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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Memoirs of the Life of Sir Walter Scott,
-Volume 4 (of 10), by John Gibson Lockhart
-
-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
-
-
-Title: Memoirs of the Life of Sir Walter Scott, Volume 4 (of 10)
-
-Author: John Gibson Lockhart
-
-Release Date: February 10, 2013 [EBook #42062]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SIR WALTER SCOTT ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by D Alexander, Christine P. Travers and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Large Paper Edition
-
-
- LOCKHART'S
- LIFE OF SCOTT
-
- COPIOUSLY ANNOTATED AND ABUNDANTLY ILLUSTRATED
-
- IN TEN VOLUMES
- VOL. IV
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: WALTER SCOTT IN 1817
- _From the water-color portrait by William Nicholson_]
-
-
-
-
- MEMOIRS OF THE LIFE
- OF
- SIR WALTER SCOTT
- BART.
-
-
- by
-
- JOHN GIBSON LOCKHART
-
-
- In Ten Volumes
- VOLUME IV
-
-
-
-
- Boston and New York
- Houghton, Mifflin and Company
- The Riverside Press, Cambridge
- MCMI
-
- Copyright, 1901
- by Houghton, Mifflin and Company
- All Rights Reserved
-
- Six Hundred Copies Printed
- Number, 200
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
- Page
-
- XXV. The "Flitting" to Abbotsford. -- Plantations. --
- George Thomson. -- Rokeby and Triermain in Progress. --
- Excursion to Flodden. -- Bishop-Auckland, and Rokeby
- Park. -- Correspondence with Crabbe. -- Life of Patrick
- Carey, etc. -- Publication of Rokeby, -- and of The
- Bridal of Triermain. 1812-1813 1
-
- XXVI. Affairs of John Ballantyne and Co. -- Causes of
- their Derangement. -- Letters of Scott to his Partners.
- -- Negotiation for Relief with Messrs. Constable. --
- New Purchase of Land at Abbotsford. -- Embarrassments
- continued. -- John Ballantyne's Expresses. --
- Drumlanrig, Penrith, etc. -- Scott's Meeting with the
- Marquis of Abercorn at Longtown. -- His Application to
- the Duke of Buccleuch. -- Offer of the
- Poet-Laureateship, -- considered, -- and declined. --
- Address of the City of Edinburgh to the Prince Regent.
- -- Its Reception. -- Civic Honors conferred on Scott.
- -- Question of Taxation on Literary Income. -- Letters
- to Mr. Morritt, Mr. Southey, Mr. Richardson, Mr.
- Crabbe, Miss Baillie, and Lord Byron. 1813 50
-
- XXVII. Insanity of Henry Weber. -- Letters on the
- Abdication of Napoleon, etc. -- Publication of Scott's
- Life and Edition of Swift. -- Essays for the Supplement
- to the Encyclopædia Britannica. -- Completion and
- Publication of Waverley. 1814 100
-
- XXVIII. Voyage to the Shetland Isles, etc. -- Scott's
- Diary kept on Board the Lighthouse Yacht. 1814 124
-
- XXIX. Diary on Board the Lighthouse Yacht continued. --
- The Orkneys. -- Kirkwall. -- Hoy. -- The Standing
- Stones of Stennis, etc. 1814 163
-
- XXX. Diary continued. -- Stromness. -- Bessy Millie's
- Charm. -- Cape Wrath. -- Cave of Smowe. -- The
- Hebrides. -- Scalpa, etc. 1814 178
-
- XXXI. Diary continued. -- Isle of Harris. -- Monuments
- of the Chiefs of Macleod. -- Isle of Skye. -- Dunvegan
- Castle. -- Loch Corriskin. -- Macallister's Cave. 1814 193
-
- XXXII. Diary continued. -- Cave of Egg. -- Iona. --
- Staffa. -- Dunstaffnage. -- Dunluce Castle. -- Giant's
- Causeway. -- Isle of Arran, etc. -- Diary concluded.
- 1814 206
-
- XXXIII. Letter in Verse from Zetland and Orkney. --
- Death of the Duchess of Buccleuch. -- Correspondence
- with the Duke. -- Altrive Lake. -- Negotiation
- concerning The Lord of the Isles completed. -- Success
- of Waverley. -- Contemporaneous criticisms on the
- Novel. -- Letters to Scott from Mr. Morritt, Mr. Lewis,
- and Miss Maclean Clephane. -- Letter from James
- Ballantyne to Miss Edgeworth. 1814 237
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- Page
-
- WALTER SCOTT IN 1817 _Frontispiece_
- From the water-color portrait by William Nicholson,
- R. S. A., in the possession of W. C. C. Erskine, Esq.
- Through the courtesy of David Douglas, Esq., Edinburgh.
-
- ABBOTSFORD IN 1812 6
-
- ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE 50
- From the painting by Sir Henry Raeburn, R. A., at Braeburn,
- Currie, Mid-Lothian. By permission of William Patrick
- Bruce, Esq.
-
- J. B. S. MORRITT 100
- From the painting by Sir M. A. Shee, P. R. A., in the
- possession of R. A. Morritt, Esq., of Rokeby.
-
- WILLIAM ERSKINE, LORD KINNEDDER 124
- From the water-color portrait by William Nicholson,
- R. S. A., in the possession of W. C. C. Erskine, Esq.
- Through the courtesy of David Douglas, Esq., Edinburgh.
-
- JAMES HOGG 250
- From the water-color portrait by Stephen Poyntz Denning,
- in the National Portrait Gallery.
-
-
-
-
-SIR WALTER SCOTT
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
- THE "FLITTING" TO ABBOTSFORD. -- PLANTATIONS. -- GEORGE THOMSON.
- --ROKEBY AND TRIERMAIN IN PROGRESS. -- EXCURSION TO FLODDEN.
- --BISHOP-AUCKLAND, AND ROKEBY PARK. -- CORRESPONDENCE WITH
- CRABBE. --LIFE OF PATRICK CAREY, ETC. -- PUBLICATION OF ROKEBY,
- -- AND OF THE BRIDAL OF TRIERMAIN
-
-1812-1813
-
-
-Towards the end of May, 1812, the Sheriff finally removed from
-Ashestiel to Abbotsford. The day when this occurred was a sad one
-for many a poor neighbor--for they lost, both in him and his wife,
-very generous protectors. In such a place, among the few evils which
-counterbalance so many good things in the condition of the
-peasantry, the most afflicting is the want of access to medical
-advice. As far as their means and skill would go, they had both done
-their utmost to supply this want; and Mrs. Scott, in particular, had
-made it so much her business to visit the sick in their scattered
-cottages, and bestowed on them the contents of her medicine-chest as
-well as of the larder and cellar, with such unwearied kindness, that
-her name is never mentioned there to this day without some
-expression of tenderness. Scott's children remember the parting
-scene as one of unmixed affliction--but it had had, as we shall see,
-its lighter features.
-
-Among the many amiable English friends whom he owed to his frequent
-visits at Rokeby Park, there was, I believe, none that had a higher
-place in his regard than the late Anne, Lady Alvanley, the widow of
-the celebrated Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas. He was
-fond of female society in general; but her ladyship was a woman
-after his heart; well born and highly bred, but without the
-slightest tinge of the frivolities of modern fashion; soundly
-informed, and a warm lover of literature and the arts, but holding
-in as great horror as himself the imbecile chatter and affected
-ecstasies of the bluestocking generation. Her ladyship had written
-to him early in May, by Miss Sarah Smith (now Mrs. Bartley), whom I
-have already mentioned as one of his theatrical favorites; and his
-answer contains, among other matters, a sketch of the "Forest
-Flitting."
-
-
-TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE LADY ALVANLEY.
-
- ASHESTIEL, 25th May, 1812.
-
-I was honored, my dear Lady Alvanley, by the kind letter which you
-sent me with our friend Miss Smith, whose talents are, I hope,
-receiving at Edinburgh the full meed of honorable applause which they
-so highly merit. It is very much against my will that I am forced to
-speak of them by report alone, for this being the term of removing, I
-am under the necessity of being at this farm to superintend the
-transference of my goods and chattels, a most miscellaneous
-collection, to a small property, about five miles down the Tweed,
-which I purchased last year. The neighbors have been much delighted
-with the procession of my furniture, in which old swords, bows,
-targets, and lances, made a very conspicuous show. A family of turkeys
-was accommodated within the helmet of some _preux chevalier_ of
-ancient Border fame; and the very cows, for aught I know, were bearing
-banners and muskets. I assure your ladyship that this caravan,
-attended by a dozen of ragged rosy peasant children, carrying
-fishing-rods and spears, and leading ponies, greyhounds, and
-spaniels, would, as it crossed the Tweed, have furnished no bad
-subject for the pencil, and really reminded me of one of the gypsy
-groups of Callot upon their march.
-
-
- EDINBURGH, 28th May.
-
-I have got here at length, and had the pleasure to hear Miss Smith
-speak the Ode on the Passions charmingly last night. It was her
-benefit, and the house was tolerable, though not so good as she
-deserves, being a very good girl, as well as an excellent performer.
-
-I have read Lord Byron with great pleasure, though pleasure is not
-quite the appropriate word. I should say admiration--mixed with
-regret, that the author should have adopted such an unamiable
-misanthropical tone.--The reconciliation with Holland House is
-extremely edifying, and may teach young authors to be in no hurry to
-exercise their satirical vein. I remember an honest old Presbyterian,
-who thought it right to speak with respect even of the devil himself,
-since no one knew in what corner he might one day want a friend. But
-Lord Byron is young, and certainly has great genius, and has both time
-and capacity to make amends for his errors. I wonder if he will pardon
-the Edinburgh Reviewers, who have read their recantation of their
-former strictures.
-
-Mrs. Scott begs to offer her kindest and most respectful compliments
-to your ladyship and the young ladies. I hope we shall get into
-Yorkshire this season to see Morritt: he and his lady are really
-delightful persons. Believe me, with great respect, dear Lady
-Alvanley, your much honored and obliged
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-A week later, in answer to a letter, mentioning the approach of the
-celebrated sale of books in which the Roxburghe Club originated,
-Scott says to his trusty ally, Daniel Terry:--
-
-
- EDINBURGH, 9th June, 1812.
-
-MY DEAR TERRY,--I wish you joy of your success, which, although all
-reports state it as most highly flattering, does not exceed what I had
-hoped for you. I think I shall do you a sensible pleasure in
-requesting that you will take a walk over the fields to Hampstead one
-of these fine days, and deliver the enclosed to my friend Miss
-Baillie, with whom, I flatter myself, you will be much pleased, as she
-has all the simplicity of real genius. I mentioned to her some time
-ago that I wished to make you acquainted, so that the sooner you can
-call upon her, the compliment will be the more gracious. As I suppose
-you will sometimes look in at the Roxburghe sale, a memorandum
-respecting any remarkable articles will be a great favor.
-
-Abbotsford was looking charming, when I was obliged to mount my wheel
-in this court, too fortunate that I have at length some share in the
-roast meat I am daily engaged in turning. Our flitting and removal
-from Ashestiel baffled all description; we had twenty-four cart-loads
-of the veriest trash in nature, besides dogs, pigs, ponies, poultry,
-cows, calves, bare-headed wenches, and bare-breeched boys. In other
-respects we are going on in the old way, only poor Percy is dead. I
-intend to have an old stone set up by his grave, with "_Cy gist li
-preux Percie,_" and I hope future antiquaries will debate which hero
-of the house of Northumberland has left his bones in Teviotdale.[1]
-
-Believe me yours very truly,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-This was one of the busiest summers of Scott's busy life. Till the
-12th of July he was at his post in the Court of Session five days
-every week; but every Saturday evening found him at Abbotsford, to
-observe the progress his laborers had made within doors and without
-in his absence; and on Monday night he returned to Edinburgh. Even
-before the Summer Session commenced, he appears to have made some
-advance in his Rokeby, for he writes to Mr. Morritt, from
-Abbotsford, on the 4th of May: "As for the house and the poem, there
-are twelve masons hammering at the one, and one poor noddle at the
-other--so they are both in progress;"--and his literary labors
-throughout the long vacation were continued under the same sort of
-disadvantage. That autumn he had, in fact, no room at all for
-himself. The only parlor which had been hammered into anything like
-habitable condition served at once for dining-room, drawing-room,
-school-room, and study. A window looking to the river was kept
-sacred to his desk; an old bed-curtain was nailed up across the room
-close behind his chair, and there, whenever the spade, the dibble,
-or the chisel (for he took his full share in all the work on hand)
-was laid aside, he pursued his poetical tasks, apparently
-undisturbed and unannoyed by the surrounding confusion of masons and
-carpenters, to say nothing of the lady's small talk, the children's
-babble among themselves, or their repetition of their lessons. The
-truth no doubt was, that when at his desk he did little more, as far
-as regarded _poetry_, than write down the lines which he had
-fashioned in his mind while pursuing his vocation as a planter, upon
-that bank which received originally, by way of joke, the title of
-_the thicket_. "I am now," he says to Ellis (October 17), "adorning
-a patch of naked land with trees _facturis nepotibus umbram_, for I
-shall never live to enjoy their shade myself otherwise than in the
-recumbent posture of Tityrus or Menalcas." But he did live to see
-_the thicket_ deserve not only that name, but a nobler one; and to
-fell with his own hand many a well-grown tree that he had planted
-there.
-
-Another plantation of the same date, by his eastern boundary, was
-less successful. For this he had asked and received from his early
-friend, the Marchioness of Stafford, a supply of acorns from
-Trentham, and it was named in consequence _Sutherland bower_; but
-the field-mice, in the course of the ensuing winter, contrived to
-root up and devour the whole of her ladyship's goodly benefaction. A
-third space had been set apart, and duly enclosed, for the reception
-of some Spanish chestnuts offered to him by an admirer established
-in merchandise at Seville; but that gentleman had not been a very
-knowing ally as to such matters, for when the chestnuts arrived, it
-turned out that they had been boiled.
-
-[Illustration: ABBOTSFORD IN 1812]
-
-Scott writes thus to Terry, in September, while the Roxburghe sale
-was still going on:--
-
-
-I have lacked your assistance, my dear Sir, for twenty whimsicalities
-this autumn. Abbotsford, as you will readily conceive, has
-considerably changed its face since the auspices of Mother Retford
-were exchanged for ours. We have got up a good garden wall, complete
-stables in the haugh, according to Stark's plan, and the old farmyard
-being enclosed with a wall, with some little picturesque additions in
-front, has much relieved the stupendous height of the Doctor's barn.
-The new plantations have thriven amazingly well, the acorns are coming
-up fast, and Tom Purdie is the happiest and most consequential person
-in the world. My present work is building up the well with some debris
-from the Abbey. Oh, for your assistance, for I am afraid we shall make
-but a botched job of it, especially as our materials are of a very
-miscellaneous complexion. The worst of all is, that while my trees
-grow and my fountain fills, my purse, in an inverse ratio, sinks to
-zero. This last circumstance will, I fear, make me a very poor guest
-at the literary entertainment your researches hold out for me. I
-should, however, like much to have the Treatise on Dreams, by the
-author of the New Jerusalem, which, as John Cuthbertson the smith said
-of the minister's sermon, must be neat work. The Loyal Poems, by N.
-T.,[2] are probably by poor Nahum Tate, who associated with Brady in
-versifying the Psalms, and more honorably with Dryden in the second
-part of Absalom and Achitophel. I never saw them, however, but would
-give a guinea or thirty shillings for the collection. Our friend John
-Ballantyne has, I learn, made a sudden sally to London, and doubtless
-you will crush a quart with him or a pottle pot; he will satisfy your
-bookseller for The Dreamer, or any other little purchase you may
-recommend for me. You have pleased Miss Baillie very much both in
-public and in society, and though not fastidious, she is not, I think,
-particularly lavish of applause either way. A most valuable person is
-she, and as warm-hearted as she is brilliant.--Mrs. Scott and all our
-little folks are well. I am relieved of the labor of hearing Walter's
-lesson by a gallant son of the church, who, with one leg of wood and
-another of oak, walks to and fro from Melrose every day for that
-purpose. Pray stick to the dramatic work,[3] and never suppose either
-that you can be intrusive, or that I can be uninterested in whatever
-concerns you.
-
-Yours,
-
- W. S.
-
-
-The tutor alluded to at the close of this letter was Mr. George
-Thomson, son of the minister of Melrose, who, when the house
-afforded better accommodation, was and continued for many years to
-be domesticated at Abbotsford. Scott had always a particular
-tenderness towards persons afflicted with any bodily misfortune; and
-Thomson, whose leg had been amputated in consequence of a rough
-casualty of his boyhood, had a special share in his favor from the
-high spirit with which he refused at the time to betray the name of
-the companion that had occasioned his mishap, and continued ever
-afterwards to struggle against its disadvantages. Tall, vigorous,
-athletic, a dauntless horseman, and expert at the singlestick,
-George formed a valuable as well as picturesque addition to the
-_tail_ of the new laird, who often said, "In the Dominie, like
-myself, accident has spoiled a capital lifeguardsman." His many
-oddities and eccentricities in no degree interfered with the respect
-due to his amiable feelings, upright principles, and sound learning;
-nor did _Dominie Thomson_ at all quarrel in after-times with the
-universal credence of the neighborhood that he had furnished many
-features for the inimitable personage whose designation so nearly
-resembled his own; and if he has not yet "wagged his head" in a
-"pulpit o' his ain," he well knows it has not been so for want of
-earnest and long-continued intercession on the part of the author of
-Guy Mannering.[4]
-
-For many years Scott had accustomed himself to proceed in the
-composition of poetry along with that of prose essays of various
-descriptions; but it is a remarkable fact that he chose this period
-of perpetual noise and bustle, when he had not even a summer-house
-to himself, for the new experiment of carrying on two poems at the
-same time--and this, too, without suspending the heavy labor of his
-edition of Swift, to say nothing of the various lesser matters in
-which the Ballantynes were, from day to day, calling for the
-assistance of his judgment and his pen. In the same letter in which
-William Erskine acknowledges the receipt of the first four pages of
-Rokeby, he adverts also to The Bridal of Triermain as being already
-in rapid progress. The fragments of this second poem, inserted in
-the Register of the preceding year, had attracted considerable
-notice; the secret of their authorship had been well kept; and by
-some means, even in the shrewdest circles of Edinburgh, the belief
-had become prevalent that they proceeded not from Scott, but from
-Erskine. Scott had no sooner completed his bargain as to the
-copyright of the unwritten Rokeby, than he resolved to pause from
-time to time in its composition, and weave those fragments into a
-shorter and lighter romance, executed in a different metre, and to
-be published anonymously, in a small pocket volume, as nearly as
-possible on the same day with the avowed quarto. He expected great
-amusement from the comparisons which the critics would no doubt
-indulge themselves in drawing between himself and this humble
-candidate; and Erskine good-humoredly entered into the scheme,
-undertaking to do nothing which should effectually suppress the
-notion of his having set himself up as a modest rival to his friend.
-Nay, he suggested a further refinement, which in the sequel had no
-small share in the success of this little plot upon the sagacity of
-the reviewers. Having said that he much admired the opening of the
-first canto of Rokeby, Erskine adds, "I shall request your
-_accoucheur_ to send me your _little Dugald_ too as he gradually
-makes his progress. What I have seen is delightful. You are aware
-how difficult it is to form any opinion of a work, the general plan
-of which is unknown, transmitted merely in legs and wings as they
-are formed and feathered. Any remarks must be of the most minute and
-superficial kind, confined chiefly to the language, and other such
-subordinate matters. I shall be very much amused if the secret is
-kept and the knowing ones taken in. To prevent any discovery from
-your prose, what think you of putting down your ideas of what the
-preface ought to contain, and allowing me to write it over? And
-perhaps a quizzing review might be concocted."
-
-This last hint was welcome; and among other parts of the preface to
-Triermain which threw out "the knowing ones," certain Greek
-quotations interspersed in it are now accounted for. Scott, on his
-part, appears to have studiously interwoven into the piece allusions
-to personal feelings and experiences more akin to his friend's
-history and character than to his own; and he did so still more
-largely, when repeating this experiment, in the introductory parts
-of Harold the Dauntless.
-
-The same post which conveyed William Erskine's letter, above quoted,
-brought him an equally wise and kind one from Mr. Morritt, in answer
-to a fresh application for some minute details about the scenery and
-local traditions of the Valley of the Tees. Scott had promised to
-spend part of this autumn at Rokeby Park himself; but now, busied as
-he was with his planting operations at home, and continually urged
-by Ballantyne to have the poem ready for publication by Christmas,
-he would willingly have trusted his friend's knowledge in place of
-his own observation and research. Mr. Morritt gave him in reply
-various particulars, which I need not here repeat, but added,--
-
-
-I am really sorry, my dear Scott, at your abandonment of your kind
-intention of visiting Rokeby, and my sorrow is not quite selfish, for
-seriously, I wish you could have come, if but for a few days, in
-order, on the spot, to settle accurately in your mind the localities
-of the new poem, and all their petty circumstances, of which there are
-many that would give interest and ornament to your descriptions. I am
-too much flattered by your proposal of inscribing the poem to me, not
-to accept it with gratitude and pleasure. I shall always feel your
-friendship as an honor--we all wish our honors to be permanent--and
-yours promises mine at least a fair chance of immortality. I hope,
-however, you will not be obliged to write in a hurry on account of the
-impatience of your booksellers. They are, I think, ill advised in
-their proceeding, for surely the book will be the more likely to
-succeed from not being forced prematurely into this critical world. Do
-not be persuaded to risk your established fame on this hazardous
-experiment. If you want a few hundreds independent of these
-booksellers, your credit is so very good, now that you have got rid of
-your Old Man of the Sea, that it is no great merit to trust you, and I
-happen at this moment to have five or six for which I have no sort of
-demand--so rather than be obliged to spur Pegasus beyond the power of
-pulling him up when he is going too fast, do consult your own judgment
-and set the midwives of the trade at defiance. Don't be scrupulous to
-the disadvantage of your muse, and above all be not offended at me for
-a proposition which is meant in the true spirit of friendship. I am
-more than ever anxious for your success--The Lady of the Lake more
-than succeeded--I think Don Roderick is less popular--I want this work
-to be another Lady at the least. Surely it would be worth your while
-for such an object to spend a week of your time, and a portion of your
-Old Man's salary, in a mail-coach flight hither, were it merely to
-renew your acquaintance with the country, and to rectify the little
-misconceptions of a cursory view. Ever affectionately yours,
-
- J. B. S. M.
-
-
-This appeal was not to be resisted. Scott, I believe, accepted Mr.
-Morritt's friendly offer so far as to ask his assistance in having
-some of Ballantyne's bills discounted; and he proceeded the week
-after to Rokeby, by the way of Flodden and Hexham, travelling on
-horseback, his eldest boy and girl on their ponies, while Mrs. Scott
-followed them in the carriage. Two little incidents that diversified
-this ride through Northumberland have found their way into print
-already; but, as he was fond of telling them both down to the end of
-his days, I must give them a place here also. Halting at Flodden to
-expound the field of battle to his young folks, he found that
-Marmion had, as might have been expected, benefited the keeper of
-the public house there very largely; and the village Boniface,
-overflowing with gratitude, expressed his anxiety to have a _Scott's
-Head_ for his sign-post. The poet demurred to this proposal, and
-assured mine host that nothing could be more appropriate than the
-portraiture of a foaming tankard, which already surmounted his
-doorway. "Why, the painter-man has not made an ill job," said the
-landlord, "but I would fain have something more connected with the
-book that has brought me so much good custom." He produced a
-well-thumbed copy, and handing it to the author, begged he would at
-least suggest a motto from the tale of Flodden Field. Scott opened
-the book at the death scene of the hero, and his eye was immediately
-caught by the "inscription" in black-letter,--
-
- "Drink, weary pilgrim, drink, and pray
- For the kind soul of Sibyl Grey," etc.
-
-"Well, my friend," said he, "what more would you have? You need but
-strike out one letter in the first of these lines, and make your
-painter-man, the next time he comes this way, print between the
-jolly tankard and your own name,--
-
- "Drink, weary pilgrim, drink and PAY."
-
-Scott was delighted to find, on his return, that this suggestion had
-been adopted, and, for aught I know, the romantic legend may still
-be visible. The other story I shall give in the words of Mr.
