intense than those of the general's. "There _are_
+the initials of J. E. also on the locket; and now that my attention is
+called to the circumstance, there is a strong resemblance between the
+miniature it encloses, and the person now before me."
+
+"Let us hasten to the house, for God's sake! captain," said the general,
+with breathless eagerness, "and have this matter cleared up, if
+possible."
+
+They returned to the house. Captain Clydesdale put the locket and the
+fragment of the little shift, which bore the initials J. E., into the
+hands of the general. He glanced at the latter, examined the former for
+an instant with trembling hands, staggered backwards a pace or two, and
+sank into a chair. It was the identical locket which, some twenty years
+before, he had given to his wife. The miniature it contained, introduced
+into the trinket at a subsequent period, was his own likeness.
+
+"Bring me my child, Captain Clydesdale," said the general, on recovering
+his composure; "for I can no longer doubt that your adopted daughter is,
+indeed, my Julia."
+
+Captain Clydesdale left the apartment, and in a moment returned leading
+in Julia Elderslie, who had hitherto been kept in ignorance of what was
+passing. On her entrance the general rushed towards her, took her by the
+left hand, gently pushed the sleeve of her gown a little way up the
+wrist, saw that the latter exhibited a small brown mole, and
+exclaiming--"The proof is complete; you are--you are my daughter, the
+image of your darling but ill-fated mother," took her in his arms in a
+transport of joy.
+
+The feelings of Julia Elderslie, on this extraordinary occasion, we need
+not describe, they will readily be conceived. Neither need we detain the
+reader with any further detail; seeing that, with the incident just
+mentioned, the interest of our story terminates.
+
+It will be enough now, then, to say, that General Elderslie, who had
+amassed a princely fortune, bought the estate and mansion of Park House.
+That he took every opportunity, and adopted every means he could think
+of, of shewing his gratitude to Captain Clydesdale, for the generous
+part he had acted towards his daughter. That this daughter ultimately
+inherited his entire fortune; the general having never married a second
+time; and that she finally married into a family of high rank and
+extensive influence in the west of Scotland.
+
+
+
+
+THE ASSASSIN.
+
+
+At a late hour of an evening in the beginning of the year 1569, mine
+host of the Stag and Hounds--the principal hostelry of Linlithgow at the
+period referred to--was suddenly called from his liquor--the which
+liquor he was at the moment enjoying with a few select friends who were
+assembled in the public room of the house--to receive a traveller who
+had just ridden up to the door.
+
+Much as Andrew Nimmo--for such was the name of mine host--much, we say,
+as Andrew loved custom, it was not without reluctance that he rose to
+leave his party to attend the duties of his calling on the present
+occasion. He would rather he had not been disturbed; for he was in the
+middle of an exceedingly interesting story, when the summons reached
+him, and was very unwilling to leave it unfinished. But business must be
+attended to; its demands are imperative; and no man, after all, could be
+more sensible of this than mine host of the Stag and Hounds. So, however
+reluctant, from his seat he rose, and, telling his friends he would
+rejoin them presently, hastened out of the apartment.
+
+On reaching the door, Andrew found the traveller had dismounted. He was
+standing by the head of his horse--a powerful black charger--and
+seemingly waiting for some one to relieve him of the animal.
+
+This duty Andrew now performed; he took hold of the bridle, after a word
+or two of welcome to his guest, and asked whether he should put up the
+horse and supper him?
+
+"What else have I come here for?" replied the stranger, gruffly. "Surely
+put him up; but I must see myself to his being properly suppered and
+tended. If we expect a horse to do his duty, we must do our duty by
+him. So lead the way, friend!"
+
+Damped by the uncourteous manner of the traveller, Andrew made no
+further reply than a muttered acquiescence in the justice of the remark
+just made, but instantly led the horse away towards the stable; calling
+out, as he went, on John Ramsay, the ostler, to come out with the
+buet--_i.e._ lantern; for it was pitch dark, and a light, of course,
+indispensable.
+
+With the scrutinizing habits of his calling, mine host of the Stag and
+Hounds had been secretly but anxiously endeavouring to make out his
+customer; to arrive at some idea of his rank and profession, if he had
+any; but the darkness of the night had prevented him from noting more
+than that he was a man of tall stature, and, he thought, of a singularly
+stern aspect.
+
+When Ramsay had brought the light, however, mine host obtained farther
+and better opportunities of pursuing his study of the stranger; and,
+besides having his former remarks confirmed, now discovered that he had
+the appearance of a person of some consideration, his dress being that
+of a gentleman.
+
+"Fine beast that, sir!" adventured mine host, after a silence of some
+time, during which the latter and his guest had been standing together
+overlooking the operation of John Ramsay as he fed and littered the
+animal, whose noble proportions had elicited the remark. "Poorfu' beast,
+sir," continued Mr Nimmo. "I think I hae never seen a better."
+
+"Not often, friend, I daresay," replied the stranger, who was standing
+erect, with folded arms, and carefully marking every proceeding of the
+ostler. "For a long run and a swift, he is the animal for a man to trust
+his life to."
+
+Mine host was startled a little by the turn given to this remark: it
+smelt somewhat, he thought, of the highway; or, at any rate, seemed to
+carry with it a somewhat suspicious sort of reference. He was, however,
+much too prudent a man to exhibit any indication of an opinion so
+injurious to the character of his guest, and, therefore, merely said
+laughingly--
+
+"That he weel believed that if a man war in sic jeopardy as required his
+trusting to horse legs for his life, he wad be safe aneuch on sic a
+beast as that, especially if he got onything o' a reasonable start."
+
+"Yes, give him ten minutes of a start, and there's not a witch that ever
+rode over North Berwick Law on a broomstick that'll throw salt on his
+tail, let alone a horse and rider of flesh and blood!" replied the
+stranger, with a grim smile. "_I'll_ trust my life to him," he added,
+emphatically, "and have no fears for the result."
+
+The tendence on the much prized animal which was the subject of these
+remarks having now been completed, mine host and his guest left the
+stable, and proceeded to the house, which having entered, the former
+ushered the latter into the public room, being the best in the house,
+and the only one fit for the reception, as our worthy landlord deemed
+it, of a personage of the stranger's apparent quality.
+
+The latter at first shewed some reluctance to enter an apartment in
+which there was already so many people assembled; for it was still
+occupied by the company formerly alluded to; but, on being told by mine
+host that he should have a table to himself, in a distant part of the
+room, if he did not wish for society, he expressed himself reconciled to
+the arrangement, and, walking into the apartment, took his place at its
+upper end; then throwing himself down in a chair, having previously laid
+aside his hat, cloak, and sword, he commenced a vigilant but silent
+scrutiny of the party by which the table that occupied the centre of the
+apartment was surrounded. While he was thus employed, the landlord, who
+had gone for a moment about some household business, approached him to
+receive his orders regarding his night's entertainment. The result of
+the conference on this subject, was an order for supper, and for a
+measure of wine to be brought in, in the meantime, until the former
+should be prepared. The landlord bowed, and retired to execute his
+commissions. In a minute after, a pewter measure of claret, with a tall
+drinking glass, stood before the stranger. He filled up the latter from
+the former, drank it off, and again set himself to the task of
+scrutinizing the company before him--a task to which he now added that
+of listening to their conversation, which seemed to be of a nature to
+interest him much, if one might judge from the earnest intensity of his
+look, and the varying but strongly marked expression of countenance with
+which he listened to the various sentiments of the various speakers. The
+subject of the conversation was the Regent Murray--his proceedings,
+government, and character.
+
+"Aweel, folk may say what they like o' the Regent," said one of the
+speakers, "but I think he's managing matters very weel on the whole, and
+I wish we may never hae a waur in his place. He's no a man to be trifled
+wi'; and if he keeps a tight rein hand, he doesna o'erride the strength
+o' his steed. He's a strict, justice-loving man; that I'll say o' him."
+
+"Then ye say mair o' him than I wad, deacon," said another of the party.
+"His strictness I grant ye; but as to his justice, there was unco little
+o't, I think, in his treatment o' his sister: his conduct to that poor
+woman has been most unnatural, most savage, selfish, and unfeelin.
+That's my opinion o't, and it's the opinion o' mony a ane besides me."
+
+"Weel, weel; every are has his ain mind o' thae things, Mr Clinkscales,"
+replied the first speaker; "but for my part, I'll ay ride the ford as I
+find it; that's my creed."
+
+"Has ony o' ye heard," here interposed another of the party, "o' that
+cruel case o' Hamilton's o' Bothwellhaugh? Ane o' the Queen's
+Hamilton's," added the querist.
+
+Some said they had, others that they had not. For the benefit of the
+latter, the speaker explained. He said that Hamilton of Bothwellhaugh
+was one of those who had been forfeited for the part he took at the
+battle of Langside. That the person to whom his property was given by
+the Regent, had turned Hamilton's wife out of her home, unclothed, and
+in a wild and stormy night; and that the poor woman had died in
+consequence of this cruel treatment.
+
+"An' what's Hamilton sayin to that?" inquired one of the party.
+
+"They say he's in an awfu takin about it," replied the first speaker,
+"an' threatenin vengeance, richt an' left; particularly against the
+Regent."
+
+"I think little wonder o't," said another of the party. "It's a shamefu
+business, and aneuch to mak ony man desperate."
+
+"But is't true?" here inquired another.
+
+The reply to this question came from a very unexpected quarter: it came
+from the stranger, who, starting fiercely to his feet, and stretching
+towards the company with a look and gesture of great excitement,
+exclaimed--
+
+"Yes, gentlemen, true it is--true as God is in heaven--true in every
+particular. An eternal monument to the justice and clemency of the
+tyrant Murray. The wife of Bothwellhaugh was turned naked out of her own
+house in a cold and bitter night, and died of bodily suffering and a
+broken heart. She did--she did. But"--and the stranger ground his teeth
+and clenched his fist as he pronounced the word--"there will be a day of
+count and reckoning. The vengeance, the deadly vengeance of a ruined,
+deeply injured, and desperate man, will yet overtake the ruthless,
+remorseless tyrant."
+
+Having thus delivered himself, the stranger again retired to his former
+place, reseated himself, and relapsed into his former silence; although
+the deep and laboured respiration of recent excitement, which he could
+not subdue, might still be distinctly heard even from the farthest end
+of the apartment.
+
+It was some time after the stranger had retired to his place before the
+company felt disposed to resume their conversation. The incident which
+had just occurred, the energy with which the stranger had spoken, and
+the extreme excitement he had evinced, had had the effect of throwing
+them all into that silent and reflective mood which the sudden display
+of anything surprising or interesting is so apt to produce even in our
+merriest and most thoughtless moments.
+
+At length, however, the chill gradually wore off; the conversation was
+resumed, at first in an under tone, and by fits and starts; by and by it
+became more continuous; and, finally, began to flow with all its
+original volume and freedom. No more allusion, however, was made by any
+of the party to the case of Bothwellhaugh. This was a subject to which,
+after what had taken place, none seemed to care about returning. Neither
+did the stranger evince any desire to hold farther correspondence with
+the revellers; but, on the contrary, appeared anxious to avoid it; nay,
+one might almost have supposed that he regretted having obtruded himself
+upon them at all, and that he could have wished that what he had uttered
+in an unguarded moment had remained unsaid. Be this as it may, however,
+he sought no farther intercourse with the party, but having hastily
+despatched the supper which was placed before him, and finished his
+measure of wine, he glided unobserved out of the apartment, and,
+conducted by his host, retired to the sleeping chamber which had been
+appointed for him.
+
+On the following morning, the stranger, who was sojourning at the Stag
+and Hounds, went out to transact, as he told his landlord, some business
+in the town; saying, besides, that he would not probably return till
+evening.
+
+Strongly impressed by the manner and appearance of his guest, and not a
+little awed by his grim and fierce aspect, he of the Stag and Hounds
+could not help following him to the door, when he departed, and
+furtively looking after him as he stalked down the main street of the
+town; and much, as he looked at him, did he marvel what sort of business
+it could be he was going about. This, however, was a point on which the
+worthy man had no means of enlightening himself, and he was therefore
+obliged to be content with the privilege of muttering some expressions
+of the wonder he felt.
+
+In the meantime, the stranger had turned an angle of the street, and
+disappeared--at least from the view of the landlord of the Stag and
+Hounds. Not from ours; for we shall follow and keep sight of him, and
+endeavour to make out what he was so curious to know.
+
+Having passed about half-way down the main street of the town, the
+former suddenly halted before a large unoccupied house, with a balcony
+in front. It was a residence of the Archbishop of St Andrew's. Standing
+in front of this house, the stranger seemed to scan it with earnest
+scrutiny. He looked from window to window with the most cautious and
+deliberate vigilance, and appeared to be noting carefully their various
+heights and positions. While pursuing this inquiry, he might also have
+been frequently observed glancing, from time to time, on either side, as
+if to see that no one was marking the earnestness of his examination of
+the building.
+
+Having apparently completed his survey of the front of the house, the
+stranger passed round to the back part of the building, and proceeded to
+the gate of the garden, which lay behind, and through which only was the
+house accessible on that side. On reaching the gate, the stranger
+paused, looked cautiously around him for a few seconds, when, observing
+no one in sight, he hastily plunged his hand beneath his cloak, drew out
+a key, applied it to the lock, opened the gate, passed quickly in, and
+closed the door cautiously behind him.
+
+With hurried step the intruder now proceeded to the house, drew forth
+another key, inserted it into the lock of the main door, turned it
+round, applied his foot to the latter, pushed it open, and entered the
+building; having previously, as in the former instance, secured the door
+behind him. Ascending the stair in the inside of the house, the
+mysterious visitant now commenced a careful examination of the various
+apartments on the second floor; and at length adopting one--a small
+room, with one window to the front--made it the scene of his future
+operations. These were, the laying on the floor a straw mattress, which
+he dragged from another apartment, and hanging a piece of black
+cloth--which he also found in the lumber-room, from whence he had taken
+the mattress--against the wall of the apartment opposite the window.
+
+Having completed these preparations, the secret workman went up to the
+window, knelt down on the mattress, and levelling a stick, or staff,
+which he found in the apartment, as if it had been a musket, seemed to
+be trying where he might be best situated for firing at an object
+without. This experiment he tried repeatedly; shifting his position from
+place to place, until he appeared to have hit upon one that promised to
+suit his purpose.
+
+This ascertained, he rose from his knees; threw down the staff; glanced
+around the apartment, as if to see that all was right; descended the
+stair; came out of the house, locking the door after him; crossed the
+garden, and passed out at the gate, locking that also before he left,
+and with the same precaution that he had used at entering; that is,
+looking around him to see that no one marked his proceedings.
+
+The guest of the Stag and Hounds now returned to his inn, from which he
+had been absent about two hours. At the door he was met by mine host,
+who, touching his cap, asked if "his honour intended dining at his
+house, as it was now about one of the clock," the general dinner-hour of
+the period.
+
+Without noticing the inquiry of his landlord--
+
+"Be there any armourers in this town of yours, friend?" he said, "where
+I could fit me with some weapons I want."
+
+"Yes, indeed, there be one, and a main good one he is," replied the
+other. "Tom Wilson, I warrant me, will fit your honour with any weapon
+you can desire, from a pistolet to a culverin; from a two-handed sword
+of six feet long, to a dagger like a bodkin. And as for armour, you may
+have anything, everything from head-piece to leg-splent; all of the best
+material, and first-rate workmanship."
+
+"Where is this man Wilson's shop?" inquired the stranger.
+
+"See you, sir," replied the other; "see you yonder projecting corner,
+beyond the palace entrance?"
+
+"I do."
+
+"Well, sir, three doors beyond that, you will find Wilson's shop; and,
+if your honour chooses, you may use my name with him, and he will not
+serve you the worse, or the less reasonably, I warrant me. It is always
+a recommendation to Tom to be a guest at the Stag and Hounds."
+
+Without saying whether or not he would avail himself of the privilege
+offered him of using his name, the mysterious stranger hastened away in
+the direction pointed out to him, and, in half a minute after, he was in
+the workshop of Wilson the armourer.
+
+"Your pleasure, sir," said that person, advancing towards his customer
+from an inner apartment.
+
+"Have you a good store of fire-arms, friend?" inquired the latter.
+
+"Pretty fair, sir; pretty fair," replied the armourer "What description
+may you want?"
+
+"Why, I want a carbine, friend--something of a sure piece--that will
+carry its ball well to the mark. None of your bungling articles, that
+first hang fire, and then throw their shot in every direction but the
+right one. I would have a piece of good and certain execution."
+
+"Here, then, sir, here is your commodity," said the armourer,
+disengaging a short and heavy gun from an arms'-rack that occupied one
+side of the shop. "Here is a piece that I can recommend. It will be the
+fault of the hand or the eye when this barker misses its mark, I warrant
+ye. I'd take in hand myself to smash an egg with it, with single ball,
+at fifty yards distance. I have done it before now with a worse gun."
+
+"I will not require any such feat from the piece as that, friend," said
+Wilson's customer, drily; and having taken the gun in his hand, he began
+to examine the lock, and to see that the piece was otherwise in
+serviceable condition. Being satisfied that it was, he demanded the
+price. It was named. The money was tendered, and accepted, and the
+stranger departed with his purchase; having, however, previously
+received from the armourer, in lieu of luck's-penny, although he offered
+to pay for them, half a dozen balls, and a few charges of powder, to put
+the capability of the gun to immediate trial. This, however, its new
+proprietor did not think necessary; but, instead, returned to the
+archbishop's house with it; and, after loading and priming it, placed it
+in a corner of the apartment, which we have described him as having put
+into so strange a state of preparation.
+
+Leaving the house with the same cautious and stealthy step as before,
+the stranger again returned to his inn; but it was now to leave it no
+more for the night.
+
+"What news stirring, friend?" said he to the landlord.
+
+"Naething, sir," replied he, as he laid the cloth for his dinner; "only
+that the Regent will pass through the town to-morrow. I hear he'll be
+this way about twelve o'clock. The magistrates, I understand, hae gotten
+notice to that effect."
+
+"So," replied the stranger. "Then we shall have a sight."
+
+"A brave sight, sir, for he is to be accompanied by a gallant cavalcade,
+and the trades of the town are to turn out with banners and music to do
+him honour. It will be a stirring day, sir, and I trust a good one for
+my poor house here; for such doings make people as thirsty as so many
+dry sponges."
+
+To these remarks the guest made no reply, but proceeded with his dinner;
+the materials for which having, in the meantime, been brought in, and
+placed on the table by another attendant.
+
+On the following morning, the little town of Linlithgow exhibited a
+scene of unusual bustle. Hosts of idlers were seen gathered here and
+there, along the whole line of the main street; and persons carrying
+trades' banners--as yet, however, carefully rolled up--might be seen
+hurrying in all directions to the various mustering-places of their
+crafts. An occasional discharge of a culverin too; and, as the morning
+advanced, a merry peal of bells heightened the promise of some impending
+event of unusual occurrence. By and by, these symptoms of public
+rejoicing became more and more marked: the groups of idlers increased;
+the banners were unfurled; the firing of the culverins became more
+frequent; and the bells either really did ring, or appeared to ring more
+furiously.
+
+It was when matters thus bespoke the near approach of a crisis--which
+crisis, we may as well say at once, was the advent of the Regent--that
+the mysterious lodger at the Stag and Hounds ordered his horse to be
+brought to the door. The horse was brought; the stranger settled his
+bill; and, saying to his landlord that he would witness the sight from
+horseback more advantageously than on foot, mounted, and rode off in the
+direction of the approaching cavalcade. In this direction, however, he
+did not ride far; for, on gaining the eastern extremity of the town, he
+suddenly wheeled round, and rode back in rear of the line of street,
+until he reached the gate of the garden behind the mansion of the
+Archbishop of St Andrew's, in which the mysterious preparation before
+described had been made.
+
+Having arrived at the gate, he dismounted, opened it, led in his horse,
+and fastened him to a tree close by. This done, he removed the lintel,
+or cross-bar, over the gate. The latter, contrary to his practice on
+former occasions, he now left wide open, and proceeded towards the
+house, into which he disappeared.
+
+In less than a quarter of an hour after, the Regent had entered the
+town. He was on horseback, surrounded by a number of friends, also
+mounted, and followed by a numerous party of armed retainers.
+
+As the cavalcade penetrated into the town, the crowd, which the occasion
+had assembled, gradually became more and more dense, and the progress of
+the Regent and his party consequently more slow; until, at length, they
+were so packed in the narrow street, with the human wedges that were
+forcing themselves around them, that it was with great difficulty they
+could make any forward progress at all.
+
+Becoming impatient with the delay thus occasioned, although carefully
+concealing this impatience, the Regent, who was now directly opposite
+the house of the Archbishop of St Andrew's, kept waving his hand to the
+crowd, as if entreating them not to press so closely, that he might pass
+on with more speed. The crowd endeavoured to comply with the wishes of
+the Regent, but their efforts only added to the confusion, without
+mending the matter in other respects. It was at this moment that all
+eyes were suddenly directed towards the house of the Archbishop of St
+Andrew's, in consequence of a shot being fired from one of the windows.
+When these eyes looked an instant after again towards the Regent, he was
+not to be seen; he had fallen from his horse, mortally wounded: a ball
+had passed through his body. It was Hamilton of Bothwellhaugh who had
+fired the fatal shot.
+
+The friends and retainers of the Regent, seconded by the town's people,
+flew to the house of the archbishop, and endeavoured to force the door,
+in order to get at the murderer but it had been barricaded by the wily
+assassin, and resisted their efforts long enough to allow of his
+escaping from the house, mounting his horse, and darting through the
+garden gate at the top of his utmost speed. He was pursued; but, thanks
+to his good steed, pursued in vain, and subsequently escaped to France;
+having done a deed which the moralist must condemn, but which cannot be
+looked upon as altogether without palliation.
+
+
+
+
+THE PRISONER OF WAR.
+
+
+I had been preserved, through divine mercy, from one of the most
+lingering and fearful deaths. I was rescued, I scarce knew how, after
+the grim king of terror held me in his embrace, and all hope had fled.
+As consciousness returned, my heart thrilled at the recollection of the
+miseries I had endured while floating, a helpless being, on the bosom of
+the ocean.[3] I shuddered to think, while I lay feeble as an infant in
+the cabin of the vessel which was bearing me to my home, and whose
+humane crew had been the means of my deliverance, that I was still at
+the mercy of the winds and waves; but kind nursing, aided by youth and a
+good constitution, quickly brought strength; and I was enabled, after a
+few days, to come upon deck. On my first attempt, when my head rose
+above the deck as I ascended the companion-ladder, and my eyes fell upon
+the boundless waste of waters, a chill of horror shot through my frame.