-Gillies:--
-
-
-"It happened at a small country town that Scott suddenly required
-medical advice for one of his servants, and, on inquiring if there was
-any doctor at the place, was told that there were two,--one long
-established, and the other a newcomer. The latter gentleman, being
-luckily found at home, soon made his appearance;--a grave,
-sagacious-looking personage, attired in black, with a shovel hat, in
-whom, to his utter astonishment, Sir Walter recognized a Scotch
-blacksmith, who had formerly practised, with tolerable success, as a
-veterinary operator in the neighborhood of Ashestiel.--'How, in all
-the world,' exclaimed he, 'can it be possible that this is John
-Lundie?'--'In troth is it, your honor--just _a' that's for
-him_.'--'Well, but let us hear; you were a _horse_-doctor before; now,
-it seems, you are a _man_-doctor; how do you get on?'--'Ou, just
-extraordinar weel; for your honor maun ken my practice is vera sure
-and orthodox. I depend entirely upon twa _simples_.'--'And what may
-their names be? Perhaps it is a secret?'--'I'll tell your honor,' in a
-low tone; 'my twa simples are just _laudamy_ and _calamy_!'--'Simples
-with a vengeance!' replied Scott. 'But, John, do you never happen to
-_kill_ any of your patients?'--'Kill? Ou ay, may be sae! Whiles they
-die, and whiles no;--but it's the will o' Providence. _Ony how, your
-honor, it wad be lang before it makes up for Flodden!_'"[5]
-
-
-It was also in the course of this expedition that Scott first made
-acquaintance with the late excellent and venerable Shute Barrington,
-Bishop of Durham. The travellers having reached Auckland over night were
-seeing the public rooms of the Castle at an early hour next morning,
-when the Bishop happened, in passing through one of them, to catch a
-glimpse of Scott's person, and immediately recognizing him, from the
-likeness of the engravings by this time multiplied, introduced himself
-to the party, and insisted upon acting as cicerone. After showing them
-the picture-gallery and so forth, his Lordship invited them to join the
-morning service of the chapel, and when that was over, insisted on their
-remaining to breakfast. But Scott and his Lordship were by this time so
-much pleased with each other that they could not part so easily. The
-good Bishop ordered his horse, nor did Scott observe without admiration
-the proud curvetting of the animal on which his Lordship proposed to
-accompany him during the next stage of his progress. "Why, yes, Mr.
-Scott," said the gentle but high-spirited old man, "I still like to feel
-my horse under me." He was then in his seventy-ninth year, and survived
-to the age of ninety-two, the model in all things of a real prince of
-the Church. They parted after a ride of ten miles, with mutual regret;
-and on all subsequent rides in that direction, Bishop-Auckland was one
-of the poet's regular halting-places.[6]
-
-At Rokeby, on this occasion, Scott remained about a week; and I
-transcribe the following brief account of his proceedings while
-there from Mr. Morritt's _Memorandum_:--
-
-
-"I had, of course," he says, "had many previous opportunities of
-testing the almost conscientious fidelity of his local descriptions;
-but I could not help being singularly struck with the lights which
-this visit threw on that characteristic of his compositions. The
-morning after he arrived he said, 'You have often given me materials
-for romance--now I want a good robber's cave, and an old church of the
-right sort.' We rode out, and he found what he wanted in the ancient
-slate quarries of Brignall and the ruined Abbey of Egglestone. I
-observed him noting down even the peculiar little wild flowers and
-herbs that accidentally grew round and on the side of a bold crag near
-his intended cave of Guy Denzil; and could not help saying, that as he
-was not to be upon oath in his work, daisies, violets, and primroses
-would be as poetical as any of the humble plants he was examining. I
-laughed, in short, at his scrupulousness; but I understood him when he
-replied, 'that in nature herself no two scenes were exactly alike, and
-that whoever copied truly what was before his eyes would possess the
-same variety in his descriptions, and exhibit apparently an
-imagination as boundless as the range of nature in the scenes he
-recorded; whereas, whoever trusted to imagination would soon find his
-own mind circumscribed, and contracted to a few favorite images, and
-the repetition of these would sooner or later produce that very
-monotony and barrenness which had always haunted descriptive poetry in
-the hands of any but the patient worshippers of truth. Besides which,'
-he said, 'local names and peculiarities make a fictitious story look
-so much better in the face.' In fact, from his boyish habits, he was
-but half satisfied with the most beautiful scenery when he could not
-connect with it some local legend, and when I was forced sometimes to
-confess with the Knife-grinder, 'Story! God bless you! I have none to
-tell, sir,'--he would laugh and say, 'Then let us make one--nothing so
-easy as to make a tradition.'"
-
-
-Mr. Morritt adds, that he had brought with him about half The
-Bridal of Triermain--told him that he meant to bring it out the same
-week with Rokeby--and promised himself particular satisfaction in
-_laying a trap for Jeffrey_; who, however, as we shall see, escaped
-the snare.
-
-Some of the following letters will show with what rapidity, after
-having refreshed and stored his memory with the localities of
-Rokeby, he proceeded in the composition of the romance:--
-
-
-TO J. B. S. MORRITT, ESQ.
-
- ABBOTSFORD, 12th October, 1812.
-
-MY DEAR MORRITT,--I have this morning returned from Dalkeith House, to
-which I was whisked amid the fury of an election tempest, and I found
-your letter on my table. More on such a subject cannot be said among
-friends who give each other credit for feeling as they ought.
-
-We peregrinated over Stanmore, and visited the Castles of Bowes,
-Brough, Appleby, and Brougham with great interest. Lest our spirit of
-chivalry thus excited should lack employment, we found ourselves, that
-is, _I_ did, at Carlisle, engaged in the service of two distressed
-ladies, being no other than our friends Lady Douglas and Lady Louisa
-Stuart, who overtook us there, and who would have had great trouble in
-finding quarters, the election being in full vigor, if we had not
-anticipated their puzzle, and secured a private house capable of
-holding us all. Some distress occurred, I believe, among the waiting
-damsels, whose case I had not so carefully considered, for I heard a
-sentimental exclamation--"Am I to sleep with the greyhounds?" which I
-conceived to proceed from Lady Douglas's _suivante_, from the
-exquisite sensibility of tone with which it was uttered, especially as
-I beheld the fair one descend from the carriage with three half-bound
-volumes of a novel in her hand. Not having it in my power to alleviate
-her woes, by offering her either a part or the whole of my own
-couch.--"_Transeat_," quoth I, "_cum cæteris erroribus_."
-
-I am delighted with your Cumberland admirer,[7] and give him credit
-for his visit to the vindicator of Homer; but you missed one of
-another description, who passed Rokeby with great regret, I mean
-General John Malcolm, the Persian envoy, the Delhi resident, the poet,
-the warrior, the polite man, and the Borderer. He is really a fine
-fellow. I met him at Dalkeith, and we returned together;--he has just
-left me, after drinking his coffee. A fine time we had of it, talking
-of Troy town, and Babel, and Persepolis, and Delhi, and Langholm, and
-Burnfoot;[8] with all manner of episodes about Iskendiar, Rustan, and
-Johnny Armstrong. Do you know, that poem of Ferdusi's must be
-beautiful. He read me some very splendid extracts which he had himself
-translated. Should you meet him in London, I have given him charge to
-be acquainted with you, for I am sure you will like each other. To be
-sure, I know him little, but I like his frankness and his sound ideas
-of morality and policy; and I have observed, that when I have had no
-great liking to persons at the beginning, it has usually pleased
-Heaven, as Slender says, to decrease it on further acquaintance.
-Adieu, I must mount my horse. Our last journey was so delightful that
-we have every temptation to repeat it. Pray give our kind love to the
-lady, and believe me ever yours,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-TO THE SAME.
-
- EDINBURGH, 29th November, 1812.
-
-MY DEAR MORRITT,--I have been, and still am, working very hard, in
-hopes to face the public by Christmas, and I think I have hitherto
-succeeded in throwing some interest into the piece. It is, however, a
-darker and more gloomy interest than I intended; but involving one's
-self with bad company, whether in fiction or in reality, is the way
-not to get out of it easily; so I have been obliged to bestow more
-pains and trouble upon Bertram, and one or two blackguards whom he
-picks up in the slate quarries, than what I originally designed. I am
-very desirous to have your opinion of the three first Cantos, for
-which purpose, so soon as I can get them collected, I will send the
-sheets under cover to Mr. Freeling, whose omnipotent frank will
-transmit them to Rokeby, where, I presume, you have been long since
-comfortably settled--
-
- "So York may overlook the town of York."[9]
-
-I trust you will read it with some partiality, because, if I have not
-been so successful as I could wish in describing your lovely and
-romantic glens, it has partly arisen from my great anxiety to do it
-well, which is often attended with the very contrary effect. There are
-two or three songs, and particularly one in praise of Brignall Banks,
-which I trust you will like--because, _entre nous_, I like them
-myself. One of them is a little dashing banditti song, called and
-entitled Allen-a-Dale. I think you will be able to judge for yourself
-in about a week. Pray, how shall I send you the _entire goose_, which
-will be too heavy to travel the same way with its _giblets_--for the
-Carlisle coach is terribly inaccurate about parcels? I fear I have
-made one blunder in mentioning the brooks which flow into the Tees. I
-have made the Balder distinct from that which comes down Thorsgill--I
-hope I am not mistaken. You will see the passage; and if they are the
-same rivulet, the leaf must be cancelled.
-
-I trust this will find Mrs. Morritt pretty well; and I am glad to find
-she has been better for her little tour. We were delighted with ours,
-except in respect of its short duration, and Sophia and Walter hold
-their heads very high among their untravelled companions, from the
-predominance acquired by their visit to England. You are not perhaps
-aware of the polish which is supposed to be acquired by the most
-transitory intercourse with your more refined side of the Tweed. There
-was an honest carter who once applied to me respecting a plan which he
-had formed of breeding his son, a great booby of twenty, to the
-Church. As the best way of evading the scrape, I asked him whether he
-thought his son's language was quite adapted for the use of a public
-speaker?--to which he answered, with great readiness, that he could
-knap English with any one, having twice driven his father's cart to
-Etal coal-hill.
-
-I have called my heroine Matilda. I don't much like Agnes, though I
-can't tell why, unless it is because it begins like Agag. Matilda is a
-name of unmanageable length; but, after all, is better than none, and
-my poor damsel was likely to go without one in my indecision.
-
-We are all hungering and thirsting for news from Russia. If Boney's
-devil does not help him, he is in a poor way. The Leith letters talk
-of the unanimity of the Russians as being most exemplary; and troops
-pour in from all quarters of their immense empire. Their commissariat
-is well managed under the Prince Duke of Oldenburgh. This was their
-weak point in former wars.
-
-Adieu! Mrs. Scott and the little people send love to Mrs. Morritt and
-you. Ever yours,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-TO THE SAME.
-
- EDINBURGH, Thursday, 10th December, 1812.
-
-MY DEAR MORRITT,--I have just time to say that I have received your
-letters, and am delighted that Rokeby pleases the owner. As I hope the
-whole will be printed off before Christmas, it will scarce be worth
-while to send you the other sheets till it reaches you altogether.
-Your criticisms are the best proof of your kind attention to the
-poem. I need not say I will pay them every attention in the next
-edition. But some of the faults are so interwoven with the story, that
-they must stand. Denzil, for instance, is essential to me, though, as
-you say, not very interesting; and I assure you that, generally
-speaking, the _poeta loquitur_ has a bad effect in narrative; and when
-you have twenty things to tell, it is better to be slatternly than
-tedious. The fact is, that the tediousness of many really good poems
-arises from an attempt to support the same tone throughout, which
-often occasions periphrasis, and always stiffness. I am quite sensible
-that I have often carried the opposite custom too far; but I am apt to
-impute it partly to not being able to bring out my own ideas well, and
-partly to haste--not to error in the system. This would, however, lead
-to a long discussion, more fit for the fireside than for a letter. I
-need not say that, the poem being in fact your own, you are at perfect
-liberty to dispose of the sheets as you please. I am glad my geography
-is pretty correct. It is too late to inquire if Rokeby is insured, for
-I have burned it down in Canto V.; but I suspect you will bear me no
-greater grudge than at the noble Russian who burned Moscow. Glorious
-news to-day from the North--_pereat iste_! Mrs. Scott, Sophia, and
-Walter, join in best compliments to Mrs. Morritt; and I am, in great
-haste, ever faithfully yours,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-P. S.--I have heard of Lady Hood by a letter from herself. She is
-well, and in high spirits, and sends me a pretty topaz seal, with a
-talisman which secures this letter, and signifies (it seems), which
-one would scarce have expected from its appearance, my name.
-
-
-We are now close upon the end of this busy twelvemonth; but I must
-not turn the leaf to 1813, without noticing one of its miscellaneous
-incidents--his first intercourse by letter with the poet Crabbe. Mr.
-Hatchard, the publisher of his Tales, forwarded a copy of the book
-to Scott as soon as it was ready; and, the bookseller having
-communicated to his author some flattering expressions in Scott's
-letter of acknowledgment, Mr. Crabbe addressed him as follows:--
-
-
-TO WALTER SCOTT, ESQ., EDINBURGH.
-
- MUSTON, GRANTHAM, 13th October, 1812.
-
-SIR,--Mr. Hatchard, judging rightly of the satisfaction it would
-afford me, has been so obliging as to communicate your two letters, in
-one of which you desire my Tales to be sent; in the other, you
-acknowledge the receipt of them; and in both you mention my verses in
-such terms, that it would be affected in me were I to deny, and I
-think unjust if I were to conceal, the pleasure you give me. I am
-indeed highly gratified.
-
-I have long entertained a hearty wish to be made known to a poet whose
-works are so greatly and so universally admired; and I continued to hope
-that I might at some time find a common friend, by whose intervention I
-might obtain that honor; but I am confined by duties near my home, and
-by sickness in it. It may be long before I be in town, and then no such
-opportunity might offer. Excuse me, then, sir, if I gladly seize this
-which now occurs to express my thanks for the politeness of your
-expressions, as well as my desire of being known to a gentleman who has
-delighted and affected me, and moved all the passions and feelings in
-turn, I believe--Envy surely excepted--certainly, if I know myself, but
-in a moderate degree. I truly rejoice in your success; and while I am
-entertaining, in my way, a certain set of readers, for the most part,
-probably, of peculiar turn and habit, I can with pleasure see the effect
-you produce on all. Mr. Hatchard tells me that he hopes or expects that
-thousands will read my Tales, and I am convinced that your publisher
-might, in like manner, so speak of your ten thousands; but this, though
-it calls to mind the passage, is no true comparison with the related
-prowess of David and Saul, because I have no evil spirit to arise and
-trouble me on the occasion; though, if I had, I know no David whose
-skill is so likely to allay it. Once more, sir, accept my best thanks,
-with my hearty wishes for your health and happiness, who am, with great
-esteem, and true respect,
-
-Dear Sir, your obedient servant,
-
- GEORGE CRABBE.
-
-
-I cannot produce Scott's reply to this communication. Mr. Crabbe
-appears to have, in the course of the year, sent him a copy of all
-his works, "ex dono auctoris," and there passed between them several
-letters, one or two of which I must quote.
-
-
-TO WALTER SCOTT, ESQ., EDINBURGH.
-
-Know you, sir, a gentleman in Edinburgh, A. Brunton (the Rev.), who
-dates St. John Street, and who asks my assistance in furnishing hymns
-which have relation to the Old or New Testament--anything which might
-suit the purpose of those who are cooking up a book of Scotch
-Psalmody? Who is Mr. Brunton? What is his situation? If I could help
-one who needed help, I would do it cheerfully--but have no great
-opinion of this undertaking....
-
-With every good wish, yours sincerely,
-
- GEORGE CRABBE.
-
-
-Scott's answer to this letter expresses the opinions he always held
-in conversation on the important subject to which it refers; and
-acting upon which, he himself at various times declined taking any
-part in the business advocated by Dr. Brunton:--
-
-
-TO THE REV. GEORGE CRABBE, MUSTON, GRANTHAM.
-
-MY DEAR SIR,--I was favored with your kind letter some time ago. Of
-all people in the world, I am least entitled to demand regularity of
-correspondence; for being, one way and another, doomed to a great deal
-more writing than suits my indolence, I am sometimes tempted to envy
-the reverend hermit of Prague, confessor to the niece of Queen
-Gorboduc, who never saw either pen or ink. Mr. Brunton is a very
-respectable clergyman of Edinburgh, and I believe the work in which he
-has solicited your assistance is one adopted by the General Assembly,
-or Convocation of the Kirk. I have no notion that he has any
-individual interest in it; he is a well-educated and liberal-minded
-man, and generally esteemed. I have no particular acquaintance with
-him myself, though we speak together. He is at this very moment
-sitting on the outside of the bar of our Supreme Court, within which I
-am fagging as a clerk; but as he is hearing the opinion of the Judges
-upon an action for augmentation of stipend to him and to his brethren,
-it would not, I conceive, be a very favorable time to canvass a
-literary topic. But you are quite safe with him; and having so much
-command of scriptural language, which appears to me essential to the
-devotional poetry of Christians, I am sure you can assist his purpose
-much more than any man alive.
-
-I think those hymns which do not immediately recall the warm and
-exalted language of the Bible are apt to be, however elegant, rather
-cold and flat for the purposes of devotion. You will readily believe
-that I do not approve of the vague and indiscriminate Scripture
-language which the fanatics of old and the modern Methodists have
-adopted, but merely that solemnity and peculiarity of diction, which
-at once puts the reader and hearer upon his guard as to the purpose of
-the poetry. To my Gothic ear, indeed, the _Stabat Mater_, the _Dies
-Iræ_, and some of the other hymns of the Catholic Church, are more
-solemn and affecting than the fine classical poetry of Buchanan; the
-one has the gloomy dignity of a Gothic church, and reminds us
-instantly of the worship to which it is dedicated; the other is more
-like a Pagan temple, recalling to our memory the classical and
-fabulous deities.[10] This is, probably, all referable to the
-association of ideas--that is, if the "association of ideas" continues
-to be the universal pick-lock of all metaphysical difficulties, as it
-was when I studied moral philosophy--or to any other more fashionable
-universal solvent which may have succeeded to it in reputation. Adieu,
-my dear sir,--I hope you and your family will long enjoy all happiness
-and prosperity. Never be discouraged from the constant use of your
-charming talent. The opinions of reviewers are really too
-contradictory to found anything upon them, whether they are favorable
-or otherwise; for it is usually their principal object to display the
-abilities of the writers of the critical lucubrations themselves. Your
-Tales are universally admired here. I go but little out, but the few
-judges whose opinions I have been accustomed to look up to, are
-unanimous. Ever yours, most truly,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-TO WALTER SCOTT, ESQ., EDINBURGH.
-
-_MY DEAR SIR_,--Law, then, is your profession--I mean a profession you
-give your mind and time to--but how "fag as a _clerk_"? Clerk is a
-name for a learned person, I know, in our Church; but how the same
-hand which held the pen of Marmion holds that with which a clerk fags,
-unless a clerk means something vastly more than I understand, is not
-to be comprehended. I wait for elucidation. Know you, dear sir, I have
-often thought I should love to read _reports_--that is, brief
-histories of extraordinary cases, with the judgments. If that is what
-is meant by _reports_, such reading must be pleasant; but, probably, I
-entertain wrong ideas, and could not understand the books I think so
-engaging. Yet I conclude there are _histories of cases_, and have
-often thought of consulting Hatchard whether he knew of such kind of
-reading, but hitherto I have rested in ignorance.... Yours truly,
-
- GEORGE CRABBE.
-
-
-TO THE REV. GEORGE CRABBE.
-
-MY DEAR SIR,--I have too long delayed to thank you for the most kind
-and acceptable present of your three volumes. Now am I doubly armed,
-since I have a set for my cabin at Abbotsford as well as in town; and,
-to say truth, the auxiliary copy arrived in good time, for my original
-one suffers as much by its general popularity among my young people,
-as a popular candidate from the hugs and embraces of his democratical
-admirers. The clearness and accuracy of your painting, whether
-natural or moral, renders, I have often remarked, your works generally
-delightful to those whose youth might render them insensible to the
-other beauties with which they abound. There are a sort of
-pictures--surely the most valuable, were it but for that reason--which
-strike the uninitiated as much as they do the connoisseur, though the
-last alone can render reason for his admiration. Indeed our old friend
-Horace knew what he was saying when he chose to address his ode,
-"_Virginibus puerisque_," and so did Pope when he told somebody he had
-the mob on the side of his version of Homer, and did not mind the
-high-flying critics at Button's. After all, if a faultless poem could
-be produced, I am satisfied it would tire the critics themselves, and
-annoy the whole reading world with the spleen.
-
-You must be delightfully situated in the Vale of Belvoir--a part of
-England for which I entertain a special kindness, for the sake of the
-gallant hero, Robin Hood, who, as probably you will readily guess, is
-no small favorite of mine; his indistinct ideas concerning the
-doctrine of _meum_ and _tuum_ being no great objection to an outriding
-Borderer. I am happy to think that your station is under the
-protection of the Rutland family, of whom fame speaks highly. Our lord
-of the "cairn and the scaur," waste wilderness and hungry hills, for
-many a league around, is the Duke of Buccleuch, the head of my clan; a
-kind and benevolent landlord, a warm and zealous friend, and the
-husband of a lady--_comme il y en a peu_. They are both great admirers
-of Mr. Crabbe's poetry, and would be happy to know him, should he ever
-come to Scotland, and venture into the Gothic halls of a Border chief.
-The early and uniform kindness of this family, with the friendship of
-the late and present Lord Melville, enabled me, some years ago, to
-exchange my toils as a barrister, for the lucrative and respectable
-situation of one of the Clerks of our Supreme Court, which only
-requires a certain routine of official duty, neither laborious nor
-calling for any exertion of the mind; so that my time is entirely at
-my own command, except when I am attending the Court, which seldom
-occupies more than two hours of the morning during sitting. I besides
-hold _in commendam_ the Sheriffdom of Ettrick Forest, which is now no
-forest; so that I am a pluralist as to law appointments, and have, as
-Dogberry says, "two gowns, and everything handsome about me."[11]
-
-I have often thought it is the most fortunate thing for bards like you
-and me to have an established profession, and professional character,
-to render us independent of those worthy gentlemen, the retailers, or,
-as some have called them, the midwives of literature, who are so much
-taken up with the abortions they bring into the world, that they are
-scarcely able to bestow the proper care upon young and flourishing
-babes like ours. That, however, is only a mercantile way of looking at
-the matter; but did any of my sons show poetical talent, of which, to
-my great satisfaction, there are no appearances, the first thing I
-should do would be to inculcate upon him the duty of cultivating some
-honorable profession, and qualifying himself to play a more
-respectable part in society than the mere poet. And as the best
-corollary of my doctrine, I would make him get your tale of The Patron
-by heart from beginning to end. It is curious enough that you should
-have republished The Village for the purpose of sending your young men
-to college, and I should have written The Lay of the Last Minstrel for
-the purpose of buying a new horse for the Volunteer Cavalry. I must
-now send this scrawl into town to get a frank, for, God knows, it is
-not worthy of postage. With the warmest wishes for your health,
-prosperity, and increase of fame--though it needs not--I remain most
-sincerely and affectionately yours,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.[12]
-
-
-The contrast of the two poets' epistolary styles is highly amusing;
-but I have introduced these specimens less on that account, than as
-marking the cordial confidence which a very little intercourse was
-sufficient to establish between men so different from each other in
-most of the habits of life. It will always be considered as one of
-the most pleasing peculiarities in Scott's history, that he was the
-friend of every great contemporary poet: Crabbe, as we shall see
-more largely in the sequel, was no exception to the rule: yet I
-could hardly name one of them who, manly principles and the
-cultivation of literature apart, had many points of resemblance to
-him; and surely not one who had fewer than Crabbe.
-
-Scott continued, this year, his care for the Edinburgh Annual
-Register--the historical department of which was again supplied by
-Mr. Southey. The poetical miscellany owed its opening piece, the
-Ballad of Polydore, to the readiness with which Scott entered into
-correspondence with its author, who sent it to him anonymously, with
-a letter which, like the verses, might well have excited much
-interest in his mind, even had it not concluded with stating the
-writer's age to be _fifteen_. Scott invited the youth to visit him
-in the country, was greatly pleased with the modesty of his manners
-and the originality of his conversation, and wrote to Joanna
-Baillie, that, "though not one of the crimps for the muses," he
-thought he could hardly be mistaken in believing that in the boyish
-author of Polydore he had discovered a true genius. When I mention
-the name of my friend William Howison of Clydegrove, it will be
-allowed that he prognosticated wisely. He continued to correspond
-with this young gentleman and his father, and gave both much advice,
-for which both were most grateful. There was inserted in the same
-volume a set of beautiful stanzas, inscribed to Scott by Mr. Wilson,
-under the title of The Magic Mirror, in which that enthusiastic
-young poet also bears a lofty and lasting testimony to the gentle
-kindness with which his earlier efforts had been encouraged by him
-whom he designates, for the first time, by what afterwards became
-one of his standing titles, that of The Great Magician.
-
- "Onwards a figure came, with stately brow,
- And, as he glanced upon the ruin'd pile
- A look of regal pride, 'Say, who art thou'
- (His countenance bright'ning with a scornful smile,
- He sternly cried), 'whose footsteps rash profane
- The wild romantic realm where I have willed to reign?'
-
- "But ere to these proud words I could reply,
- How changed that scornful face to soft and mild!
- A witching frenzy glitter'd in his eye,
- Harmless, withal, as that of playful child.
- And when once more the gracious vision spoke,
- I felt the voice familiar to mine ear;
- While many a faded dream of earth awoke,
- Connected strangely with that unknown seer,
- Who now stretch'd forth his arm, and on the sand
- A circle round me traced, as with magician's wand," etc.
-
-Scott's own chief contribution to this volume was a brief account of
-the Life and Poems (hitherto unpublished)[13] of Patrick Carey, whom
-he pronounces to have been not only as stout a Cavalier, but almost
-as good a poet as his contemporary Lovelace. That Essay was
-expanded, and prefixed to an edition of Carey's Trivial Poems and
-Triolets, which Scott published in 1820; but its circulation in
-either shape has been limited: and I believe I shall be gratifying
-the majority of my readers by here transcribing some paragraphs of
-his beautiful and highly characteristic introduction of this
-forgotten poet of the seventeenth century.
-
-
-"The present age has been so distinguished for research into poetical
-antiquities, that the discovery of an unknown bard is, in certain
-chosen literary circles, held as curious as an augmentation of the
-number of fixed stars would be esteemed by astronomers. It is true,
-these 'blessed twinklers of the night' are so far removed from us,
-that they afford no more light than serves barely to evince their
-existence to the curious investigator; and in like manner the pleasure
-derived from the revival of an obscure poet is rather in proportion to
-the rarity of his volume than to its merit; yet this pleasure is not
-inconsistent with reason and principle. We know by every day's
-experience the peculiar interest which the lapse of ages confers upon
-works of human art. The clumsy strength of the ancient castles, which,
-when raw from the hand of the builder, inferred only the oppressive
-power of the barons who reared them, is now broken by partial ruin
-into proper subjects for the poet or the painter; and as Mason has
-beautifully described the change,
-
- 'Time
- Has mouldered into beauty many a tower,
- Which, when it frowned with all its battlements,
- Was only terrible.'
-
-"The monastery, too, which was at first but a fantastic monument of
-the superstitious devotion of monarchs, or of the purple pride of
-fattened abbots, has gained by the silent influence of antiquity the
-power of impressing awe and devotion. Even the stains and
-weather-taints upon the battlements of such buildings add, like the
-scars of a veteran, to the affecting impression:--
-
- 'For time has softened what was harsh when new,
- And now the stains are all of sober hue;
- The living stains which nature's hand alone,
- Profuse of life, pours forth upon the stone.'--_Crabbe._
-
-"If such is the effect of Time in adding interest to the labors of the
-architect, if partial destruction is compensated by the additional
-interest of that which remains, can we deny his exerting a similar
-influence upon those subjects which are sought after by the
-bibliographer and poetical antiquary? The obscure poet, who is detected
-by their keen research, may indeed have possessed but a slender portion
-of that spirit which has buoyed up the works of distinguished
-contemporaries during the course of centuries, yet still his verses
-shall, in the lapse of time, acquire an interest, which they did not
-possess in the eyes of his own generation. The wrath of the critic,
-like that of the son of Ossian, flies from the foe that is low. Envy,
-base as she is, has one property of the lion, and cannot prey on
-carcases; she must drink the blood of a sentient victim, and tear the
-limbs that are yet warm with vital life. Faction, if the ancient has
-suffered her persecution, serves only to endear him to the recollection
-of posterity, whose generous compassion overpays him for the injuries he
-sustained while in life. And thus freed from the operation of all
-unfavorable prepossessions, his merit, if he can boast any, has more
-than fair credit with his readers. This, however, is but part of his
-advantages. The mere attribute of antiquity is of itself sufficient to
-interest the fancy by the lively and powerful train of associations
-which it awakens. Had the pyramids of Egypt, equally disagreeable in
-form and senseless as to utility, been the work of any living tyrant,
-with what feelings, save those of scorn and derision, could we have
-regarded such a waste of labor? But the sight, nay, the very mention of
-these wonderful monuments, is associated with the dark and sublime ideas
-which vary their tinge according to the favorite hue of our studies. The
-Christian divine recollects the land of banishment and of refuge; to the
-eyes of the historian's fancy, they excite the shades of Pharaohs and of
-Ptolemies, of Cheops and Merops, and Sesostris drawn in triumph by his
-sceptred slaves; the philosopher beholds the first rays of moral truth
-as they dawned on the hieroglyphic sculptures of Thebes and Memphis; and
-the poet sees the fires of magic blazing upon the mystic altars of a
-land of incantation. Nor is the grandeur of size essential to such
-feelings, any more than the properties of grace and utility. Even the
-rudest remnant of a feudal tower, even the obscure and almost
-indistinguishable vestige of an altogether unknown edifice, has power to
-awaken such trains of fancy. We have a fellow interest with the 'son of
-the winged days,' over whose fallen habitation we tread:--
-
- 'The massy stones, though hewn most roughly, show
- The hand of man had once at least been there.'--_Wordsworth._
-
-"Similar combinations give a great part of the delight we receive from
-ancient poetry. In the rude song of the Scald, we regard less the
-strained imagery and extravagance of epithet, than the wild
-impressions which it conveys of the dauntless resolution, savage
-superstition, rude festivity, and ceaseless depredation of the ancient
-Scandinavians. In the metrical romance, we pardon the long, tedious,
-and bald enumeration of trifling particulars; the reiterated sameness
-of the eternal combats between knights and giants; the overpowering
-languor of the love speeches, and the merciless length and similarity
-of description--when Fancy whispers to us that such strains may have
-cheered the sleepless pillow of the Black Prince on the memorable eves
-of Cressy or Poictiers. There is a certain romance of Ferumbras, which
-Robert the Bruce read to his few followers, to divert their thoughts
-from the desperate circumstances in which they were placed, after an
-unsuccessful attempt to rise against the English. Is there a true
-Scotsman who, being aware of this anecdote, would be disposed to yawn
-over the romance of Ferumbras? Or, on the contrary, would not the
-image of the dauntless hero, inflexible in defeat, beguiling the
-anxiety of his war-worn attendants by the lays of the minstrel, give
-to these rude lays themselves an interest beyond Greek and Roman
-fame?"
-
-
-The year 1812 had the usual share of minor literary labors--such as
-contributions to the journals; and before it closed, the Romance of
-Rokeby was finished. Though it had been long in hand, the MS. sent
-to the printer bears abundant evidence of its being the _prima
-cura_: three cantos at least reached Ballantyne through the Melrose
-post--written on paper of various sorts and sizes--full of blots and
-interlineations--the closing couplets of a despatch now and then
-encircling the page, and mutilated by the breaking of the seal.
-
-According to the recollection of Mr. Cadell, though James Ballantyne
-read the poem, as the sheets were advancing through the press, to
-his usual circle of literary _dilettanti_, their whispers were far
-from exciting in Edinburgh such an intensity of expectation as had
-been witnessed in the case of The Lady of the Lake. He adds,
-however, that it was looked for with undiminished anxiety in the
-south. "Send me _Rokeby_," Byron writes to Murray on seeing it
-advertised,--"Who the devil is he? No matter--he has good
-connections, and will be well introduced."[14] Such, I suppose, was
-the general feeling in London. I well remember, being in those days
-a young student at Oxford, how the booksellers' shops there were
-beleaguered for the earliest copies, and how he that had been so
-fortunate as to secure one was followed to his chambers by a tribe
-of friends, all as eager to hear it read as ever horse-jockeys were
-to see the conclusion of a match at Newmarket; and indeed not a few
-of those enthusiastic academics had bets depending on the issue of
-the struggle, which they considered the elder favorite as making, to
-keep his own ground against the fiery rivalry of Childe Harold.
-
-The poem was published a day or two before Scott returned to
-Edinburgh from Abbotsford, between which place and Mertoun he had
-divided his Christmas vacation. On the 9th and 10th of January,
-1813, he thus addresses his friends at Sunning Hill and Hampstead:--
-
-
-TO GEORGE ELLIS, ESQ.
-
-MY DEAR ELLIS,--I am sure you will place it to anything rather than
-want of kindness that I have been so long silent--so very long, indeed,
-that I am not quite sure whether the fault is on my side or yours--but,
-be it what it may, it can never, I am sure, be laid to forgetfulness in
-either. This comes to train you on to the merciful reception of a Tale
-of the Civil Wars; not political, however, but merely a pseudo-romance
-of pseudo-chivalry. I have converted a lusty buccaneer into a hero with
-some effect; but the worst of all my undertakings is, that my rogue
-always, in despite of me, turns out my hero. I know not how this should
-be. I am myself, as Hamlet says, "indifferent honest;" and my father,
-though an attorney (as you will call him), was one of the most honest
-men, as well as gentlemanlike, that ever breathed. I am sure I can bear
-witness to that--for if he had at all _smacked_, or _grown to_, like the
-son of Lancelot Gobbo, he might have left us all as rich as Croesus,
-besides having the pleasure of taking a fine primrose path himself,
-instead of squeezing himself through a tight gate and up a steep ascent,
-and leaving us the decent competence of an honest man's children. As to
-our more ancient pedigree, I should be loath to vouch for them. My
-grandfather was a horse-jockey and cattle-dealer, and made a fortune; my
-great-grandfather a Jacobite and traitor (as the times called him), and
-lost one; and after him intervened one or two half-starved lairds, who
-rode a lean horse, and were followed by leaner greyhounds; gathered with
-difficulty a hundred pounds from a hundred tenants; fought duels; cocked
-their hats,--and called themselves gentlemen. Then we come to the old
-Border times, cattle-driving, halters, and so forth, for which, in the
-matter of honesty, very little I suppose can be said--at least in modern
-acceptation of the word. Upon the whole, I am inclined to think it is
-owing to the earlier part of this inauspicious generation that I
-uniformly find myself in the same scrape in my fables, and that, in
-spite of the most obstinate determination to the contrary, the greatest
-rogue in my canvas always stands out as the most conspicuous and
-prominent figure. All this will be a riddle to you, unless you have
-received a certain packet, which the Ballantynes were to have sent under
-Freeling's or Croker's cover, so soon as they could get a copy done up.
-
-And now let me gratulate you upon the renovated vigor of your fine old
-friends the Russians. By the Lord, sir! it is most famous, this
-campaign of theirs. I was not one of the very sanguine persons who
-anticipated the actual capture of Buonaparte--a hope which rather
-proceeded from the ignorance of those who cannot conceive that
-military movements, upon a large scale, admit of such a force being
-accumulated upon any particular point as may, by abandonment of other
-considerations, always insure the escape of an individual. But I had
-no hope, in my time, of seeing the dry bones of the Continent so warm
-with life again, as this revivification of the Russians proves them to
-be. I look anxiously for the effect of these great events on Prussia,
-and even upon Saxony; for I think Boney will hardly trust himself
-again in Germany, now that he has been plainly shown, both in Spain
-and Russia, that protracted, stubborn, unaccommodating resistance will
-foil those grand exertions in the long run. All laud be to Lord
-Wellington, who first taught that great lesson.
-
-Charlotte is with me just now at this little scrub habitation, where
-we weary ourselves all day in looking at our projected improvements,
-and then slumber over the fire, I pretending to read, and she to work
-trout-nets, or cabbage-nets, or some such article. What is Canning
-about? Is there any chance of our getting him in? Surely Ministers
-cannot hope to do without him. Believe me, dear Ellis, ever truly
-yours,
-
- W. SCOTT.
-
-ABBOTSFORD, 9th January, 1813.
-
-
-TO MISS JOANNA BAILLIE.
-
- ABBOTSFORD, January 10, 1813.
-
-Your kind encouragement, my dear friend, has given me spirits to
-complete the lumbering quarto, which I hope has reached you by this
-time. I have gone on with my story _forth right_, without troubling
-myself excessively about the development of the plot and other
-critical matters--
-
- "But shall we go mourn for that, my dear?
- The pale moon shines by night;
- And when we wander here and there,
- We then do go most right."
-
-I hope you will like Bertram to the end; he is a Caravaggio sketch,
-which, I may acknowledge to you--but tell it not in Gath--I rather
-pique myself upon; and he is within the keeping of Nature, though
-critics will say to the contrary. It may be difficult to fancy that
-any one should take a sort of pleasure in bringing out such a
-character, but I suppose it is partly owing to bad reading, and
-ill-directed reading, when I was young. No sooner had I corrected the
-last sheet of Rokeby, than I escaped to this Patmos as blithe as bird
-on tree, and have been ever since most decidedly idle--that is to say,
-with busy idleness. I have been banking, and securing, and diking
-against the river, and planting willows, and aspens, and
-weeping-birches, around my new old well, which I think I told you I
-had constructed last summer. I have now laid the foundations of a
-famous background of copse, with pendent trees in front; and I have
-only to beg a few years to see how my colors will come out of the
-canvas. Alas, who can promise that? But somebody will take my
-place--and enjoy them, whether I do or no. My old friend and pastor,
-Principal Robertson (the historian), when he was not expected to
-survive many weeks, still watched the setting of the blossom upon some
-fruit-trees in the garden with as much interest as if it was possible
-he could have seen the fruit come to maturity, and moralized on his
-own conduct, by observing that we act upon the same inconsistent
-motive throughout life. It is well we do so for those that are to come
-after us. I could almost dislike the man who refuses to plant
-walnut-trees, because they do not bear fruit till the second
-generation; and so--many thanks to our ancestors, and much joy to our
-successors, and truce to my fine and very new strain of morality.
-Yours ever,
-
- W. S.
-
-
-The following letter lets us completely behind the scenes at the
-publication of Rokeby. The "horrid story" it alludes to was that of
-a young woman found murdered on New Year's Day in the highway
-between Greta Bridge and Barnard Castle--a crime, the perpetrator of
-which was never discovered. The account of a parallel atrocity in
-Galloway, and the mode of its detection, will show the reader from
-what source Scott drew one of the most striking incidents in his Guy
-Mannering:--
-
-
-TO J. B. S. MORRITT, ESQ., ROKEBY PARK.
-
- EDINBURGH, 12th January, 1813.
-
-DEAR MORRITT,--Yours I have just received in mine office at the
-Register-House, which will excuse this queer sheet of paper. The
-publication of Rokeby was delayed till Monday, to give the London
-publishers a fair start. My copies, that is, my friends', were all to
-be got off about Friday or Saturday; but yours may have been a little
-later, as it was to be what they call a picked one. I will call at
-Ballantyne's as I return from this place, and close the letter with
-such news as I can get about it there. The book has gone off here very
-bobbishly, for the impression of 3000 and upwards is within two or
-three score of being exhausted, and the demand for these continuing
-faster than they can be boarded. I am heartily glad of this, for now I
-have nothing to fear but a bankruptcy in the Gazette of Parnassus; but
-the loss of five or six thousand pounds to my good friends and
-school-companions would have afflicted me very much. I wish we could
-whistle you here to-day. Ballantyne always gives a christening dinner,
-at which the Duke of Buccleuch, and a great many of my friends, are
-formally feasted. He has always the best singing that can be heard in
-Edinburgh, and we have usually a very pleasant party, at which your
-health as patron and proprietor of Rokeby will be faithfully and
-honorably remembered.
-
-Your horrid story reminds me of one in Galloway, where the perpetrator
-of a similar enormity on a poor idiot girl was discovered by means of
-the print of his foot which he left upon the clay floor of the cottage
-in the death struggle. It pleased Heaven (for nothing short of a
-miracle could have done it) to enlighten the understanding of an old
-ram-headed sheriff, who was usually nicknamed Leather-head. The steps
-which he took to discover the murderer were most sagacious. As the
-poor girl was pregnant (for it was not a case of violation), it was
-pretty clear that her paramour had done the deed, and equally so that
-he must be a native of the district. The sheriff caused the minister
-to advertise from the pulpit that the girl would be buried on a
-particular day, and that all persons in the neighborhood were invited
-to attend the funeral, to show their detestation of such an enormous
-crime, as well as to evince their own innocence. This was sure to
-bring the murderer to the funeral. When the people were assembled in
-the kirk, the doors were locked by the sheriff's order, and the shoes
-of all the men were examined; that of the murderer was detected by the
-measure of the foot, tread, etc., and a peculiarity in the mode in
-which the sole of one of them had been patched. The remainder of the
-curious chain of evidence upon which he was convicted will suit best
-with twilight, or a blinking candle, being too long for a letter. The
-fellow bore a most excellent character, and had committed this crime
-for no other reason that could be alleged, than that, having been led
-accidentally into an intrigue with this poor wretch, his pride
-revolted at the ridicule which was likely to attend the discovery.
-
-On calling at Ballantyne's, I find, as I had anticipated, that your
-copy, being of royal size, requires some particular nicety in
-hot-pressing. It will be sent by the Carlisle mail _quam
-primum_.--Ever yours,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-P. S.--Love to Mrs. Morritt. John Ballantyne says he has just about
-eighty copies left, out of 3250, this being the second day of
-publication, and the book a two-guinea one.
-
-
-It will surprise no one to hear that Mr. Morritt assured his friend
-he considered Rokeby as the best of all his poems. The admirable,
-perhaps the unique fidelity of the local descriptions, might alone
-have swayed, for I will not say it perverted, the judgment of the
-lord of that beautiful and thenceforth classical domain; and,
-indeed, I must admit that I never understood or appreciated half the
-charm of this poem until I had become familiar with its scenery. But
-Scott himself had not designed to rest his strength on these
-descriptions. He said to James Ballantyne while the work was in
-progress (September 2), "I hope the thing will do, chiefly because
-the world will not expect from _me_ a poem of which the interest
-turns upon _character_;" and in another letter (October 28, 1812),
-"I think you will see the same sort of difference taken in all my
-former poems,--of which I would say, if it is fair for me to say
-anything, that the force in the Lay is thrown on style--in Marmion,
-on description--and in The Lady of the Lake, on incident."[15] I
-suspect some of these distinctions may have been matters of
-afterthought; but as to Rokeby, there can be no mistake. His own
-original conceptions of some of its principal characters have been
-explained in letters already cited; and I believe no one who
-compares the poem with his novels will doubt that, had he undertaken
-their portraiture in prose, they would have come forth with effect
-hardly inferior to any of all the groups he ever created. As it is,
-I question whether even in his prose there is anything more
-exquisitely wrought out, as well as fancied, than the whole contrast
-of the two rivals for the love of the heroine in Rokeby; and that
-heroine herself, too, has a very particular interest attached to
-her. Writing to Miss Edgeworth five years after this time (10th May,
-1818), he says, "I have not read one of my poems since they were
-printed, excepting last year The Lady of the Lake, which I liked
-better than I expected, but not well enough to induce me to go
-through the rest--so I may truly say with Macbeth--
-
- 'I am afraid to think what I have done--
- Look on 't again I dare not.'
-
-"This much of _Matilda_ I recollect--(for that is not so easily
-forgotten)--that she was attempted for the existing person of a lady
-who is now no more, so that I am particularly flattered with your
-distinguishing it from the others, which are in general mere
-shadows."[16] I can have no doubt that the lady he here alludes to
-was the object of his own unfortunate first love; and as little,
-that in the romantic generosity, both of the youthful poet who fails
-to win her higher favor, and of his chivalrous competitor, we have
-before us something more than "a mere shadow."
-
-In spite of these graceful characters, the inimitable scenery on
-which they are presented, and the splendid vivacity and thrilling
-interest of several chapters in the story--such as the opening
-interview of Bertram and Wycliffe--the flight up the cliff on the
-Greta--the first entrance of the cave at Brignall--the firing of
-Rokeby Castle--and the catastrophe in Eglistone Abbey;--in spite
-certainly of exquisitely happy lines profusely scattered throughout
-the whole composition, and of some detached images--that of the
-setting of the tropical sun,[17] for example--which were never
-surpassed by any poet; in spite of all these merits, the immediate
-success of Rokeby was greatly inferior to that of The Lady of the
-Lake; nor has it ever since been so much a favorite with the public
-at large as any other of his poetical romances. He ascribes this
-failure, in his Introduction of 1830, partly to the radically
-unpoetical character of the Roundheads; but surely their character
-has its poetical side also, had his prejudices allowed him to enter
-upon its study with impartial sympathy; and I doubt not, Mr. Morritt
-suggested the difficulty on this score, when the outline of the
-story was as yet undetermined, from consideration rather of the
-poet's peculiar feelings, and powers as hitherto exhibited, than of
-the subject absolutely. Partly he blames the satiety of the public
-ear, which had had so much of his rhythm, not only from himself, but
-from dozens of mocking-birds, male and female, all more or less
-applauded in their day, and now all equally forgotten.[18] This
-circumstance, too, had probably no slender effect; the more that, in
-defiance of all the hints of his friends, he now, in his narrative,
-repeated (with more negligence) the uniform octosyllabic couplets of
-The Lady of the Lake, instead of recurring to the more varied
-cadence of the Lay or Marmion. It is fair to add that, among the
-London circles at least, some sarcastic flings in Mr. Moore's
-Twopenny Post Bag must have had an unfavorable influence on this
-occasion.[19] But the cause of failure which the poet himself places
-last was unquestionably the main one. The deeper and darker passion
-of Childe Harold, the audacity of its morbid voluptuousness, and the
-melancholy majesty of the numbers in which it defied the world, had
-taken the general imagination by storm; and Rokeby, with many
-beauties and some sublimities, was pitched, as a whole, on a key
-which seemed tame in the comparison.
-
-I have already adverted to the fact that Scott felt it a relief, not
-a fatigue, to compose The Bridal of Triermain _pari passu_ with
-Rokeby. In answer, for example, to one of James Ballantyne's
-letters, urging accelerated speed with the weightier romance, he
-says, "I fully share in your anxiety to get forward the grand work;
-but, I assure you, I feel the more confidence from coquetting with
-the guerilla."
-
-The quarto of Rokeby was followed, within two months, by the small
-volume which had been designed for a twin birth;--the MS. had been
-transcribed by one of the Ballantynes themselves, in order to guard
-against any indiscretion of the press-people; and the mystification,
-aided and abetted by Erskine, in no small degree heightened the
-interest of its reception. Except Mr. Morritt, Scott had, so far as
-I am aware, no English confidant upon this occasion. Whether any of
-his daily companions in the Parliament House were in the secret, I
-have never heard; but I can scarcely believe that any of those
-intimate friends, who had known him and Erskine from their youth
-upwards, could have for a moment believed the latter capable either
-of the invention or the execution of this airy and fascinating
-romance in little. Mr. Jeffrey, for whom chiefly "the trap had been
-set," was far too sagacious to be caught in it; but, as it happened,
-he made a voyage that year to America, and thus lost the opportunity
-of immediately expressing his opinion either of Rokeby or of The
-Bridal of Triermain. The writer in the Quarterly Review (July, 1813)
-seems to have been completely deceived.