+Like a lone traveller who had suddenly met a lion in his path, I stood
+paralysed; every nerve and muscle refused to act. I must have fallen
+back into the cabin, had not my hand instinctively clung to their hold
+for a few seconds. I could not withdraw my fixed gaze, while all I had
+suffered rushed upon me like a hideous dream. Slowly my faculties
+returned, when I ascended the deck, where I sat for a few hours. Each
+day after this brought additional strength; so that, before we made
+soundings, I was as strong and cheerful as I had ever been in my life.
+The weather was squally, and I assisted the crew as much as was in my
+power; and, when not so occupied, lay listlessly looking over the ship's
+bows that bravely dashed aside the waves that rolled between me and the
+home I now longed to reach, or walked the deck musing upon the joy my
+return would impart to my over-indulgent parents.
+
+As we neared the shores of Scotland, a circumstance occurred that both
+greatly surprised and alarmed me. This was a sudden change in the
+manners and temper of the crew. Care and anxiety took the place of their
+wonted cheerfulness; the joyous laugh, or snatch of song, no longer
+broke the monotonous hissing of the waves that rippled along the sides
+of the vessel, or the dull whistle of the wind through the rigging. At
+the first appearance of every sail that hove in sight, I could perceive
+every eye turned to it with a look of alarm until she was made out.
+Fearful of giving offence to my benefactors, I made no remark on the
+subject for some time, although I felt disappointed at what I
+saw--attributing it to cowardice; yet they were all stout, young,
+resolute-looking fellows at other times. This scene of alarm, and
+appearance of a wish to skulk below or conceal themselves, had occurred
+twice in the course of the forenoon. After the last ship we encountered
+was made out to be a merchant-brig, I could no longer refrain from
+delivering my sentiments of the greater number of the crew, but
+addressing the mate, said--
+
+"Mr Ross, it is fortunate for us that these strange sails have turned
+out to be British merchantmen. Had they proved to be French privateers,
+we should have made but a poor stand, I fear, notwithstanding our eight
+carronades."
+
+"What makes you think so?" said he.
+
+"Why, there is not a vessel that heaves in sight," said I, "but the men
+look as if they wished themselves anywhere but where they are."
+
+"Avast there, my man!" said he. "What! do you mean to say that they
+would not stand by their guns while there was a chance? Yes, they would,
+and long after; and, if you think otherwise, all I say is, you form
+opinions and talk of what you know nothing about."
+
+Casting an angry look at me--the only one he ever gave--he squirted his
+quid over the bulwarks, and was walking away, when I stopped him.
+
+"If I have given you offence, Mr Ross, nothing was farther from my
+intention. I cannot but observe the alarm caused by every sail that
+heaves in sight until she is made out to be a friend. Now, the little
+time I was at sea, before I fell overboard and was saved by you, every
+sail that hove in sight made the hearts of all on board leap for joy."
+
+"Ho! ho!" and he laughed aloud. "Are you on that tack, my messmate? You
+are quite out in your reckoning, and becalmed in a fog; but I shall soon
+blow it away. There is not a man on board with whom I would not go into
+action with the fullest reliance upon his courage; and, were we to meet
+a French privateer, you would quickly see such a change as would satisfy
+you that my confidence is not misplaced. Every face, that the moment
+before expressed anxiety and alarm, would brighten up with joy; every
+man would stand to his gun as cheerfully as to the helm. It is their
+liberty the poor fellows are afraid of being deprived of by our own
+men-of-war--the liberty to toil for their parents or wives where they
+can get better wages than the Government allows. Danger, in any form,
+they meet undaunted when duty calls; it is for their countrymen they
+quail. Were the smallest sloop-of-war in the British navy to heave in
+sight, and a boat put off from her with a boy of a midshipman and eight
+or ten men, every one on board, who had not a protection, would shake in
+his shoes at her approach; yet, against an enemy, every man would stand
+to his gun until his ship was blown out of the water."
+
+A new and painful feeling came over me as he spoke. I was myself an
+entered seaman, and, of course, liable to impressment; but the idea of
+being taken had never occurred to me. I wondered that it had not, after
+the scenes I had witnessed in the frigate; but my longing for home had
+entirely engrossed my mind. I was, indeed, home-sick, and weary of the
+sea. From this moment, no one on board felt more alarm than I did at the
+sight of a top-royal rising out of the distant waters. My feelings were
+near akin to those of a felon in concealment.
+
+At length we reached the Moray Firth, in the evening, and arrangements
+were made for as many of the crew as could be spared to be landed at
+Cromarty, where the vessel was to put in. This was to avoid the danger
+of impressment in the Firth of Forth. I gave the captain an order upon
+my father for my passage, and the expense he had been at on my account,
+as I was to leave, with the others in the boat, as soon as we were off
+the town, which we hoped to reach in the morning. My anxiety was so
+great that I had kept the deck since nightfall. It was intensely dark;
+nothing broke the gloom but the flashes of light that gleamed for a
+moment upon the waves, as they rippled along the sides of the vessel,
+and the dull rays of the binnacle-lamp before the man at the helm. Bell
+after bell was struck, still I stood at the bows, leaning upon the
+bowsprit, unmindful of the chill wind from under the foretopsail,
+anxiously watching for the first tints of dawn. Tediously as the night
+wore on, I thought, when morning dawned, it had fled far too fast.
+
+The dark clouds began at length to melt away in the east, and the
+distant mountain-tops to rise like grey clouds above the darkness that
+still hid the shores from our view. Gradually the whole face of nature
+began to emerge from the morning mists. We were just off the Sutors of
+Cromarty. My heart leapt for joy at the near prospect of being once more
+on firm ground, and so near home. Several of the crew had now joined
+me, and all eyes were directed to the entrance of the bay. Only a few
+minutes had elapsed in this pleasing hope--for it was still dullish on
+the horizon--when the report of a gun from seaward of us, so near that I
+thought it was alongside, made us start and look round. Each of us
+seemed as if we had been turned into stone by the alarming sound; while,
+so sudden was the revulsion of feeling, in my own case, that my heart
+almost ceased to beat. There, not half-a-league to windward of us, lay a
+frigate, with her sails shaking in the wind, and a boat, well-manned,
+with an officer in her stern, putting off from her.
+
+So completely were we overcome by the sudden appearance of this dreaded
+object, which seemed to emerge from darkness, as the sun's first rays
+fell upon and whitened her sails, that we stood incapable of thought or
+action. The well-manned barge was carried, by the faint breeze and
+impetus of her oars, almost as swift as a gull on the wing. The report
+of the gun brought the captain and mate upon deck before we had
+recovered from our stupor.
+
+"Bear a hand, men!" cried Ross, as he sprung upon deck. "Man the
+tacklefalls! clear the boat! and give them a run for it at least."
+
+Roused by his voice, every nerve was strained, the boat lowered, and we
+in her, ready to push off, when the captain called over the side--
+
+"My lads, do as you think for the best; but it is of no use to try. The
+frigate's boat will be under our stern ere you can gain way."
+
+I stood in the act of pushing off, when the object we were going to
+strain every nerve to avoid swept round the stern, and grappled us. We
+hopelessly threw our oars upon the thwarts, and prepared to reascend the
+vessel, to settle with the captain and bring away our chests. As for
+myself, I had no call to leave the boat. All I possessed in the world
+was upon my person, and half-a-guinea given me by the captain to carry
+me home. The other three were getting their bags and chests ready to
+lower into the boat, having got their wages from the captain, when he
+called me to come on deck. I obeyed; when he said to the midshipman in
+command of the boat--
+
+"Sir, to prevent any unpleasant consequences arising to this poor
+fellow, Elder, here, I shall let you know how he came on board of us. He
+belonged to the _Latona_, and is no deserter, I assure you. Ross, bring
+here our log-book, and satisfy the gentleman if he wishes." Ross obeyed;
+and having examined it, the captain told the wretched state in which I
+had been picked up, and the way in which I had accounted to him for the
+accident. During the recital, he looked hard at me, no muscle of his
+face indicating either pity or surprise. When the captain ceased to
+speak, he only said--
+
+"Well, my lad, you have for once had a narrow escape--you must hold
+better on in future. I shall report to the captain, and get the D from
+before your name. Tumble into the boat, my lads. Good day, captain."
+And, in a few minutes afterwards, I was on board the _Edgar_,
+seventy-four, and standing westwards for the Firth of Forth.
+
+It was strange the change that came over the impressed men, when there
+was no longer any hope of escape. Like true seamen, they bent to the
+circumstance they could not remedy, and were, as soon as they got on
+board, as much at home, and more cheerful, than they had been for many
+days before. As for myself, I took it much to heart, and was very
+melancholy when we entered the Firth and stood up to the roadstead. I
+could hardly restrain my feelings when the city of Edinburgh came in
+sight, and when I thought of the short distance in miles that divided me
+from my parents and home--that home I had left so foolishly in the hopes
+of being back at the conclusion of the war, which I now found was raging
+more furiously, if possible, than when I left, and with much less
+prospect of its termination. I would stand for hours gazing upon the
+White Craig, the eastern extremity of the Pentland Hills, and wish I was
+upon it, until my eyes were suffused with tears. I begged hard for the
+first lieutenant to give me leave to go on shore, if only for
+eight-and-forty hours, to visit my parents; but he refused my request,
+fearful of my not returning. Several of the hands on board, natives of
+Edinburgh, who had been long in the _Edgar_, obtained leave. With one of
+them I sent a letter to my father, who came the following day. It was a
+meeting of sorrow, not unmixed with upbraidings, on his part, for what I
+had done; but we parted with regret--he to do what he could to obtain my
+discharge, I under promise not to act so precipitately in future, if I
+was once more a free agent. What steps were taken I know not, for next
+morning we received orders to sail for the Nore. We had many faces on
+board that looked as long as my own, for there were still several who
+had obtained promise of leave whose turn had not come round. Wallace,
+one of the mess I was in, had not been in his native city for ten years,
+having been all that time voluntarily on board of men-of-war, either at
+home or on foreign stations. He was to have had two days' leave the very
+morning we sailed, and had doomed ten gold guineas, which he had long
+kept for such purpose, to be expended in a blow-out in Edinburgh, among
+his relations and friends. When the boatswain piped to weigh anchor,
+Wallace, who was captain of the foretop, ran to his berth, opened his
+chest, took out his long-hoarded store, and came on deck with it in his
+hand. His looks bespoke rage and disappointment, bordering upon
+insanity. He gazed upon the distant city that shone upon the gently
+swelling hills glancing back the sun's rays, then at the purse of gold
+in his hand. He seemed incapable of speech. A bitter smile curled his
+lip, bespeaking the most intense scorn. I looked on, wondering what he
+meant to do. It was but the scene of a minute. Suddenly raising his
+hand, he threw the purse and gold over the side with all his force,
+exclaiming:--"Go, vile trash! what use have I for you now? The first
+action may lay me low!" Then, as if relieved from some oppressive load,
+he mounted the rattlings to his duty with a smile of satisfaction; and
+we bore away for the Nore, where I was draughted on board the _Repulse_,
+sixty-four, and departed upon a cruise along the coast of Brittany; at
+times lying off Brest harbour, and at others, standing along the coast
+in search of the enemy. Employed in this monotonous duty, month followed
+month, and year after year passed away.
+
+It was now the year 1799. The century was drawing to a close; but the
+interminable war seemed only commencing. I had become almost callous to
+my fate. We were standing along, under a steady breeze, as close in
+shore as we could with safety to the vessel. It was the dog-watch; and I
+had only been a short time turned in when our good ship struck upon some
+sunken rocks with such force that I thought she had gone to pieces.
+Every one in a moment turned out. The night was as dark as pitch, and
+the sea breaking over us, while we lay hard and fast. Everything was
+done to lighten her in vain. She was making water very fast, in spite of
+all our exertions at the pumps. Still there was not the smallest
+confusion on board. Our discipline was as strict, and our officers as
+promptly obeyed, as they were before our accident. As the tide rose, the
+wind shifted, and blew a gale right upon the shore, causing the ship to
+beat violently. Day at length dawned, and there, not one hundred fathoms
+from our deck, lay a rocky and desolate-looking shore. We had been
+forced over a reef of sunken rocks that were not in our charts; and,
+during the darkness, as was supposed, had been carried in-shore by some
+current; but, however it had happened, there we were, in a serious
+scrape, the sea breaking over our decks, and our hold full of water.
+
+Soon after daybreak we could perceive the peasantry crowding down to the
+water's edge. Everything had been done that skill and resolution could
+accomplish, to save the vessel, but in vain. We had nothing before our
+eyes but instant death. The sea ran so high that no boat could live for
+a moment in the broken water between us and the shore. The French
+peasantry were making no effort for our safety, but running about and
+looking on our deplorable situation, with apparently no other feeling
+than that of curiosity. At this time, James Paterson, an Edinburgh lad,
+volunteered to make the attempt to swim to the shore with a log-line,
+and fearlessly let himself over the side. It was, to all appearance, a
+hopeless attempt; for every one felt assured that he would be beat to
+death against the rocks that lined the beach, on which the waves were
+beating with great fury.
+
+It was a period of fearful suspense; yet, dreadful as our situation was,
+there was not the least unnecessary noise on board. All was prompt
+attention and obedience. The weather was extremely cold, and the sea, at
+times, making a complete breach over the ship, which we expected every
+moment to go to pieces. As for myself, I meant to stow below and perish
+with her, rather than to float about, bruised and maimed, and drown at
+last. One half of the crew were only dressed in their shirts and
+trousers, without shoes or stockings, as they had leaped from their
+hammocks. When she struck, we had no leisure to put on more than our
+trousers. Thus we stood, holding on by the nettings, or anything we
+could lay hold of, to prevent our being washed off the decks, with our
+eyes anxiously watching the progress of the brave Paterson, who swam
+like an otter, the boatswain and his mates serving out the line to him.
+We saw him near the rocks, and the people making signs to him. This was
+the point of greatest danger, but, by the aid of the peasants, he
+surmounted it.
+
+Those on the beach gave a shout, which we replied to from the deck. A
+hawser was made fast to the line, and secured on shore. It was not until
+now that we began to hope; and with this hope arose an anxiety on the
+part of every one to save what they could. I strove to reach my chest,
+in which were a pair of new shoes and five guineas, but my efforts, like
+those of the others, were vain; our under decks were flooded several
+inches, and everything was loose and knocking about in the most furious
+manner, from the rolling and pitching of the vessel upon the rocks, so
+that I was but too happy to reach the decks without being crushed to
+death. All I regretted was my shoes; the money I cared not for, and do
+not think I would have taken it, as we expected to be plundered as soon
+as we got to the beach.
+
+After a great deal of fatigue, we all got safe to land, and now the
+plundering began. There were no regular soldiers on the spot, but a
+great many of the peasantry had firelocks and bayonets, and stood over
+us, stripping those of the men, who had them, of their jackets and hats.
+At first, we were disposed to resist, but soon found it to be of no use.
+One of the fellows seized the chain of the watch belonging to one of our
+men, and was in the act of pulling it from the pocket, when the owner,
+Jack Smith, struck him to the ground with a blow of his fist. The next
+moment poor Smith lay a lifeless corpse upon the sand, felled by a
+stroke from the butt end of a musket.
+
+There was no one present who seemed to have or who assumed any
+authority, to whom our officers might appeal for protection; they were
+not more respected than the men; all were searched and robbed as soon as
+they arrived from the wreck. Poor Smith's fate taught us submission,
+even while our bosoms burned with a desire for vengeance. One of my
+messmates said aloud--"I would cheerfully stand before the muzzle of one
+of the old _Repulse's_ thirty-twos, were she charged to the mouth with
+grape well laid, to sweep these French robbers from the face of the
+earth." As for myself, they took nothing from me. I had twopence in the
+pocket of my trousers; when I saw what was going on, I took it out and
+held it in my hand while they searched me. I more than once thought they
+were going to strip me of my nether garments, and give me in exchange a
+pair of their own gun-mouthed rags, which would scarcely have reached my
+knees; for several of them looked at them as if they felt inclined to
+make the exchange; but I escaped, and felt thankful.
+
+We stood for several hours shivering upon the beach without food, fire,
+or water, while the plunderers were busy picking up anything that
+drifted ashore, but still keeping a strict watch over us; at length, the
+chief magistrate of a neighbouring small town arrived, and to him our
+officers complained of the usage we had received. He only shook his
+head, and shrugged his shoulders, when the body of Smith was pointed out
+to him. What could we do? A grave was dug for him on the spot where he
+was murdered, and we were marched off into the interior. It was well on
+in the afternoon before we reached the place where we were to halt. It
+was a small poverty-stricken-like town, with an old ruinous church and
+churchyard, surrounded by high walls, with an iron gate close by. Into
+this chill, desolate place, we were crowded by the soldiers, the gate
+locked upon us, and sentinels placed around the building. Here we
+remained until the evening, when there was served out to every man a
+small loaf, black as mud; yet, black as it was, I never ate a sweeter
+morsel; for neither I nor any of my companions had tasted any food since
+the evening before.
+
+But how shall I express the horror we felt when we found we were to
+remain where we were, in this old, ruined charnel-house of a church,
+which could scarcely contain us all, unless we stood close together. To
+lie down was out of the question; and, although we could, there were
+neither straw, blankets, nor covering of any kind, to screen us from the
+cold. We implored in vain to be removed; but these privations, bad as
+they were, did not annoy us so much as the idea of spending the long
+dark night in such a miserable place. By far the greater number of us
+believed as firmly in the reality of ghosts as we did in our own
+existence; and, of all places in the world, a church and churchyard,
+from time immemorial, have been their favourite haunts, and the terror
+of all who believe in their reality--even those who affect to disbelieve
+in the visits of spirits to this earth, feel sensations which they would
+not choose to own, when in a churchyard, in a dark night, with
+gravestones and crumbling human bones around them. Of all men seamen are
+the most superstitious, and give the most ready credence to ghost
+stories. The unmanning feeling of fear, that had not touched a single
+heart in the extremity of our danger from the storm, was now strongly
+marked in every face, exaggerated by a horror of we knew not what. Fear
+is contagious--we huddled together, and peered fearfully around,
+expecting every moment to see some appalling vision or hear some
+dreadful sound. Our sense of hearing was painfully acute--the smallest
+noise made us start; but our feelings were too much racked to remain
+long at the same intensity--they gradually became more obtuse as the
+night wore on, until we at length began to entertain each other with
+fearful stories of ghosts; feeling a strange satisfaction in increasing
+the gloomy excitement under which we laboured. Had any of us begun a
+humorous story, with the view of diverting our thoughts from their
+present bent, and the circumstances we were in, I am certain he would
+have been silenced in no gentle manner.
+
+We might have been about two hours or less in this state, in the most
+intense darkness--our own whispers being all that we could recognise of
+each other, even although in contact--when a low pleasant murmur
+suddenly fell upon our ears: It was the voice of Dick Bates, who, having
+either been requested, or, moved by his present situation, had, of his
+own accord, commenced singing in an under tone his favourite ballad of
+"Hozier's Ghost." Now, Dick was the best singer in the whole crew, with
+a voice like a singing bird; it was at this moment so low that, had it
+been broad daylight, he would have appeared only to have been breathing
+hard; yet it was at this time distinctly heard by all, and made our
+flesh creep upon our bones, although a strange kind of pleasure was
+mingled with the feeling. We scarcely breathed when he came to the
+lines--
+
+ "With three thousand ghosts beside him,
+ And in groans did Vernon hail--
+ Heed, O heed my fatal story,
+ I am Hozier's injured Ghost."
+
+I thought the whole was present before me, and I could see the scene the
+poet described, and shuddered when he breathed forth--
+
+ "See these ghastly spectres sweeping
+ Mournful o'er this hated wave,
+ Whose pale cheeks are stained with weeping--
+ These were English captains brave.
+
+ "See these numbers pale and horrid!
+ These were once my seamen bold.
+ Lo! each hangs his drooping forehead
+ While his mournful tale is told."
+
+I believe there was not a man in the old church who did not think he saw
+the ghastly train of spectres flitting before his eyes, and who did not
+feel every nerve thrill, and every hair of his head stand on end. Many
+were the tales of superstition and of terror related, until overpowered
+nature sank into sleep; but I have since often reflected that, of all
+the accounts of fearful sights I heard, they were all related at second
+hand, from the authority of others. No one asserted they themselves had
+ever seen anything out of the ordinary course of nature except Bob
+Nelson, and his was calculated to lead a more prejudiced observer
+astray. It was as follows--
+
+"It was during a voyage I made to New York from Greenock, in the brig
+_Cochrane_, that I once saw, with my own eyes, a strange sight, such as
+I hope never to witness again. Our cargo consisted of dry goods, and we
+had several emigrants as passengers; in particular, a family of six in
+the cabin, the husband and wife, with four children; they were wealthy,
+and had sold off their farm stock to purchase land, and settle somewhere
+in America. When they came on board at the quay of Greenock, they were
+accompanied by a great many relations and friends, who took a most
+affectionate leave of them; in particular one old woman, the mother of
+the emigrant's wife. Her wailings were most pitiable; she wrung her
+hands, and stood as if rooted to our decks. I heard her say more than
+once--
+
+"'Mary, I feel I shall never see you more, nor these lovely babes. O why
+will you leave your aged mother to go mourning to her grave?'
+
+"Her daughter looked more like one dead than alive, as she lay sobbing
+upon the breast of her husband, her mother holding one of her hands
+between both of her's. Poor soul, she looked as if her heart was
+breaking, but spoke not; at length, the husband said--
+
+"'O woman, have you no feeling for your daughter?'
+
+"The old woman's grief seemed, all at once, turned into rage: she let
+her daughter's hand drop, and, raising her hands, cursed him for
+depriving her of her daughter; concluding with--
+
+"'But, James, remember what I say; dead or alive, I shall yet see my
+Mary.'
+
+"The poor young woman was carried below in a faint and the old dame was
+conveyed from the deck by the friends, for we were by this time cast
+loose, and leaving our berth. For several days I saw nothing of the
+farmer's family, as they were very sick; but the children had now begun
+to play about the deck, and their father would leave the cabin for a
+short time, once or twice a-day, for his wife remained very ill, and
+confined to her bed. The haglike appearance of the old woman, in her
+rage, had made a great impression on me, and had evidently sunk the
+spirits of the young people; for I often saw, when the husband came on
+deck, that he was much dejected. I felt it strange that the figure of
+the old woman often occurred to my mind when I looked at him; and I
+several times dreamed I saw her in my sleep, as I had seen her in
+Greenock, but her appearance was more pale and hideous, and had so great
+an effect upon me, that I always awoke in an agony, and cursed her from
+my heart.