-
-
-"We have already spoken of it," says the critic, "as an imitation of
-Mr. Scott's style of composition; and if we are compelled to make the
-general approbation more precise and specific, we should say, that if
-it be inferior in vigor to some of his productions, it equals or
-surpasses them in elegance and beauty; that it is more uniformly
-tender, and far less infected with the unnatural prodigies and
-coarseness of the earlier romances. In estimating its merits, however,
-we should forget that it is offered as an imitation. The diction
-undoubtedly reminds us of a rhythm and cadence we have heard before;
-but the sentiments, descriptions, and characters, have qualities that
-are native and unborrowed."
-
-
-If this writer was, as I suppose, Ellis, he probably considered it
-as a thing impossible that Scott should have engaged in such a
-scheme without giving him a hint of it; but to have admitted into
-the secret any one who was likely to criticise the piece, would have
-been to sacrifice the very object of the device. Erskine's own
-suggestion, that "perhaps a quizzical review might be got up," led,
-I believe, to nothing more important than a paragraph in one of the
-Edinburgh newspapers. He may be pardoned for having been not a
-little flattered to find it generally considered as not impossible
-that he should have written such a poem; and I have heard James
-Ballantyne say that nothing could be more amusing than the style of
-his coquetting on the subject while it was yet fresh; but when this
-first excitement was over, his natural feeling of what was due to
-himself, as well as to his friend, dictated many a remonstrance;
-and, though he ultimately acquiesced in permitting another minor
-romance to be put forth in the same manner, he did so reluctantly,
-and was far from acting his part so well.
-
-Scott says, in the Introduction to The Lord of the Isles, "As Mr.
-Erskine was more than suspected of a taste for poetry, and as I took
-care, in several places, to mix something that might resemble (as
-far as was in my power) my friend's feeling and manner, the train
-easily caught, and two large editions were sold." Among the passages
-to which he here alludes are no doubt those in which the character
-of the minstrel Arthur is shaded with the colorings of an almost
-effeminate gentleness. Yet, in the midst of them, the "mighty
-minstrel" himself, from time to time, escapes; as, for instance,
-where the lover bids Lucy, in that exquisite picture of crossing a
-mountain stream, trust to his "stalwart arm"--
-
- "Which could yon oak's prone trunk uprear."
-
-Nor can I pass the compliment to Scott's own fair patroness, where
-Lucy's admirer is made to confess, with some momentary lapse of
-gallantry, that he
-
- "Ne'er won--best meed to minstrel true--
- One favoring smile from fair Buccleuch;"
-
-nor the burst of genuine Borderism,--
-
- "Bewcastle now must keep the hold,
- Speir-Adam's steeds must bide in stall,
- Of Hartley-burn the bowmen bold
- Must only shoot from battled wall;
- And Liddesdale may buckle spur,
- And Teviot now may belt the brand,
- Tarras and Ewes keep nightly stir,
- And Eskdale foray Cumberland."
-
-But, above all, the choice of the scenery, both of the Introductions
-and of the story itself, reveals the early and treasured
-predilections of the poet. For who that remembers the circumstances
-of his first visit to the vale of St. John, but must see throughout
-the impress of his own real romance? I own I am not without a
-suspicion that, in one passage, which always seemed to me a blot
-upon the composition--that in which Arthur derides the military
-coxcombries of his rival--
-
- "Who comes in foreign trashery
- Of tinkling chain and spur,
- A walking haberdashery
- Of feathers, lace, and fur;
- In Rowley's antiquated phrase,
- Horse-milliner of modern days"--
-
-there is a sly reference to the incidents of a certain ball, of
-August, 1797, at the Gilsland Spa.[20]
-
-Among the more prominent Erskinisms, are the eulogistic mention of
-Glasgow, the scene of Erskine's education; and the lines on
-Collins--a supplement to whose Ode on the Highland Superstitions is,
-as far as I know, the only specimen that ever was published of
-Erskine's verse.[21]
-
-As a whole, The Bridal of Triermain appears to me as characteristic
-of Scott as any of his larger poems. His genius pervades and
-animates it beneath a thin and playful veil, which perhaps adds as
-much of grace as it takes away of splendor. As Wordsworth says of
-the eclipse on the lake of Lugano--
-
- "'T is sunlight sheathed and gently charmed;"
-
-and I think there is at once a lightness and a polish of
-versification beyond what he has elsewhere attained. If it be a
-miniature, it is such a one as a Cooper might have hung fearlessly
-beside the masterpieces of Vandyke.
-
-The Introductions contain some of the most exquisite passages he
-ever produced; but their general effect has always struck me as
-unfortunate. No art can reconcile us to contemptuous satire of the
-merest frivolities of modern life--some of them already, in twenty
-years, grown obsolete--interlaid between such bright visions of the
-old world of romance, when
-
- "Strength was gigantic, valor high,
- And wisdom soared beyond the sky,
- And beauty had such matchless beam
- As lights not now a lover's dream."
-
-The fall is grievous, from the hoary minstrel of Newark, and his
-feverish tears on Killiecrankie, to a pathetic swain, who can stoop
-to denounce as objects of his jealousy--
-
- "The landaulet and four blood bays--
- The Hessian boot and pantaloon."
-
-Before Triermain came out, Scott had taken wing for Abbotsford; and
-indeed he seems to have so contrived it in his earlier period, that
-he should not be in Edinburgh when any unavowed work of his was
-published; whereas, from the first, in the case of books that bore
-his name on the title-page, he walked as usual to the Parliament
-House, and bore all the buzz and tattle of friends and acquaintance
-with an air of good-humored equanimity, or rather total apparent
-indifference. The following letter, which contains some curious
-matter of more kinds than one, was written partly in town and partly
-in the country:--
-
-
-TO MISS JOANNA BAILLIE, HAMPSTEAD.
-
- EDINBURGH, March 13, 1813.
-
-MY DEAREST FRIEND,--The pinasters have arrived safe, and I can hardly
-regret, while I am so much flattered by, the trouble you have had in
-collecting them. I have got some wild larch-trees from Loch Katrine,
-and both are to be planted next week, when, God willing, I shall be at
-Abbotsford to superintend the operation. I have got a little corner of
-ground laid out for a nursery, where I shall rear them carefully till
-they are old enough to be set forth to push their fortune on the banks
-of Tweed.--What I shall finally make of this villa-work I don't know,
-but in the mean time it is very entertaining. I shall have to resist
-very flattering invitations this season; for I have received hints,
-from more quarters than one, that my bow would be acceptable at
-Carlton House in case I should be in London, which is very flattering,
-especially as there were some prejudices to be got over in that
-quarter. I should be in some danger of giving new offence, too; for,
-although I utterly disapprove of the present rash and ill-advised
-course of the princess, yet, as she always was most kind and civil to
-me, I certainly could not, as a gentleman, decline obeying any
-commands she might give me to wait upon her, especially in her present
-adversity. So, though I do not affect to say I should be sorry to take
-an opportunity of peeping at the splendors of royalty, prudence and
-economy will keep me quietly at home till another day. My great
-amusement here this some time past has been going almost nightly to
-see John Kemble, who certainly is a great artist. It is a pity he
-shows too much of his machinery. I wish he could be double-capped, as
-they say of watches;--but the fault of too much study certainly does
-not belong to many of his tribe. He is, I think, very great in those
-parts especially where character is tinged by some acquired and
-systematic habits, like those of the Stoic philosophy in Cato and
-Brutus, or of misanthropy in Penruddock; but sudden turns and natural
-bursts of passion are not his forte. I saw him play Sir Giles
-Overreach (the Richard III. of middling life) last night; but he came
-not within a hundred miles of Cooke, whose terrible visage, and short,
-abrupt, and savage utterance, gave a reality almost to that
-extraordinary scene in which he boasts of his own successful villainy
-to a nobleman of worth and honor, of whose alliance he is ambitious.
-Cooke contrived somehow to impress upon the audience the idea of such
-a monster of enormity as had learned to pique himself even upon his
-own atrocious character. But Kemble was too handsome, too plausible,
-and too smooth, to admit its being probable that he should be blind to
-the unfavorable impression which these extraordinary vaunts are likely
-to make on the person whom he is so anxious to conciliate.
-
-
- ABBOTSFORD, 21st March.
-
-This letter, begun in Edinburgh, is to take wing from Abbotsford. John
-Winnos (now John Winnos is the sub-oracle of Abbotsford, the principal
-being Tom Purdie)--John Winnos pronounces that the pinaster seed ought
-to be raised at first on a hot-bed, and thence transplanted to a
-nursery; so to a hot-bed they have been carefully consigned, the upper
-oracle not objecting, in respect his talent lies in catching a salmon,
-or finding a hare sitting--on which occasions (being a very complete
-Scrub) he solemnly exchanges his working jacket for an old green one
-of mine, and takes the air of one of Robin Hood's followers. His more
-serious employments are ploughing, harrowing, and overseeing all my
-premises; being a complete Jack-of-all-trades, from the carpenter to
-the shepherd, nothing comes strange to him; and being extremely
-honest, and somewhat of a humorist, he is quite my right hand. I
-cannot help singing his praises at this moment, because I have so many
-odd and out-of-the-way things to do, that I believe the conscience of
-many of our jog-trot countrymen would revolt at being made my
-instrument in sacrificing good corn-land to the visions of Mr. Price's
-theory. Mr. Pinkerton, the historian, has a play coming out at
-Edinburgh; it is by no means bad poetry, yet I think it will not be
-popular; the people come and go, and speak very notable things in good
-blank verse, but there is no very strong interest excited; the plot
-also is disagreeable, and liable to the objections (though in a less
-degree) which have been urged against the Mysterious Mother; it is to
-be acted on Wednesday; I will let you know its fate. P., with whom I
-am in good habits, showed the MS., but I referred him, with such
-praise as I could conscientiously bestow, to the players and the
-public. I don't know why one should take the task of damning a man's
-play out of the hands of the proper tribunal. Adieu, my dear friend. I
-have scarce room for love to Miss, Mrs., and Dr. B.
-
- W. SCOTT.
-
-
-To this I add a letter to Lady Louisa Stuart, who had sent him a
-copy of these lines, found by Lady Douglas on the back of a tattered
-bank-note:--
-
- "Farewell, my note, and wheresoe'er ye wend,
- Shun gaudy scenes, and be the poor man's friend.
- You've left a poor one; go to one as poor,
- And drive despair and hunger from his door."
-
-It appears that these noble friends had adopted, or feigned to
-adopt, the belief that The Bridal of Triermain was a production of
-Mr. R. P. Gillies--who had about this time published an imitation of
-Lord Byron's Romaunt, under the title of Childe Alarique.
-
-
-TO THE LADY LOUISA STUART, BOTHWELL CASTLE.
-
- ABBOTSFORD, 28th April, 1813.
-
-DEAR LADY LOUISA,--Nothing can give me more pleasure than to hear from
-you, because it is both a most acceptable favor to me, and also a sign
-that your own spirits are recovering their tone. Ladies are, I think,
-very fortunate in having a resource in work at a time when the mind
-rejects intellectual amusement. Men have no resource but striding up
-and down the room, like a bird that beats itself to pieces against the
-bars of its cage; whereas needle-work is a sort of sedative, too
-mechanical to worry the mind by distracting it from the points on
-which its musings turn, yet gradually assisting it in regaining
-steadiness and composure; for so curiously are our bodies and minds
-linked together, that the regular and constant employment of the
-former on any process, however dull and uniform, has the effect of
-tranquillizing, where it cannot disarm, the feelings of the other. I
-am very much pleased with the lines on the guinea note, and if Lady
-Douglas does not object, I would willingly mention the circumstance in
-the Edinburgh Annual Register. I think it will give the author great
-delight to know that his lines had attracted attention, and _had_ sent
-the paper on which they were recorded, "heaven-directed, to the
-poor." Of course I would mention no names. There was, as your Ladyship
-may remember, some years since, a most audacious and determined murder
-committed on a porter belonging to the British Linen Company's Bank at
-Leith, who was stabbed to the heart in broad daylight, and robbed of a
-large sum in notes.[22] If ever this crime comes to light, it will be
-through the circumstance of an idle young fellow having written part
-of a playhouse song on one of the notes, which, however, has as yet
-never appeared in circulation.
-
-I am very glad you like Rokeby, which is nearly out of fashion and
-memory with me. It has been wonderfully popular, about ten thousand
-copies having walked off already, in about three months, and the
-demand continuing faster than it can be supplied. As to my imitator,
-the Knight of Triermain, I will endeavor to convey to Mr. Gillies
-(_puisque Gillies il est_) your Ladyship's very just strictures on the
-Introduction to the second Canto. But if he takes the opinion of a
-hacked old author like myself, he will content himself with avoiding
-such bevues in future, without attempting to mend those which are
-already made. There is an ominous old proverb which says, _Confess and
-be hanged_; and truly if an author acknowledges his own blunders, I do
-not know who he can expect to stand by him; whereas, let him confess
-nothing, and he will always find some injudicious admirers to
-vindicate even his faults. So that I think after publication the
-effect of criticism should be prospective, in which point of view I
-dare say Mr. G. will take your friendly hint, especially as it is
-confirmed by that of the best judges who have read the poem.--Here is
-beautiful weather for April! an absolute snow-storm mortifying me to
-the core by retarding the growth of all my young trees and
-shrubs.--Charlotte begs to be most respectfully remembered to your
-Ladyship and Lady D. We are realizing the nursery tale of the man and
-his wife who lived in a vinegar bottle, for our only sitting-room is
-just twelve feet square, and my Eve alleges that I am too big for our
-paradise. To make amends, I have created a tolerable garden, occupying
-about an English acre, which I begin to be very fond of. When one
-passes forty, an addition to the quiet occupations of life becomes of
-real value, for I do not hunt and fish with quite the relish I did ten
-years ago. Adieu, my dear Lady Louisa, and all good attend you.
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-Footnotes of the Chapter XXV.
-
-[1: The epitaph of this favorite greyhound may be seen on
-the edge of the bank, a little way below the house of Abbotsford.]
-
-[2: The Reverend Alexander Dyce says, "N. T. stands for
-_Nathaniel Thompson_, the Tory bookseller, who published these
-_Loyal Poems_."--(1839.)]
-
-[3: An edition of the British Dramatists had, I believe,
-been projected by Mr. Terry.]
-
-[4: Mr. Thomson died 8th January, 1838, before the
-publication of the first edition of these Memoirs had been
-completed.--(1839.)]
-
-[5: _Reminiscences of Sir Walter Scott_, p. 56.]
-
-[6: [From a passage in a letter to Lady Abercorn, written
-September 10, 1818, on the return from a similar journey (see
-_Familiar Letters_, vol. ii. p. 24), it seems probable that some at
-least of the incidents of this visit belong to that of the later
-date.]]
-
-[7: This alluded to a ridiculous hunter of lions, who,
-being met by Mr. Morritt in the grounds at Rokeby, disclaimed all
-taste for picturesque beauties, but overwhelmed their owner with
-Homeric Greek; of which he had told Scott.]
-
-[8: _Burnfoot_ is the name of a farmhouse on the Buccleuch
-estate, not far from Langholm, where the late Sir John Malcolm and
-his distinguished brothers were born. Their grandfather had, I
-believe, found refuge there after forfeiting a good estate and an
-ancient baronetcy in the _affair_ of 1715. A monument to the gallant
-General's memory has recently been erected near the spot of his
-birth.]
-
-[9: _3d King Henry VI._ Act I. Scene 4.]
-
-[10: See _Life of Dryden_, Scott's _Miscellaneous Prose
-Works_, vol. i. p. 293.]
-
-[11: _Much Ado about Nothing_, Act IV. Scene 2.]
-
-[12: Several of these letters having been enclosed in
-franked covers, which have perished, I am unable to affix the exact
-dates to them.]
-
-[13: The Rev. Alexander Dyce informs me that _nine_ of
-Carey's pieces were printed in 1771, for J. Murray of Fleet Street,
-in a quarto of thirty-five pages, entitled _Poems from a MS. written
-in the time of Oliver Cromwell_. This rare tract had never fallen
-into Scott's hands.--(1839.)]
-
-[14: Byron's _Life and Works_, vol. ii. p. 169.]
-
-[15: Several letters to Ballantyne on the same subject are
-quoted in the notes to the last edition of _Rokeby_. See Scott's
-_Poetical Works_, 1834, vol. ix. pp. 1-3; and especially the note on
-p. 300, from which it appears that the closing stanza was added, in
-deference to Ballantyne and Erskine, though the author retained his
-own opinion that "it spoiled one effect without producing another."]
-
-[16: [See _Familiar Letters_, vol. ii. p. 16.]]
-
-[17:
-
- "My noontide, India may declare;
- Like her fierce sun, I fired the air!
- Like him, to wood and cave bid fly
- Her natives, from mine angry eye.
- And now, my race of terror ran,
- Mine be the eye of tropic sun!
- No pale gradations quench his ray,
- No twilight dews his wrath allay;
- With disk like battle-target red,
- He rushes to his burning bed.
- Dyes the wide wave with bloody light,
- Then sinks at once--and all is night."--_Canto_ vi. 21.]
-
-[18: "Scott found peculiar favor and imitation among the
-fair sex. There was Miss Holford, and Miss Mitford, and Miss
-Francis; but, with the greatest respect be it spoken, none of his
-imitators did much honor to the original except Hogg, the Ettrick
-Shepherd, until the appearance of _The Bridal of Triermain_ and
-_Harold the Dauntless_, which, in the opinion of some, equalled if
-not surpassed him; and, lo! after three or four years, they turned
-out to be the master's own compositions."--Byron, vol. xv. p. 96.]
-
-[19: See, for instance, the Epistle of Lady Corke--or that
-of Messrs. Lackington, booksellers, to one of their dandy authors,--
-
- "Should you feel any touch of _poetical_ glow,
- We've a scheme to suggest--Mr. Scott, you must know
- (Who, we're sorry to say it, now works for the _Row_),
- Having quitted the Borders to seek new renown,
- Is coming by long Quarto stages to town,
- And beginning with Rokeby (the job's sure to pay),
- Means to do all the gentlemen's seats on the way.
- Now the scheme is, though none of our hackneys can beat him,
- To start a new Poet through Highgate to meet him;
- Who by means of quick proofs--no revises--long coaches--
- May do a few Villas before Scott approaches;
- Indeed if our Pegasus be not curst shabby,
- He'll reach, without foundering, at least Woburn-Abbey," etc., etc.]
-
-[20: See _ante_, vol. i. p. 246.]
-
-[21: It is included in the _Border Minstrelsy_, vol. i. p.
-270.]
-
-[22: This murder, perpetrated in November, 1806, remains a
-mystery in 1836. The porter's name was Begbie. [See _Familiar
-Letters_, vol. i. p. 63.]]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
- AFFAIRS OF JOHN BALLANTYNE AND CO. -- CAUSES OF THEIR
- DERANGEMENT. --LETTERS OF SCOTT TO HIS PARTNERS. -- NEGOTIATION
- FOR RELIEF WITH MESSRS. CONSTABLE. -- NEW PURCHASE OF LAND AT
- ABBOTSFORD. --EMBARRASSMENTS CONTINUED. -- JOHN BALLANTYNE'S
- EXPRESSES. --DRUMLANRIG, PENRITH, ETC. -- SCOTT'S MEETING WITH
- THE MARQUIS OF ABERCORN AT LONGTOWN. -- HIS APPLICATION TO THE
- DUKE OF BUCCLEUCH. --OFFER OF THE POET-LAUREATESHIP, --
- CONSIDERED, -- AND DECLINED. --ADDRESS OF THE CITY OF EDINBURGH
- TO THE PRINCE REGENT. -- ITS RECEPTION. -- CIVIC HONORS CONFERRED
- ON SCOTT. -- QUESTION OF TAXATION ON LITERARY INCOME. -- LETTERS
- TO MR. MORRITT, MR. SOUTHEY, MR. RICHARDSON, MR. CRABBE, MISS
- BAILLIE, AND LORD BYRON
-
-1813
-
-
-About a month after the publication of The Bridal of Triermain, the
-affairs of the Messrs. Ballantyne, which had never apparently been
-in good order since the establishment of the bookselling firm,
-became so embarrassed as to call for Scott's most anxious efforts to
-disentangle them. Indeed, it is clear that there had existed some
-very serious perplexity in the course of the preceding autumn; for
-Scott writes to John Ballantyne, while Rokeby was in progress
-(August 11, 1812),--"I have a letter from James, very anxious about
-your health and state of spirits. If you suffer the present
-inconveniences to depress you too much, you are wrong; and if you
-conceal any part of them, are very unjust to us all. I am always
-ready to make any sacrifices to do justice to engagements, and would
-rather sell anything, or everything, than be less than true men to
-the world."
-
-[Illustration: ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE
-
-_From the painting by Raeburn_]
-
-I have already, perhaps, said enough to account for the general want
-of success in this publishing adventure; but Mr. James Ballantyne
-sums up the case so briefly in his deathbed paper, that I may here
-quote his words. "My brother," he says, "though an active and
-pushing, was not a cautious bookseller, and the large sums received
-never formed an addition to stock. In fact, they were all expended
-by the partners, who, being then young and sanguine men, not
-unwillingly adopted my brother's hasty results. By May, 1813, in a
-word, the absolute throwing away of our own most valuable
-publications, and the rash adoption of some injudicious speculations
-of Mr. Scott, had introduced such losses and embarrassments, that
-after a very careful consideration, Mr. Scott determined to dissolve
-the concern." He adds: "This became a matter of less difficulty,
-because time had in a great measure worn away the differences
-between Mr. Scott and Mr. Constable, and Mr. Hunter was now out of
-Constable's concern.[23] A peace, therefore, was speedily made up,
-and the old habits of intercourse were restored."
-
-How reluctantly Scott had made up his mind to open such a
-negotiation with Constable, as involved a complete exposure of the
-mismanagement of John Ballantyne's business as a publisher, will
-appear from a letter dated about the Christmas of 1812, in which he
-says to James, who had proposed asking Constable to take a share
-both in Rokeby and in the Annual Register, "You must be aware, that
-in stating the objections which occur to me to taking in Constable,
-I think they ought to give way either to absolute necessity or to
-very strong grounds of advantage. But I _am_ persuaded nothing
-ultimately good can be expected from any connection with that
-house, unless for those who have a mind to be hewers of wood and
-drawers of water. We will talk the matter coolly over, and, in the
-mean while, perhaps you could see W. Erskine, and learn what
-impression this odd union is like to make among your friends.
-Erskine is sound-headed, and quite to be trusted with _your whole
-story_. I must own I can hardly think the purchase of the Register
-is equal to the loss of credit and character which your surrender
-will be conceived to infer." At the time when he wrote this, Scott
-no doubt anticipated that Rokeby would have success not less
-decisive than The Lady of the Lake; but in this expectation--though
-10,000 copies in three months would have seemed to any other author
-a triumphant sale--he had been disappointed. And meanwhile the
-difficulties of the firm, accumulating from week to week, had
-reached, by the middle of May, a point which rendered it absolutely
-necessary for him to conquer all his scruples.
-
-Mr. Cadell, then Constable's partner, says in his
-_Memoranda_,--"Prior to this time the reputation of John Ballantyne
-and Co. had been decidedly on the decline. It was notorious in the
-trade that their general speculations had been unsuccessful; they
-were known to be grievously in want of money. These rumors were
-realized to the full by an application which Messrs. B. made to Mr.
-Constable in May, 1813, for pecuniary aid, accompanied by an offer
-of some of the books they had published since 1809, as a purchase,
-along with various shares in Mr. Scott's own poems. Their
-difficulties were admitted, and the negotiation was pressed
-urgently; so much so, that a pledge was given, that if the terms
-asked were acceded to, John Ballantyne and Co. would endeavor to
-wind up their concerns, and cease as soon as possible to be
-publishers." Mr. Cadell adds: "I need hardly remind you that this
-was a period of very great general difficulty in the money market.
-It was the crisis of the war. The public expenditure had reached an
-enormous height; and even the most prosperous mercantile houses were
-often pinched to sustain their credit. It may easily, therefore, be
-supposed that the Messrs. Ballantyne had during many months besieged
-every banker's door in Edinburgh, and that their agents had done the
-like in London."