+
+"About mid-passage we met with westerly gales and rough weather, which
+caused the passengers to keep below for several days, and retarded our
+passage much. It was blowing very hard. It was my turn at the wheel. In
+the midwatch we had occasional showers. The clouds were scudding along
+in immense bodies over the face of the moon, which was just at the full,
+so that we had, at times, bright moonlight for a minute or two, then
+gloom; but the night was not dark. I might have been at the wheel half
+my time or so. My eye was fixed ahead to watch the set of the waves,
+save when I glanced to the compass. I thought I saw something upon the
+bowsprit in the gloom that was not there a moment before. I looked aloft
+to see for a break in the clouds that the moon might shew me more
+distinctly what it was. I looked ahead again, and there it still was,
+but nearer the bows of the vessel. Still I could not make out what it
+was. Soon a burst of moonlight shone forth, and I saw it resembled a
+human figure, but whether man or woman I could not tell, for the moon
+was as suddenly obscured as it had shone forth. I felt very queer; being
+certain it was none of the crew--for the whole watch was aft at the
+time--and I was sure that all the passengers were below, and no one had
+come on deck since the watch had been changed. I looked at the spot
+where I had seen it, and it was gone. I felt the greatest inclination to
+tell what I had seen; but the fear of being laughed at, made me say
+nothing of it at this time; I, however, never wished so much for
+anything in my life as that my spell at the wheel was over, and the
+watch passed. When, at length, I was released, I crept to the foxa, and
+tumbled into my hammock, but could not close an eye for thinking of what
+I had seen.
+
+"Well, my mates, I was then, as I am now, in a pretty mess, and wished
+myself as heartily out of the _Cochrane_ as we all do ourselves out of
+this old foundered hulk of a church. I was fairly aground with fear, and
+felt all of a tremble for the nights I must pass on board before we
+reached New York, where I was determined to leave the brig if I saw any
+more such sights. For a few days the gale continued, sometimes blowing
+very hard, at others more moderate, but nothing uncommon occurred. At
+length it abated, and we had pleasant weather. I began to think I had
+been deceived, and was glad I had not spoken of what I had seen to any
+of the crew. It was the afternoon, towards evening. I was again at the
+wheel. The sun was setting in a bed of clouds, as gaily coloured as a
+ship rejoicing--the colours of all nations floating aloft, from the
+point of her bowsprit to the end of her jib-boom. The four children were
+playing upon deck, laughing and full of joy at being once more relieved
+from their long confinement in the cabin. I looked at their innocent
+gambols and at the beautiful sky by turns, as much as my duty would
+allow, and felt more happy than I had done since we sailed. It was so
+pleasant to look ahead; for every face on deck wore a pleasing and
+happy aspect. I looked again at the children's gambols; but I almost
+dropped at the wheel. My hands and limbs refused to do their office.
+There, before me, close by the children, stood the exact representation
+of the old woman--so stern, so unearthly was her look, that I cannot
+express it; but she was pale as the foam on the crest of a wave. I could
+not call out. I had no power either to move tongue or limb. The yawing
+of the vessel called the attention of the mate to me, who sung out to
+hold her steady. I heard him, but could not obey. My whole faculties
+were engrossed by the fearful vision. My eyes appeared as if they would
+have started out of my head. One of the crew seized the wheel. All
+looked at me with astonishment. I stood rivetted to the spot, pointing
+to where the spectre stood; but no one saw anything but myself. The
+captain was below in the cabin, with the farmer and his wife--the latter
+of whom was known to all the crew to be very ill. As I looked to the
+unearthly figure, attracted by a power I could not resist, the children
+continued their play. The features of the old woman, I thought, relaxed,
+and a sadness came over them, but it was of unearthly expression. The
+figure glided from the children to the cabin-companion, and disappeared
+below, when it as suddenly came again upon deck, accompanied by the
+farmer's wife, pale and wasted. Both gazed upon the children. The young
+woman appeared to wring her hands in great distress, as I had seen her
+before she was carried below; but the old woman hurried her over the
+side of the brig, and I saw no more of them. When they disappeared, my
+faculties returned. I trembled as if I had been in an ague, and the cold
+sweat stood in large drops upon my forehead. The mate and crew thought
+that I had been in a fit, until I told them what I had seen. They looked
+rather serious, but were much inclined to laugh at me. The mate began to
+jaw me a little on my fancies. All had passed in a minute or two.
+Scarce had the mate spoken a dozen of words, when the captain hurried
+upon deck, much affected, and called to one of the female steerage
+passengers to go instantly to the cabin and assist, as he feared the
+farmer's wife was dead. The mate ceased to speak, and the rest of the
+crew looked as amazed as I did at the strange occurrence. The captain
+came to us. When he heard my strange story, he shook his head, and only
+said it was a remarkable occurrence; but I had been deceived by some
+illusion, and commanded us not to speak of it, for distressing the poor
+husband. We resolved to obey him, as we were by this time nearly in with
+the land, and expected to make it next day, which we did; and the poor
+farmer was helped ashore, almost as death-like as the body of his wife,
+which was buried in New York. I sailed several trips afterwards in the
+_Cochrane_, but never saw anything out of the common afterwards in her
+or anywhere else."
+
+The first rays of the rising sun shone upon us all sound asleep, as
+quiet and undisturbed as if we had passed the night under the roofs of
+our fathers' houses; but I was cold, stiff, and sore when I awoke. I had
+passed the night upon a flat gravestone outside of the church, for want
+of room within, without any covering but my shirt and trousers--all I
+had saved from the wreck. There was not a character engraved on the
+stone that was not as distinctly marked on my body. It was of no use
+grumbling or being cast down--we were fairly adrift, and must go with
+the current. It was now that the buoyancy of a sailor's mind burst
+forth. The old church and churchyard resounded with shouts and laughter,
+that made the French sentinels think we had all gone mad. Some were busy
+at leap-frog, others were pursuing each other among the ruins and
+tomb-stones--all were in active exertion for the sake of warmth, and to
+beguile the time; while the French gathered outside wherever they could
+obtain a sight of us, and looked on in amazement at our frolics. I am
+certain they were not without fear for us; for a few of the lads had
+contrived to clamber to the top of the ruins; and were amusing
+themselves by antics, at the hazard of their necks, and throwing small
+pieces of lime at us below. The officer in command called to them to
+come down; but they knew not what he said. Some of them cried out, in
+answer to his call--"Speak like a Christian if you want us to understand
+you, and don't wow like a dog." At this moment, Nick Williams, one of
+our maintop men, had scaled the highest point of the walls, and had, at
+the risk of his life, contrived to perch himself upon the crumbling
+stone, and was huzzaing most vociferously. It was a daring and foolhardy
+feat. A shout of admiration rose from the outside of the walls, when a
+real British cheer answered it from within. Whether the officer was
+enraged at the apparent defiance and disobedience to his commands, I
+know not, but several muskets were fired through the rails of the gate,
+and the balls recoiled from the walls. A shout of rage burst from us;
+and a serious conflict was only prevented by the prudence of the petty
+officers who were among us; for the enraged seamen had begun to collect
+stones from the base of the ruined walls to hurl at the dastardly
+guards, who were shouting, _"Vive la Nation!" "Vive la Republique!"_ Our
+boatswain, who was a cool and resolute old tar, seeing that the storm
+was still on the verge of bursting out--for we looked upon their cries
+as insulting as their balls--by a happy thought, struck up the national
+air, "God save the King," which we sung with an enthusiasm and strength
+of lungs never, I am certain, surpassed before or since. If it had no
+melody, it had a tone and sound equivalent to both. Many who still held
+the stones in their hands, which they had lifted to hurl at the guards,
+struck them together like cymbals, in regular time, to increase the
+noise. The effect was most exhilarating and produced the desired effect
+of turning our angry feeling into good-humour. So pleased were we, that
+we gave them "Rule Britannia" in the same style, until we forgot, in our
+enthusiasm, that we were prisoners, hungry, cold, and naked. Scarce had
+the last loud cadence died away, when the gate was thrown open, and a
+miserable allowance of the same black bread was served out to us, with
+plenty of water, and the gate once more shut against us.
+
+It was very strange that, among more than five hundred of us, not one
+knew a word of French, and there were none of those who entered the
+enclosure could speak a word of English, so that we knew not what those
+who had the power over us meant to do. We conjectured that they intended
+to keep us where we were until we were exchanged; and had already begun
+to canvass the possibility of breaking out of the hated church and yard,
+and making a bold push for our liberty, in the following night, by
+overpowering our guards, seizing their arms, and passing along the
+coast, until we reached some of the small ports, and making prizes of
+all the vessels in it, and setting sail for England. A council was
+actually deliberating in the church, composed of the petty officers and
+a few of our picked hands, when our attention was roused by the sound of
+martial music approaching the churchyard, where it halted, and we were
+soon after turned out, and numbered to the officer in command.
+
+The party who had just arrived consisted of two companies of soldiers of
+the line, regularly clothed and armed, as the French troops were; while
+those under whose charge we had been were only the armed peasantry of
+the neighbourhood. We hoped the change would be for our advantage. We
+saw at once we were going to be conveyed into the interior. Go where we
+must, we felt we could not be worse fed, lodged, or used than we had
+been. No harsh word was used to us by the regular troops; and, before we
+had been a few hours on the road, we understood each other well enough
+by dumb show, and marched on in good humour; we walking in the middle of
+them like a drove of bullocks, as frolicsome as children, singing,
+laughing, and putting practical jokes upon each other, to beguile the
+way. Scarce had we travelled a couple of miles, until my bare feet
+became sore from the small stones and bruises; yet I limped on in the
+best manner I could, and as cheerfully as possible. I was in the front
+as we were on the point of entering a village; the soldiers in file
+enclosing us on either side, and bringing up the rear, so that we could
+not walk faster or slower than they chose. A few hundred yards from the
+entrance of the village, those in front turned round, and pointing to
+the fowls of various kinds that were feeding on the highway before us,
+made signs which we readily understood, and nodded significantly; they
+then drew to each side of the road, and we behind them, leaving a gap in
+the middle of the way like the prongs of a fork closed at the base. The
+ducks, hens, and other fowls became alarmed as we came close upon them,
+and ran for shelter to the vacant space in the middle, when the front
+closed, and all were secured by those in the centre; the poor people,
+their owners, calling in vain for restitution of their property. The
+soldiers would not allow them to come within their ranks; and, at night,
+when we stopped, the former procured wood for us to dress the stolen
+fowls, after having received their proportion. This, I confess, was a
+species of robbery; but we were starved by the allowance of government,
+and we were in an enemy's country, who had plundered the shipwrecked
+mariner cast upon their shores. We thought, therefore, although, of
+course, the reasoning was wrong, that, in appropriating whatever we
+could lay hands upon, we were merely making fair and just reprisals for
+the losses we had sustained at the hands of our captors; but, the truth
+is, we troubled ourselves very little about the right or wrong of the
+matter, for we were lodged either in large empty barns, or ruined
+churches, all the way to Rennes, and could, from hunger, have eaten a
+jackass when we were allowed to rest for the night. Even yet, I remember
+the relish a small piece of a roast pig or fowl had, without either
+bread or salt, at this time, for we were not scrupulous what we lifted
+that would eat, if we could carry it. In one village, five pigs
+disappeared in this manner, and only the great weight of the parent
+prevented her following them. At the time, it had not the appearance of
+theft; there was so much fun in it that it resembled a great hunt, for
+every eye was in quest of game, and all was done so quietly and
+dexterously that there was not the least confusion or noise. We closed
+so rapidly that the prey had no means of escape, nor room to move until
+it was despatched; yet the people, as we passed, were often very kind to
+us, so far as was in their power, for they appeared to be miserably
+poor. When we reached Rennes my feet were so sore, swelled, and cut,
+that I walked with great pain; numbers of us were in the same situation.
+We did not pass straight through the town, but were halted, for some
+time, in the market-place, while the inhabitants came in crowds to gaze
+at the English prisoners; and a miserable sight we were. We might have
+been here about half an hour, when a beautiful young lady came to where
+we were, with a young woman behind her carrying a large basket filled
+with shoes. I thought she had come to sell them, as so many were
+barefoot. I saw her giving them to the men, and hirpled to the spot, and
+looked with an anxious eye at the store which was diminishing fast. I
+had still retained the twopence, and resolved to make an effort to
+obtain a pair, but felt backward, conscious I had no equivalent to give
+for them; holding out my coppers, I pointed to a pair which I thought
+would answer me; I felt ashamed, and looked to the ground, pointing to
+my feet when I had attracted her attention, for she was looking in
+another direction. She took the shoes and gave them to me. I proffered
+my little cash; she gently put my hand aside, and, by a sign, made me
+know that I was welcome to them. I never saw a female so lovely as this
+young lady; her clear, black eyes were swimming in tears, and her face
+covered with blushes; her looks were so mild, so benevolent, she looked
+like an angel sent from heaven to administer to our wants. Never before
+or since have I felt the same sensation so intensely. It was delightful;
+it was painful. I felt a choking in my throat. I could have wept, and
+have found relief in it, but I was surrounded by those who would have
+made sport of my emotion. I retired a few paces to make way for others,
+in silence. I dared not utter a sound, lest my feelings had overpowered
+me, but stood and gazed at the lovely creature until she retired. I felt
+as if everything to be esteemed on earth was concentrated in her person
+and mind. Had I been an admiral I would have gloried in calling her
+mine; had it been necessary I could have faced death or any danger, to
+free her from trouble or grief, with a feeling of joy and exultation.
+Many a time has this fair creature been embodied in my mind's eye, as
+fair and lovely as she was then, but I never saw her again.
+
+Many others of the good inhabitants of Rennes administered to our wants.
+I got, besides the shoes, a substitute for a jacket, and a straw hat
+from an old man. Indeed, we saw in our route scarce any others except
+old men, women, and boys. Women were driving the carts, and working in
+the fields, and doing the work done by the men in Britain. From Rennes
+we were marched to Perche, our final destination, in the same manner as
+we had been from the coast, and lodged in prison; but I found it no
+prison to me: men were so scarce at this time in France that we were
+allowed to work out of prison if we chose, and only visited once a-week
+to pass muster, and receive our allowance--so I soon found a master, or,
+more properly, he found me in prison--a cart and plough-wright residing
+a short distance from town.
+
+Citizen Vauquin, in secret, was a staunch Royalist; but, in his common
+conversation, a Republican. To me he was extremely kind, but our
+communications were very limited, from my want of knowledge of French;
+but I was picking it up with rapidity, and we soon contrived to
+understand each other pretty well.
+
+It was now well on in the spring, and the weather warm and agreeable. I
+was busy at my work, when Vauquin, who was a stout, hale old man, came
+to me; there was something comic in the expression of his countenance,
+joy and vexation seemed by turns to pass over it, and at times to
+struggle for mastery; he looked cautiously around lest any one might
+overhear us, then said--
+
+"Ah, France! beautiful France! these cursed Democrats have dimmed your
+glory, and ruined you! We have lost our fleet in Egypt, and we fly
+before the Germans. What can we have but defeat, while the best blood in
+France either has been shed by her sons, or languishes in obscurity.
+Could we be freed from the ruffians that tyrannize over us in any way
+but this? We have suffered much, and must suffer more, before we see the
+glories of France shine as they once shone in the courts of her kings.
+Ha! Elder, your sailors are the devils that humble France; from your
+riches the seas are covered with your ships, and the brave French,
+plundered by their rulers, have few. What could be done with sixteen
+ships when fifty were upon them?"
+
+Piqued by his national vanity, I replied--
+
+"Had Nelson had half the number, there would have been no fighting."
+
+"Why no fighting, Monsieur?" said he.
+
+"Because they would have run if they could," replied I; "or struck when
+they saw no chance--that's all I have to say on the subject. If you
+please let us change it, my friend."
+
+"By all means," said he, "let us change it. We are a ruined and undone
+people since we lost our King. The great nation are a people without a
+head; and, when a house wants the head, all goes wrong."
+
+"You and I are at one on this point," replied I. "But how comes it that
+you are as democratic as any one in the neighbourhood when politics is
+the subject of discourse? It is not so in Britain. Every man speaks his
+mind; yet we have a king and a kingly government. I was led to believe,
+before I left home, that in France alone there was liberty: for all men
+were equal--freedom and equality being the law of the land."
+
+"O Monsieur Elder!" exclaimed he, "freedom and equality are the worst
+tyranny, as I shall shew you by my sad experience. When all men make the
+law, who is to obey? Better one tyrant than one million; for, when every
+one thinks he is a law-maker, no one thinks of obeying the law farther
+than it pleases himself. Listen to me; and you shall hear the truth as I
+have experienced it, and many thousands in France as well as I:--
+
+"When first the people of France began to give attention to the writers
+and haranguers against the oppression which we, no doubt, suffered, no
+one was more enthusiastic than I was for the removal of the abuses; and
+I thought no sacrifice could be too great to have them removed. I was,
+at the time, carpenter to the great chateau which you see in the
+distance. Our old lord, who was a severe master, had died only a few
+years before, and had not the love of a single peasant in his wide
+domains; but his son was the reverse of his parent--the friend and
+benefactor of every one on his estate; yet he inherited a fund of
+animosity which it would have taken years of his kindness and humanity
+to have obliterated. In this state of matters, the troubles broke out.
+He was on the side of the people, and aided, as far as in him lay, the
+cause of improvement in the state, until the factions in Paris--who,
+ruling the silly multitude, led them to believe that they were ruled by
+them--struck at the root of all good government by insulting and
+imprisoning the King. From this time, he took no active part in the
+commotions, but remained at his chateau. I was his overseer, and managed
+his affairs. I loved him with all my soul, for he was worthy of my love.
+My ideas went still farther than his went, and I felt not displeased
+with anything that had as yet occurred; for I knew the tenacity with
+which the aristocracy clung to their privileges; but the cunning and
+designing men who, under the faint shew of obeying the people, ruled
+them at their will for mischief and disorder, ultimately, by taking the
+life of the King, took the key-stone out of the arch which sheltered the
+people, and brought the whole fabric of civil order about their ears. I
+was confounded at the blindness I had laboured under; and, from that
+hour, my whole ideas changed. But, alas! it was too late; and even those
+that had lent a willing hand trembled at the mischief they had done.
+Benefits are soon forgot; but the remembrance of injuries are indelible.
+Numbers of needy plunderers had arrived from Paris, and overspread these
+peaceful plains like evil spirits, rousing the worst feeling of our
+peasantry into action. As yet, no serious outrage had been committed in
+this quarter; but I too plainly saw that it would not long be deferred.
+I requested my dear master to fly, as many others had done; for blood
+had begun to flow like water in Paris and the provinces--not the blood
+of the guilty, but the blood of the noble and virtuous; for, alas!
+France had become the arena in the remorseless war of poverty against
+property. The whole fabric of social order had been dissolved, and men
+had returned to their original state of barbarism; like jackalls or
+wolves, only banding together when they scented plunder. To be rich or
+nobly born was a crime of the deepest dye, only to be atoned by blood.
+I, with extreme pain, saw the storm gathering, and could only deplore
+it; and what added to my anguish, was, I dared not argue against them;
+for our old and worthy magistrates had been deposed, and others, more in
+the spirit of the times, appointed. As yet, no blood had been shed in
+Perche, but numbers were immured in prison; and, had I given the least
+cause of suspicion, I would have been placed beyond the power of lending
+that aid to the distressed which I was resolved to afford them, or
+perish in the attempt. Several times I had entreated my young lord to
+fly, and avoid the storm; but my entreaties were in vain. He thought far
+too well of his fellow-men.
+
+"At length a rumour reached us that two commissioners were on their way
+to the chateau to sequestrate it for the use of the state: immediately
+there was a violent commotion amongst the people--fearful of losing
+their share of the plunder, all marched in a tumultuous manner to
+assault it. Aware of what might ensue--for blood had begun to flow--I
+got my young lord disguised as one of my workmen, and set to his
+bench--that very one at which you work--and joined the crowd as they
+approached the chateau. To prevent suspicion, no one shouted louder than
+I, 'Down with the Tyrants!'--'Down with the Aristocrats!'--'_Vive la
+Nation!_'--'_Vive la Republique!_' We entered the chateau, which was
+searched in vain for my young lord. It was now that the true spirit of
+the peasantry shewed itself in all its deformity; everything of value
+was in a short time carried off or destroyed; while every quarter
+resounded with execrations and cries for blood--the oppressions of the
+father were alone remembered. How it occurred I have yet to learn, but
+the youthful aristocrat was discovered in my shop; this was a severe
+blow to me, for I was immediately seized by the furious crowd, charged
+by them with the worst of crimes in their eyes, the concealing from them
+a victim of their rage. It was a fearful hour. I expected to have been
+torn to pieces upon the spot. My presence of mind did not forsake me: I
+begged to be heard before the fatal daggers that were brandished around
+reached my heart. I stood firm until a pause of the storm, when I
+appealed to them not for mercy, but for revenge--revenge upon my lord
+before I died. "I have been betrayed," I cried, "by some one. I appeal
+to yourselves for my former love of my country. Let me die, but let it
+be for my country, and let me be revenged upon the tyrants. Fire the
+chateau!--'_Vive la Nation_,' '_A bas les Aristocrats_,' '_Vive la
+Republique_'--and let me die by the light of the stronghold of tyranny
+enveloped in flames."