-
-The most important of the requests which the laboring house made to
-Constable was that he should forthwith take entirely to himself the
-stock, copyright, and future management of the Edinburgh Annual
-Register. Upon examining the state of this book, however, Constable
-found that the loss on it had never been less than £1000 per annum,
-and he therefore declined that matter for the present. He promised,
-however, to consider seriously the means he might have of ultimately
-relieving them from the pressure of the Register, and, in the mean
-time, offered to take 300 sets of the stock on hand. The other
-purchases he finally made on the 18th of May were considerable
-portions of Weber's unhappy Beaumont and Fletcher--of an edition of
-De Foe's novels in twelve volumes--of a collection entitled Tales of
-the East in three large volumes, 8vo, double-columned--and of
-another in one volume, called Popular Tales--about 800 copies of The
-Vision of Don Roderick--and a fourth of the remaining copyright of
-Rokeby, price £700. The immediate accommodation thus received
-amounted to £2000; and Scott, who had personally conducted the
-latter part of the negotiation, writes thus to his junior partner,
-who had gone a week or two earlier to London in quest of some
-similar assistance there:--
-
-
-TO MR. JOHN BALLANTYNE, CARE OF MESSRS. LONGMAN & CO., LONDON.
-
- PRINTING-OFFICE, May 18, 1813.
-
-DEAR JOHN,--After many _offs_ and _ons_, and as many _projets_ and
-_contre-projets_ as the treaty of Amiens, I have at length concluded
-a treaty with Constable, in which I am sensible he has gained a great
-advantage;[24] but what could I do amidst the disorder and pressure of
-so many demands? The arrival of your long-dated bills decided my
-giving in, for what could James or I do with them? I trust this
-sacrifice has cleared our way, but many rubs remain; nor am I, after
-these hard skirmishes, so able to meet them by my proper credit.
-Constable, however, will be a zealous ally; and for the first time
-these many weeks I shall lay my head on a quiet pillow, for now I do
-think that, by our joint exertions, we shall get well through the
-storm, save Beaumont from depreciation, get a partner in our heavy
-concerns, reef our topsails, and move on securely under an easy sail.
-And if, on the one hand, I have sold my gold too cheap, I have, on the
-other, turned my lead to gold. Brewster[25] and Singers[26] are the
-only heavy things to which I have not given a blue eye. Had your news
-of Cadell's sale[27] reached us here, I could not have harpooned my
-grampus so deeply as I have done, as nothing but Rokeby would have
-barbed the hook.
-
-Adieu, my dear John. I have the most sincere regard for you, and you
-may depend on my considering your interest with quite as much
-attention as my own. If I have ever expressed myself with irritation
-in speaking of this business, you must impute it to the sudden,
-extensive, and unexpected embarrassments in which I found myself
-involved all at once. If to your real goodness of heart and integrity,
-and to the quickness and acuteness of your talents, you added habits
-of more universal circumspection, and, above all, the courage to tell
-disagreeable truths to those whom you hold in regard, I pronounce that
-the world never held such a man of business. These it must be your
-study to add to your other good qualities. Meantime, as some one says
-to Swift, I love you with all your failings. Pray make an effort and
-love me with all mine. Yours truly,
-
- W. S.
-
-
-Three days afterwards Scott resumes the subject as follows:--
-
-
-TO MR. JOHN BALLANTYNE, LONDON.
-
- EDINBURGH, 21st May, 1813.
-
-DEAR JOHN,--Let it never escape your recollection, that shutting your
-own eyes, or blinding those of your friends, upon the actual state of
-business, is the high road to ruin. Meanwhile, we have recovered our
-legs for a week or two. Constable will, I think, come in to the
-Register. He is most anxious to maintain the printing-office; he sees
-most truly that the more we print the less we publish; and for the
-same reason he will, I think, help us off with our heavy quire-stock.
-
-I was aware of the distinction between the _state_ and the _calendar_
-as to the latter including the printing-office bills, and I summed and
-docked them (they are marked with red ink), but there is still a
-difference of £2000 and upwards on the calendar against the business.
-I sometimes fear that, between the long dates of your bills, and the
-tardy settlements of the Edinburgh trade, some difficulties will occur
-even in June; and July I always regard with deep anxiety. As for loss,
-if I get out without public exposure, I shall not greatly regard the
-rest. Radcliffe the physician said, when he lost £2000 on the South
-Sea scheme, it was only going up 2000 pair of stairs; I say, it is
-only writing 2000 couplets, and the account is balanced. More of this
-hereafter. Yours truly,
-
- W. SCOTT.
-
-P. S.--James has behaved very well during this whole transaction, and
-has been most steadily attentive to business. I am convinced that the
-more he works the better his health will be. One or other of you will
-need to be constantly in the printing-office henceforward,--it is the
-sheet-anchor.
-
-
-The allusion in this _postscript_ to James Ballantyne's health
-reminds me that Scott's letters to himself are full of hints on that
-subject, even from a very early period of their connection; and
-these hints are all to the same effect. James was a man of lazy
-habits, and not a little addicted to the more solid, and perhaps
-more dangerous, part of the indulgences of the table. One letter
-(dated Ashestiel, 1810) will be a sufficient specimen:--
-
-
-TO MR. JAMES BALLANTYNE.
-
-MY DEAR JAMES,--I am very sorry for the state of your health, and
-should be still more so, were I not certain that I can prescribe for
-you as well as any physician in Edinburgh. You have naturally an
-athletic constitution and a hearty stomach, and these agree very ill
-with a sedentary life and the habits of indolence which it brings on.
-Your stomach thus gets weak; and from those complaints of all others
-arise most certainly flatulence, hypochondria, and all the train of
-unpleasant feelings connected with indigestion. We all know the
-horrible sensation of the nightmare arises from the same cause which
-gives those waking nightmares commonly called the blue devils. You
-must positively put yourself on a regimen as to eating, not for a
-month or two, but for a year at least, and take regular exercise--and
-my life for yours. I know this by myself, for if I were to eat and
-drink in town as I do here, it would soon finish me, and yet I am
-sensible I live too genially in Edinburgh as it is. Yours very truly,
-
- W. SCOTT.
-
-
-Among Scott's early pets at Abbotsford there was a huge raven,
-whose powers of speech were remarkable, far beyond any parrot's that
-he had ever met with; and who died in consequence of an excess of
-the kind to which James Ballantyne was addicted. Thenceforth, Scott
-often repeated to his old friend, and occasionally scribbled by way
-of postscript to his notes on business--
-
- "When you are craving,
- Remember the Raven."
-
-Sometimes the formula is varied to--
-
- "When you've dined half,
- Think on poor Ralph!"
-
-His preachments of regularity in book-keeping to John, and of
-abstinence from good cheer to James Ballantyne, were equally vain;
-but on the other hand it must be allowed that they had some reason
-for displeasure--(the more felt, because they durst not, like him,
-express their feelings)[28]--when they found that scarcely had these
-"hard skirmishes" terminated in the bargain of May 18, before Scott
-was preparing fresh embarrassments for himself, by commencing a
-negotiation for a considerable addition to his property at
-Abbotsford. As early as the 20th of June he writes to Constable as
-being already aware of this matter, and alleges his anxiety "to
-close at once with a very capricious person," as the only reason
-that could have induced him to make up his mind to sell the whole
-copyright of an as yet unwritten poem, to be entitled The Nameless
-Glen. This copyright he then offered to dispose of to Constable for
-£5000; adding, "this is considerably less in proportion than I have
-already made on the share of Rokeby sold to yourself, and surely
-that is no unfair admeasurement." A long correspondence ensued, in
-the course of which Scott mentions The Lord of the Isles, as a title
-which had suggested itself to him in place of The Nameless Glen; but
-as the negotiation did not succeed, I may pass its details. The new
-property which Scott was so eager to acquire was that hilly tract
-stretching from the old Roman road near Turn-again towards the
-Cauldshiels Loch: a then desolate and naked mountain-mere, which he
-likens, in a letter of this summer (to Lady Louisa Stuart), to the
-Lake of the Genie and the Fisherman in the Arabian Tale. To obtain
-this lake at one extremity of his estate, as a contrast to the Tweed
-at the other, was a prospect for which hardly any sacrifice would
-have appeared too much; and he contrived to gratify his wishes in
-the course of that July, to which he had spoken of himself in May as
-looking forward "with the deepest anxiety."
-
-Nor was he, I must add, more able to control some of his minor
-tastes. I find him writing to Mr. Terry, on the 20th of June, about
-"that splendid lot of ancient armor, advertised by Winstanley," a
-celebrated auctioneer in London, of which he had the strongest fancy
-to make his spoil, though he was at a loss to know where it should
-be placed when it reached Abbotsford; and on the 2d of July, this
-acquisition also having been settled, he says to the same
-correspondent: "I have written to Mr. Winstanley. My bargain with
-Constable was otherwise arranged, but Little John is to find the
-needful article, and I shall take care of Mr. Winstanley's interest,
-who has behaved too handsomely in this matter to be trusted to the
-mercy of our little friend the Picaroon, who is, notwithstanding his
-many excellent qualities, a little on the score of old Gobbo--doth
-somewhat smack--somewhat grow to.[29] We shall be at Abbotsford on
-the 12th, and hope soon to see you there. I am fitting up a small
-room above _Peter-House_, where an unceremonious bachelor may
-consent to do penance, though the place is a cock-loft, and the
-access that which leads many a bold fellow to his last nap--a
-ladder."[30] And a few weeks later, he says, in the same sort, to
-his sister-in-law, Mrs. Thomas Scott: "In despite of these hard
-times, which affect my patrons the booksellers very much, I am
-buying old books and old armor as usual, and adding to what your old
-friend Burns[31] calls--
-
- 'A fouth of auld nick-nackets,
- Rusty airn caps and jingling jackets,
- Wad haud the Lothians three in tackets
- A towmont gude,
- And parritch-pats and auld saut-backets,
- Before the flude.'"
-
-Notwithstanding all this, it must have been with a most uneasy mind
-that he left Edinburgh to establish himself at Abbotsford that July.
-The assistance of Constable had not been granted, indeed it had not
-been asked, to an extent at all adequate for the difficulties of the
-case; and I have now to transcribe, with pain and reluctance, some
-extracts from Scott's letters, during the ensuing autumn, which
-speak the language of anxious, and, indeed, humiliating distress;
-and give a most lively notion of the incurable recklessness of his
-younger partner.
-
-
-TO MR. JOHN BALLANTYNE.
-
- ABBOTSFORD, Saturday, 24th July.
-
-DEAR JOHN,--I sent you the order, and have only to hope it arrived
-safe and in good time. I waked the boy at three o'clock myself,
-having slept little, less on account of the money than of the time.
-Surely you should have written, three or four days before, the
-probable amount of the deficit, and, as on former occasions, I would
-have furnished you with means of meeting it. These expresses, besides
-every other inconvenience, excite surprise in my family and in the
-neighborhood. I know no justifiable occasion for them but the
-unexpected return of a bill. I do not consider you as answerable for
-the success of plans, but I do and must hold you responsible for
-giving me, in distinct and plain terms, your opinion as to any
-difficulties which may occur, and that in such time that I may make
-arrangements to obviate them if possible.
-
-Of course, if anything has gone wrong you will come out here
-to-morrow. But if, as I hope and trust, the cash arrived safe, you
-will write to me, under cover to the Duke of Buccleuch, Drumlanrig
-Castle, Dumfries-shire. I shall set out for that place on Monday
-morning early.
-
- W. S.
-
-
-TO MR. JAMES BALLANTYNE.
-
- ABBOTSFORD, 25th July, 1813.
-
-DEAR JAMES,--I address the following jobation for John to you, that
-you may see whether I do not well to be angry, and enforce upon him
-the necessity of constantly writing his fears as well as his hopes.
-You should rub him often on this point, for his recollection becomes
-rusty the instant I leave town and am not in the way to rack him with
-constant questions. I hope the presses are doing well, and that you
-are quite stout again. Yours truly,
-
- W. S.
-
-
-(_Enclosure._)
-
-TO MR. JOHN BALLANTYNE.
-
-MY GOOD FRIEND JOHN,--The post brings me no letter from you, which I
-am much surprised at, as you must suppose me anxious to learn that
-your express arrived. I think he must have reached you before
-post-hours, and James or you _might_ have found a minute to say so in
-a single line. I once more request that you will be a businesslike
-correspondent, and state your provisions for every week prospectively.
-I do not expect you to _warrant them_, which you rather perversely
-seem to insist is my wish, but I do want to be aware of their nature
-and extent, that I may provide against the possibility of miscarriage.
-The calendar, to which you refer me, tells me what sums are due, but
-cannot tell your shifts to pay them, which are naturally altering with
-circumstances, and of which alterations I request to have due notice.
-You say you _could not suppose_ Sir W. Forbes would have refused the
-long dated bills; but that you _had_ such an apprehension is clear,
-both because in the calendar these bills were rated two months lower,
-and because, three days before, you wrote me an enigmatical expression
-of your apprehensions, instead of saying plainly there was a chance of
-your wanting £350, when I would have sent you an order to be used
-conditionally.
-
-All I desire is unlimited confidence and frequent correspondence, and
-that you will give me weekly at least the fullest anticipation of your
-resources, and the probability of their being effectual. I may be
-disappointed in my own, of which you shall have equally timeous
-notice. Omit no exertions to procure the use of money, even for a
-month or six weeks, for time is most precious. The large balance due
-in January from the trade, and individuals, which I cannot reckon at
-less than £4000, will put us finally to rights; and it will be a shame
-to founder within sight of harbor. The greatest risk we run is from
-such ill-considered despatches as those of Friday. Suppose that I had
-gone to Drumlanrig--suppose the pony had set up--suppose a thousand
-things--and we were ruined for want of your telling your apprehensions
-in due time. Do not plague yourself to vindicate this sort of
-management; but if you have escaped the consequences (as to which you
-have left me uncertain), thank God, and act more cautiously another
-time. It was quite the same to me on what day I sent that draft;
-indeed it must have been so if I had the money in my cash account, and
-if I had not, the more time given me to provide it the better.
-
-Now, do not affect to suppose that my displeasure arises from your not
-having done your utmost to realize funds, and that utmost having
-failed. It is one mode, to be sure, of exculpation, to suppose one's
-self accused of something they are not charged with, and then to make
-a querulous or indignant defence, and complain of the injustice of the
-accuser. The head and front of your offending is precisely your not
-writing explicitly, and I request this may not happen again. It is
-your fault, and I believe arises either from an ill-judged idea of
-smoothing matters to me--as if I were not behind the curtain--or a
-general reluctance to allow that any danger is near, until it is
-almost unparriable. I shall be very sorry if anything I have said
-gives you pain; but the matter is too serious for all of us, to be
-passed over without giving you my explicit sentiments. To-morrow I set
-out for Drumlanrig, and shall not hear from you till Tuesday or
-Wednesday. Make yourself master of the post-town--Thornhill, probably,
-or Sanquhar. As Sir W. F. & Co. have cash to meet my order, nothing, I
-think, can have gone wrong, unless the boy perished by the way.
-Therefore, in faith and hope, and--that I may lack none of the
-Christian virtues--in charity with your dilatory worship, I remain
-very truly yours,
-
- W. S.
-
-
-Scott proceeded, accordingly, to join a gay and festive circle, whom
-the Duke of Buccleuch had assembled about him on first taking
-possession of the magnificent Castle of Drumlanrig, in Nithsdale,
-the principal messuage of the dukedom of Queensberry, which had
-recently lapsed into his family. But, _post equitem sedet atra
-cura_--another of John Ballantyne's unwelcome missives, rendered
-necessary by a neglect of precisely the same kind as before, reached
-him in the midst of this scene of rejoicing. On the 31st, he again
-writes:--
-
-
-TO MR. JOHN BALLANTYNE, BOOKSELLER, EDINBURGH.
-
- DRUMLANRIG, Friday.
-
-DEAR JOHN,--I enclose the order. Unfortunately, the Drumlanrig post
-only goes thrice a week; but the Marquis of Queensberry, who carries
-this to Dumfries, has promised that the guard of the mail-coach shall
-deliver it by five to-morrow. I was less anxious, as your note said
-you could clear this month. It is a cruel thing that no State you
-furnish excludes the arising of such unexpected claims as this for the
-taxes on the printing-office. What unhappy management, to suffer them
-to run ahead in such a manner!--but it is in vain to complain. Were it
-not for your strange concealments, I should anticipate no difficulty
-in winding up these matters. But who can reckon upon a State where
-claims are kept out of view until they are in the hands of a _writer_?
-If you have no time to say that _this_ comes safe to hand, I suppose
-James may favor me so far. Yours truly,
-
- W. S.
-
-
-Let the guard be rewarded.
-
-Let me know exactly what you _can_ do and _hope_ to do for next
-month; for it signifies nothing raising money for you, unless I see
-it is to be of real service. Observe, I make you responsible for
-nothing but a fair statement.[32] The guard is known to the Marquis,
-who has good-naturedly promised to give him this letter with his own
-hand; so it must reach you in time, though probably past five on
-Saturday.
-
-Another similar application reached Scott the day after the guard
-delivered his packet. He writes thus, in reply:
-
-
-TO MR. JOHN BALLANTYNE.
-
- DRUMLANRIG, Sunday.
-
-DEAR JOHN,--I trust you got my letter yesterday by five, with the
-draft enclosed. I return your draft accepted. On Wednesday I think of
-leaving this place, where, but for these damned affairs, I should have
-been very happy.
-
- W. S.
-
-
-Scott had been for some time under an engagement to meet the Marquis
-of Abercorn at Carlisle, in the first week of August, for the
-transaction of some business connected with his brother Thomas's
-late administration of that nobleman's Scottish affairs; and he had
-designed to pass from Drumlanrig to Carlisle for this purpose,
-without going back to Abbotsford. In consequence of these repeated
-harassments, however, he so far altered his plans as to cut short
-his stay at Drumlanrig, and turn homewards for two or three days,
-where James Ballantyne met him with such a statement as in some
-measure relieved his mind.
-
-He then proceeded to fulfil his engagement with Lord Abercorn, whom
-he encountered travelling in a rather peculiar style between
-Carlisle and Longtown. The ladies of the family and the household
-occupied four or five carriages, all drawn by the Marquis's own
-horses, while the noble Lord himself brought up the rear, mounted on
-horseback, and decorated with the ribbon of the order of the Garter.
-On meeting the cavalcade, Scott turned with them, and he was not a
-little amused when they reached the village of Longtown, which he
-had ridden through an hour or two before, with the preparations
-which he found there made for the dinner of the party. The Marquis's
-major-domo and cook had arrived there at an early hour in the
-morning, and everything was now arranged for his reception in the
-paltry little public house, as nearly as possible in the style usual
-in his own lordly mansions. The ducks and geese that had been
-dabbling three or four hours ago in the village pond were now ready
-to make their appearance under numberless disguises as _entrées_; a
-regular bill-of-fare flanked the noble Marquis's allotted cover;
-every huckaback towel in the place had been pressed to do service as
-a napkin; and, that nothing might be wanting to the mimicry of
-splendor, the landlady's poor remnants of crockery and pewter had
-been furbished up, and mustered in solemn order on a crazy old
-beauffet, which was to represent a sideboard worthy of Lucullus. I
-think it worth while to preserve this anecdote, which Scott
-delighted in telling, as perhaps the last relic of a style of
-manners now passed away, and never likely to be revived among us.
-
-Having despatched this dinner and his business, Scott again turned
-southwards, intending to spend a few days with Mr. Morritt at
-Rokeby; but on reaching Penrith, the landlord there, who was his old
-acquaintance (Mr. Buchanan), placed a letter in his hands: _ecce
-iterum_--it was once more a cry of distress from John Ballantyne. He
-thus answered it:--
-
-
-TO MR. JOHN BALLANTYNE.
-
- PENRITH, August 10, 1813.
-
-DEAR JOHN,--I enclose you an order for £350. I shall remain at Rokeby
-until Saturday or Sunday, and be at Abbotsford on Wednesday at latest.
-
-I hope the printing-office is going on well. I fear, from the state of
-accompts between the companies, restrictions on the management and
-expense will be unavoidable, which may trench upon James's comforts. I
-cannot observe hitherto that the printing-office is paying off, but
-rather adding to its embarrassments; and it cannot be thought that I
-have either means or inclination to support a losing concern at the
-rate of £200 a month. If James could find a monied partner, an active
-man who understood the commercial part of the business, and would
-superintend the conduct of the cash, it might be the best for all
-parties; for I really am not adequate to the fatigue of mind which
-these affairs occasion me, though I must do the best to struggle
-through them.
-
-Believe me yours, etc.
-
- W. S.
-
-
-At Brough he encountered a messenger who brought him such a painful
-account of Mrs. Morritt's health, that he abandoned his intention of
-proceeding to Rokeby; and, indeed, it was much better that he should
-be at Abbotsford again as soon as possible, for his correspondence
-shows a continued succession, during the three or four ensuing
-weeks, of the same annoyances that had pursued him to Drumlanrig and
-to Penrith. By his desire, the Ballantynes had, it would seem,
-before the middle of August, laid a statement of their affairs
-before Constable. Though the statement was not so clear and full as
-Scott had wished it to be, Constable, on considering it, at once
-assured them, that to go on raising money in driblets would never
-effectually relieve them; that, in short, one or both of the
-companies must stop, unless Mr. Scott could find means to lay his
-hand, without farther delay, on at least £4000; and I gather that,
-by way of inducing Constable himself to come forward with part at
-least of this supply, John Ballantyne again announced his intention
-of forthwith abandoning the bookselling business altogether, and
-making an effort to establish himself--on a plan which Constable had
-shortly before suggested--as an auctioneer in Edinburgh. The
-following letters need no comment:--
-
-
-TO MR. JOHN BALLANTYNE.
-
- ABBOTSFORD, August 16, 1813.
-
-DEAR JOHN,--I am quite satisfied it is impossible for J. B. and Co.
-to continue business longer than is absolutely necessary for the sale
-of stock and extrication of their affairs. The fatal injury which
-their credit has sustained, as well as your adopting a profession in
-which I sincerely hope you will be more fortunate, renders the closing
-of the bookselling business inevitable. With regard to the printing,
-it is my intention to retire from that also, so soon as I can possibly
-do so with safety to myself, and with the regard I shall always
-entertain for James's interest. Whatever loss I may sustain will be
-preferable to the life I have lately led, when I seem surrounded by a
-sort of magic circle, which neither permits me to remain at home in
-peace, nor to stir abroad with pleasure. Your first exertion as an
-auctioneer may probably be on "that distinguished, select, and
-inimitable collection of books, made by an amateur of this city
-retiring from business." I do not feel either health or confidence in
-my own powers sufficient to authorize me to take a long price for a
-new poem, until these affairs shall have been in some measure
-digested. This idea has been long running in my head, but the late
-fatalities which have attended this business have quite decided my
-resolution. I will write to James to-morrow, being at present annoyed
-with a severe headache.
-
-Yours truly,
-
- W. SCOTT.
-
-
-Were I to transcribe all the letters to which these troubles gave
-rise, I should fill a volume before I had reached the end of another
-twelvemonth. The two next I shall quote are dated on the same day
-(the 24th August), which may, in consequence of the answer the
-second of them received, be set down as determining the crisis of
-1813.
-
-
-TO MR. JAMES BALLANTYNE.
-
- ABBOTSFORD, 24th August, 1813.
-
-DEAR JAMES,--Mr. Constable's advice is, as I have always found it,
-sound, sensible, and friendly,--and I shall be guided by it. But I
-have no wealthy friend who would join in security with me to such an
-extent; and to apply in quarters where I might be refused would insure
-disclosure. I conclude John has shown Mr. C. the state of the affairs;
-if not, I would wish him to do so directly. If the proposed
-accommodation could be granted to the firm on my personally joining in
-the security, the whole matter would be quite safe, for I have to
-receive in the course of the winter some large sums from my father's
-estate.[33] Besides which, I shall certainly be able to go to press in
-November with a new poem; or, if Mr. Constable's additional security
-would please the bankers better, I could insure Mr. C. against the
-possibility of loss, by assigning the copyrights, together with that
-of the new poem, or even my library, in his relief. In fact, if he
-looks into the affairs, he will I think see that there is no prospect
-of any eventual loss to the creditors, though I may be a loser myself.
-My property here is unincumbered; so is my house in Castle Street; and
-I have no debts out of my own family, excepting a part of the price of
-Abbotsford, which I am to retain for four years. So that, literally, I
-have no claims upon me unless those arising out of this business; and
-when it is considered that my income is above £2000 a year, even if
-the printing-office pays nothing, I should hope no one can possibly be
-a loser by me.
-
- Clerkship, £1300}
- Sheriffdom, 300 }
- Mrs. Scott, 200 }
- Interest, 100 }
- Somers, (say) 200 }
- ______
- £2100 }
-
-I am sure I would strip myself to my shirt rather than it should be
-the case; and my only reason for wishing to stop the concern was to do
-open justice to all persons. It must have been a bitter pill to me. I
-can more confidently expect some aid from Mr. Constable, or from
-Longman's house, because they can look into the concern and satisfy
-themselves how little chance there is of their being losers, which
-others cannot do. Perhaps between them they might manage to assist us
-with the credit necessary, and go on in winding up the concern by
-occasional acceptances.
-
-An odd thing has happened. I have a letter, by order of the Prince
-Regent, offering me the laureateship in the most flattering terms.
-Were I my own man, as you call it, I would refuse this offer (with all
-gratitude); but, as I am situated, £300 or £400 a year is not to be
-sneezed at upon a point of poetical honor--and it makes me a better
-man to that extent. I have not yet written, however. I will say little
-about Constable's handsome behavior, but shall not forget it. It is
-needless to say I shall wish him to be consulted in every step that is
-taken. If I should lose all I advanced to this business, I should be
-less vexed than I am at this moment. I am very busy with Swift at
-present, but shall certainly come to town if it is thought necessary;
-but I should first wish Mr. Constable to look into the affairs to the
-bottom. Since I have personally superintended them, they have been
-winding up very fast, and we are now almost within sight of harbor. I
-will also own it was partly ill-humor at John's blunder last week that
-made me think of throwing things up.
-
-Yours truly,
-
- W. S.
-
-
-After writing and despatching this letter, an idea occurred to Scott
-that there was a quarter, not hitherto alluded to in any of these
-anxious epistles, from which he might consider himself as entitled
-to ask assistance, not only with little, if any, chance of a
-refusal, but (owing to particular circumstances) without incurring
-any very painful sense of obligation. On the 25th he says to John
-Ballantyne:--
-
-
-After some meditation, last night, it occurred to me I had some title
-to ask the Duke of Buccleuch's guarantee to a cash account for £4000,
-as Constable proposes. I have written to him accordingly, and have
-very little doubt that he will be my surety. If this cash account be
-in view, Mr. Constable will certainly _assist us_ until the necessary
-writings are made out--I beg your pardon--I dare say I am very stupid;
-but very often you don't consider that I can't follow details which
-would be quite obvious to a man of business;--for instance, you tell
-me daily, "that _if_ the sums I count upon _are_ forthcoming, the
-results must be as I suppose." But--in a week--the scene is changed,
-and all I can do, and more, is inadequate to bring about these
-results. I protest I don't know if at this moment £4000 _will_ clear
-us out. After all, you are vexed, and so am I; and it is needless to
-wrangle who has a right to be angry. Commend me to James.
-
-Yours truly,
-
- W. S.
-
-
-Having explained to the Duke of Buccleuch the position in which he
-stood--obliged either to procure some guarantee which would enable
-him to raise £4000, or to sell abruptly all his remaining interest
-in the copyright of his works; and repeated the statement of his
-personal property and income, as given in the preceding letter to
-James Ballantyne--Scott says to his noble friend:--
-
-
-I am not asking nor desiring any loan from your Grace, but merely the
-honor of your sanction to my credit as a good man for £4000; and the
-motive of your Grace's interference would be sufficiently obvious to
-the London Shylocks, as your constant kindness and protection is no
-secret to the world. Will your Grace consider whether you can do what
-I propose, in conscience and safety, and favor me with your answer?--I
-have a very flattering offer from the Prince Regent, of his own free
-motion, to make me poet laureate; I am very much embarrassed by it. I
-am, on the one hand, afraid of giving offence where no one would
-willingly offend, and perhaps losing an opportunity of smoothing the
-way to my youngsters through life; on the other hand, the office is a
-ridiculous one, somehow or other--they and I should be well
-quizzed,--yet that I should not mind. My real feeling of reluctance
-lies deeper--it is, that favored as I have been by the public, I
-should be considered, with some justice, I fear, as engrossing a petty
-emolument which might do real service to some poorer brother of the
-Muses. I shall be most anxious to have your Grace's advice on this
-subject. There seems something churlish, and perhaps conceited, in
-repelling a favor so handsomely offered on the part of the Sovereign's
-representative; and on the other hand, I feel much disposed to shake
-myself free from it. I should make but a bad courtier, and an
-ode-maker is described by Pope as a poet out of his way or out of his
-senses. I will find some excuse for protracting my reply till I can
-have the advantage of your Grace's opinion; and remain, in the mean
-time, very truly your obliged and grateful
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-P. S.--I trust your Grace will not suppose me capable of making such a
-request as the enclosed, upon any idle or unnecessary speculation;
-but, as I stand situated, it is a matter of deep interest to me to
-prevent these copyrights from being disposed of either hastily or at
-under prices. I could have half the booksellers in London for my
-sureties, on a hint of a new poem; but bankers do not like people in
-trade, and my brains are not ready to spin another web. So your Grace
-must take me under your princely care, as in the days of lang syne;
-and I think I can say, upon the sincerity of an honest man, there is
-not the most distant chance of your having any trouble or expense
-through my means.
-
-
-The Duke's answer was in all respects such as might have been looked
-for from the generous kindness and manly sense of his character.
-
-
-TO WALTER SCOTT, ESQ., ABBOTSFORD.
-
- DRUMLANRIG CASTLE, August 28, 1813.
-
-MY DEAR SIR,--I received yesterday your letter of the 24th. I shall
-with pleasure comply with your request of guaranteeing the £4000. You
-must, however, furnish me with the form of a letter to this effect, as
-I am completely ignorant of transactions of this nature.
-
-I am never willing to _offer_ advice, but when my opinion is asked by
-a friend I am ready to give it. As to the offer of his Royal Highness
-to appoint you laureate, I shall frankly say that I should be
-mortified to see you hold a situation which, by the general
-concurrence of the world, is stamped ridiculous. There is no good
-reason why this should be so; but so it is. _Walter Scott, Poet
-Laureate_, ceases to be the Walter Scott of the Lay, Marmion, etc. Any
-future poem of yours would not come forward with the same probability
-of a successful reception. The poet laureate would stick to you and
-your productions like a piece of _court plaster_. Your muse has
-hitherto been independent--don't put her into harness. We know how
-lightly she trots along when left to her natural paces, but do not try
-driving. I would write frankly and openly to his Royal Highness, but
-with respectful gratitude, for he _has_ paid you a compliment. I would
-not fear to state that you had hitherto written when in poetic mood,
-but feared to trammel yourself with a fixed periodical exertion; and I
-cannot but conceive that his Royal Highness, who has much taste, will
-at once see the many objections which you must have to his proposal,
-but which you cannot write. Only think of being chaunted and
-recitatived by a parcel of hoarse and squeaking choristers on a
-birthday, for the edification of the bishops, pages, maids of honor,
-and gentlemen-pensioners! Oh horrible! thrice horrible! Yours
-sincerely,
-
- BUCCLEUCH, ETC.
-
-
-The letter which first announced the Prince Regent's proposal was
-from his Royal Highness's librarian, Dr. James Stanier Clarke; but
-before Scott answered it he had received a more formal notification
-from the late Marquis of Hertford, then Lord Chamberlain. I shall
-transcribe both these documents.
-
-
-TO WALTER SCOTT, ESQ., EDINBURGH.
-
- PAVILION, BRIGHTON, August 18, 1813.
-
-MY DEAR SIR,--Though I have never had the honor of being introduced to
-you, you have frequently been pleased to convey to me very kind and
-flattering messages,[34] and I trust, therefore, you will allow me,
-without any further ceremony, to say--That I took an early opportunity
-this morning of seeing the Prince Regent, who arrived here late
-yesterday; and I then delivered to his Royal Highness my earnest wish
-and anxious desire that the vacant situation of poet laureate might be
-conferred on you. The Prince replied, "that you had already been
-written to, and that if you wished it, everything would be settled as
-I could desire."
-
-I hope, therefore, I may be allowed to congratulate you on this event.
-You are the man to whom it ought first to have been offered, and it
-gave me sincere pleasure to find that those sentiments of high
-approbation which my Royal Master had so often expressed towards you
-in private, were now so openly and honorably displayed in public. Have
-the goodness, dear sir, to receive this intrusive letter with your
-accustomed courtesy, and believe me, yours very sincerely,
-
- J. S. CLARKE,
-
-Librarian to H. R. H., the Prince Regent.
-
-
-TO WALTER SCOTT, ESQ., EDINBURGH.
-
- RAGLEY, 31st August, 1813.
-
-SIR,--I thought it my duty to his Royal Highness, the Prince Regent,
-to express to him my humble opinion that I could not make so
-creditable a choice as in your person for the office, now vacant, of
-poet laureate. I am now authorized to offer it to you, which I would
-have taken an earlier opportunity of doing, but that, till this
-morning, I have had no occasion of seeing his Royal Highness since Mr.
-Pye's death. I have the honor to be, sir, your most obedient, humble
-servant,
-
- INGRAM HERTFORD.
-
-
-The following letters conclude this matter:--
-
-TO THE MOST NOBLE THE MARQUIS OF HERTFORD, ETC., ETC., RAGLEY,
-WARWICKSHIRE.
-
- ABBOTSFORD, 4th September.
-
-MY LORD,--I am this day honored with your Lordship's letter of the
-31st August, tendering for my acceptance the situation of poet
-laureate in the Royal Household. I shall always think it the highest
-honor of my life to have been the object of the good opinion implied
-in your Lordship's recommendation, and in the gracious acquiescence of
-his Royal Highness, the Prince Regent. I humbly trust I shall not
-forfeit sentiments so highly valued, although I find myself under the
-necessity of declining, with every acknowledgment of respect and
-gratitude, a situation above my deserts, and offered to me in a manner
-so very flattering. The duties attached to the office of poet laureate
-are not indeed very formidable, if judged of by the manner in which
-they have sometimes been discharged. But an individual selected from
-the literary characters of Britain, upon the honorable principle
-expressed in your Lordship's letter, ought not, in justice to your
-Lordship, to his own reputation, but above all to his Royal Highness,
-to accept of the office, unless he were conscious of the power of
-filling it respectably, and attaining to excellence in the execution
-of the tasks which it imposes. This confidence I am so far from
-possessing, that, on the contrary, with all the advantages which do
-now, and I trust ever will, present themselves to the poet whose task
-it may be to commemorate the events of his Royal Highness's
-administration, I am certain I should feel myself inadequate to the
-fitting discharge of the regularly recurring duty of periodical
-composition, and should thus at once disappoint the expectation of the
-public, and, what would give me still more pain, discredit the
-nomination of his Royal Highness.
-
-Will your Lordship permit me to add, that though far from being
-wealthy, I already hold two official situations in the line of my
-profession, which afford a respectable income. It becomes me,
-therefore, to avoid the appearance of engrossing one of the few
-appointments which seem specially adapted for the provision of those
-whose lives have been dedicated exclusively to literature, and who too
-often derive from their labors more credit than emolument.
-
-Nothing could give me greater pain than being thought ungrateful to
-his Royal Highness's goodness, or insensible to the honorable
-distinction his undeserved condescension has been pleased to bestow
-upon me. I have to trust to your Lordship's kindness for laying at the
-feet of his Royal Highness, in the way most proper and respectful, my
-humble, grateful, and dutiful thanks, with these reasons for declining
-a situation which, though every way superior to my deserts, I should
-chiefly have valued as a mark of his Royal Highness's approbation.
-
-For your Lordship's unmerited goodness, as well as for the trouble you
-have had upon this occasion, I can only offer you my respectful
-thanks, and entreat that you will be pleased to believe me, my Lord
-Marquis, your Lordship's much obliged and much honored humble servant,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-TO HIS GRACE THE DUKE OF BUCCLEUCH, ETC., DRUMLANRIG CASTLE.
-
- ABBOTSFORD, September 5, 1813.
-
-MY DEAR LORD DUKE,--Good advice is easily followed when it jumps with
-our own sentiments and inclinations. I no sooner found mine fortified
-by your Grace's opinion than I wrote to Lord Hertford, declining the
-laurel in the most civil way I could imagine. I also wrote to the
-Prince's librarian, who had made himself active on the occasion,
-dilating, at somewhat more length than I thought respectful to the
-Lord Chamberlain, my reasons for declining the intended honor. My
-wife has made a copy of the last letter, which I enclose for your
-Grace's perusal: there is no occasion either to preserve or return
-it--but I am desirous you should know what I have put my apology upon,
-for I may reckon on its being misrepresented. I certainly should never
-have survived the recitative described by your Grace: it is a part of
-the etiquette I was quite unprepared for, and should have sunk under
-it. It is curious enough that Drumlanrig should always have been the
-refuge of bards who decline court promotion. Gay, I think, refused to
-be a gentleman-usher, or some such post;[35] and I am determined to
-abide by my post of Grand Ecuyer Trenchant of the Chateau, varied for
-that of tale-teller of an evening.
-
-I will send your Grace a copy of the letter of guarantee when I
-receive it from London. By an arrangement with Longman and Co., the
-great booksellers in Paternoster Row, I am about to be enabled to
-place their security, as well as my own, between your Grace and the
-possibility of hazard. But your kind readiness to forward a
-transaction which is of such great importance both to my fortune and
-comfort can never be forgotten--although it can scarce make me more
-than I have always been, my dear Lord, your Grace's much obliged and
-truly faithful,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-(_Copy--Enclosure._)
-
-TO THE REV. J. S. CLARKE, ETC., ETC., ETC., PAVILION, BRIGHTON.
-
- ABBOTSFORD, 4th September, 1813.
-
-SIR,--On my return to this cottage, after a short excursion, I was at
-once surprised and deeply interested by the receipt of your letter. I
-shall always consider it as the proudest incident of my life that his
-Royal Highness, the Prince Regent, whose taste in literature is so
-highly distinguished, should have thought of naming me to the
-situation of poet laureate. I feel, therefore, no small embarrassment
-lest I should incur the suspicion of churlish ingratitude in declining
-an appointment in every point of view so far above my deserts, but
-which I should chiefly have valued as conferred by the unsolicited
-generosity of his Royal Highness, and as entitling me to the
-distinction of terming myself an immediate servant of his Majesty. But
-I have to trust to your goodness in representing to his Royal
-Highness, with my most grateful, humble, and dutiful acknowledgments,
-the circumstances which compel me to decline the honor which his
-undeserved favor has proposed for me. The poetical pieces I have
-hitherto composed have uniformly been the hasty production of
-impulses, which I must term fortunate, since they have attracted his
-Royal Highness's notice and approbation. But I strongly fear, or
-rather am absolutely certain, that I should feel myself unable to
-justify, in the eye of the public, the choice of his Royal Highness,
-by a fitting discharge of the duties of an office which requires
-stated and periodical exertion. And although I am conscious how much
-this difficulty is lessened under the government of his Royal
-Highness, marked by paternal wisdom at home and successes abroad which
-seem to promise the liberation of Europe, I still feel that the
-necessity of a regular commemoration would trammel my powers of
-composition at the very time when it would be equally my pride and
-duty to tax them to the uttermost. There is another circumstance which
-weighs deeply in my mind while forming my present resolution. I have
-already the honor to hold two appointments under Government, not
-usually conjoined, and which afford an income, far indeed from wealth,
-but amounting to decent independence. I fear, therefore, that in
-accepting one of the few situations which our establishment holds
-forth as the peculiar provision of literary men, I might be justly
-censured as availing myself of his Royal Highness's partiality to
-engross more than my share of the public revenue, to the prejudice of
-competitors equally meritorious at least, and otherwise unprovided
-for; and as this calculation will be made by thousands who know that I
-have reaped great advantages by the favor of the public, without being
-aware of the losses which it has been my misfortune to sustain, I may
-fairly reckon that it will terminate even more to my prejudice than if
-they had the means of judging accurately of my real circumstances. I
-have thus far, sir, frankly exposed to you, for his Royal Highness's
-favorable consideration, the feelings which induce me to decline an
-appointment offered in a manner so highly calculated to gratify, I
-will not say my vanity only, but my sincere feelings of devoted
-attachment to the crown and constitution of my country, and to the
-person of his Royal Highness, by whom its government has been so
-worthily administered. No consideration on earth would give me so much
-pain as the idea of my real feelings being misconstrued on this
-occasion, or that I should be supposed stupid enough not to estimate
-the value of his Royal Highness's favor, or so ungrateful as not to
-feel it as I ought. And you will relieve me from great anxiety if you
-will have the goodness to let me know if his Royal Highness is pleased
-to receive favorably my humble and grateful apology.
-
-I cannot conclude without expressing my sense of your kindness and of
-the trouble you have had upon this account, and I request you will
-believe me, sir, your obliged humble servant,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-TO ROBERT SOUTHEY, ESQ., KESWICK.
-
- ABBOTSFORD, 4th September, 1813.
-
-MY DEAR SOUTHEY,--On my return here I found, to my no small surprise,
-a letter tendering me the laurel vacant by the death of the poetical
-Pye. I have declined the appointment, as being incompetent to the task
-of annual commemoration; but chiefly as being provided for in my
-professional department, and unwilling to incur the censure of
-engrossing the emolument attached to one of the few appointments which
-seems proper to be filled by a man of literature who has no other
-views in life. Will you forgive me, my dear friend, if I own I had you
-in my recollection? I have given Croker the hint, and otherwise
-endeavored to throw the office into your option. I am uncertain if you
-will like it, for the laurel has certainly been tarnished by some of
-its wearers, and, as at present managed, its duties are inconvenient
-and somewhat liable to ridicule. But the latter matter might be
-amended, as I think the Regent's good sense would lead him to lay
-aside these regular commemorations; and as to the former point, it has
-been worn by Dryden of old, and by Warton in modern days. If you quote
-my own refusal against me, I reply--first, I have been luckier than
-you in holding two offices not usually conjoined; secondly, I did not
-refuse it from any foolish prejudice against the situation, otherwise
-how durst I mention it to you, my elder brother in the muse?--but from
-a sort of internal hope that they would give it to you, upon whom it
-would be so much more worthily conferred. For I am not such an ass as
-not to know that you are my better in poetry, though I have had,
-probably but for a time, the tide of popularity in my favor. I have
-not time to add ten thousand other reasons, but I only wished to tell
-you how the matter was, and to beg you to think before you reject the
-offer which I flatter myself will be made to you. If I had not been,
-like Dogberry, a fellow with two gowns already, I should have jumped
-at it like a cock at a gooseberry. Ever yours most truly,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-Immediately after Mr. Croker received Scott's letter here alluded
-to, Mr. Southey was invited to accept the vacant laurel. But, as the
-birthday ode had been omitted since the illness of King George III.,
-and the Regent had good sense and good taste enough to hold that
-ancient custom as "more honored in the breach than the observance,"
-the whole fell completely into disuse.[36] The office was thus
-relieved from the burden of ridicule which had, in spite of so many
-illustrious names, adhered to it; and though its emoluments did not
-in fact amount to more than a quarter of the sum at which Scott
-rated them when he declined it, they formed no unacceptable addition
-to Mr. Southey's income. Scott's answer to his brother poet's
-affectionate and grateful letter on the conclusion of this affair is
-as follows:--
-
-
-TO R. SOUTHEY, ESQ., KESWICK.
-
- EDINBURGH, November 13, 1813.
-
-I do not delay, my dear Southey, to say my _gratulor_. Long may you
-live, as Paddy says, to rule over us, and to redeem the crown of
-Spenser and of Dryden to its pristine dignity. I am only discontented
-with the extent of your royal revenue, which I thought had been £400,
-or £300 at the very least. Is there no getting rid of that iniquitous
-modus, and requiring the _butt_ in kind? I would have you think of it;
-I know no man so well entitled to Xeres sack as yourself, though many
-bards would make a better figure at drinking it. I should think that
-in due time a memorial might get some relief in this part of the
-appointment--it should be at least, £100 wet and £100 dry. When you
-have carried your point of discarding the ode, and my point of getting
-the sack, you will be exactly in the situation of Davy in the farce,
-who stipulates for more wages, less work, and the key of the
-ale-cellar.[37] I was greatly delighted with the circumstances of your
-investiture. It reminded me of the porters at Calais with Dr.
-Smollett's baggage, six of them seizing upon one small portmanteau,
-and bearing it in triumph to his lodgings. You see what it is to laugh
-at the superstitions of a gentleman-usher, as I think you do
-somewhere. "The whirligig of time brings in his revenges."[38]
-
-Adieu, my dear Southey; my best wishes attend all that you do, and my
-best congratulations every good that attends you--yea even this, the
-very least of Providence's mercies, as a poor clergyman said when
-pronouncing grace over a herring. I should like to know how the Prince
-received you; his address is said to be excellent, and his knowledge
-of literature far from despicable. What a change of fortune even since
-the short time when we met! The great work of retribution is now
-rolling onward to consummation, yet am I not fully satisfied--_pereat
-iste_!--there will be no permanent peace in Europe till Buonaparte
-sleeps with the tyrants of old. My best compliments attend Mrs.
-Southey and your family.
-
-Ever yours,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-To avoid returning to the affair of the laureateship, I have placed
-together such letters concerning it as appeared important. I regret
-to say that, had I adhered to the chronological order of Scott's
-correspondence, ten out of every twelve letters between the date of
-his application to the Duke of Buccleuch, and his removal to
-Edinburgh on the 12th of November, would have continued to tell the
-same story of pecuniary difficulty, urgent and almost daily
-applications for new advances to the Ballantynes, and endeavors,
-more or less successful, but in no case effectually so, to relieve
-the pressure on the bookselling firm by sales of its heavy stock to
-the great publishing houses of Edinburgh and London. Whatever
-success these endeavors met with, appears to have been due either
-directly or indirectly to Mr. Constable; who did a great deal more
-than prudence would have warranted, in taking on himself the results
-of its unhappy adventures,--and, by his sagacious advice, enabled
-the distressed partners to procure similar assistance at the hands
-of others, who did not partake his own feelings of personal kindness
-and sympathy. "I regret to learn," Scott writes to him on the 16th
-October, "that there is great danger of your exertions in our favor,
-which once promised so fairly, proving finally abortive, or at least
-being too tardy in their operation to work out our relief. If
-anything more can be honorably and properly done to avoid a most
-unpleasant shock, I shall be most willing to do it; if not--God's
-will be done! There will be enough of property, including my private
-fortune, to pay every claim; and I have not used prosperity so ill,
-as greatly to fear adversity. But these things we will talk over at
-meeting; meanwhile believe me, with a sincere sense of your kindness
-and friendly views, very truly yours, W. S."--I have no wish to
-quote more largely from the letters which passed during this crisis
-between Scott and his partners. The pith and substance of his, to
-John Ballantyne at least, seems to be summed up in one brief
-_postscript_: "For God's sake treat me as a man, and not as a
-milch-cow!"
-
-The difficulties of the Ballantynes were by this time well known
-throughout the commercial circles not only of Edinburgh, but of
-London; and a report of their actual bankruptcy, with the addition
-that Scott was engaged as their surety to the extent of £20,000,
-found its way to Mr. Morritt about the beginning of November. This
-dear friend wrote to him, in the utmost anxiety, and made liberal
-offers of assistance in case the catastrophe might still be
-averted; but the term of Martinmas, always a critical one in
-Scotland, had passed before this letter reached Edinburgh, and
-Scott's answer will show symptoms of a clearing horizon. I think
-also there is one expression in it which could hardly have failed to
-convey to Mr. Morritt that his friend was involved, more deeply than
-he had ever acknowledged, in the concerns of the Messrs. Ballantyne.
-
-
-TO J. B. S. MORRITT, ESQ., ROKEBY PARK.
-
- EDINBURGH, 20th November, 1813.