+
+"I now breathed more freely. Shouts rent the air; for like a weathercock
+is a mob--ever pointing as the last breath of wind blows. '_Vive
+Vauquin!_' resounded from every lip; the chateau was enveloped in
+flames; its owner immersed in a dungeon to await his doom, already fixed
+before the mock forms of justice were gone through. Think not the worse
+of me for the part I acted; every paper and article of plate had been
+concealed for some days before. To save, if possible, his life, no one
+was louder in denouncing my lord than myself, for his having dared to
+conceal himself in my shop. At my return, I began seriously to turn over
+in my mind what steps I was next to pursue for his safety, now rendered
+difficult, almost beyond my power to overcome. I feared not death, nor
+any danger to myself, could my object have been attained by it. There
+was not a moment to be lost; the following day was to have been the day
+of his trial and death. The commissioners had arrived from Paris, and a
+fete was resolved to be got up to welcome them. In a state of anxiety I
+can hardly describe, I bustled about and waited upon the commissioners;
+but my chief object was to ascertain the exact spot where the
+aristocrats were confined. My lord was my chiefest care, for however
+much I had, at the commencement of the revolution, wished for the
+abused power of the nobles to be reduced, I had no wish for their ruin,
+far less their murder; judge my horror when I learned that he was in the
+lower dungeon of the prison, to which there was only one entrance
+through the guard-room, which was constantly filled by the soldiers on
+guard. With a heart void of hope I returned to my home. In an agony of
+mind I threw myself upon my couch, that if possible I might exclude
+every other thought but the one that I wished to fix my whole attention
+upon: while I walked about, I felt like one distracted. At length, I was
+so fortunate as to call to mind having, when a boy, heard my father tell
+that he had assisted my grandfather in securing a door into the lower
+dungeon, that led into another even more loathsome, where the Huguenots
+were wont to be confined in the time of Louis the Fourteenth; this had a
+door which led into the outer court of the prison, the walls of which
+were in the hinder part, ruinous and neglected, as few of the present
+people in authority knew of such a dungeon; the old door having been
+long built up. A faint ray of hope shot through my mind; I started from
+my bed, and, concealing what tools I judged to be necessary, proceeded
+to the jail without being perceived--this was rendered the more easy as
+every one was engaged preparing for the fete. I remained under the
+shelter of the ruined wall until it was quite dark. A voice of mirth and
+revelry sounded in the front of that prison, whose gloomy walls and
+strong iron barred windows might, and no doubt did, enclose hearts more
+sorrowful than mine, but none more anxious. My situation, solitary as it
+was, was full of peril--I might be missed at the fete, and suspicion
+roused if I was so fortunate as to succeed; but I allowed no selfish
+thought to intrude. I was so fortunate as to find the low arched door I
+had heard my father speak of; after considerable labour it yielded to my
+efforts, and I entered the low and noisesome vault which had heard and
+re-echoed the groans of so many victims of tyranny whose only fault was
+adhering to the dictates of their consciences against an intolerant
+priesthood. So baleful was the air I breathed, that I was forced to
+retire, or I had fallen to the damp floor; again I entered, for I heard
+the voice of my lord in prayer, and felt a new sort of assurance arise
+in my mind; there was no distinguishing one object from another, so
+impenetrable was the darkness, and the faint sound appeared to come from
+no particular side of the dungeon. I commenced groping with my hands,
+from the entrance, along the walls; it was a loathsome task, for they
+were damp and ropy, and loathsome reptiles ever and anon made me
+withdraw my fingers; still I groped on. At length I succeeded; the door
+was forced to yield to my skill and efforts; all that divided me from
+him I sought was the strong planks and plaster. I struck a sharp single
+blow upon it, and paused--the voice of my master had ceased from the
+commencement of my work upon the second door. It was a period of intense
+anxiety, lest he should alarm his guards, if any of them had been in his
+dungeon. To my first signal no answer was made: he knew not that he had
+a friend so near, willing to sacrifice everything for his rescue. I
+struck a second blow, and again listened; I heard him utter a faint
+exclamation of surprise, and all was again still. The third time I
+struck, and I heard a movement on the other side: the plaster was
+struck, piercing a small hole, and we were enabled to communicate. I
+found he was alone in his dismal dungeon. It was agreed that I was to
+return in two hours with a disguise for him, after I had appeared at the
+fete; and, in the meantime, I loosened the fastening so as he could
+easily force it away should any thing happen to prevent my return; and,
+these arrangements being made, I took my departure, in the same stealthy
+manner in which I had reached him.
+
+"With my heart still anxious but more at ease, I joined the festive
+throng, and, joining in the dance for a short time, then retired, got
+all ready, returned, with a view to relieve my lord from his dungeon,
+and had the unspeakable pleasure to see him beyond its walls, dressed as
+a peasant girl. Our parting was brief but sincere, my wishes for his
+safety were equal to the extent of my love, but I have never heard of
+him since; whether he went for La Vendee, or joined the allied army, I
+never knew. As soon as I saw him safe out of the town, I returned to the
+joyous group, and was among the last to leave it. My share in the escape
+of my noble master was never even suspected; but from this time I have
+wished the fall of the tyrants that have ruled France with a rod of
+iron, and for the return of our King and nobility, until which time we
+can never hope for tranquillity. I am not displeased at what can assist
+in aiding their overthrow but I feel, as a true Frenchman, humbled at
+every defeat our brave forces sustain. I love the beautiful fields of
+France and all her sons, but I hate the demagogues who at present rule
+her destinies."
+
+Had I not been an exile against my will, I never had been more happy in
+my life than I was at this time. I, no doubt, was a prisoner of war; but
+it was only in name. I never saw my prison but once a-week, when I
+appeared at the muster to receive my jail allowance, and returned to
+citizen Vauquin's in a few hours after, or strayed where I chose within
+the proscribed distance. Our visits to the prison always gave rise to an
+afternoon of merriment and pleasure--a meeting of friends. Not one of us
+wished to escape, or desired an exchange.
+
+I was always a fortunate fellow. The four months I was here I improved
+much in my drawing, and found the instructions of poor Walden of the
+utmost service to me; and I was much benefited by a relation of
+Vauquin's, who had studied the arts at Paris. It was thus I spent my
+evenings; but I was never as yet allowed to enjoy my good fortune long.
+We were ordered to be marched to the coast at Saint Malos, where a
+cartel was to be in readiness to receive us. I bade adieu to my kind
+friend, Citizen Vauquin, not without regret, and set out for the coast.
+There was not a trace of pleasure at our release among us; we had no
+cause, at least nine-tenths of us. For, as Bill Wates had foretold, off
+Jersey we were brought too by the _Ramillies_, and crowded on board her.
+The greater part were draughted to other men-of-war, but in her I
+remained until she was paid off, at the peace.
+
+[Footnote 3: See "The Man-of-war's Man."]
+
+
+
+
+WILLIE WASTLE'S ACCOUNT OF HIS WIFE.
+
+ "Sic a wife as Willie had!
+ I wadna gie a button for her."
+ BURNS.[4]
+
+
+"It was a very cruel dune thing in my neebor, Robert Burns, to mak a
+sang aboot my wife and me," said Mr William Wastle, as he sat with a
+friend over a jug of reeking toddy, in a tavern near the Bridge-end in
+Dumfries where he had been attending the cattle market; "I didna think
+it was neebor-like," he added; "indeed it was a rank libel upon baith
+her and me; and I took it the worse, inasmuch as I always had a very
+high respect for Maister Burns. Though he said that I 'dwalt on Tweed,'
+and that I 'was a wabster,' yet everybody kenned wha the sang was aimed
+at. Neither did my wife merit the description that has been drawn o'
+her; for, though she was nae beauty, and hadna a face like a wax-doll,
+yet there were thousands o' waur looking women to be met wi' than my
+Kirsty; and to say that her mither was a 'tinkler,' was very
+unjustifiable, for her parents were as decent and respectable people, in
+their sphere o' life, as ye would hae found in a' Nithsdale. Her faither
+had a small farm which joined on with one that I took a lease o', when I
+was about one-and-twenty. Kirsty was about three years aulder; and,
+though not a bonny woman, she was, in many respects, as ye shall hear in
+the coorse o' my story, a very extraordinary one. I was in the habit o'
+seeing her every day, and as I sometimes was working in a field next to
+her, I had every opportunity o' observing her industry, and that, frae
+mornin' till nicht, she was aye eident. This gave me a far higher
+opinion o' her than if I had seen her gaun about wi' a buskit head; and
+often, at meal-times, I used to stand and speak to her owre the dyke.
+But, after we had been acquainted in this manner for some months, when
+the cheerfu' summer weather came in, and the grass by the dyke-sides was
+warm and green, and the bonny gowans blossomed among it, I louped owre
+the dyke, and we sat doun and took our dinners together. I couldna have
+believed it possible that a bit bare bannock and a drap skim milk wad
+gang doun sae deliciously, but never before had I partaken o' onything
+that was sae pleasant to the palate. One day I was quite surprised, when
+I found that my arm had slipped unconsciously round her waist, and,
+drawing her closer to my side, I seighed, and said--'O Kirsty, woman!'
+
+"She pulled away my hand from her waist, and looking me in the face,
+said--'Weel, Willie, man, what is't?'
+
+"'Kirsty,' said I, 'I like ye.'"
+
+"'I thocht as meikle,' quoth she, 'but could ye no hae said sae at
+ance.'"
+
+"'Perhaps I could, dear,' said I; 'but ye ken true love is aye blate;
+however, if ye hae nae objections, I'll gang yont, after fothering time
+the micht, and speak to yer faither and mither; and if they hae nae
+objections, and ye have yer providin' ready, wi' yer guid-will and
+consent, I shall gie up oor names, and we shall be cried on Sabbath
+first.'
+
+"'Oh,' said she, 'I haena lived for five-and-twenty years without
+expectin' to get a guidman some day; and I hae had my providin' ready
+since I was eighteen, an' a' o' my ain spinnin' and bleachin', an' the
+lint bocht wi' what I had wrocht for; so that I am behauden to naebody.
+My faither and mither have mair sense than to cast ony obstacle in the
+way o' my weelfare; and, as ye are far frae bein' disagreeable to me, if
+we are to be married, it may as weel be sune as syne, and we may be
+cried on Sunday if ye think proper.'
+
+"'O Kirsty, woman!' cried I, and I drew my arm round her waist again,
+'ye hae made me as happy as a prince! I hardly ken which end o' me is
+upmost!'
+
+"'Na, Willie,' said she, 'there is nae necessity for ony nonsensical
+raptures, ye ken perfectly weel that yer head is upmost, though I hae
+heard my faither talk about some idiots that he ca's philosophers, who
+say that the world whirls roond aboot like a cart-wheel on an axle-tree,
+and that ance in every twenty-four hours our feet are upmost, and our
+head downmost; but it will be lang or onybody get me to believe in sic
+balderdash! As to yer being happy at present, it shall be nae faut o'
+mine if ye are not aye sae; and if ye be aye as I would wish ye to be,
+ye will never be unhappy.'
+
+"Such, as near as I can recollect, is not only the history, but the
+exact words o' oor courtship. Her faither and mither gied their consent
+without the slightest hesitation. I remember her faither's words to me
+were--'Weel, William, frae a' that I hae seen o' ye, ye appear to be a
+very steady and industrious young man, and ane that is likely to do weel
+in the world. I hae seen, also, wi' great satisfaction, that ye are very
+regular in yer attendance upon the ordinances; there hasna been a
+Sabbath, since ye cam to be oor neebor, that I hae missed ye oot o' yer
+seat in the kirk. Frae a' that I hae heard concernin' ye, also, ye hae
+always been a serious, sober, and weel-behaved young man. These things
+are a great satisfaction to a faither when he finds them in the lad that
+his dochter wishes to marry. Ye hae my consent to tak Kirsty; and,
+though I say it, I believe ye will find her to mak as industrious,
+carefu', and kind a wife, as ye would hae found if ye had sought through
+a' broad Scotland for ane. I will say it, however, and before her face,
+that there are some things in which she takes it o' her mother, and in
+which she will hae her ain way. But this is her only faut. I'm sure
+ye'll ne'er hae cause to complain o' her wasting a bawbee, or o' her
+allowing even the heel o' a kebbuck to gang to unuse. It is needless for
+me to say mair; but ye hae my full and free consent to marry when ye
+like.'
+
+"Then up spoke the auld guidwife, and said--'Weel, Willie, lad, if you
+and Kirsty hae made up yer minds to mak a bargain o' it, I am as little
+disposed to oppose yer inclinations as her faither is. A guid wife, I
+sincerely believe, ye will find her prove to ye; and though her faither
+says that in some things she will be like me, and have her ain way, let
+me tell ye, lad, that is owre often necessary for a woman to do, wha is
+striving everything in her power for the guid o' her husband and the
+family, and sees him, just through foolishness, as it were, striving
+against her. Ye are strange beings you men-folk to deal wi'. But ye
+winna find her a bare bride, for she has a kist fu' o' linen o' her ain
+spinnin', that may serve ye a' yer days, and even when ye are dead,
+though ye should live for sixty years.'
+
+"I thought it rather untimeous that the auld woman should hae spoken
+aboot linen for oor grave-claes, before we were married; and I suppose
+my countenance had hinted as much, for Kirsty seemed to hae observed it,
+and she said--'My mother says what is and ought to be. It is aye best
+to be provided for whatever may come; and as Death often gies nae
+warning, I wadna like to be met wi' it, and to hae naething in the house
+to lay me out in like a Christian.'
+
+"I thought there was a vast deal o' sense and discretion in what she
+said; and though I didna like the idea o' such a premature providing o'
+winding-sheets, yet, after she spoke, I highly approved o' her prudence
+and forethought.
+
+"It was on a Monday afternoon, about three weeks after the time I have
+been speaking o', that Kirsty, wi' her faither, and mother, and another
+young lass, an acquaintance o' hers, that was to be best-maid, cam yont
+to my house for her and me to be married. I had sent for ane o' my
+brothers to be best-man, and he was with me waiting when they came. She
+was not in the least discomposed, but behaved very modestly. In a few
+minutes the minister arrived, when the ceremony immediately began, and
+within a quarter of an hour she was mine, and I was hers, for the term
+o' oor natural lives.
+
+"From the time that I took the farm, I had no kind o' dishes in the
+house, save a wooden bowie or twa, four trenchers, three piggins, and
+twa bits o' tin cans, that I had bought from a travelling tinker for
+twopence a-piece, and which Kirsty afterwards told me, were each a
+halfpenny a-piece aboon their value. I dinna think that I had tasted tea
+aboon a dozen times in the whole course o' my life; but, as it was
+coming into general use, I thought it would look respectfu' to my bride,
+before her faither and mother, if I should hae tea upon oor marriage
+day, and I could ask the minister to stop and tak a dish wi' us. I
+thought it would gie a character o' respectability to oor wedding.
+Therefore, on the Saturday afore the marriage, I went to Dumfries, and
+bought half a dozen o' bonny blue cups and saucers. I never durst tell
+Kirsty how meikle I gied for them. It was with great difficulty that I
+got them carried hame without breaking. I also bought two ounces o' the
+best tea, and a whole pound o' brown sugar.
+
+"I had a servant lassie at the time, the doohter o' a hind in the
+neighbourhood; she was necessary to me to do the work about the house,
+and to milk twa kye that I kept, to mak the cheese, and a part o' the
+day to help the workers out wi' the bondage.
+
+"'Lassie,' said I, when I got hame; 'do ye ken hoo to mak tea?'
+
+"'I'm no very sure,' said she; 'but I think I do. I ance got a cup when
+I wasna weel, frae the farmer's wife that my faither lives wi'. I'll
+try.'
+
+"'Here, then,' says I; 'tak care o' thir, and see that ye dinna break
+them, or it will mak a breaking that ye wouldna like in your quarter's
+wages.' So I gied her the cups and saucers to put awa carefully into the
+press.
+
+"'O maister,' says she; 'but noo, when I recollect, ye'll need a
+tea-kettle, and a tea-pat, and a cream-pat, and teaspoons.'
+
+"'Preserve me!' quoth I, 'the lassie is surely wrang in the head! Hoo
+mony articles o' _tea_ and _cream_ hae ye there? The parritch kettle
+will do as weel as a tea-kettle--where can be the difference? Your
+tea-pats I ken naething aboot, and as for a cream-pat, set down the
+cream-bowie; and as for spoons, ye fool, they dinna sip tea--they drink
+it--just sirple it, as it were, oot o' the saucer.'
+
+"'O sir,' said she; 'but they need a little spoon to stir it round to
+mak the sugar melt--and that is weel minded, ye'll also require a
+sugar-basin.'
+
+"'Hoots! toots! lassie,' cried I, 'do ye intend to ruin me? By yer
+account o' the matter, it would be almost as expensive to set up a tea
+equipage, as a chariot equipage. No, no; just do as the miller's wife o'
+Newmills did.'
+
+"'And what way micht that be, sir?' inquired she.
+
+"'Why,' said I, 'she took such as she had, and she never wanted! Just
+ye tak such as ye have--cogie, bowie, or tinniken, never ye mind--show
+ye your dexterity.'
+
+"'Very weel, sir,' said she; 'I'll do the best I can.'
+
+"But, just to exemplify another trait in my wife's character, I will
+tell ye the upshot o' my cups and saucers. I confess that I was in a
+state of very considerable perturbation; not only on account o' what the
+lassie had told me about the want o' a tea-kettle, tea-pat, and so
+forth, but also that, including the minister, there were seven o' us,
+while I had but six cups; and I consoled mysel by thinking that, as
+Kirsty and I were now _one_, she might drink oot o' the cup and I wad
+tak the saucer, so that a cup and saucer would serve us baith; and I was
+trustin to the ingenuity o' the lassie to find substitutes for the other
+deficiencies, when she came ben to where we were sitting, and going
+forward to Kirsty, says she--'Mistress, I have had the twa ounces o' tea
+on boiling in a chappin o' water, for the last twa hoors--do ye think it
+will be what is ca'ed _masked_ noo?'
+
+"'Tea!' said my new-made wife, wi' a look o' astonishment; 'is the
+lassie talking aboot _tea_? While I am to be in this house--and I
+suppose that is to be for my life--there shall nae poisonous foreign
+weed be used in it, nor come within the door, unless it be some drug
+that a doctor orders. Take it off the fire, and throw the broo awa. My
+certes! if young folk like us were to begin wi' sic extravagance, where
+would be the upshot? Na, na, Willie,' said she, turning round to me,
+'let us just begin precisely as we mean to end. At all events, let us
+rather begin meanly, than end beggarly. I hae seen some folk, no aboon
+oor condition in life, mak a great dash on their wedding-day; and some
+o' them even hire gigs and coaches, forsooth, to tak a jaunt awa for a
+dozen o' miles! Poor things! it was the first and last time that ony o'
+them was either in gig or coach. But there shall be nae extravagance o'
+that kind for me. My faither and mither care naething about tea, for
+they hae never been used to it, and I'm sure that our friends here care
+as little; and, asking the minister's pardon, I am perfectly sure and
+certain, that tea can be nae treat to him, for he has it every day, and
+it will be standing ready for him when he gangs hame. The supper will be
+ready by eight o'clock, and those who wish it, may tak a glass o'
+speerits in the meantime--as it isna every day that they are at my
+wedding.'
+
+"Her faither and mother looked remarkable proud and weel-pleased like at
+what she said, just as if they wished to say to me--'There's a wife for
+ye!' But I thought the minister seemed a good deal surprised, and in a
+few minutes he took up his hat, wished us much joy, and went away. For
+my part, I didna think sae much aboot my bride's lecture, as I rejoiced
+that she thereby released me from the confusion I should have
+experienced in exposing the poverty o' my tea equipage.
+
+"It was on the very morning after oor marriage, and just as I was gaun
+oot to my wark--'Willie,' says she, 'I think we should single the
+turnips in the field west o' the hoose the day. The cotters' twa bondage
+lasses, and me, will be able to manage it by the morn's nicht.'
+
+"'O, my dear,' quoth I, 'but I hae nae intention that ye should gang out
+into the fields to work, noo that ye are my wife. Let the servant-lass
+gang out, and ye can look after the meat.'
+
+"'Her! the idle taupie!' said she, 'we hae nae mair need for her than a
+cart has for a third wheel. Mony a time it has grieved me to observe her
+motions, when ye were out o' the way--and there would she and the other
+twa wenches been standing, clashing for an hour at a time, and no
+workin' a stroke. I often had it in my mind to tell ye, but only I
+thought ye might think it forward in me, as I perceived ye had a
+kindness for me. But I can baith do all that is to do in-doors, and
+work out-by also, and at the end o' the quarter she shall leave.'
+
+"'Wi' a' my heart,' says I, 'if ye wish it;' for it struck me she micht
+be a wee thocht jealous o' the lassie; 'but there is no the sma'est
+necessity for you working out in the fields; for though she leaves, we
+can get a callant at threepence a-day, that would just do as muckle
+out-work as she does, and ye would hae naething to attend to but the
+affairs o' the hoose.'
+
+"'O William!' replied she, 'I'm surprised to hear ye speak. Ye talk o'
+threepence a-day just as if it were naething. Hoo mony starving families
+are there, that threepence a-day would mak happy? It is my maxim never
+to spend a penny unless it be laid out to the greatest possible
+advantage. Ye should always keep that in view, every time ye put yer
+hand in your pocket. He that saves a penny has as mony thanks, in the
+lang run, as he that gies it awa. Threepence a-day, not including the
+Sabbath, is eighteenpence a-week; noo, you that are a scholar, only
+think how much that comes to in a twelvemonth. There are fifty-twa weeks
+in the year--that is fifty-twa shillings; and fifty-twa sixpences
+is--how much?'
+
+"'Twenty-six shillings, my dear,' said I, for I was quite amused at her
+calculation--the thing had never struck me before.
+
+"'Weel,' added she, 'fifty-two shillings and twenty-six shillings, put
+that together, and see how much it comes to.'
+
+"'Oh,' says I, after half a minute's calculation, 'it will just be three
+pounds, eighteen shillings, to a farthing.'
+
+"'Noo,' cried she, 'only think o' that!--three pounds eighteen shillings
+a-year; and ye would throw it away, just as if it were three puffs o'
+breath! Now, William, just listen to me and tak tent--that is within twa
+shillings o' four pounds. It would far mair than cleed you and me, out
+and out, frae head to foot, from year's end to year's end. But at
+present the wench's meat and wages come to three times that, and
+therefore I am resolved, William, that while I am able to work, we shall
+neither throw away the one nor the other. It is best that we should
+understand each other in time: therefore, I just tell ye plainly, as I
+said yesterday, that as I wish to end, I mean to begin. This very day,
+this very morning and hour, I go out wi' the bondage lassies to single
+the turnips; and, at the end o' the quarter, the lazy taupie
+butt-a-house maun walk aboot her business.'
+
+"'Weel, Kirsty, my darling,' says I, 'your way be it. Only I maun again
+say, that I had no wish or inclination whatever to see you toiling and
+thinning turnips beneath a burning sun, or maybe taking them up and
+shawing them, when the cauld drift was cutting owre the face keener than
+a razor.'
+
+"'Weel, William,' quoth she, 'it is needless saying any more words about
+it--it is my fixed and determined resolution.'
+
+"'Then, hinny,' says I, 'if ye be absolutely resolved upon that, it is
+o' no manner o' use to say ony mair upon the subject, of course--your
+way be it.'