-
-I did not answer your very kind letter, my dear Morritt, until I could
-put your friendly heart to rest upon the report you have heard, which
-I could not do entirely until this term of Martinmas was passed. I
-have the pleasure to say that there is no truth whatever in the
-Ballantynes' reported bankruptcy. They have had severe difficulties
-for the last four months to make their resources balance the demands
-upon them, and I, having the price of Rokeby, and other monies in
-their hands, have had considerable reason for apprehension, and no
-slight degree of plague and trouble. They have, however, been so well
-supported, that I have got out of hot water upon their account. They
-are winding up their bookselling concern with great regularity, and
-are to abide hereafter by the printing-office, which, with its stock,
-etc., will revert to them fairly.
-
-I have been able to redeem the offspring of my brain, and they are
-like to pay me like grateful children. This matter has set me
-a-thinking about money more seriously than ever I did in my life, and
-I have begun by insuring my life for £4000, to secure some ready cash
-to my family should I slip girths suddenly. I think my other property,
-library, etc., may be worth about £12,000, and I have not much debt.
-
-Upon the whole, I see no prospect of any loss whatever. Although in
-the course of human events I may be disappointed, there certainly
-_can_ be none to vex your kind and affectionate heart on my account. I
-am young, with a large official income, and if I lose anything now, I
-have gained a great deal in my day. I cannot tell you, and will not
-attempt to tell you, how much I was affected by your letter--so much,
-indeed, that for several days I could not make my mind up to express
-myself on the subject. Thank God! all real danger was yesterday put
-over--and I will write, in two or three days, a funny letter, without
-any of these vile cash matters, of which it may be said there is no
-living with them nor without them.
-
-Ever yours, most truly,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-All these annoyances produced no change whatever in Scott's habits of
-literary industry. During these anxious months of September, October,
-and November, he kept feeding James Ballantyne's press, from day to day,
-both with the annotated text of the closing volumes of Swift's works,
-and with the MS. of his Life of the Dean. He had also proceeded to
-mature in his own mind the plan of The Lord of the Isles, and executed
-such a portion of the First Canto as gave him confidence to renew his
-negotiation with Constable for the sale of the whole, or part of its
-copyright. It was, moreover, at this period, that, looking into an old
-cabinet in search of some fishing-tackle, his eye chanced to light once
-more on the Ashestiel fragment of Waverley.--He read over those
-introductory chapters--thought they had been undervalued--and determined
-to finish the story.
-
-All this while, too, he had been subjected to those interruptions
-from idle strangers, which from the first to the last imposed so
-heavy a tax on his celebrity; and he no doubt received such guests
-with all his usual urbanity of attention. Yet I was not surprised to
-discover, among his hasty notes to the Ballantynes, several of
-tenor akin to the following specimens:--
-
-
- "September 2, 1813.
-
-"My temper is really worn to a hair's breadth. The intruder of
-yesterday hung on me till twelve to-day. When I had just taken my pen,
-he was relieved, like a sentry leaving guard, by two other lounging
-visitors; and their post has now been supplied by some people on real
-business."
-
-
-Again:--
-
- "Monday evening.
-
- "Oh James! oh James! Two Irish dames
- Oppress me very sore;
- I groaning send one sheet I've penned--
- For, hang them! there's no more."
-
-A scrap of nearly the same date to his brother Thomas may be
-introduced, as belonging to the same state of feeling:--
-
-
-DEAR TOM,--I observe what you say as to Mr. ****; and as you may
-often be exposed to similar requests, which it would be difficult to
-parry, you can sign such letters of introduction as relate to persons
-whom you do not delight to honor short, _T. Scott_; by which
-abridgment of your name I shall understand to limit my civilities.
-
-
-It is proper to mention that, in the very agony of these
-perplexities, the unfortunate Maturin received from him a timely
-succor of £50, rendered doubly acceptable by the kind and judicious
-letter of advice in which it was enclosed; and I have before me
-ample evidence that his benevolence had been extended to other
-struggling brothers of the trade, even when he must often have had
-actual difficulty to meet the immediate expenditure of his own
-family. All this, however, will not surprise the reader.
-
-Nor did his general correspondence suffer much interruption; and,
-as some relief after so many painful details, I shall close the
-narrative of this anxious year by a few specimens of his
-miscellaneous communications:--
-
-
-TO MISS JOANNA BAILLIE, HAMPSTEAD.
-
- ABBOTSFORD, September 12, 1813.
-
-MY DEAR MISS BAILLIE,--I have been a vile lazy correspondent, having
-been strolling about the country, and indeed a little way into
-England, for the greater part of July and August; in short, "aye
-skipping here and there," like the Tanner of Tamworth's horse. Since I
-returned, I have had a gracious offer of the laurel on the part of the
-Prince Regent. You will not wonder that I have declined it, though
-with every expression of gratitude which such an unexpected compliment
-demanded. Indeed, it would be high imprudence in one having literary
-reputation to maintain, to accept of an offer which obliged him to
-produce a poetical exercise on a given theme twice a year; and
-besides, as my loyalty to the royal family is very sincere, I would
-not wish to have it thought mercenary. The public has done its part by
-me very well, and so has Government: and I thought this little
-literary provision ought to be bestowed on one who has made literature
-his sole profession. If the Regent means to make it respectable, he
-will abolish the foolish custom of the annual odes, which is a
-drudgery no person of talent could ever willingly encounter--or come
-clear off from, if he was so rash. And so, peace be with the laurel,
-
- "Profaned by Cibber and contemned by Gray."
-
-I was for a fortnight at Drumlanrig, a grand old chateau, which has
-descended, by the death of the late Duke of Queensberry, to the Duke
-of Buccleuch. It is really a most magnificent pile, and when embosomed
-amid the wide forest scenery, of which I have an infantine
-recollection, must have been very romantic. But old Q. made wild
-devastation among the noble trees, although some fine ones are still
-left, and a quantity of young shoots are, in despite of the want of
-every kind of attention, rushing up to supply the places of the
-fathers of the forest from whose stems they are springing. It will now
-I trust be in better hands, for the reparation of the castle goes hand
-in hand with the rebuilding of all the cottages, in which an aged race
-of pensioners of Duke Charles, and his pious wife,--"Kitty, blooming,
-young and gay,"--have, during the last reign, been pining into
-rheumatisms and agues, in neglected poverty.
-
-All this is beautiful to witness: the indoor work does not please me
-so well, though I am aware that, to those who are to inhabit an old
-castle, it becomes often a matter of necessity to make alterations by
-which its tone and character are changed for the worse. Thus a noble
-gallery, which ran the whole length of the front, is converted into
-bedrooms--very comfortable, indeed, but not quite so magnificent; and
-as grim a dungeon as ever knave or honest man was confined in, is in
-some danger of being humbled into a wine-cellar. It is almost
-impossible to draw your breath, when you recollect that this, so many
-feet under-ground, and totally bereft of air and light, was built for
-the imprisonment of human beings, whether guilty, suspected, or merely
-unfortunate. Certainly, if our frames are not so hardy, our hearts are
-softer than those of our forefathers, although probably a few years of
-domestic war, or feudal oppression, would bring us back to the same
-case-hardening both in body and sentiment.
-
-I meant to have gone to Rokeby, but was prevented by Mrs. Morritt
-being unwell, which I very much regret, as I know few people that
-deserve better health. I am very glad you have known them, and I pray
-you to keep up the acquaintance in winter. I am glad to see by this
-day's paper that our friend Terry has made a favorable impression on
-his first appearance at Covent Garden--he has got a very good
-engagement there for three years, at twelve guineas a week, which is a
-handsome income.--This little place comes on as fast as can be
-reasonably hoped; and the pinasters are all above the ground, but
-cannot be planted out for twelve months. My kindest compliments--in
-which Mrs. Scott always joins--attend Miss Agnes, the Doctor, and his
-family. Ever, my dear friend, yours most faithfully,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-TO DANIEL TERRY, ESQ., LONDON.
-
- ABBOTSFORD, 20th October, 1813.
-
-DEAR TERRY,--You will easily believe that I was greatly pleased to
-hear from you. I had already learned from The Courier (what I had
-anticipated too strongly to doubt for one instant) your favorable
-impression on the London public. I think nothing can be more judicious
-in the managers than to exercise the various powers you possess, in
-their various extents. A man of genius is apt to be limited to one
-single style, and to become perforce a mannerist, merely because the
-public is not so just to its own amusement as to give him an
-opportunity of throwing himself into different lines; and doubtless
-the exercise of our talents in one unvaried course, by degrees renders
-them incapable of any other, as the over-use of any one limb of our
-body gradually impoverishes the rest. I shall be anxious to hear that
-you have played _Malvolio_, which is, I think, one of your
-_coups-de-maître_, and in which envy itself cannot affect to trace an
-imitation. That same charge of imitation, by the way, is one of the
-surest scents upon which dunces are certain to open. Undoubtedly, if
-the same character is well performed by two individuals, their acting
-must bear a general resemblance--it could not be well performed by
-both were it otherwise. But this general resemblance, which arises
-from both following nature and their author, can as little be termed
-imitation as the river in Wales can be identified with that of
-Macedon. Never mind these dunderheads, but go on your own way, and
-scorn to laugh on the right side of your mouth, to make a difference
-from some ancient comedian who, in the same part, always laughed on
-the left. Stick to the public--be uniform in your exertions to study
-even those characters which have little in them, and to give a grace
-which you cannot find in the author. Audiences are always grateful for
-this--or rather--for gratitude is as much out of the question in the
-theatre, as Bernadotte says to Boney it is amongst sovereigns--or
-rather, the audience is gratified by receiving pleasure from a part
-which they had no expectation would afford them any. It is in this
-view that, had I been of your profession, and possessed talents, I
-think I should have liked often those parts with which my brethren
-quarrelled, and studied to give them an effect which their intrinsic
-merit did not entitle them to. I have some thoughts of being in town
-in spring (not resolutions by any means); and it will be an additional
-motive to witness your success, and to find you as comfortably
-established as your friends in Castle Street earnestly hope and trust
-you will be.
-
-The summer--an uncommon summer in beauty and serenity--has glided away
-from us at Abbotsford, amidst our usual petty cares and petty
-pleasures. The children's garden is in apple-pie order, our own
-completely cropped and stocked, and all the trees flourishing like the
-green bay of the Psalmist. I have been so busy about our domestic
-arrangements, that I have not killed six hares this season. Besides, I
-have got a cargo of old armor, sufficient to excite a suspicion that I
-intend to mount a squadron of cuirassiers. I only want a place for my
-armory; and, thank God, I can wait for that, these being no times for
-building. And this brings me to the loss of poor Stark, with whom more
-genius has died than is left behind among the collected universality
-of Scottish architects. O Lord!--but what does it signify?--Earth was
-born to bear, and man to pay (that is, lords, nabobs, Glasgow traders,
-and those who have wherewithal)--so wherefore grumble at great castles
-and cottages, with which the taste of the latter contrives to load the
-back of Mother Terra?--I have no hobbyhorsical commissions at present,
-unless if you meet the Voyages of Captain Richard, or Robert Falconer,
-in one volume--"cow-heel, quoth Sancho"--I mark them for my own. Mrs.
-Scott, Sophia, Anne, and the boys, unite in kind remembrances. Ever
-yours truly,
-
- W. SCOTT.
-
-
-TO THE RIGHT HON. LORD BYRON, 4 BENNET STREET, ST. JAMES'S, LONDON.
-
- ABBOTSFORD, 6th November, 1813.
-
-MY DEAR LORD,--I was honored with your Lordship's letter of the 27th
-September,[39] and have sincerely to regret that there is such a
-prospect of your leaving Britain, without my achieving your personal
-acquaintance. I heartily wish your Lordship had come down to Scotland
-this season, for I have never seen a finer, and you might have renewed
-all your old associations with Caledonia, and made such new ones as
-were likely to suit you. I dare promise you would have liked me well
-enough--for I have many properties of a Turk--never trouble myself
-about futurity--am as lazy as the day is long--delight in collecting
-silver-mounted pistols and ataghans, and go out of my own road for no
-one--all which I take to be attributes of your good Moslem. Moreover,
-I am somewhat an admirer of royalty, and in order to maintain this
-part of my creed, I shall take care never to be connected with a
-court, but stick to the _ignotum pro mirabili_.
-
-The author of The Queen's Wake will be delighted with your
-approbation. He is a wonderful creature for his opportunities, which
-were far inferior to those of the generality of Scottish peasants.
-Burns, for instance--(not that their extent of talents is to be
-compared for an instant)--had an education not much worse than the
-sons of many gentlemen in Scotland. But poor Hogg literally could
-neither read nor write till a very late period of his life; and when
-he first distinguished himself by his poetical talent, could neither
-spell nor write grammar. When I first knew him, he used to send me his
-poetry, and was both indignant and horrified when I pointed out to him
-parallel passages in authors whom he had never read, but whom all the
-world would have sworn he had copied. An evil fate has hitherto
-attended him, and baffled every attempt that has been made to place
-him in a road to independence. But I trust he may be more fortunate in
-future.
-
-I have not yet seen Southey in the Gazette as Laureate. He is a real
-poet, such as we read of in former times, with every atom of his soul
-and every moment of his time dedicated to literary pursuits, in which
-he differs from almost all those who have divided public attention
-with him. Your Lordship's habits of society, for example, and my own
-professional and official avocations, must necessarily connect us much
-more with our respective classes in the usual routine of pleasure or
-business, than if we had not any other employment than _vacare musis_.
-But Southey's ideas are all poetical, and his whole soul dedicated to
-the pursuit of literature. In this respect, as well as in many others,
-he is a most striking and interesting character.
-
-I am very much interested in all that concerns your Giaour, which is
-universally approved of among our mountains. I have heard no objection
-except by one or two geniuses, who run over poetry as a cat does over
-a harpsichord, and they affect to complain of obscurity. On the
-contrary, I hold every real lover of the art is obliged to you for
-condensing the narrative, by giving us only those striking scenes
-which you have shown to be so susceptible of poetic ornament, and
-leaving to imagination the says I's and says he's, and all the minutiæ
-of detail which might be proper in giving evidence before a court of
-justice. The truth is, I think poetry is most striking when the mirror
-can be held up to the reader, and the same kept constantly before his
-eyes; it requires most uncommon powers to support a direct and
-downright narration; nor can I remember many instances of its being
-successfully maintained even by our greatest bards.
-
-As to those who have done me the honor to take my rhapsodies for their
-model, I can only say they have exemplified the ancient adage, "One
-fool makes many;" nor do I think I have yet had much reason to suppose
-I have given rise to anything of distinguished merit. The worst is, it
-draws on me letters and commendatory verses, to which my sad and sober
-thanks in humble prose are deemed a most unmeet and ungracious reply.
-Of this sort of plague your Lordship must ere now have had more than
-your share, but I think you can hardly have met with so original a
-request as concluded the letter of a bard I this morning received, who
-limited his demands to being placed in his due station on
-Parnassus--_and_ invested with a post in the Edinburgh Custom House.
-
-What an awakening of dry bones seems to be taking place on the
-Continent! I could as soon have believed in the resurrection of the
-Romans as in that of the Prussians--yet it seems a real and active
-renovation of national spirit. It will certainly be strange enough if
-that tremendous pitcher, which has travelled to so many fountains,
-should be at length broken on the banks of the Saale; but from the
-highest to the lowest we are the fools of fortune. Your Lordship will
-probably recollect where the Oriental tale occurs, of a Sultan who
-consulted Solomon on the proper inscription for a signet-ring,
-requiring that the maxim which it conveyed should be at once proper
-for moderating the presumption of prosperity and tempering the
-pressure of adversity. The apophthegm supplied by the Jewish sage was,
-I think, admirably adapted for both purposes, being comprehended in
-the words, "And this also shall pass away."
-
-When your Lordship sees Rogers, will you remember me kindly to him? I
-hope to be in London next spring, and renew my acquaintance with my
-friends there. It will be an additional motive if I could flatter
-myself that your Lordship's stay in the country will permit me the
-pleasure of waiting upon you. I am, with much respect and regard, your
-Lordship's truly honored and obliged humble servant,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-I go to Edinburgh next week, _multum gemens_.
-
-
-TO MISS JOANNA BAILLIE, HAMPSTEAD.
-
- EDINBURGH, 10th December, 1813.
-
-Many thanks, my dear friend, for your kind token of remembrance, which
-I yesterday received. I ought to blush, if I had grace enough left, at
-my long and ungenerous silence: but what shall I say? The habit of
-procrastination, which had always more or less a dominion over me,
-does not relax its sway as I grow older and less willing to take up
-the pen. I have not written to dear Ellis this age,--yet there is not
-a day that I do not think of you and him, and one or two other friends
-in your southern land. I am very glad the whiskey came safe: do not
-stint so laudable an admiration for the liquor of Caledonia, for I
-have plenty of right good and sound Highland Ferintosh, and I can
-always find an opportunity of sending you up a bottle.
-
-We are here almost mad with the redemption of Holland, which has an
-instant and gratifying effect on the trade of Leith, and indeed all
-along the east coast of Scotland. About £100,000 worth of various
-commodities, which had been dormant in cellars and warehouses, was
-sold the first day the news arrived, and Orange ribbons and _Orange
-Boven_ was the order of the day among all ranks. It is a most
-miraculous revivification which it has been our fate to witness.
-Though of a tolerably sanguine temper, I had fairly adjourned all
-hopes and expectations of the kind till another generation: the same
-power, however, that opened the windows of heaven and the fountains of
-the great deep has been pleased to close them, and to cause his wind
-to blow upon the face of the waters, so that we may look out from the
-ark of our preservation, and behold the reappearance of the mountain
-crests, and old, beloved, and well-known land-marks, which we had
-deemed swallowed up forever in the abyss: the dove with the olive
-branch would complete the simile, but of that I see little hope.
-Buonaparte is that desperate gambler, who will not rise while he has a
-stake left; and, indeed, to be King of France would be a poor
-pettifogging enterprise, after having been almost Emperor of the
-World. I think he will drive things on, till the fickle and impatient
-people over whom he rules get tired of him and shake him out of the
-saddle. Some circumstances seem to intimate his having become jealous
-of the Senate; and indeed anything like a representative body, however
-imperfectly constructed, becomes dangerous to a tottering tyranny. The
-sword displayed on both frontiers may, like that brandished across the
-road of Balaam, terrify even dumb and irrational subjection into
-utterance;--but enough of politics, though now a more cheerful subject
-than they have been for many years past.
-
-I have had a strong temptation to go to the Continent this Christmas;
-and should certainly have done so, had I been sure of getting from
-Amsterdam to Frankfort, where, as I know Lord Aberdeen and Lord
-Cathcart, I might expect a welcome. But notwithstanding my earnest
-desire to see the allied armies cross the Rhine, which I suppose must
-be one of the grandest military spectacles in the world, I should like
-to know that the roads were tolerably secure, and the means of
-getting forward attainable. In spring, however, if no unfortunate
-change takes place, I trust to visit the camp of the allies, and see
-all the pomp and power and circumstance of war, which I have so often
-imagined, and sometimes attempted to embody in verse.--Johnnie
-Richardson is a good, honorable, kind-hearted little fellow as lives
-in the world, with a pretty taste for poetry, which he has wisely kept
-under subjection to the occupation of drawing briefs and revising
-conveyances. It is a great good fortune to him to be in your
-neighborhood, as he is an idolater of genius, and where could he offer
-up his worship so justly? And I am sure you will like him, for he is
-really "officious, innocent, sincere."[40] Terry, I hope, will get on
-well; he is industrious, and zealous for the honor of his art.
-Ventidius must have been an excellent part for him, hovering between
-tragedy and comedy, which is precisely what will suit him. We have a
-woeful want of him here, both in public and private, for he was one of
-the most easy and quiet chimney-corner companions that I have had for
-these two or three years past.
-
-I am very glad if anything I have written to you could give pleasure
-to Miss Edgeworth, though I am sure it will fall very short of the
-respect which I have for her brilliant talents. I always write to you
-_à la volée_, and trust implicitly to your kindness and judgment upon
-all occasions where you may choose to communicate any part of my
-letters.[41] As to the taxing men, I must battle them as I can: they
-are worse than the great Emathian conqueror, who
-
- "bade spare
- The house of Pindarus, when temple and tower
- Went to the ground."[42]
-
-Your pinasters are coming up gallantly in the nursery-bed at
-Abbotsford. I trust to pay the whole establishment a Christmas visit,
-which will be, as Robinson Crusoe says of his glass of rum, "to mine
-exceeding refreshment." All Edinburgh have been on tiptoe to see
-Madame de Staël, but she is now not likely to honor us with a visit,
-at which I cannot prevail on myself to be very sorry; for as I tired
-of some of her works, I am afraid I should disgrace my taste by tiring
-of the authoress too. All my little people are very well, learning,
-with great pain and diligence, much which they will have forgotten
-altogether, or nearly so, in the course of twelve years hence: but the
-habit of learning is something in itself, even when the lessons are
-forgotten.
-
-I must not omit to tell you that a friend of mine, with whom that
-metal is more plenty than with me, has given me some gold mohurs to be
-converted into a ring for enchasing King Charles's hair; but this is
-not to be done until I get to London, and get a very handsome pattern.
-Ever, most truly and sincerely, yours,
-
- W. SCOTT.
-
-
-The last sentence of this letter refers to a lock of the hair of
-Charles I., which, at Dr. Baillie's request, Sir Henry Halford had
-transmitted to Scott when the royal martyr's remains were discovered
-at Windsor, in April, 1813.[43] Sir John Malcolm had given him some
-Indian coins to supply virgin gold for the setting of this relic;
-and for some years he constantly wore the ring, which is a massive
-and beautiful one, with the word REMEMBER surrounding it in highly
-relieved black-letter.
-
-The poet's allusion to "taxing men" may require another word of
-explanation. To add to his troubles during this autumn of 1813, a
-demand was made on him by the commissioners of the income-tax, to
-return in one of their schedules an account of the profits of his
-literary exertions during the last three years. He demurred to this,
-and took the opinion of high authorities in Scotland, who confirmed
-him in his impression that the claim was beyond the statute. The
-grounds of his resistance are thus briefly stated in one of his
-letters to his legal friend in London:--
-
-
-TO JOHN RICHARDSON, ESQ., FLUDYER STREET, WESTMINSTER.
-
-MY DEAR RICHARDSON,--I have owed you a letter this long time, but
-perhaps my debt might not yet be discharged, had I not a little matter
-of business to trouble you with. I wish you to lay before either the
-King's counsel, or Sir Samuel Romilly and any other you may approve,
-the point whether a copyright being sold for the term during which
-Queen Anne's act warranted the property to the author, the price is
-liable in payment of the property-tax. I contend it is not so liable,
-for the following reasons: 1st, It is a patent right, expected to
-produce an annual, or at least an incidental profit, during the
-currency of many years; and surely it was never contended that if a
-man sold a theatrical patent, or a patent for machinery, property-tax
-should be levied in the first place on the full price as paid to the
-seller, and then on the profits as purchased by the buyer. I am not
-very expert at figures, but I think it clear that a double taxation
-takes place. 2d, It should be considered that a book may be the work
-not of one year, but of a man's whole life; and as it has been found,
-in a late case of the Duke of Gordon, that a fall of timber was not
-subject to property-tax because it comprehended the produce of thirty
-years, it seems at least equally fair that mental exertions should not
-be subjected to a harder principle of measurement. 3d, The demand is,
-so far as I can learn, totally new and unheard of. 4th, Supposing that
-I died and left my manuscripts to be sold publicly along with the rest
-of my library, is there any ground for taxing what might be received
-for the written book, any more than any rare printed book, which a
-speculative bookseller might purchase with a view to republication?
-You will know whether any of these things ought to be suggested in the
-brief. David Hume, and every lawyer here whom I have spoken to,
-consider the demand as illegal. Believe me truly yours,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-Mr. Richardson having prepared a case, obtained upon it the opinions
-of Mr. Alexander (afterwards Sir William Alexander and Chief Baron
-of the Exchequer) and of the late Sir Samuel Romilly. These eminent
-lawyers agreed in the view of their Scotch brethren; and after a
-tedious correspondence, the Lords of the Treasury at last decided
-that the Income-Tax Commissioners should abandon their claim upon
-the produce of literary labor. I have thought it worth while to
-preserve some record of this decision, and of the authorities on
-which it rested, in case such a demand should ever be renewed
-hereafter.