+
+"So the servant lassie was discharged accordingly, and Kirsty did
+everything hersel. Wet day and dry day, whatever kind o' wark was to be
+done, there was she in the middle o' it, by her example spurring on the
+bondagers. Even when we began to hae a family, I hae seen her working in
+the fields wi' an infant on her back; and I am certain that for a dozen
+o' harvests, while she was aye at the head o' the shearers, there was
+aye our bairn that was youngest at the time, lying rowed up in a blanket
+at the foot o' the rig, and playing wi' the stubble to amuse itsel.
+
+"There were many that said that I was entirely under her thumb, and that
+she had the maister-skep owre me. But that was a grand mistake, for she
+by no means exercised onything like maistership owre me; though I am
+free to confess, that I at all times paid a great degree o' deference to
+her opinions, and that she had a very particular and powerfu' way o'
+enforcing them. Yet, although I was in no way cowed by her, there wasna
+a bairn that we had, from the auldest to the youngest, that durst play
+_cheep_ before her. She certainly had her family under great subjection,
+and their bringing up did her great credit. They were allowed time to
+play like ither bairns--but from the time that they were able to make
+use o' their hands, ye would hardly hae found it possible to come in
+upon us, and seen ane o' them idle. All were busy wi' something; and no
+ane o' them durst hae stepped owre a prin lying on the floor, without
+stooping doun to tak it up, or passed onything that was out o' its place
+without putting it right. For I will say for her again, that, if my
+Kirsty wasna a bonny wife, she was not only a thrifty but a tidy ane,
+and keepit every ane and every thing tidy around her.
+
+"She was a strange woman for abhorring everything that was new-fangled.
+She was a most devout believer in, and worshipper o' the wisdom o' oor
+ancestors. She perfectly hated everything like change; and as to
+onything that implied speculation, ye micht as weel hae spoken o'
+profanation in her presence. She said she liked auld friends, auld
+customs, auld fashions; and was the sworn enemy o' a' the innovations on
+the practices and habits that had been handed doun frae generation to
+generation. I dinna ken if ever she heard the names Whig or Tory in her
+life; but if Tory mean an enemy o' change, then my Kirsty certainly was
+a Tory o' the very purest water.
+
+"I dinna suppose that she believed there was such a word as
+_improvement_ in the whole Dictionary. She would hae allooed everything
+to stand steadfast as Lot's wife, for ever and for ever. But, however,
+just to gie ye a specimen or twa o' her remarkable disposition:--I think
+it was about sixteen years after we were married, that I took a tack o'
+an adjoining farm, which was much larger than the ane we occupied. I was
+conscious it would require every penny we had scraped thegither, and
+that we had saved, to stock it. My wife was by no means favourable to my
+taking it. She said we kenned what we had done, but we didna ken what we
+might do; and it was better to go on as we were doing, than to risk oor
+a'. I acknowledge that there was a vast deal o' truth in what she said;
+but, however, I saw that the farm was an excellent bargain, and I was
+resolved to tak it, say what she might; and therefore, though she was
+said to domineer owre me, yet, just to prove to every person round about
+that I was not under a wife's government, I did tak it. I had not had it
+twa years, when I began to find that thrashing wi' the flail would never
+answer. Often, when the markets were on the rise, and when I could hae
+turned owre many pounds into my ain pocket, I found it was a'thegither
+impossible for me to get my corn thrashed in time to catch the markets
+while they were high; and I am certain that, in the second year that I
+had the new farm, I lost at least a hundred pounds frae that cause
+alone--that is, I didna get a hundred pounds that I micht hae got, and
+that was much the same as losing it oot o' my pocket. Thrashing machines
+at that period were just beginning to come into vogue, but there was a
+terrible outcry against them; and mony a ane said that they were an
+invention o' the Prince o' Darkness; for my part I wish he would
+never do mair ill upon the earth, than invent sic things as
+thrashing-machines. Hooever, I saw plain and clearly the advantage that
+the machine had owre the flail, and I was determined to hae ane. But
+never did I see a woman in such a steer as the mention o' the thing put
+Kirsty in! She went perfectly wild aboot it.
+
+"'What, William!' she cried, 'what do ye talk aboot?' Losh me, man, have
+ye nae mair sense?--have ye nae discretion whatever? Will ye really rush
+upon ruin at a horse-race? Ye talk aboot getting a machine! How, I ask
+ye, how do ye expect that ever ye could prosper for a single day after,
+if ye were to throw oor twa decent barn-men oot o' employment, and their
+families oot o' bread? I just ask ye that question, William. Does na the
+proverb say--'Live and let live;' and hoo are men to live, if, by an
+invention o' the Enemy o' mankind, ye tak work oot o' their hands, and
+bread oot o' their mouths?"
+
+"'Dear me, Kirsty!' said I, 'hoo is it possible that a woman o' your
+excellent sense can talk such nonsense? Ye see very weel that, if I had
+had a machine, I micht hae made a hundred pounds mair than I did by last
+year's crops--that, certainly, would hae been a good turn to us--and,
+tak my word for it, it is neither in the power nor in the nature o' the
+Evil One to do a guid turn to onybody.'
+
+"'Willie,' quoth she, 'ye talk like a silly man--like a very silly man,
+indeed. If the Enemy o' mankind hadna it in his power to do for us what
+we tak to be for oor guid, hoo in the warld do ye think he could tempt
+us to our hurt? I say, that thrashing-machines are an invention o' his,
+and that they are ane o' the instruments he is bringing up for the ruin
+o' this country. It is him, and him alone, that is putting it into your
+head to buy ane o' his infernal devices, in order that he may not only
+ruin you, baith soul and body, by filling ye wi' a desire o' riches, an'
+making ye the oppressor and the robber o' the poor, but that, through
+your oppression and robbery, he may ruin them also, and bring them to
+shame or the gallows!'
+
+"'Forgie me, Kirsty,' said I, 'what in a' the world do ye mean? Hoo is
+it possible that ye can talk aboot me as likely to be either an
+oppressor or a robber o' the poor? I'll declare there never was a beggar
+passed either me or my door, that ever I saw, but I gied him something.
+I'm sure, guidwife, ye baith ken better o' me, and think better o' me
+than to talk sae.'
+
+"'Yes, William,' said she, 'I did think better o' ye; but I noo see
+distinctly that the Enemy is leading ye blindfolded to your ruin. First,
+through the pride o' your heart, he tempted ye to tak this big farm,
+that, as ye thocht, ye might hasten to be rich; and now he is seducing
+ye to buy ane o' his diabolical machines for the same end, and in order
+that ye may not only deprive honest men and their families o' bread,
+but, belike, rather than starve, tempt them to steal! And what ca' ye
+that but oppressing and robbing the poor? Hooever, buy a machine!--buy
+ane, and ye'll see what will be the upshot! If ye dinna repent it, say
+I'm no your wife.'
+
+"I confess her words were onything but agreeable to me, and they rather
+set me a hesitating hoo to act. Hooever my mind was bent upon buying the
+machine. I had said to several o' my neebors that I intended to hae ane
+put up; and I was convinced that, if I drew back o' my word, it would be
+said that my wife wouldna let me get it, and I would be made a general
+laughing-stock--and that was a thing that I held in greater dread than
+even my wife's lectures, severe as they sometimes were; therefore,
+reason or nane, I got a machine put up. It caused a very general outcry
+amongst a' the 'datal' men and their wives for miles round. At ae time I
+even thocht that they would mob me and pull it to pieces. But all their
+clamour was a mere snaw-flake fa'ing in the sea, compared wi' the
+perpetual dirdum that Kirsty rang in my ears about it. She actually
+threatened that judgments would follow, and I didna ken a' what. But, on
+the morning o' the day that I yoked the horses into it, and began to
+thrash wi' it for the first time I declare to you that she took the six
+bairns wi' her, and absolutely went to her faither's, vowing to work for
+them until the blood sprang from her finger-ends, rather then live wi' a
+man that would be guilty o' such madness and iniquity.
+
+"But having heard before dinner-time that I had had to employ a woman at
+sixpence a-day to feed into the machine she came back as fast as her
+feet could carry her, wi' a' the bairns behint her, and ordering the
+stranger away, began to feed the machine hersel', and the bairns carried
+her the sheaves.
+
+"I saw that out o' a spirit o' pure wickedness, she was distressing
+hersel' far beyond what there was the sma'est occasion for. It was as
+clear as day, that indignation was working in her heart, like barm
+fermenting in a bottle, and just about half an hour before we were to
+leave off thrashing for the nicht, she was seized with a very alarming
+pain in the breast. I saw and said it was a hysterical affection, and
+was altogether the consequence o' the passion that she had given way to
+on account o' the unlucky machine. She, however, denied that there were
+such diseases in existence as either hysterical or nervous affections.
+They were sham disorders, she said, that cam into the country wi' tea
+and spirit-drinking; and she assuredly was free from indulging in either
+the ane or the other. But she grew worse and worse, and was at last
+obliged to sit down upon some straw on the barn-floor. I ventured
+forward to her, and said--'Kirsty, woman, ye had better gang awa into
+the house. Ye will do yersel' mair ill by sittin there, for there is a
+current o' air through the loft, which, after you being warm with
+working, may gie ye your death o' cauld. Rise up, dear, and gang awa
+into the house, and try if a glass o' usquebae will do ye ony guid.'
+
+"Maister Burns, the poet, has said--
+
+ 'She has an ee, she has but _ane_;'
+
+but, certes, had he seen the look that she gied me as I then spoke to
+her, he would hae been satisfied that she had _twa_! I saw it was o' nae
+manner o' use for me either to offer advice or to express sympathy. The
+wife o' an auld man that was called John Neilson, and who for several
+years had been our barn-man, came into the machine-loft at the time, and
+wi' a great deal o' concern she asked my wife what was like the matter
+wi' her. Now this auld Peggy Neilson had the reputation, for miles
+round, o' being an extraordinary _skilly_ woman. There wasna a bairn in
+the parish took a sair throat, or got a burnt foot, or a cut finger, or
+took a _dwam_ for a day or twa, but its mother said--'I maun hae Peggy
+Neilson spoken to aboot that bairn, before it be owre late.' Kirsty,
+therefore, told her hoo she was affected, when the other, wi' the
+confidence o' a doctor o' medicine brought up at the first college in
+the kingdom, said--'Then, ma'am, if that be the way ye feel, there is
+naething in the warld sae guid for ye as a blast o' the pipe. I aye
+carry a tinder-box and flint and steel wi' me, and ye are welcome to a
+whuff o' my cutty.'
+
+"Now, Kirsty was a bitter enemy to baith smoking and snuffing in
+general; but she had great faith in the skill o' Peggy Neilson, and wad
+far rather hae done whatever she advised than followed the prescription
+o' the best doctor in a' the land. She took the auld woman's pipe,
+therefore, and began to blaw through a spirit o' pain and perverseness
+at the same moment. As I anticipated, it soon made her dizzy in the
+head, and she had to be led to the house. Hooever, in a short time, the
+pain she had been suffering was greatly abated, though whether the
+smoking contributed towards removing it or not, I dinna pretend to say.
+Just as she had been taen to the house, we were dune wi' thrashing for
+the day, and I was very highly gratified wi' the day's wark.
+
+"But I was very tired, and as soon as I had had my sowens I went to bed.
+I several times thought, and remarked it, that there was a sort o' burnt
+smell about.
+
+"'Ay,' said Kirsty, who by this time was a great deal better; 'they who
+will use the engines o' forbidden agents maun expect to smell them, as
+in the end they will feel them.'
+
+"Being conscious it was o' nae use to reason wi' her, for she in general
+had the better o' me in an argument, I tried to compose mysel' to
+sleep. But it was in vain to think o' closing my een, for the smell o'
+burning grew stronger and stronger, and I was rising again,
+saying--'There is something burning aboot somewhere, and I canna rest
+until I hae seen what it is.'
+
+"'Nor let other folk rest either,' said Kirsty.
+
+"Just at that moment, oor eldest dochter, who was as perfect a picture
+o' beauty as ever man looked upon wi' eyes o' admiration, and who being
+alarmed by the smell, as well as me, had gane oot to examine from what
+it proceeded came running oot o' breath, crying--'Faither! faither!-the
+barn and everything is on fire!'
+
+"'O goodness!' cried I, as I threw on part o' my claes in the twinkling
+o' an ee; 'what wretch can hae been sae wicked as to do it!'
+
+"'It's a judgment upon ye,' said Kirsty, 'for having such a thing about
+the place, after a' the admonitions ye had against it. I said ye would
+see what would be the upshot, and it hasna been lang o' coming.'
+
+"'O ye tormenter o' my life!' cried I, as I ran oot o' the house; 'it's
+your handy-work!'
+
+"'Mine!' exclaimed she. 'O ye heartless man that ye are, how dare ye
+presume either to say or think sic a thing!' and she followed me out.
+
+"The whole stackyard was black wi' smoke--it was hardly possible to
+breathe--and a great sheet o' fire, like the mouth o' a fiery dragon,
+was rushing and roaring out at the barn-door. I didna ken what to do; I
+was ready to rush head foremost into the middle o' the flames, as if
+that I could hae crushed them out wi' the weight o' my body; and I am
+persuaded that I would hae darted right into the machine loft, where the
+flames were bursting through the very tiles, as frae the mouth o' a
+volcano, had not my wife, and our eldest daughter Janet, flewn after me
+and held me in their arms, the one crying--'Be calm, William--do
+naething rashly--let us see to save what can be saved;' and the other
+saying--'Faither! faither! dinna risk your life.'
+
+"Now, there was a hard frost owre the entire face o' the ground, and
+there wasna a drop o' water to be got within a quarter o' a mile; and
+the whole o' my year's crop, with, the exception o' what had that day
+been thrashed, was in the stackyard. I shouted at the pitch of my voice
+for assistance, but the devouring flames soon roared louder than I did.
+Kirsty, wi' her usual presence o' mind, began to clear away the straw
+from around the barn, to prevent the fire from spreading, and she called
+upon the bairns and me to follow her example. She also ordered a laddie
+to set the horses out o' the stables, and the nowt oot o' the
+'courtine,' and drive them into a field, where they would be oot o'
+danger. A' our neighbours round aboot, in a short time arrived to our
+assistance; but a' our combined efforts were unavailing. The wood wark
+o' the machine was already on fire--the barn roof fell in, and up flew
+such a volley o' smoke and firmament o' fire as man had never witnessed.
+The sparks ascended in millions upon millions; and as they poured down
+again like a shower o' fire, every stack that I had broke into a blaze,
+and the whole produce o' my farm, corn, straw, and hay became as a
+burning fiery furnace. It became impossible for ony living thing to
+remain in the stackyard. From end to end, and round and round, it was
+one fierce and awful flame. The heat was scorching, and the dense smoke
+was baith blinding and suffocating. Every person was obliged to flee
+from it. The very cattle in the field ran about in confusion, and moaned
+wi' terror, and the horses neighed wi' fright, and pranced to and fro. I
+stood at a distance, as motionless as a dead man, gazing wi' horror upon
+the terrific scene o' desolation, beholding the destruction o' my
+property--the burning up, as I may say, o' a' my prospects. The teeth in
+my head chattered thegither, and every joint in my body seemed oot o'
+its socket; and the raging o' destruction in the stackyard was naething
+to the raging o' misery in my breast; and especially because I coudna
+banish frae my brain the awfu' thought that the hand o' the wife o' my
+bosom had lighted the conflagration. While I was standing in this state
+o' speechless agony, and some around about me were pitying me, while
+others in whispers said--'He had nae business to get a thrashing
+machine, and the thing woudna hae happened,' Kirsty came forward to me,
+and takin' me by the hand, said--'William, dinna be silly--appear like a
+man before folk. Our loss is nae doubt great, but in time we may get
+ower it; and be thankfu' that it is nae waur than it is like to be--for
+your wife and bairns are spared to ye, and we have escaped unskaithed.'
+
+"'Awa, ye descendant o' Judas Iscariot!' cried I; 'dinna speak to me!'
+
+"'William,' said she, calmly, 'what infatuation possesses ye,
+man?--dinna mak a fool o' yoursel'.'
+
+"'Awa wi' ye!' cried I, perfectly shaking wi' rage.
+
+"'Dear me!' I heard a neighbour remark to another; 'how gruffly he
+speaks to Kirsty! I aye thought that she had the upperhand o' him, but
+it doesna appear by his manner o' speaking to her.'
+
+"Distracted, wretched, and angry as I was, I experienced a sort o'
+secret pleasure at hearing the observation. I had shewn them that I
+wasna a slave tied to my wife's apron-strings, as they supposed me to
+be. Kirsty left me wi' a look that had baith scorn and pity in it. But
+oor auldest lassie, my bonny fair-haired Janet--to look upon whose face
+I always delighted beyond everything on earth--came running forward to
+me; and throwing her arms about my neck, sobbed wi' her face upon my
+breast, and softly whispered--'Dinna stand that way, faither, a' body is
+looking at ye; and dinna speak harshly to my poor mother--she is
+distressed enough without you being angry wi' her.' I bent my head upon
+my bairn's shouther, and the tears ran doun my cheeks.
+
+"By this time, everything was oot o' the house; and the fire was
+prevented from reaching it, chiefly through the daring exertions o' a
+hafflins laddie, whose name was James Patrick, who was the son o' a
+neebor farmer, and who, though no aboon seventeen years o' age, I
+observed was very fond o' oor bonny Janet; for I had often observed the
+young creatures wandering in the loaning thegither; and when ye
+mentioned the name o' the ane before the other, the blood rose to their
+face.
+
+"Next morning, the stackyard, barn, byres, and stables, presented a
+fearful picture o' devastation. There was naething to be seen but the
+still smoking heaps o' burnt straw and roofless buildings, wi' wreck and
+ruin to the richt hand and to the left. Some thought that the calamity
+would knock me aff my feet, and cause me to become a broken man--and I
+thought myself that that would be its effect. But Kirsty was determined
+that we should never sink while we had a finger to wag to keep us aboon
+the water. Cheap as she had always maintained the house, she now keepit
+it at almost no expense whatever. For more than two years, nothing was
+allowed to come into it but what the farm produced, and what we had
+within ourselves, neither in meat nor in claething.
+
+"But though I witnessed all her exertions, nothing could satisfy my mind
+that she was not the cause o' the destruction o' the machine, and
+through it o' all that was in and about the stackyard. The idea haunted
+me perpetually, and rendered me miserable, and I could not look upon my
+wife without saving to mysel--'Is it possible that she could hae been
+guilty o' such folly and great wickedness.' I was the more confirmed in
+my suspicion, because she never again mentioned the subject o' the
+machine in my hearing, neither would she allow it to be spoken aboot by
+ony ane else.
+
+"What gratified me maist, during the years that we had to undergo
+privation, was the cheerfulness wi' which all the bairns submitted to
+it; and I couldna deny that it was solely to her excellent manner o'
+bringing them up. Our Janet, who was approaching what may be called
+womanhood, was now talked o' through the hale country-side for her
+beauty and sweet temper; and it pleased me to observe, that, during our
+misfortune, the attentions o' James Patrick (through whose skilful
+exertions oor house was saved frae the conflagration) increased. It was
+admitted, on all hands, that a more winsome couple were never seen in
+Nithsdale.
+
+"Oor auldest son, David, who was only fifteen months younger than his
+sister, had also grown to be o' great assistance to me. Before he was
+seventeen he was capable o' man's work, which enabled me to do with a
+hind less than I had formerly employed. My landlord, also, was very
+considerate; and, the first year after the burning, he gave me back the
+half o' the rent, which I, with great difficulty, had been able to
+scrape thegether. But when I went hame, and, in the gladness o' my
+heart, began to count down the money upon the table before Kirsty and
+the bairns, and to tell them how good the laird had been--'Tak it up,
+William!' cried she, 'tak it up, and gang back wi' it--he would consider
+it an obligation a' the days o' our lives. I will be beholden to neither
+laird nor lord! nor shall ony ane belonging to me--sae, tak back the
+money, for it isna ours!'
+
+"'Bless me!' thought I, 'but this is something very remarkable. This is
+certainly another proof that she really is at the bottom o' the
+fire-raising. It is the consciousness o' her guilt that makes her
+shudder at and refuse the kind kindness o' the laird.'
+
+"'It is braw talking, Kirsty,' said I, 'but I see nae necessity for
+persons that hae been visited wi' a misfortune such as we met wi', and
+wha hae suffered sae much on account o' it, to let their pride do them
+an injury or exceed their discretion. Consider that we hae a rising
+family to provide for.'
+
+"'Consider what ye like,' quoth she, 'but, if ye accept the siller,
+consider what will be the upshot. Ye would hae to be hat in hand to him
+at all times and on all occasions. Yer very bairns would be, as it were,
+his bought slaves. No, William, tak back the money--I order ye!'
+
+"'Ye _order_ me!' cried I, 'there's a guid ane!--and where got ye
+authority to order me. If ye will hae the siller taen back, tak it back
+yersel.'
+
+"Without saying another word, she absolutely whipped it off the table,
+every plack and bawbee, into her apron; and, throwing on her rockelay
+and hood, set aff to the laird's wi' it, where, as I was afterwards
+given to understand, she threw it down upon his table wi' as little
+ceremony as she had sweept it aft' mine.
+
+"Ye may weel imagine that baith my astonishment and vexation were very
+considerable. I had seen a good deal o' Kirsty, but the act o' taking
+back the siller crowned a'!
+
+"'Losh!' said I, in the pure bitterness o' my spirit, 'that caps
+a'!--that is even worse than destroying the machine, wi' the stacks and
+stabling into the bargain!'
+
+"'What do ye mean about destroying the machine, faither?' inquired Janet
+and David, almost at the same instant--'who do ye say destroyed it?'
+
+"'Naebody,' said I, angrily, 'naebody!'--for I found I had said what I
+ought not to hae said.
+
+"'Really, faither,' said Janet, 'whatever it may be that ye think and
+hint at, I am certain that ye do my mother a great injustice if ye
+harbour a single thought to her prejudice. It may appear rather
+proud-spirited her takin back the siller, though I hae na doubt, in the
+lang run, but we'll a' approve o' it.'
+
+"'That is exactly what I think, too,' said David.
+
+"'Oh, nae dout!' said I, 'nae dout o' that!--for she has ye sae learned,
+that everything she does, or that ony o' ye does, is always right; and
+whatever I do must be wrang!' and I went oot o' the house in a pet,
+driving the door behind me, and thinking about the machine and the loss
+o' the siller.
+
+"Hooever, I am happy to say, that although Kirsty did tak back the money
+to the laird and leave it wi' him, yet, as I have already hinted to ye,
+through her frugal management, within a few years we got the better o'
+the burning. But there is a saying, that some folk are no sooner weel
+than they're ill again--and I'm sure I may say that at that time. I no
+sooner got the better o' the effects o' ae calamity, until another
+overtook me. Ye hae heard what a terrible dirdum the erecting o'
+toll-bars caused throughout the country, and upon the Borders in
+particular. Kirsty was one o' those who cried oot most bitterly against
+them. She threatened, that if it were attempted to place ane within ten
+miles o' oor farm, she would tear it to pieces with her ain hands.
+
+"'Here's a bonny time o' day, indeed!' said she, 'that a body canna gang
+for a cart-load o' coals or peats, or tak their corn, or whatever it may
+be, to the market, but they must pay whatever a set o' Justices o' the
+Peace please to charge them for the liberty o' driving along the road.
+Na, na! the roads did for our faithers before us, and they will do for
+us. They went alang them free and without payment, and so will we; for I
+defy any man to claim, what has been a public road for ages, as his
+property. Only submit to such an imposition, and see what will be the
+upshot. But, rather than they shall mak sic things in this
+neighbourhood, I will raise the whole countryside.'
+
+"Unfortunately in this, as in everything else, she verified her words. A
+toll-bar was erected within half-a-mile o' oor door Kirsty was clean
+mad about it. She threatened not only to break the yett to pieces, but
+to hang the toll-keeper owre the yett-post if he offered resistance. I
+thought o' my machine, and said little; and the more especially because
+every ane, baith auld and young, and through the whole country, so far
+as I could hear, were o' the same sentiments as Kirsty. There never was
+onything proposed in this kingdom that was mair unpopular. And, I am
+free to confess, that, with regard to the injustice o' toll-bars, I was
+precisely o' the same way o' thinkin' as my wife--only I by no means
+wished to carry things to the extremes that she wished to bring them to.
+
+"I ought to tell ye, that our laird was more than suspected o' being the
+principal cause o' us having a toll-bar placed so near us, so that we
+could neither go to lime, coals, nor market, without gaun through it. I
+was, therefore, almost glad that my wife had taken back the siller to
+him, lest--as I was against raising a disturbance about the matter--folk
+should say that my hands and tongue were tied wi' the siller which he
+had given me back; for, if I didna wish to be considered the slave o' my
+wife, as little did I desire to be thought the tool o' my landlord. But,
+ae day, I had been in at Dumfries in the month o' July, selling my wool;
+I had met wi' an excellent market, and a wool-buyer from Leeds and I got
+very hearty thegether. He had bought from me before; and, on that day,
+he bought all that I had. I knew him to be an excellent man, though a
+keen Yorkshireman--and, ye ken, that the Yorkshire folk and we Scotchmen
+are a gay tight match for ane anither--though I believe, after a', they
+rather beat us at keeping the grip o' the siller; but as I intended to
+say, I treated him, and he treated me, and a very agreeable day we had.
+I recollect when he was pressing me to hae the other gill, I sang him a
+bit hamely sang o' my ain composing. Ye shall hear it.
+
+ Nay, dinna press, I winna stay,
+ For drink shall ne'er abuse me;
+ It's time to rise and gang away--
+ Sae neibors ye'll excuse me.
+
+ It's true I like a social gill,
+ A friendly crack wi' cronies;
+ But I like my wifie better still,
+ Our Jennies an' our Johnnies.
+
+ There's something by my ain fireside--
+ A saft, a haly sweetness;
+ I see, wi' mair than kingly pride,
+ My hearth a heaven o' neatness
+
+ Though whisky may gie care the fling,
+ It's triumph's unco noisy;
+ A jiffy it may pleasure bring,
+ But comfort it destroys aye.
+
+ But I can view my ain fireside
+ Wi' a' a faither's rapture;--
+ Wee Jenny's hand in mine will slide,
+ While Davy reads his chapter.
+
+ I like your company and yer crack,
+ But there's ane I loo dearer,
+ Ane wha will sit till I come back,
+ Wi' ne'er a ane to cheer her.
+
+ A waff o' joy comes owre her face
+ The moment that she hears me;
+ The supper--a' thing's in its place,
+ An' wi' her smiles she cheers me.
+
+However, I declare to you, it was very near ten o'clock before I left
+the house we are sitting in at present, and put my foot in the stirrup.
+But, as my friend Robin says--
+
+ 'Weel mounted on my grey mare Meg,'
+
+I feared for naething; and, though I had sixteen lang Scots miles to
+ride, I thought naething aboot it; for, as he says again--
+
+ 'Kings may be great, but I was glorious,
+ Owre a' the ills o' life victorious!'
+
+But, just as I had reached within about half a mile o' the toll-bar
+that had been erected near my farm, I saw a sort o' light rising frae
+the ground, and reflected on the sky. My heart sank within me in an
+instant. I remembered the last time I had seen such a light. I thought
+o' my burning stackyard, o' my ruined machine, and o' Kirsty! My first
+impulse was to gallop forward, but a thousand thoughts, a thousand fears
+cam owre me in an instant; and I thought that evil tidings come quick
+enough o' their ain accord, without galloping to meet them. As I
+approached the toll-bar, the flame and the reflection grew brighter and
+brighter; and I heard the sound o' human voices, in loud and discordant
+clamour. My forebodings told me, to use Kirsty's words, what would be
+the upshot. I hadna reached within a hundred yards o' the bar, when,
+aboon a' the shouting and the uproar, I heard her voice, the voice o' my
+ain wife, crying--'Mak him promise that it shall ne'er be put up
+again--mak him swear to it--or let his yett gang the gaet o' the
+toll-yett!'
+
+"In a moment all that I had dreaded I found to be true. At the sound o'
+her voice, hounding on the enraged multitude, (though I didna altogether
+disapprove o' what they were doing,) I plunged my spurs into my horse,
+and galloped into the middle o' the outrageous crowd, crying--'Kirsty! I
+say, Kirsty! awa hame wi' ye! What right or what authority had ye to be
+there?'
+
+"'Hear him! hear him!' cried the crowd, 'Willie has turned a toll-bar
+man, and a laird man, because the Laird once offered him the half o' his
+rent back again! Never mind him, Kirsty!--we'll stand yer friends!'
+
+"'I thank ye, neighbours,' said she, 'but I require nae body to stand as
+friends between my guidman and me. I ken it is my duty to obey him, that
+is, when he is himsel', and comes hame at a reasonable time o' nicht;
+but not when he is in a way that he doesna ken what he's saying, as he
+is the nicht.'
+
+"'Weel done, Mistress Wastle!' cried a dozen o' them; 'we see ye hae the
+whip-hand o' him yet!'
+
+"'The mischief tak ye!' cried I, 'for a wheen ill-mannered scoundrels;
+but I'll let every mother's son and dochter among ye ken whase hand the
+whip is in!'
+
+"And, wi' that, I began to lay about me on every side; but, before I had
+brought the whip half-a-dozen o' times round my head, I found that the
+horse was out from under me; and there was I wi' my back upon the
+ground, while, on the one side, was a heavy foot upon my breast, and, on
+the other, Kirsty threatening ony ane that would injure a hair o' her
+husband's head; and my son David and James Patrick rushing forward,
+seized the man by the throat that had his foot upon my breast, and, in
+an instant, they had him lying where I had lain; for they were stout,
+powerfu' lads.
+
+"But when I got upon my feet, and began to recover from the surprise
+that I had met wi', there did I see the laird himsel, standing trembling
+like an ash leaf in the middle o' the unruly mob--and, as ringleader o'
+the whole, my wife Kirsty shaking her hand in his face, and endeavouring
+to extort from him a promise, that there never should be another
+toll-bar erected upon his grounds, while he was laird!
+
+"'Kirsty!' I exclaimed, 'what are ye after? Are ye mad?'
+
+"'No, William!' cried she, 'I am not mad, but I am standing out for our
+rights against injustice; and sorry am I to perceive that, at a time
+when everybody is crying out and raising their hand against the
+oppression that is attempted to be practised upon them, my guidman
+should be the only coward in the countryside.'
+
+"'William Wastle!' said the terrified laird, whom some o' them were
+handling very roughly, (and principally, I must confess, at the
+instigation o' Kirsty,) 'I am glad to see that I have one tenant upon my
+estate who is a true man; and I ask your protection.'
+
+"'Such protection as I can afford, sir,' said I, 'ye shall have; but,
+after the rough handling winch I have experienced this very moment, I
+dout it is not much that is in my power to afford ye.'
+
+"'Get yer faither awa to his bed, bairns!' cried my wife, as I was
+driving my way through the crowd to the assistance o' the laird; and
+I'll declare, if my son David, and James Patrick, didna actually come
+behind me, and, lifting me aff my feet, carried me shouther-high a' the
+way to my bedroom; and, in spite o' my threats, expostulations, and
+commands, locked me into it.
+
+"Weel, thought I, as I threw myself down upon the bed, without taking
+aff my claes, (partly because I found my head wanted ballast to tak them
+aff,) I said unto mysel--'This comes o' having a wise and headstrong
+wife, and bairns o' her way o' bringing up. But if ever I marry again
+and hae a family, I shall ken better how to act.'
+
+"Notwithstanding all that I had undergone and witnessed, in the space o'
+ten minutes, I fell fast asleep; and the first thing that I awoke to
+recollect--that is, to be conscious o'--was my daughter Janet rushing to
+my bedside, and crying--'Faither! faither! my mother is a prisoner!--my
+poor dear mother, and James Patrick also!--and I heard the laird saying
+that they would baith be transported, as the very least that could
+happen them for last night's work, which I understand will be punished
+more severely than even highway robbery!'
+
+"I awoke like a man born to a consciousness o' horror, and o' naething
+but horror. All that I had seen and heard and encountered on the night
+before, was just as a dream to me, but a dismal dream I trow.
+
+"'Where is yer mother?' I gasped, 'or what is it that ye are saying,
+hinny? and--where is James Patrick?'
+
+"'Oh!' cried my darling daughter, 'before this time they are baith in
+Dumfries jail, for pu'ing down and burning the toll-yetts, and
+threatening the life o' the laird. But everybody says it will gang
+particularly hard against my mother and poor James; for, though every
+one was to blame, they were what they ca' ringleaders.'
+
+"I soon recollected enough o' the previous night's proceedings to
+comprehend what my daughter said. I hurried on my claes, and awa I flew
+to Dumfries. But I ought to tell ye, that the laird's servants had
+ridden in every direction for assistance; and having got three or four
+constables, and about a dozen o' the regular military, all armed wi'
+swords and pistols, they made poor Kirsty and James Patrick, wi' about a
+dozen others, prisoners, and conveyed them to Dumfries jail.
+
+"When I was shewn into the prison, Kirsty and James, and the whole o'
+them, were together. 'O Kirsty, woman!' said I, in great distress,
+'could ye no hae keepit at hame while my back was turned! Why hae ye
+brought the like o' this upon us? I'm sure ye kenned better! _Was the
+destruction o' the machine and the stackyard no a warning to ye!_'
+
+"'William,' answered she, 'what is it that ye mean?--is this a time to
+cast upon me yer low-minded suspicions? Had ye last nicht acted as a
+man, we micht hae got the laird to comply wi' our request; but it is
+through you, and such as you, that everything in this unlucky country is
+gaun to destruction; and sorry am I to say that ill o' ye--for a kind, a
+good, and a faithfu' husband hae ye been to me, William.'
+
+"'O sir!' said James Patrick, coming forward and taking me by the hand,
+'may I just beg that ye will tak my respects to yer dochter Janet; and,
+I hope, that whatever may be the issue o' this awkward affair, that she
+will in no way look down upon me, because I happen to be as a sort o'
+prisoner in a jail.' My heart rose to my mouth, and I hadna a word to
+say to either my wife or him.
+
+"'Weel," said I, as I left them, 'I must do the best I can to bring
+baith o' ye aff; and, to accomplish it, the best lawyers in a' Scotland
+shall be employed.'
+
+"But to go on--at a very great expense, I, and the faither o' James
+Patrick, had employed the very principal advocates that went upon the
+Dumfries circuit; and they tauld us that we had naething to fear, and
+that we might keep ourselves quite at ease.
+
+"I was glad that my son David hadna been seized and imprisoned, as weel
+as his mother and James Patrick, for he also had been ane o' the
+ringleaders in the breaking doun and burning o' the toll-bars, and in
+the assault upon the laird. But he escaped apprehension at the time, and
+I suppose they thought that they had enough in custody to answer the
+ends o' justice and the law, and, therefore, he was permitted to remain
+unmolested.
+
+"Now, sir, comes the most melancholy part o' my story. I had a quantity
+o' wool to deliver to the Yorkshire buyer, I hae already mentioned, upon
+a certain day. My son David was to drive the carts wi' it to Annan. It
+was sair wark, and he had but little sleep for a fortnight thegether. It
+caused him to travel night and day, load after load. Now, I needna tell
+ye, that at that period the roads were literally bottomless. The horse
+just went plunge, plunging, and the cart jerking, now to ae side, and
+now to another, or giein a shake sufficient to drive the life out o' ony
+body that was in it. Now, the one wheel was on a hill, and the other in
+a hollow; or, again, baith were up to the axle-tree in mud, or the horse
+half-swimming in water! And yet people cried out against toll-bars! But,
+as I hae been telling ye, my son David had driven wool to Annan for a
+fortnight, and he was sair worn out. The roads were in a dreadful
+state--worse than if, now-a-days, ye were to attempt to drive through a
+bog.
+
+"Ae night, when he was expected hame, his sister Janet, and mysel' sat
+lang up waiting upon him, and wondering what could be keeping him, when
+a stranger rode up to the door, and asked if 'one Mr William Wastle
+lived there?' I replied 'Yes!' And, oh! what think ye were his tidings,
+but that my name had been seen upon the carts, that the horses had stuck
+fast in the roads, and that my son David, who had fallen from the
+shafts, had either been killed, or drowned among the horses' feet!
+
+"I thought his brothers and sisters, and especially Janet, would have
+gane oot o' their judgment. As for me, a' the trials I had had were but
+as a drap in a bucket when compared wi' this!
+
+"But, after I had mourned for a night, the worst was to come. Hoo was I
+to tell his poor imprisoned mother!--imprisoned as she wis for opposing
+the very thing that would hae saved her son's life!
+
+"Next day I went to Dumfries; but I declare that I never saw the light
+o' the sun hae sic a dismal appearance. The fields appeared to me as if
+I saw them through a mist. Even distance wasna as it used to be. I was
+admitted into the prison, but I winna--oh no! I canna repeat to ye the
+manner in which I communicated the tidings to his mother! It was too
+much for her then--it would be the same for me now! for naething in the
+whole coorse o' my life ever shook me so much as the death o' my poor
+David. But I remember o' saying to her, and I declare to you upon the
+word o' a man, unthinkingly--'O Kirsty, woman! had we had toll-bars,
+David might still hae been living!'
+
+"'William, William!' she cried, and fell upon my neck, 'will ye kill me
+outright!' And, for the first time in my life, I saw the tears gushing
+down her cheeks. Those tears washed away the very remembrance o' the
+machine, and the burning o' the stacks. I pressed her to my heart, and
+my tears mingled wi' hers.
+
+"I believe it was partly through our laird that baith Kirsty and James
+Patrick were liberated without being brought to a trial. Her
+imprisonment, and the death o' our son, had wrought a great change upon
+my wife; and I think it was hardly three months after her being set at
+liberty, that we were baith sent for to auld John Neilson the barnman's,
+whose wife Peggy lay upon her death-bed. When we approached her bedside,
+she raised herself upon her elbow, and said--'The burning o' yer barn
+and stackyard has always been a mystery--hear the real truth from the
+words o' a dying and guilty woman. Yer machine had thrown my husband out
+o' employment, and when yer wife there gied me back the pipe, a whuff o'
+which I said would do her good, _I let the burning dottle drap among the
+straw_--nane o' ye observed it--ye were a' leaving the barn. Now, ye ken
+the cause--on my death-bed I make the confession.'
+
+"I declare I thought my heart would hae louped out o' my body. I pressed
+my wife, against whom I had harboured such vile suspicions, to my
+breast. She saw my meaning--she read my feelings.
+
+"'William,' said she, kindly, 'if ye hae onything on yer mind that ye
+wish to forget, so hae I; let us baith forget and forgie!'
+
+"I felt Kirsty's bosom heaving upon mine, and I was happy.
+
+"Within six months after this, James Patrick and our dochter Janet were
+married; and an enviable couple they then were, and such they are unto
+this day. And, as for my Kirsty, auld though she is, and though the sang
+says--
+
+ 'I wadna gie a button for her,'
+
+auld, I say, as she is, and wi' a' her faults, I would gie a' the
+buttons upon my coat for her still, and a' the siller that ever was in
+my pouch into the bargain."
+
+[Footnote 4: Mr Allan Cunningham, in his Life of Burns, states the
+following particulars respecting Willie's wife:--viz., that "He was a
+farmer, who lived near Burns, at Ellisland. She was a very singular
+woman--tea, she said, would be the ruin of the nation; sugar was a sore
+evil; wheaten bread was only fit for babes; earthenware was a
+pickpocket; wooden floors were but fit for thrashing upon; slated roofs,
+cold; feathers good enough for fowls. In short, she abhorred change: and
+whenever anything new appeared--such as harrows with iron teeth--'Ay!
+ay!' she would exclaim, 'ye'll see the upshot!' Of all modern things she
+disliked china most--she called it 'burnt clay,' and said 'it was only
+fit for haudin' the broo o' stinkin' weeds,' as she called tea. On one
+occasion, an English dealer in cups and saucers asked so much for his
+wares, that he exasperated a peasant, who said, 'I canna purchase, but I
+ken ane that will. Gang there,' said he, pointing to the house of
+Willie's wife, 'dinna be blate or burd-moothed; ask a guid penny--she
+has the siller!' Away went the poor dealer, spread out his wares before
+her, and summed up all by asking a double price. A blow from her
+crummock was his instant reward, which not only fell on his person, but
+damaged his china. 'I'll learn ye,' quoth she, as she heard the saucers
+jingle, 'to come wi' yer brazent English face, and yer bits o' burnt
+clay to me!' She was an unlovely dame--her daughters, however, were
+beautiful."--ED.]
+
+
+
+
+THE STONE-BREAKER.
+
+
+If any of our readers had had occasion to go out, for a couple of miles
+or so, on the road leading from Edinburgh to the village of Carlops, any
+time during the summer of the year 1836, they would have seen a little
+old man--very old--employed in breaking metal for the roads. The exact
+spot where _we_ saw him, was at the turn of the eastern shoulder of the
+Pentland Hills; but the nature of his employment rendering him somewhat
+migratory, he may have been seen by others in a different locality. In
+the appearance of the old stone-breaker, there was nothing particularly
+interesting--nothing to attract the attention of the passer-by--unless
+it might be his great age. This, however, certainly was calculated to do
+so; and when it did, it must have been accompanied by a painful feeling
+at seeing one so old and feeble still toiling for the day that was
+passing over him; and toiling, too, at one of the most dreary,
+laborious, and miserable occupations which can well be conceived. Had
+the old man no children who could provide for the little wants of their
+aged parent, without the necessity of his still labouring for them--who
+could secure him in that ease which exhausted nature demanded? It
+appeared not. Perhaps it was a spirit of independence that nerved his
+weak arm, and kept him toiling so far beyond the usual term of human
+capability. Probably the proud-spirited old man would break no bread but
+that which he had earned by the sweat of his brow and the labour of his
+hands. Perhaps it was so. At any rate, this we know, that, at the early
+hour of five in the morning, as regularly as the morning came, the old
+stone-breaker had already commenced his monotonous labour. But this was
+not all. He had also, by this early hour, walked upwards of four
+miles--for so far distant was the scene of his occupation from the place
+of his residence, Edinburgh. He must, therefore, have left home between
+three and four o'clock, and this was his daily round, without
+intermission, without variation, and without relaxation. A bottle of
+butter-milk and a penny loaf formed each day's sustenance. His daily
+earnings, labouring from five in the morning till six at night, averaged
+about ninepence! Hear ye this, ye who ride in emblazoned carriages! Hear
+ye this, ye loungers on the well-stuffed couch!--and hear it, ye
+revellers at the festive board, who have never toiled for the luxuries
+ye enjoy! Hear it, and think of it! But of this person we have other
+things to tell; and to these we proceed.
+
+One morning, just after he had commenced the labours of the day, a young
+man, of about four or five and twenty years of age, accosted him, wished
+him a good morning, and seated himself on the heap of broken metal on
+which the old man was at work, and did so seemingly with the intention
+of entering into conversation with him. This was a proceeding to which
+the latter was much accustomed, it being a frequent practice with the
+humbler class of wayfarers. The advances of the stranger, therefore, in
+the present instance, did not for a moment interrupt his labours, or
+slacken his assiduity. He hammered on without raising his head, even
+while returning the greetings that were made him.
+
+"A delightful view from this spot," said the young man, breaking in upon
+a silence which had continued for some time after the first salutations
+had passed between them.
+
+"Yes," said the old man, drily; and, continuing his operations, he again
+relapsed into his usual taciturnity; for, in truth, he was naturally of
+a morose and uncommunicative disposition. Undeterred by his cold,
+repulsive manner, the stranger again broke silence, and said, with a
+deep-drawn sigh--
+
+"How I envy these little birds that hop so joyously from spray to spray!
+Their life is a happy one. Would to God I were one of them!"
+
+The oddness of the expressions, and the earnestness with which they were
+pronounced, had an effect on the labourer which few things had. They
+induced him to pause in his work, to raise his head, and to look in the
+face of the speaker, which he did with a smile of undefinable meaning.
+It was the first full look he had taken of him, and it discovered to him
+a countenance open and pleasing in its expression, but marked with deep
+melancholy, and telling, in language not to be misunderstood, a tale of
+heart-sickness of the most racking and depressing kind.
+
+"Has your lot been ill cast, young man, that ye envy the bits o' burds
+o' the air the freedom and the liberty that God has gien them?" said the
+old man, eyeing the stranger scrutinizingly, with a keen, penetrating
+grey eye, that had not even yet lost all its fire.
+
+"It has," replied the latter. "I have been unfortunate in the world. I
+have struggled hard with my fate, but it has at length overwhelmed me."
+
+The old man muttered something unintelligibly, and, without vouchsafing
+any other reply, resumed his labours. After another pause of some
+duration, which, however, he had evidently employed in _thinking_ on the
+declaration of unhappiness which had just been made him--
+
+"Some folly o' your ain, young man, very likely," said he, carelessly,
+and still knapping the stones, whose bulk it was his employment to
+reduce.
+
+"No," replied the young man, blushing; but it was a blush which he who
+caused it did not see. "I cannot blame myself."
+
+"Nae man does," interposed the stone-breaker; "he aye blames his
+neighbours."
+
+"Perhaps so," rejoined the stranger; "but you will allow that it is
+perfectly possible for a man to be unfortunate without any fault on his
+own part."
+
+"I hae seldom seen't," replied the ungracious and unaccommodating old
+man; and he hammered on.
+
+"Well, perhaps so," said the youth; "but I hope you will not deny that
+such things _may_ be."
+
+"Canna say," was the brief, but sufficiently discouraging rejoinder.
+
+"Then let us drop the subject," said the stranger, smilingly. "Each will
+still judge of the world by his own experience. But, methinks, your own
+case, my friend, is a hard enough one. To see a man of your years
+labouring at this miserable employment, is a painful sight. Your debt to
+fortune is also light, I should believe."
+
+"I hae aye trusted mair to my ain industry than to fortune, young man. I
+never pat it in her power to jilt me. I never trusted her, and
+therefore, she has never deceived me; so her and me are quits." And the
+old man plied away with his long, light hammer.
+
+"Yet your earnings must be scanty?"
+
+"I dinna compleen o' them."
+
+"I daresay not; but will you not take it amiss my offering this small
+addition to them?" And he tendered him a half-crown piece. "I have but
+little to spare, and that must be my apology for offering you so
+trifling a gift."
+
+The man here again paused in his operations, and again looked full in
+the face of the stranger, but without making any motion towards
+accepting the proffered donation.
+
+"I thocht ye said ye war in straits, young man," he said, and now
+resting his elbow on the end of his hammer.
+
+"And I said truly," replied the former, again colouring.
+
+"Then hoo come ye to be sportin yer siller sae freely? I wad hae thocht
+ye wad hae as muckle need o' a half-croon as I hae?"
+
+"Perhaps I may," replied the stranger; "but that's not to hinder me from
+feeling for others, nor from relieving their distresses so far as I
+can."
+
+"Foolish doctrine, young man, an' no' for this warl. It's nae wunner
+that ye're in difficulties. I guessed the faut was yer ain, and noo I'm
+sure o't. Put up yer half-croon, sir. I dinna tak charity."
+
+"I hope, however, I have not offended you by the offer? It was well
+meant."
+
+"Ou, I daresay--I'm no the least offended; but tak an auld man's advice,
+an' dinna let yer feelins hae the command o' yer purse-strings,
+otherwise ye'll never hae muckle in't."
+
+And the churlish old stone-breaker resumed his labours, and again
+relapsed into taciturnity. Silent as he was, however, it was evident
+that he was busily thinking, although none but himself could possibly
+tell what was the subject of his thoughts; but this soon discovered
+itself. After a short time, he again spoke--
+
+"What may the nature an' cause o' yer defeeculties be, young man, an' I
+may speer?" he said--"and I fancy I may, since ye hae been sae far free
+on the subject o yer ain accord."
+
+"That's soon told," replied the stranger. "Three years ago, an aunt,
+with whom I was an especial favourite, left me two hundred and fifty
+pounds. With this sum I set up in business in Edinburgh in the
+ironmongery line, to which I was bred. My little trade prospered, and
+gradually attained such an extent that I found I could not do without an
+efficient assistant, who should look after the shop while I was out on
+the necessary calls of business. In this predicament I bethought me of
+my brother, who was a year older than myself, and accordingly sent for
+him to Selkirkshire, where he resided with our father, assisting him in
+his small farming operations; this being the business of the latter. My
+brother came; and, for some time, was everything I could have
+wished--sober, regular, and attentive; and we thus got on swimmingly.
+This, however, was a state of matters which was not long to continue.
+When my brother had about completed a year with me, I began to perceive
+a gradual falling off in his anxiety about the interests of our little
+business. I remonstrated with him on one or two occasions of palpable
+neglect; but this, instead of inducing him to greater vigilance, had the
+effect only of rendering him more and more careless. But I did not then
+know the worst. I did not then know that, in place of aiding, he was
+robbing me. This was the truth, however. He had formed an infamous
+connection with a woman of disreputable character, and the consequence
+was the adoption of a regular system of plunder on my little property,
+to answer the calls which she was constantly making on my unfortunate
+relative.
+
+"About this time I took ill, and, not suspecting the integrity of my
+brother, although aware of his carelessness, I did not hesitate to trust
+him with the entire conduct of my affairs. Indeed, I could not help
+myself in this particular; he best knowing my business, and being,
+besides, the natural substitute for myself in such a case. For three
+months was I confined, unable to leave my own room; and, when I did come
+out, I found myself a ruined man. In this time, my brother had
+appropriated almost every farthing that had been drawn to his own
+purposes; and had, moreover, done the same by some of my largest and
+best outstanding accounts; and, to sum up all, he had fled, I knew not
+whither, on the day previous to that on which I made my first appearance
+in my shop after my recovery. That is about ten days since."
+
+"Did the rascal harry ye oot an' oot?" here interposed the old
+stone-breaker, knapping away with great earnestness.
+
+"No; there was a little on which he could not lay his hands--some
+considerable accounts which are payable only yearly; there was also some
+stock in the shop; but these, of course, are now the property of my
+creditors."
+
+"But could ye no get a settlement wi' them, an' go on?" inquired the
+other, still knapping away assiduously. "I'm sure if you stated your
+case, your creditors wadna be owre hard on ye."
+
+"Perhaps they might not; but there is one circumstance that puts it out
+of my power to make any attempt at arrangement. There is one bill of
+fifty pounds, due to a Sheffield house, on which diligence has been
+raised, and on which I am threatened with instant incarceration. In
+truth, it is this proceeding that has brought me here so early this
+morning. I expected to have been taken in my bed, as the charge was out
+yesterday, and I am here to keep out of the way of the messengers. I am
+thus deprived of the power of helping myself--of taking any steps
+towards the adjustment of my affairs."
+
+"An' could ye do any guid, think ye, if that debt wur paid, or in some
+way arranged?" inquired the other.
+
+"I think I could;" said the party questioned. "My good outstanding debts
+are yet considerable, and so is the stock in the shop; so that, had a
+little time been allowed me, I could have got round. But all that is
+knocked on the head, by the impending diligence against me. That settles
+the matter at once, by depriving me of the necessary liberty to go about
+my affairs."
+
+"It's a pity," said the man, drily. "Wha's the man o' business in
+Edinburgh that thae Sheffield folk hae employed to prosecute ye? What
+ca' ye him?"
+
+"Mr Langridge."
+
+"Ou ay, I hae heard o' him. An will he no gie ye ony indulgence?"
+
+"He cannot. His instructions are imperative, otherwise he would, I am
+convinced; for he is an excellent sort of man, and knows all about me
+and my affairs. Indeed, so willing was he to have assisted me, that,
+when the bill was first put into his hands, he wrote to his clients,
+strongly recommending lenient measures and bearing testimony, on his own
+knowledge, to the hardship of my case; but their reply was brief and
+peremptory. It was to proceed against me instantly, and threatening him
+with the loss of their business if he did not. For this uncompromising
+severity they assigned as a reason, their having been lately 'taken in,'
+as they expressed it, to a large extent, by a number of their Scotch
+customers. So Mr. Langridge had no alternative but to do his duty, and
+let matters take their course."
+
+"True," replied the monosyllabic stone-breaker. It was all he said, or,
+if he had intended to say more, which, however, is not probable, no
+opportunity was afforded him; for at this moment three labouring men of
+his acquaintance, who were on their way to their work, came up and began
+conversing. On this interruption taking place, the young man rose,
+wished him a good morning, which was merely replied to by a slight nod,
+and went his way.
+
+At this point in our story, we change the scene to the writing chambers
+of Mr. Langridge, and the time we advance to the evening of the day on
+which our tale opens.
+
+It will surprise the reader to find our old stone-breaker, still wearing
+the patched and threadbare clothes, the battered and torn hat, and the
+coarse, strong shoes, which had never rejoiced in the contact of
+blacking brush, in which he prosecuted his daily labours, ringing the
+door-bell of Mr Langridge's house, about eight o'clock in the evening.
+It will still more surprise him, perhaps, to find this man received,
+notwithstanding the homeliness, we might have said wretchedness, of his
+appearance, by Mr Langridge himself with great courtesy, and even with a
+slight air of deference.
+
+On his entering the apartment in which that gentleman was, the latter
+immediately rose from his seat, and advanced, with extended hand,
+towards him.
+
+"Ah, Mr Lumsden," he exclaimed, "how do you do? I hope I see you well.
+Come, my dear sir, take a chair." And he ran with eager civility for the
+convenience he named, and placed it for the accommodation of his
+visiter.
+
+When the old man was seated--
+
+"Well, my dear sir," said Mr Langridge, "I am sorry to say that _your
+rents_ have not come so well in this last half-year as usual. We are
+considerably short." And the man of business hurried to a large green
+painted tin box, that stood amongst some others on a shelf, and bore on
+its front the name of Lumsden, and from this drew forth what appeared to
+be a list or rent roll, which he spread out on the table. "We are
+considerably short," he said. "There's six or eight of your folks who
+have paid nothing yet, and as many more who have made only partial
+payments."
+
+"Ay," said the man, crustily, "what's the meanin' o' that? Ye maun just
+screw them up, Mr Langridge; for I canna want my siller, and I winna
+want it. Hae thae folk Thamsons, paid yet?"
+
+"Not a shilling more than you know of," replied Mr Langridge.
+
+"Weel, then, Mr Langridge, ye maun just tak the necessary steps to
+recover; for I'm determined to hae my rent. I'm no gaun to aloo mysel'
+to be ruined this way. They wadna leave me a sark to my back, if I wad
+let them. Ye maun just sequestrate, Mr Langridge--ye maun just
+sequestrate, an' we'll help oorsels to payment, since they winna help
+us."
+
+"Oh, surely, surely, my dear sir. All fair and right. But I would just
+mention to you, that though, latterly, they have been dilatory payers--I
+would say, shamefully so--they are yet decent, honest, well-meaning
+people, these Thomsons; and that, moreover, there is some reason for
+their having been so remiss of late, although it is, certainly, none
+whatever why you should want your rent."
+
+"No, I fancy no," here interposed the other, with a triumphant chuckle.
+
+"No, certainly not," went on Mr Langridge, who seemed to know well how
+to manage his eccentric client; "but only, I would just mention to you,
+that the _reason_ of the dilatoriness of the Thomsons, is the husband's
+having been unable, from illness, to work for the last three months, and
+that, in that time, they have also lost no less than two children. It is
+rather a piteous case."
+
+"An' what hae I to do wi' a' that?" exclaimed the other, impatiently.
+"What hae I to do wi' a' that, I wad like to ken? Am I to be ca'ed on to
+relieve a' the distress in the world? That wad be a bonny set o't. Am I
+to be robbed o' my richts that others may be at ease? That I winna, I
+warrant you. See that ye recover me thae folk's arrears, Mr Langridge,
+by hook or by crook, and that immediately, though ye shouldna leave them
+a stool to sit upon. That's _my_ instructions to _you_."
+
+"And they shall be obeyed, Mr Lumsden," replied the man of
+business--"obeyed to the letter. I merely mentioned the circumstance to
+you, in order that you might be fully apprized of everything relating to
+your tenants, which it is proper you should know."
+
+"Weel, weel, but there's nae use in troublin' me wi' thae stories. I
+dinna want to be plagued wi' folk makin' puir mouths. There's aye a
+design on ane's pouch below't. By the bye, Mr Langridge," continued he,
+after a momentary pause, "hae ye a young chield o' an airnmonger in your
+hauns enow about some bill or anither that he canna pay."
+
+"The name?" inquired Mr Langridge, musingly.
+
+"Troth that I cannot tell you; for I never heard it, and forgot to
+speer."
+
+"Let me see--oh, ay--you will mean, I dare say, a young man of the name
+of John Reid, poor fellow?"
+
+"Very likely," said the client; "Is he a young man, an airnmonger to
+business, and hae ye diligence against him enow on a fifty pound bill,
+due to a Sheffield hoose?"
+
+"The same," replied Mr Longridge. "These are exactly the circumstances.
+How came you, Mr Lumsden," he added, smilingly, "to be so well informed
+of them?"
+
+"I'll maybe explain that afterwards; but, in the meantime, will ye tell
+me what sort o' a lad this Mr Reid is? Is he a decent, weel-doin' young
+man?"
+
+"Remarkably so," replied Mr Langridge, "remarkably so, Mr Lumsden. I can
+answer for that; for I have known him now for a good while, and have had
+many opportunities of estimating his character."
+
+"Then hoo cam he into his present difficulties?"
+
+"Through the misconduct of a brother--entirely through the misconduct of
+a brother." And Mr Langridge proceeded to give precisely the same
+account of the young man's misfortunes, and of the present state of his
+affairs, that he himself had given to the old stone-breaker, as already
+detailed to the reader. When he had concluded--
+
+"It seems to me rather a hard sort o' case," said the client. "But could
+you no help him a wee on the score o' lenity?"
+
+"I would willingly do it if I could; but it's not in my power. My
+instructions are peremptory. I dare not do it but with a certainty of
+losing the business of the pursuers, the best clients I have."
+
+"Naething, then, 'll do but payin' the siller, I suppose?" said the
+other.
+
+"Nothing, nothing, I fear. My clients seem quite determined. They are
+enraged at some smart losses which they have lately sustained in
+Scotland, and will give no quarter."
+
+"Then I suppose if they _war_ paid, they would be satisfied," said the
+stone-breaker.
+
+"Ha, ha, ha! Mr Lumsden, no doubt of _that_," exclaimed Mr Langridge,
+laughing. "That would settle the business at once."
+
+"I fancy sae," said the other, musingly. Then, after a pause--"An' think
+ye the lad wad get on if this stane were taen frae aboot his neck?"
+
+"I have no doubt of it--not the least," replied Mr Langridge, "for I
+have every confidence in the young man's industry and uprightness of
+principle. But he has no friend to back him, poor fellow: no one to help
+him out of the scrape."
+
+"Ye canna be quite sure o' that, Mr Langridge," said the old man. "What
+if I hae taen a fancy to help him mysel?"
+
+"You, Mr Lumsden!--you!" exclaimed Mr Langridge in great surprise. "What
+motive on earth can you have for assisting him?"
+
+"I didna say that I meant to assist him--I only asked ye, what if I took
+a fancy to do't?"
+
+"Why, to that I can only say that, if you have, he is all right, and
+will get his head above water yet. But you surprise me, Mr Lumsden, by
+this interest in Reid. May I ask how it comes about?"
+
+"I'll tell you a' that presently, but I'll first tell you that I _do_
+mean to assist the young man in his straits. I'll advance the money to
+pay that bill for him. Will ye see to that, then, Mr Langridge? Put me
+doon for the amount oot o' the funds in your hauns, and stay further
+proceedins."
+
+Mr Langridge could not express the surprise he felt on this
+extraordinary intimation from a man who, although there were some good
+points in his character, notwithstanding of the outward crust of
+churlishness in which it was encased, he never believed capable of any
+very striking act of generosity. Mr Langridge, we say, could not
+express the surprise which this unlooked-for instance of that quality
+in Mr Lumsden inspired, nor did he attempt it; for he justly considered
+that such expression would be offensive to the old man, as implying a
+belief that he had been deemed incapable of doing a benevolent thing. Mr
+Langridge, therefore, kept his feelings, on the occasion, to himself,
+and contented himself with promising compliance, and venturing a
+muttered compliment or two, which, however, were ungraciously enough
+received, on the old man's generosity.
+
+"But whar's the young man to be fand?" inquired the latter.
+
+"Why, that I cannot well tell you," replied Mr Langridge; "for I was
+informed, in the course of the day, by the messengers whom I employed to
+apprehend him, that he had left his lodging early in the morning, no
+doubt in order to avoid them, and they could not ascertain where he had
+gone to."
+
+"Humph, that's awkward," replied the client. "I wad like to find him."
+
+"I fear that will be difficult," replied Mr Langridge; "but I will call
+off the bloodhounds in the meantime, and terminate proceedings."
+
+"Ay, do sae, do sae. But can we no get haud o' the lad ony way?"
+
+At this moment, a rap at the door of the apartment in which was Mr
+Langridge and his client, interrupted further conversation on the
+subject.
+
+"Come in," exclaimed the former.
+
+The door opened, and in walked two messengers, with Reid a prisoner
+between them. We leave it to the reader to conceive the latter's
+surprise, on beholding his acquaintance of the morning, the old
+stone-breaker, seated in an arm-chair in Mr Langridge's writing-chamber.
+But while he looked this surprise, he also seemed to feel acutely the
+humiliation of his position. After a nod of recognition, he said, with
+an attempt at a smile, and addressing himself to the old man--
+
+"You see they have got me after all, my friend. But it was my own doing.
+On reflection, I saw no use in endeavouring to avoid them, and gave
+myself up, at least, threw myself in their way, in order to encounter
+the worst at once, and be done with it."
+
+"I daresay ye was richt, after a'," replied the stone-breaker; "it was
+the best way. Mr Langridge," he added, and now rising from his seat,
+"wad ye speak wi' me for a minnit, in another room?"
+
+"Certainly, Mr Lumsden," replied Mr Langridge.
+
+"Will we proceed with the prisoner?" inquired one of the messengers.
+
+"No, remain where you are a moment, till I return;" and Mr Langridge led
+the way out of the apartment, followed by the old stone-breaker. When
+they had reached another room, and the door had been secured--
+
+"Noo, Mr Langridge, anent what I was speaking to ye about regarding this
+young man wha has come in sae curiously upon us, juist whan we were
+wanting him--I dinna care to be seen in the matter, sae ye maun juist
+manag't for me yersel."
+
+"Had ye no better enjoy the satisfaction of your own good deed in
+person, Mr Lumsden, by telling Mr Reid of the important service you
+intend doing him?"
+
+"I'll do naething o' the kind," replied the old stone-breaker, testily.
+"I dinna want to be bothered wi't. Sae juist pay ye his bill and
+charges, Mr Langridge, an' keep an e'e on his proceedins afterwards, an'
+let me ken frae time to time hoo he's gettin on."
+
+With these instructions Mr Langridge promised compliance; and, on his
+having done so, the stone-breaker proposed to depart; but, just as he
+was about doing so, he turned suddenly round to his man of business,
+and said--
+
+"About the Tamsons, Mr Langridge, ye needna, for a wee while, tak thae
+staps again them that I was speakin aboot. Let them alane a wee till
+they get roun a bit."
+
+"I'll do so, Mr Lumsden," replied the worthy writer, who, the reader
+will observe, had accomplished his generous purpose dexterously. He knew
+his man, and acted accordingly.
+
+"What's their arrears, again?" inquired the other.
+
+"Half-a-year's rent--L3, 17s.," replied Mr Langridge.
+
+"Ay, it's a heap o' siller--no to be fan at every dyke side. An' then,
+there's this half-year rinning on, an' very near due. That'll mak--hoo
+much?"
+
+"Just L7, 14s. exactly, Mr Lumsden."
+
+"Ay, exactly," replied the latter, who had been making a mental
+calculation of the amount, and had arrived, although more slowly than
+his experienced lawyer, at the same result. "A serious soom," added the
+client.
+
+"No trifle, indeed, Mr Lumsden," said Mr Langridge; "but it's safe
+enough. They're honest people."
+
+"Ye'r aye harpin on that string," replied the stone-breaker, surlily;
+"but what signifies their honesty to me, if they'll no pay me my rent?"
+
+"True, very true," said the law agent. "That's the only practical
+honesty."
+
+"See you an' get thae arrears, at ony rate, oot o' them, _if_ ye can, Mr
+Langridge; an', if ye canna, I suppose we maun juist want them. Ye
+needna push owre hard for them either, since they're in the state ye
+say. But ye'll surely mak the present half-year oot o' them. That maun
+be paid. Mind _that_, at ony rate, maun be paid, Mr Langridge." And
+saying this, he placed his old tattered hat, which he had hitherto held
+in his hand, on his head, and left the house.
+
+On his departure, Mr Langridge hastily entered the apartment in which,
+he had left the messengers with their prisoner.
+
+"We're just waiting marching orders, Mr Langridge," said the latter, on
+his entering, and making an attempt at playfulness, with which his
+spirit but ill accorded. "My friends here are getting tired of their
+charge, and anxious to be relieved of him."
+
+"Are they so, Mr Reid?" replied Mr Langridge, smiling.
+
+"Why, then, we had best relieve them at once." Then turning to the
+principal officer--"Quit your prisoner, Maxwell--the debt is settled. Mr
+Reid, you are at liberty."
+
+The blood rushed to poor Reid's face, and then withdrew, leaving it as
+pale as death, and yet he could express no part of the feelings which
+caused these violent alternations. At length--
+
+"Mr Langridge," he said, "what is the meaning of this? How do I come to
+be liberated?"
+
+"By the simplest and most effectual of all processes, Mr Reid," replied
+the worthy writer, smiling; "by the payment of the debt."
+
+"But _I_ have not paid the debt, Mr Langridge. I _could_ not pay the
+debt."
+
+"No; but somebody else might. The short and the long of it is, Mr Reid,
+that a _friend_ has come forward, and settled the claim on which
+diligence was raised against you. The bill, with interest and all
+expenses, _is_ paid, and you are again a free man."
+
+Again overwhelmed by his feelings, which were a thousand times more
+eloquently expressed by a flood of silent tears than they could have
+been by the most carefully rounded periods, it was some time before the
+young man could pursue the conversation, or ask for the further
+information which he yet intensely longed to possess. On recovering from
+the burst of emotion which had, for the moment, deprived him of the
+power of utterance--
+
+"And _who_, pray, Mr Langridge, is this friend--this friend indeed?"
+
+"Why, I do not know exactly whether I am at liberty to tell you, Mr
+Reid," replied Mr Langridge. "The friend you allude to declined
+transacting this matter personally with you, which seems to imply that
+he did not care that you should know who he was; yet, as he certainly
+did not expressly forbid me to disclose him, and as I think it but right
+that you should know to whom you are indebted, I will venture to tell
+you. Had you some conversation, at an early hour this morning, with an
+old stone-breaker, on the highway side, about three or four miles from
+town?"
+
+"I had. The old man that was sitting here when I came in."
+
+"The same. Well, what would you think if _he_ should have been the
+friend in question? Would you expect from his manner, that he _would_ do
+such a thing? or, from his appearance and occupation, that he could?"
+
+"Certainly not--certainly not. The old man--the poor old man, to whom I
+offered half-a-crown--who works for ninepence a-day--who never saw me in
+his life before this morning--who knows nothing of me! Impossible, Mr
+Langridge--impossible; he cannot be the man. You do not say that he is?"
+
+"But I do though, Mr Reid, and that most distinctly. It is he, and no
+other, I assure you, who has done you this friendly service."
+
+"Then, if it be so, I know not what to say to it, Mr Langridge. I can
+say nothing. I trust, however, I shall not be found wanting on the score
+of gratitude. I can say no more. But will you be so good as inform me,
+if you can, how the good man has come to do me so friendly a service?
+Who on earth, or what is he?"
+
+"Sit down, sit down, Mr Reid, and I'll answer all your questions--I'll
+tell you all about him," replied Mr Langridge.
+
+Mr Reid having complied with this invitation, the latter began:--
+
+"The history of the old stone-breaker, my good sir, is a very short and
+a very simple one. It contains no vicissitude, and to few, besides
+ourselves, would be found possessing any particular interest. Your
+friend was, in his youth, a soldier, and served, I believe, in the
+American war. At his return home on the conclusion of that war, he was
+discharged, still a young man, and shortly after married a woman with a
+fortune" (smilingly) "of some five-and-twenty or thirty pounds. With
+this sum the thrifty pair purchased two or three cows, and commenced the
+business of cowfeeders. They prospered; for they were both saving and
+industrious, and, in time, realized a considerable sum of money, which
+they went on increasing. This they invested in house property from time
+to time, till their possessions of this kind became very valuable.
+
+"For upwards of forty years they continued in this way, when Mrs Lumsden
+died, leaving her husband a lonely widower; for they had no children. On
+the death of the former, the latter, who was now an old man, and unequal
+to conducting, alone, the business in which his wife's activity and
+industry had hitherto aided him, sold off his cows, and proposed to live
+in retirement on the rents of his property; and this he did for some
+time. Accustomed, however, to a life of constant labour and exertion,
+the old man soon found the idleness on which he had thrown himself,
+intolerably irksome. He became miserable from a mere want of having
+something to do. While in this state of ennui, chancing one day to
+stroll into the country, (this is what he told me himself,) he saw some
+labouring men knapping stones by the way-side; and strange as the fancy
+may seem, he was instantly struck with a desire of taking to this
+occupation. He did so, and has, from that day to the present, now
+upwards of ten years, pursued it with as much assiduity as if it was
+his only resource for a subsistence. He has, as I already told you, no
+family of his own; neither has he, I believe, any relation living; or,
+if there be, they must be very remote; and, as he strictly confines his
+expenditure to his daily earnings as a stone-breaker--some ninepence
+a-day, I believe--his wealth is rapidly increasing, and is, at this
+moment, no trifle, I assure you. Now, my good sir, when I tell you that
+I am the law agent of this strange, eccentric person, and that I manage
+all his business for him, I have told you everything about him that is
+worth mentioning."
+
+"There is just one thing, Mr Langridge," said Mr Reid, who had been an
+attentive listener to the tale just told him, "that wants explanation:
+can you give me the smallest shadow of a reason for the part he has
+acted towards me?"
+
+"Nay, there you puzzle me; I cannot. It appears as unaccountable to me
+as to you, although I have known Mr Lumsden now for upwards of fifteen
+years."
+
+"Did you ever know him do a thing of this kind before?"
+
+"Never! and I must say candidly, that, although he is by no means
+deficient in kindness of heart, notwithstanding his rough exterior, I
+did not believe him capable of such an act of generosity."
+
+"It is an extraordinary matter," said Mr Reid; "and although I can have
+but little right to inquire into the _motives_ for an act by which I am
+so largely benefited--it seems ungracious to do so--yet would I give a
+good round sum, if I had it to spare, to know the real cause of this
+good man's friendship towards me."
+
+"Why, that I suspect neither you nor I shall ever know. I question much,
+indeed, if the principal actor in this affair himself could give a
+reason for what he has done. It seems to me just one of those odd and
+unaccountable things which eccentric men, like Mr Lumsden, will
+sometimes do; and with this solution of the mystery, and the benefit it
+has produced to you, I rather think, Mr Reid, you must be content. I
+would, however, add, in order to redeem Mr Lumsden's act of generosity
+from the character of a mere whim, that your case was one eminently
+calculated to excite any latent feeling of benevolence which he might
+possess; and that your manner and appearance--no flattery--are equally
+well calculated to second a claim so established. Yourself, and your
+peculiar circumstances, in short, had chanced to touch the right chord
+in a right man's breast, and hence the response on which we are
+speculating."
+
+Having thus discussed the knotty point of the old stonebreaker's sudden
+act of generosity, Mr Langridge invited Mr Reid to put his affairs into
+his hands, promising that they should have the advantage, on his part,
+of something more than mere professional zeal. This friendly invitation
+the latter gladly accepted, and shortly after consigned all his business
+matters to the care of the worthy writer, who exerted himself in behalf
+of his client with an efficiency that soon placed the latter once more
+in the way of well-doing. And well he did; having subsequently realised
+a very handsome independency. In the success of the young man, no one
+rejoiced more than the old stone-breaker, who frequently visited him in
+his shop; sometimes merely for the purpose of seeing him; at others, to
+purchase some of those little articles of ironmongery which the due
+preservation of his dwelling-house property demanded. Let us state, too,
+that, amongst his purchases, were, at different times, the hammer-heads
+which he used in his occupation of stone-breaking.
+
+In their first transaction in this way, there was something curiously
+characteristic of the old man's peculiarities of temper. Mr Reid, not
+yet perfectly aware of these peculiarities, declined, for some time,
+putting any price on a couple of hammer-heads which his friend had
+picked out. He would have made him a present of them; and, to the
+latter's inquiry as to their price, replied, evasively, and laughing
+while he spoke, that he would tell him that afterwards.
+
+"I tak nae credit, young man," said the stone-breaker, crustily, "tell
+me enow their cost." And he pulled out a small greasy leathern purse,
+and was undoing its strings, when Mr Reid laid his hand on his arm to
+prevent him, at the same time telling him that he would do him a favour
+by accepting the hammer-heads in a present. "What is such a trifle
+between you and me, Mr Lumsden--you to whom I owe everything?"
+
+"You owe me a great deal mair than ye're ever likely to pay me, at ony
+rate, young man, if this be the way ye transact business," replied the
+other, with evident signs of displeasure. "Tell me the price o' thae
+hammer-heads at ance, an' be dune wi't. I hae nae broo o' folk that
+fling awa their guids as ye seem inclined to do."
+
+Mr Reid blushed at the reproof, but, seeing at once how the land lay,
+with regard to his customer's temper, he now plumply named the price of
+the hammers, sevenpence each.
+
+"Sevenpence!" exclaimed the old man. "I'll gie ye nae such price.
+Doonricht robbery! I can get them as guid in ony shop in the toon for
+saxpence ha'penny. If ye like to tak that price for them, ye may hae't.
+If no, ye can keep them."
+
+Mr Reid, now knowing his man somewhat better than he did at first,
+demurred, but at length agreed to the abatement, and the transaction was
+thus brought to a close.
+
+We need hardly add, that the L50 advanced by the old man to Mr Reid were
+subsequently repaid; but the call is more imperative on us to state,
+that, on the former's death, which took place about two years after, the
+latter found himself named in his will for a very considerable sum. One,
+somewhat larger, was bequeathed by the same document to Mr Langridge.
+The remainder was appropriated to various charities. And here, good
+reader, ends the story of the Stone-Breaker.
+
+
+
+
+LAIRD RORIESON'S WILL.
+
+
+In the little town of Maybole there lived, some fifty years ago or more,
+an old man of the name of George Rorieson, more commonly called Laird
+Rorieson. He had been a kind of general merchant, or trafficker in any
+kind of commodities which he thought would yield him a profit; and, by
+dint of great sagacity, had made some very fortunate hits, and realised
+a large sum of money. Having begun the world with a penny, he was
+emphatically the maker of his own fortunes--a circumstance he was very
+proud of, and loved to sound in the ears of certain individuals who
+envied him his riches. Having amassed his money by an accumulation of
+small sums, for a long course of years, he had gradually become narrower
+and narrower, as his wealth increased; and, by the time he arrived at
+the age of sixty, his penurious feelings had become so strong and
+deeprooted that he could scarcely afford himself the means of a
+comfortable subsistence.
+
+It is almost needless to say that Laird Rorieson never had courage or
+liberality of sentiment sufficient to give him an impulse towards
+matrimony; and truly it was alleged that he never oven looked on
+womankind with any feelings different from those with which he
+contemplated his fellow-creatures generally; and these had always some
+connection, one way or another, with making profit of them. But, though
+he had no wife, he had a good store of nephews and nieces--somewhere
+about twenty--all poor enough, God knows! but all as hopeful as brides
+and bridegrooms of a great store of wealth and bliss being awaiting them
+on the death of Uncle Geordie.
+
+The affection which these twenty nephews and nieces shewed to Uncle
+George was remarkable; but, somehow or another, the good uncle hated
+them mortally, and, the bitterer he became, the more loving they
+waxed--so that it was very wonderful to see so much human love and
+sympathy thrown away upon an old churl who could have seen all the
+devoted creatures at the devil.
+
+It was indeed alleged that this crabbed miser had no love for any one,
+all his affection being expended upon his money-bags: but we are bound
+to say that this is not quite the truth; for there was a neighbour of
+the name of Saunders Gibbieson, a bachelor, for whom the Laird really
+felt some small twinges of human kindness. Saunders Gibbieson was as
+true a Scotchman as ever threw the pawkie glamour of a twinkling grey
+eye over the open face of an English victim. He was, as already said, a
+bachelor; but unlike his friend Geordie, he loved the fair sex, and
+vowed he would marry the bonniest lass o' Maybole the moment he was able
+to sustain her "in bed, board, and washing." He had scraped together a
+few pounds, maybe to the extent of a hundred or two, and looked forward
+to making himself happy at no very distant period. He was a famous hand
+at a political argument; and there was not a man in Maybole who could
+touch him at driving a bargain.
+
+As already said, Geordie had a kind of feeling towards Saunders, and
+there can be no doubt that Saunders had as strong an affection for the
+"auld rich grub," as he called him in his throat, as ever had any of the
+twenty nephews and nieces already alluded to. In the evenings he often
+went in and sat with him; and, by dint of curious jokes, "humorous
+lees," and political anecdotes, he contrived to wile, for a few minutes,
+the creature's heart from his money-bags, and unbend his puckered cheeks
+and lips into a species of compromise between a laugh and a grin. It was
+no wonder, then, that Geordie had a kind of liking for Saunders--seeing
+he got value in amusement from him, without so much cost as even a
+piece of old dry cheese, of a waught of thin ale. On the other hand, it
+was difficult to see how Saunders could love the laird; and, indeed, it
+was a matter of gossip what could induce a man so much in request as
+Saunders Gibbieson to take so much pains in pouring into the "leather
+lugs" of an old miser the precious jokes that would have set the biggest
+table in Maybole in a roar.
+
+Now the time came when Laird Rorieson began to feel the first touches of
+that big black angel who loves to hug so fondly the sons of men. He was
+ill--he was indeed very ill--and it would have done any man's heart good
+to see the kindness and sympathy which his twenty nephews and nieces
+paid him. Every hour one or other of them was calling at his house; and
+his ears were regaled by the sympathetic tones which their love for
+their dear uncle wrung from their tender hearts. Oh, it was beautiful to
+behold! Such things do credit to our fallen nature. But the old grub
+loved it not; and it was even said he cursed and swore in the very faces
+of the kind creatures, just as if they had had an eye on the heavy
+coffers of gold that lay in his house. This kindness on the part of his
+nephews and nieces was thus converted into a kind of poison; for every
+time they called, their uncle got into such a passion that his remaining
+strength was well-nigh worn out. But he had still enough left to sign
+his name; and the ungrateful creature resolved upon leaving all his gold
+to found an hospital. He sent for a man of the law, and had a
+consultation with locked doors, and all things seemed in a fair way for
+the poor nephews and nieces being sacrificed for ever.
+
+This circumstance came to the ears of Saunders Gibbieson, who had not
+been an unattentive spectator of the extraordinary proceedings going on
+in the house of his neighbour. As soon as he heard the news, he retired
+and meditated, and communed with himself three hours on matters of deep
+concernment to him and the generations that might descend from him. The
+result of all this study was a resolution alike remarkable for its
+eccentricity and sagacity; but Saunders' spirit dipped generally so deep
+in the wells of wisdom that there was no wonder it should come forth
+drunk, as it were, with the golden policy of cunning.
+
+Now, all of a sudden, Saunders grew (as he said) very ill--as ill
+indeed, or nearly as ill, as Laird Rorieson himself, but, so full was he
+of brotherly love towards his neighbour, that his sudden illness did not
+prevent him calling upon the latter one night, when there seemed to be
+no great chance of their being disturbed by any of the sympathetic
+nephews and nieces. He found Geordie very weakly, and sat down by the
+bedside, to pour the balm of his friendship and consolation into the
+sick man's ear. The Laird received him kindly, and as was his custom,
+Saunders got him into a pleasant humour, by telling him something of a
+curious nature that had occurred, or had been supposed by Saunders to
+have occurred, during the day. He then began the more important part of
+his work.
+
+"You are ill, Laird," said he; "but I question muckle if ye're sae ill
+as I am myself. For a long time I've been in a dwinin way, and, though I
+hae kept up a fair appearance and good spirits, I've been gradually
+getting thinner and weaker. I fear I'm in a fair way for anither warld."
+
+"I'm sorry to hear't," replied the Laird. "It's a sad thing to dee." And
+he shook as he uttered the word.
+
+"Ay, an' it's a sad thing," said Saunders, "to be tormented in your
+illness, wi' thae cursed corbies o' puir relations. The moment I began
+to complain I've been tormented wi' a host o' nephews and nieces, wha
+come and stare into my hollow een, as if they would count the draps o'
+blude that are yet left in my heart."
+
+"Ay, ay, are you in that plight too, Saunders?" groaned the Laird. "The
+ravens have been croaking owre me for twa lang years. They come and
+perch on the very bedposts, they croak, they whet their nebs, they look
+into my face, and peer into my very heart. It's dreadful--and there's
+nae remedy. I've tried to terrify them awa; but they come aye back
+again. They've worn me fairly out."
+
+"I've had many a meditation on the subject, Laird," said Saunders; "and,
+between you and me, if there's a goose quill in a' Scotland, I'll hae a
+shot at them. I haena muckle i' the warld--a thousand or twa maybe, hard
+won, Geordie, as a' gowd is in thae hard times; but the deil a plack o't
+they'll ever touch."
+
+"Ye'll be to found an hospital?" said the Laird.
+
+"Na, na," answered Saunders. "I'll found nae beggar's palace. I've
+studied political economy owre lang to be ignorant o' the bad effects o'
+public charities. They relax the sinews o' industry, and mak learned
+mendicants. Besides, wha thanks the founder o' an hospital for his
+charity? Nane!--nane! A puff or twa in the newspapers about Gibbieson's
+mortification would be the hail upshot o' my reward; and sensible folk
+would set me doun as an auld curmudgeon, wha hadna heart to love and
+benefit a friend."
+
+"There's some truth in that," muttered the Laird. "It's a pity a body
+canna tak his gear wi' him. Sair hae I toiled for it, and, oh! it's
+miserable! cruel! cruel! that I should be obliged to leav't to a
+thankless warld! But what are ye to do wi'fc, Saivjders?"
+
+"Indeed, I'm just to leave it a' to you, Laird," said Saunders. "I have
+lang liked ye wi' a' the luve o' honest, leal friendship; and, after
+muckle meditation, I canna fix on a mortal creature wha is mair deservin
+o't than you, my guid auld freend. You have a fair chance o' recovering;
+I have nane. Ye may enjoy my gear lang after the turf has grown
+thegither owre my grave; and God bless the gift!"
+
+"Kind, guid man!" cried the Laird, in a voice evincing strong emotion,
+either of love or greed. "That _is_ kindness--ay, very different frae
+the friendship o' my sisters' and brothers' bairns. After a', I believe
+yer richt, Saunders--an hospital has nae gratitude; and what have we to
+do wi' a cauld and heartless warld?"
+
+"There's just ae difficulty I hae," said Saunders. "The will's written
+and signed; but I dinna weel ken whar to lay it; for, when I'm dead,
+thae deevils o' corbies may smell the bit paper and put it in the fire.
+Maybe you would tak the charge o't for me, Laird."
+
+"Ou ay," answered the Laird. "I'll keep it. The deil o' are o' them will
+get it oot o' my clutches."
+
+"Weel, weel, my dear friend," said Saunders. "I'll put it into a tin
+box; the key ye'll find, after my breath's out, in the little cupboard
+that's at the foot o' my bed--ye ken the place. They can mak naething o'
+the key without the box; and, if you canna find the key, you can force
+the box open. Oh, I would like to see you reading the will in the midst
+o' the harpies."
+
+"That's weel arranged, Saunders; ye can set about it as soon as you
+like."
+
+"I intend to do it instantly, Laird," replied the man. "I'll about it
+this moment." And he rose and went out of the house.
+
+In a short time, Saunders returned, holding in his hand a small tin box.
+He laid it down upon the table, and, taking out a small key, opened it,
+and took out a paper, entitled--"Last Will and Testament."
+
+"There it is, my good friend," he said; and, replacing the paper in the
+box, he locked it and placed it in an escritoire pointed out by the
+Laird. He then went away.
+
+Next day, the lawyer came to carry into effect the charitable resolution
+of Laird Rorieson; but he found that a great change had taken place upon
+the old man's sentiments. He was now adverse to a mortification, and
+said he was resolved upon leaving his fortune to one whom he considered
+to be a _real friend_, and, indeed, the only real friend he had upon
+earth. The lawyer was surprised when he ascertained that this friend was
+Saunders Gibbieson; but it was not his province to object--so he
+departed straightway to carry into effect the new resolution of the
+testator.
+
+Two days afterwards, the Laird sent a message to Saunders to come and
+speak with him. Saunders obeyed; walking in to him slowly, and
+apparently with great effort, as if he had been labouring under a strong
+disease.
+
+"I have been thinking again and again, Saunders," said the Laird, "o'
+yer great kindness. You are the first man that ever left me a farthing.
+The warld has rugged aff me since ever I had a feather to pick. Nane has
+ever offered me either a bite or a sup. You are the only friend I've
+ever met upon earth."
+
+"I hae only obeyed the dictates o' my heart," replied Saunders; "and I
+am glad I have dune it, for I feel mysel very weakly, and fear the clock
+o' this world's time will be wound up wi' me in a very short period."
+
+"Maybe no so sune as ye think, Saunders," replied the Laird. "But my
+purpose is executed. Saunders, you are my heir. Hand me that box there."
+
+Saunders took up a small mahogany box that lay on the table, and handed
+it to him.
+
+"Here," continued the Laird, taking out a paper; "here is my will. It's
+a' in your favour, Saunders--lands, houses, guids, and chattels,
+heritable and moveable. Say naething; you are my heir. Ha! ha! let the
+corbies croak. You've dune me a guid service; I winna be ahint ye. Tak
+the box into yer ain keeping. I'll keep the key. Awa wi't this instant.
+Ha! ha! let the corbies croak."
+
+Saunders obeyed. He carried the box into his own house, placed it in his
+cupboard, locked the door, and put the key into his pocket.
+
+In about a month afterwards, old Laird Rorieson departed this life. On
+the day of his death, his nephews and nieces were in great commotion,
+and there was a terrible running to and fro, and much whispering, and
+wondering, and gossiping--all on the great subject of the death of Uncle
+Geordie. On the day of his funeral, they were all collected, to see
+whether there was any will. They, of course, wished that there should be
+none, because they, being his heirs, would succeed to all, if there was
+no disposition of the old man's effects. By some means, Saunders
+Gibbieson contrived to be present along with the expectants. Perhaps he
+was allowed to be among them in the character of a witness; but indeed,
+so certain were the nephews and nieces of having succeeded in their
+efforts to please the dear old man, that they could afford to allow the
+presence of any number of witnesses who could vouch for the sacred
+gravity of their countenances, and the deep sorrows of their bereaved
+hearts. Nor was Saunders less under the affection of lugubriousness
+himself; so that it was altogether one of those beautiful sights so
+often witnessed on such melancholy occasions, where every indication of
+selfishness is banished, and nothing can be observed save that Christian
+solemnity which proveth that "the devil hath been cast out of the heart
+of man, even when he did appear to be strong." The nephews and the
+nieces looked at Saunders, and Saunders looked at them, and so solemn
+were these looks, that though the writer was searching about for a will,
+no one seemed to care whether he found one or not. It has been said that
+"the heart of man is deceitful above all things;" but of a surety the
+adage could not have been spoken there, except with the determination to
+get it disproved for once in the world, and the blessed object of
+shewing to us sons of the seed of Abraham that we are not so wicked as
+we are called.
+
+At length the ominous little box was laid hold of and broken open,
+amidst a pretty nonchalance, and lo! there was indeed a paper, bearing
+the fearful word "Will," and the faces of the heirs turned as pale as
+the paper itself. It was opened; but it was a fair, clean sheet of
+paper, and not a drop of ink had stained its purity. "All safe, all
+safe," muttered the heirs.
+
+"Here is another box," said Saunders Gibbieson, holding up the mahogany
+one; "let us try it." And he opened it, and took out Geordie's will. The
+writer read it aloud. Saunders was sole heir to all the old miser's
+possessions, amounting to L10,000. No one could tell the reason why
+there were two papers marked "Will," and one of them a blank sheet; and
+Saunders, simple man, did not trouble himself to give any explanation.
+
+
+END OF VOL. XVIII.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Transcriber's Notes: Hyphen variations left as printed
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of
+Scotland Volume 18, by Alexander Leighton
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WILSON'S TALES OF THE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 39759.txt or 39759.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/9/7/5/39759/
+
+Produced by David Clarke, Mary Meehan and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/39759.zip b/39759.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..cf6f949
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39759.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5e5935f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #39759 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/39759)