-
-In the beginning of December, the Town Council of Edinburgh resolved
-to send a deputation to congratulate the Prince Regent on the
-prosperous course of public events, and they invited Scott to draw
-up their address, which, on its being transmitted for previous
-inspection to Mr. William Dundas, then Member for the City, and
-through him shown privately to the Regent, was acknowledged to the
-penman, by his Royal Highness's command, as "the most elegant
-congratulation a sovereign ever received, or a subject offered."[44]
-The Lord Provost of Edinburgh presented it accordingly at the levee
-of the 10th, and it was received most graciously. On returning to
-the north, the Magistrates expressed their sense of Scott's services
-on this occasion by presenting him with the freedom of his native
-city, and also with a piece of plate,--which the reader will find
-alluded to, among other matters of more consequence, in a letter to
-be quoted presently.
-
-At this time Scott further expressed his patriotic exultation in the
-rescue of Europe, by two songs for the anniversary of the death of
-Pitt; one of which has ever since, I believe, been chanted at that
-celebration:--
-
- "O dread was the time and more dreadful the omen,
- When the brave on Marengo lay slaughter'd in vain," etc.[45]
-
-
-Footnotes of the Chapter XXVI.
-
-[23: Mr. Hunter died in March, 1812.]
-
-[24: "These and after purchases of books from the stock of
-J. Ballantyne and Co. were resold to the trade by Constable's firm,
-at less than one half and one third of the prices at which they were
-thus obtained."--_Note from Mr. R. Cadell._]
-
-[25: Dr. Brewster's edition of Ferguson's _Astronomy_, 2
-vols. 8vo, with plates, 4to, Edin. 1811. 36_s_.]
-
-[26: Dr. Singers's _General View of the County of
-Dumfries_, 8vo, Edin. 1812. 18_s_.]
-
-[27: A trade sale of Messrs. Cadell and Davies in the
-Strand.]
-
-[28: Since this work was first published, I have been
-compelled to examine very minutely the details of Scott's connection
-with the Ballantynes, and one result is, that both James and John
-had trespassed so largely, for their private purposes, on the funds
-of the Companies, that, Scott being, as their letters distinctly
-state, the only "monied partner," and his over-advances of capital
-having been very extensive, any inquiry on their part as to his
-uncommercial expenditure must have been entirely out of the
-question. To avoid misrepresentation, however, I leave my text as it
-was.--(1839.)]
-
-[29: _Merchant of Venice_, Act II. Scene 2.]
-
-[30: The court of offices, built on the haugh at Abbotsford
-in 1812, included a house for the faithful coachman, Peter
-Mathieson. One of Scott's Cantabrigian friends, Mr. W. S. Rose, gave
-the whole pile soon afterwards the name, which it retained to the
-end, of _Peter-House_. The loft at Peter-House continued to be
-occupied by occasional bachelor guests until the existing mansion
-was completed.]
-
-[31: Mrs. Thomas Scott had met Burns frequently in early
-life at Dumfries. Her brother, the late Mr. David MacCulloch, was a
-great favorite with the poet, and the best singer of his songs that
-I ever heard.]
-
-[32: John Ballantyne had embarked no capital--not a shilling--in the
-business; and was bound by the contract to limit himself to an allowance
-of £300 a year, in consideration of his _management_, until there should
-be an overplus of profits!--(1839.)]
-
-[33: He probably alludes to the final settlement of
-accounts with the Marquis of Abercorn.]
-
-[34: The Royal Librarian had forwarded to Scott
-presentation copies of his successive publications--_The Progress of
-Maritime Discovery_--Falconer's _Shipwreck, with a Life of the
-Author_--_Naufragia_--_A Life of Nelson_, in two quarto volumes,
-etc., etc., etc.]
-
-[35: Poor Gay--"In wit a man, simplicity a child"--was insulted, on the
-accession of George II., by the offer of a gentleman-ushership to one of
-the royal infants. His prose and verse largely celebrate his obligations
-to Charles, third Duke of Queensberry, and the charming Lady Catharine
-Hyde, his Duchess--under whose roof the poet spent the latter years of
-his life.]
-
-[36: See the Preface to the third volume of the late
-Collective Edition of Mr. Southey's _Poems_, p. xii., where he
-corrects a trivial error I had fallen into in the first edition of
-these Memoirs, and adds, "Sir Walter's conduct was, as it always
-was, characteristically generous, and in the highest degree
-friendly."--(1839.)]
-
-[37: Garrick's _Bon Ton, or High Life Above Stairs_.]
-
-[38: _Twelfth Night_, Act V. Scene 1.]
-
-[39: The letter in question has not been preserved in
-Scott's collection of correspondence. This leaves some allusions in
-the answer obscure.]
-
-[40: Scott's old friend, Mr. John Richardson, had shortly
-before this time taken a house in Miss Baillie's neighborhood, on
-Hampstead Heath.]
-
-[41: Miss Baillie had apologized to him for having sent an
-extract of one of his letters to her friend at Edgeworthstown.]
-
-[42: Milton, _Sonnet No. VIII._ [_When the Assault was
-intended to the City._]]
-
-[43: [On May 3, Scott had written to his daughter, that
-this hair was light brown, and later, writing to Joanna Baillie, he
-says, "I did not think Charles's hair had been quite so light; that
-of his father, and I believe of all the Stuarts till Charles II.,
-was reddish." Of the king, he goes on to say: "Tory, as I am, my
-heart only goes with King Charles in his struggles and distresses,
-for the fore part of his reign was a series of misconduct; however,
-if he sow'd the wind, God knows he reap'd the whirlwind.... Sound
-therefore be the sleep, and henceforward undisturbed the ashes, of
-this unhappy prince.... His attachment to a particular form of
-worship was in him conscience, for he adhered to the Church of
-England ... when by giving up that favorite point he might have
-secured his reëstablishment; and in that sense he may be justly
-considered as a martyr, though his early political errors blemish
-his character as King of England."--_Familiar Letters_, vol. i. p.
-288.]]
-
-[44: Letter from the Right Hon. W. Dundas, dated 6th
-December, 1813.]
-
-[45: See Scott's _Poetical Works_, vol. xi. p. 309, Edition
-1834 [Cambridge Edition, p. 409].]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
- INSANITY OF HENRY WEBER. -- LETTERS ON THE ABDICATION OF
- NAPOLEON, ETC. -- PUBLICATION OF SCOTT'S LIFE AND EDITION OF
- SWIFT. -- ESSAYS FOR THE SUPPLEMENT TO THE ENCYCLOPÆDIA
- BRITANNICA. -- COMPLETION AND PUBLICATION OF WAVERLEY
-
-1814
-
-
-I have to open the year 1814 with a melancholy story. Mention has
-been made, more than once, of Henry Weber, a poor German scholar,
-who escaping to this country in 1804, from misfortunes in his own,
-excited Scott's compassion, and was thenceforth furnished, through
-his means, with literary employment of various sorts. Weber was a
-man of considerable learning; but Scott, as was his custom, appears
-to have formed an exaggerated notion of his capacity, and certainly
-countenanced him, to his own severe cost, in several most
-unfortunate undertakings. When not engaged on things of a more
-ambitious character, he had acted for ten years as his protector's
-amanuensis, and when the family were in Edinburgh, he very often
-dined with them. There was something very interesting in his
-appearance and manners: he had a fair, open countenance, in which
-the honesty and the enthusiasm of his nation were alike visible; his
-demeanor was gentle and modest; and he had not only a stock of
-curious antiquarian knowledge, but the reminiscences, which he
-detailed with amusing simplicity, of an early life chequered with
-many strange-enough adventures. He was, in short, much a favorite
-with Scott and all the household; and was invited to dine with
-them so frequently, chiefly because his friend was aware that he had
-an unhappy propensity to drinking, and was anxious to keep him away
-from places where he might have been more likely to indulge it. This
-vice, however, had been growing on him; and of late Scott had found
-it necessary to make some rather severe remonstrances about habits
-which were at once injuring his health, and interrupting his
-literary industry.
-
-[Illustration: J. B. S. MORRITT
-
-_From the painting by Sir M. A. Shee_]
-
-They had, however, parted kindly when Scott left Edinburgh at
-Christmas, 1813,--and the day after his return, Weber attended him
-as usual in his library, being employed in transcribing extracts
-during several hours, while his friend, seated over against him,
-continued working at the Life of Swift. The light beginning to fail,
-Scott threw himself back in his chair, and was about to ring for
-candles, when he observed the German's eyes fixed upon him with an
-unusual solemnity of expression. "Weber," said he, "what's the
-matter with you?" "Mr. Scott," said Weber, rising, "you have long
-insulted me, and I can bear it no longer. I have brought a pair of
-pistols with me, and must insist on your taking one of them
-instantly;" and with that he produced the weapons, which had been
-deposited under his chair, and laid one of them on Scott's
-manuscript. "You are mistaken, I think," said Scott, "in your way of
-setting about this affair--but no matter. It can, however, be no
-part of your object to annoy Mrs. Scott and the children; therefore,
-if you please, we will put the pistols into the drawer till after
-dinner, and then arrange to go out together like gentlemen." Weber
-answered with equal coolness, "I believe that will be better," and
-laid the second pistol also on the table. Scott locked them both in
-his desk, and said, "I am glad you have felt the propriety of what I
-suggested--let me only request further, that nothing may occur while
-we are at dinner to give my wife any suspicion of what has been
-passing." Weber again assented, and Scott withdrew to his
-dressing-room, from which he immediately despatched a message to one
-of Weber's intimate companions,--and then dinner was served, and
-Weber joined the family circle as usual. He conducted himself with
-perfect composure, and everything seemed to go on in the ordinary
-way, until whiskey and hot water being produced, Scott, instead of
-inviting his guest to help himself, mixed two moderate tumblers of
-toddy, and handed one of them to Weber, who, upon that, started up
-with a furious countenance, but instantly sat down again, and when
-Mrs. Scott expressed her fear that he was ill, answered placidly
-that he was liable to spasms, but that the pain was gone. He then
-took the glass, eagerly gulped down its contents, and pushed it back
-to Scott. At this moment the friend who had been sent for made his
-appearance, and Weber, on seeing him enter the room, rushed past him
-and out of the house, without stopping to put on his hat. The
-friend, who pursued instantly, came up with him at the end of the
-street, and did all he could to soothe his agitation, but in vain.
-The same evening he was obliged to be put into a strait-waistcoat;
-and though in a few days he exhibited such symptoms of recovery that
-he was allowed to go by himself to pay a visit in the north of
-England, he there soon relapsed, and continued ever afterwards a
-hopeless lunatic, being supported to the end of his life, in June,
-1818, at Scott's expense, in an asylum at York.
-
-The reader will now appreciate the gentle delicacy of the following
-letter:--
-
-
-TO J. B. S. MORRITT, ESQ., ROKEBY, GRETA BRIDGE.
-
- EDINBURGH, 7th January, 1814.
-
-Many happy New Years to you and Mrs. Morritt.
-
-MY DEAR MORRITT,--I have postponed writing a long while, in hopes to
-send you the Life of Swift. But I have been delayed by an odd
-accident. Poor Weber, whom you may have heard me mention as a sort of
-grinder of mine, who assisted me in various ways, has fallen into a
-melancholy state. His habits, like those of most German students, were
-always too convivial--this, of course, I guarded against while he was
-in my house, which was always once a week at least; but unfortunately
-he undertook a long walk through the Highlands of upwards of 2000
-miles, and, I suppose, took potations pottle deep to support him
-through the fatigue. His mind became accordingly quite unsettled, and
-after some strange behavior here, he was fortunately prevailed upon to
-go to **** who resides in Yorkshire. It is not unlikely, from
-something that dropped from him, that he may take it into his head to
-call at Rokeby, in which case you must parry any visit, upon the score
-of Mrs. Morritt's health. If he were what he used to be, you would be
-much pleased with him; for besides a very extensive general
-acquaintance with literature, he was particularly deep in our old
-dramatic lore, a good modern linguist, a tolerable draughtsman and
-antiquary, and a most excellent hydrographer. I have not the least
-doubt that if he submits to the proper regimen of abstinence and
-moderate exercise, he will be quite well in a few weeks or days--if
-not, it is miserable to think what may happen. The being suddenly
-deprived of his services in this melancholy way, has flung me back at
-least a month with Swift, and left me no time to write to my friends,
-for all my memoranda, etc., were in his hands, and had to be
-new-modelled, etc., etc.
-
-Our glorious prospects on the Continent called forth the
-congratulations of the City of Edinburgh among others. The Magistrates
-asked me to draw their address, which was presented by the Lord
-Provost in person, who happens to be a gentleman of birth and
-fortune.[46] The Prince said some very handsome things respecting the
-address, with which the Magistrates were so much elated, that they
-have done the genteel thing (as Winifred Jenkins says) by their
-literary adviser, and presented me with the freedom of the city, and a
-handsome piece of plate. I got the freedom at the same time with Lord
-Dalhousie and Sir Thomas Graham, and the Provost gave a very brilliant
-entertainment. About 150 gentlemen dined at his own house, all as well
-served as if there had been a dozen. So if one strikes a cuff on the
-one side from ill-will, there is a pat on the other from kindness, and
-the shuttlecock is kept flying. To poor Charlotte's great horror, I
-chose my plate in the form of an old English tankard, an utensil for
-which I have a particular respect, especially when charged with good
-ale, cup, or any of these potables. I hope you will soon see mine.[47]
-
-Your little friends, Sophia and Walter, were at a magnificent party on
-Twelfth Night at Dalkeith, where the Duke and Duchess entertained all
-Edinburgh. I think they have dreamed of nothing since but Aladdin's
-lamp and the palace of Haroun Al-Raschid. I am uncertain what to do
-this spring. I would fain go on the Continent for three or four weeks,
-if it be then safe for non-combatants. If not, we will have a merry
-meeting in London, and, like Master Silence,
-
- "Eat, drink, and make good cheer,
- And praise heaven for the merry year."[48]
-
-I have much to say about Triermain. The fourth edition is at press.
-The Empress Dowager of Russia has expressed such an interest in it,
-that it will be inscribed to her, in some doggerel sonnet or other, by
-the unknown author. This is funny enough.--Love a thousand times to
-dear Mrs. Morritt, who, I trust, keeps pretty well. Pray write soon--a
-modest request from
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-The last of Weber's literary productions were the analyses of the
-Old German Poems of the _Helden Buch_, and the _Nibelungen Lied_,
-which appeared in a massive quarto, entitled Illustrations of
-Northern Antiquities, published in the summer of 1814, by his and
-Scott's friend, Mr. Robert Jameson. Scott avowedly contributed to
-this collection an account of the Eyrbiggia Saga, which has since
-been included in his Prose Miscellanies (Vol. V., edition 1834); but
-any one who examines the share of the work which goes under Weber's
-name will see that Scott had a considerable hand in that also. The
-rhymed versions from the Nibelungen Lied came, I can have no doubt,
-from his pen; but he never reclaimed these, or any other similar
-benefactions, of which I have traced not a few; nor, highly curious
-and even beautiful as many of them are, could they be intelligible,
-if separated from the prose narrative on which Weber embroidered
-them, in imitation of the style of Ellis's Specimens of Metrical
-Romance.
-
-The following letters, on the first abdication of Napoleon, are too
-characteristic to be omitted here. I need not remind the reader how
-greatly Scott had calmed his opinions, and softened his feelings,
-respecting the career and fate of the most extraordinary man of our
-age, before he undertook to write his history.
-
-
-TO J. B. S. MORRITT, ESQ., PORTLAND PLACE, LONDON.
-
- ABBOTSFORD, 30th April, 1814
-
-"Joy--joy in London now!"--and in Edinburgh, moreover, my dear
-Morritt; for never did you or I see, and never again shall we see,
-according to all human prospects, a consummation so truly glorious, as
-now bids fair to conclude this long and eventful war. It is startling
-to think that, but for the preternatural presumption and hardness of
-heart displayed by the arch-enemy of mankind, we should have had a
-hollow and ominous truce with him, instead of a glorious and stable
-peace with the country over which he tyrannized, and its lawful ruler.
-But Providence had its own wise purposes to answer--and such was the
-deference of France to the ruling power--so devoutly did they worship
-the Devil for possession of his burning throne, that, it may be,
-nothing short of his rejection of every fair and advantageous offer of
-peace could have driven them to those acts of resistance which
-remembrance of former convulsions had rendered so fearful to them.
-Thank God! it is done at last: and--although I rather grudge him even
-the mouthful of air which he may draw in the Isle of Elba--yet I
-question whether the moral lesson would have been completed either by
-his perishing in battle, or being torn to pieces (which I should
-greatly have preferred), like the De Witts, by an infuriated crowd of
-conscripts and their parents. Good God! with what strange feelings
-must that man retire from the most unbounded authority ever vested in
-the hands of one man, to the seclusion of privacy and restraint! We
-have never heard of one good action which he did, at least for which
-there was not some selfish or political reason; and the train of
-slaughter, pestilence, and famine and fire, which his ambition has
-occasioned, would have outweighed five hundredfold the private virtues
-of a Titus. These are comfortable reflections to carry with one to
-privacy. If he writes his own history, as he proposes, we may gain
-something; but he must send it here to be printed. Nothing less than a
-neck-or-nothing London bookseller, like John Dunton of yore, will
-venture to commit to the press his strange details uncastrated. I
-doubt if he has _stamina_ to undertake such a labor; and yet, in
-youth, as I know from the brothers of Lauriston, who were his
-school-companions, Buonaparte's habits were distinctly and strongly
-literary. Spain, the Continental System, and the invasion of Russia he
-may record as his three leading blunders--an awful lesson to
-sovereigns that morality is not so indifferent to politics as
-Machiavelians will assert. _Res nolunt diu male administrari._ Why can
-we not meet to talk over these matters over a glass of claret? and
-when shall that be! Not this spring, I fear, for time wears fast away,
-and I have remained here nailed among my future oaks, which I measure
-daily with a foot-rule. Those which were planted two years ago begin
-to look very gayly, and a venerable plantation of four years old looks
-as _bobbish_ as yours at the dairy by Greta side. Besides, I am
-arranging this cottage a little more conveniently, to put off the
-plague and expense of building another year; and I assure you, I
-expect to spare Mrs. Morritt and you a chamber in the wall, with a
-dressing-room and everything handsome about you. You will not
-stipulate, of course, for many square feet.--You would be surprised to
-hear how the Continent is awakening from its iron sleep. The utmost
-eagerness seems to prevail about English literature. I have had
-several voluntary epistles from different parts of Germany, from men
-of letters, who are eager to know what we have been doing, while they
-were compelled to play at blind man's buff with the _ci-devant
-Empereur_. The feeling of the French officers, of whom we have many in
-our vicinity, is very curious, and yet natural.[49] Many of them,
-companions of Buonaparte's victories, and who hitherto have marched
-with him from conquest to conquest, disbelieve the change entirely.
-This is all very stupid to write to you, who are in the centre of
-these wonders; but what else can I say, unless I should send you the
-measure of the future fathers of the forest? Mrs. Scott is with me
-here--the children in Edinburgh. Our kindest love attends Mrs.
-Morritt. I hope to hear soon that her health continues to gain ground.
-
-I have a letter from Southey, in high spirits on the glorious news.
-What a pity this last battle[50] was fought. But I am glad the rascals
-were beaten once more.
-
-Ever yours,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-TO ROBERT SOUTHEY, ESQ., KESWICK.
-
- EDINBURGH, 17th June, 1814.
-
-MY DEAR SOUTHEY,--I suspended writing to thank you for the Carmen
-Triumphale--(a happy omen of what you can do to immortalize our public
-story)--until the feverish mood of expectation and anxiety should be
-over. And then, as you truly say, there followed a stunning sort of
-listless astonishment and complication of feeling, which, if it did
-not lessen enjoyment, confused and confounded one's sense of it. I
-remember the first time I happened to see a launch, I was neither so
-much struck with the descent of the vessel, nor with its majestic
-sweep to its moorings, as with the blank which was suddenly made from
-the withdrawing so large an object, and the prospect which was at once
-opened to the opposite side of the dock crowded with spectators.
-Buonaparte's fall strikes me something in the same way: the huge bulk
-of his power, against which a thousand arms were hammering, was
-obviously to sink when its main props were struck away--and yet
-now--when it has disappeared--the vacancy which it leaves in our minds
-and attention marks its huge and preponderating importance more
-strongly than even its presence. Yet I so devoutly expected the
-termination, that in discussing the matter with Major Philips, who
-seemed to partake of the doubts which prevailed during the feverish
-period preceding the capture of Paris, when he was expressing his
-apprehensions that the capital of France would be defended to the
-last, I hazarded a prophecy that a battle would be fought on the
-heights of Montmartre--(no great sagacity, since it was the point
-where Marlborough proposed to attack, and for which Saxe projected a
-scheme of defence)--and that if the allies were successful, which I
-little doubted, the city would surrender, and the Senate proclaim the
-dethronement of Buonaparte. But I never thought nor imagined that he
-would have _given in_ as he has done. I always considered him as
-possessing the genius and talents of an Eastern conqueror; and
-although I never supposed that he possessed, allowing for some
-difference of education, the liberality of conduct and political views
-which were sometimes exhibited by old Hyder Ally, yet I did think he
-might have shown the same resolved and dogged spirit of resolution
-which induced Tippoo Saib to die manfully upon the breach of his
-capital city with his sabre clenched in his hand. But this is a poor
-devil, and cannot play the tyrant so rarely as Bottom the Weaver
-proposed to do. I think it is Strap in Roderick Random, who, seeing a
-highwayman that had lately robbed him, disarmed and bound, fairly
-offers to box him for a shilling. One has really the same feeling with
-respect to Buonaparte, though if he go out of life after all in the
-usual manner, it will be the strongest proof of his own
-insignificance, and the liberality of the age we live in. Were I a son
-of Palm or Hoffer, I should be tempted to take a long shot at him in
-his retreat to Elba. As for coaxing the French by restoring all our
-conquests, it would be driving generosity into extravagance: most of
-them have been colonized with British subjects, and improved by
-British capital; and surely we owe no more to the French nation than
-any well-meaning individual might owe to a madman, whom--at the
-expense of a hard struggle, black eyes, and bruises--he has at length
-overpowered, knocked down, and by the wholesome discipline of a bull's
-pizzle and strait-jacket, brought to the handsome enjoyment of his
-senses. I think with you, what we return to them should be well paid
-for; and they should have no Pondicherry to be a nest of smugglers,
-nor Mauritius to nurse a hornet-swarm of privateers. In short, draw
-teeth, and pare claws, and leave them to fatten themselves in peace
-and quiet, when they are deprived of the means of indulging their
-restless spirit of enterprise.
-
---The above was written at Abbotsford last month, but left in my
-portfolio there till my return some days ago; and now, when I look
-over what I have written, I am confirmed in my opinion that we have
-given the rascals too good an opportunity to boast that they have got
-well off. An intimate friend of mine,[51] just returned from a long
-captivity in France, witnessed the entry of the King, guarded by the
-Imperial Guards, whose countenances betokened the most sullen and
-ferocious discontent. The mob, and especially the women, pelted them
-for refusing to cry, "Vive le Roi." If Louis is well advised, he will
-get rid of these fellows gradually, but as soon as possible. "Joy, joy
-in London now!" What a scene has been going on there! I think you may
-see the Czar appear on the top of one of your stages one morning. He
-is a fine fellow, and has fought the good fight. Yours affectionately,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-On the 1st of July, 1814, Scott's Life and Edition of Swift, in
-nineteen volumes 8vo, at length issued from the press. This
-adventure, undertaken by Constable in 1808, had been proceeded in
-during all the variety of their personal relations, and now came
-forth when author and publisher felt more warmly towards each other
-than perhaps they had ever before done. The impression was of 1250
-copies; and a reprint of similar extent was called for in 1824. The
-Life of Swift has subsequently been included in the author's
-Miscellanies, and has obtained a very wide circulation.
-
-By his industrious inquiries, in which, as the preface gratefully
-acknowledges, he found many zealous assistants, especially among the
-Irish literati,[52] Scott added to this edition many admirable
-pieces, both in prose and verse, which had never before been
-printed, and still more which had escaped notice amidst old bundles
-of pamphlets and broadsides. To the illustration of these and of all
-the better known writings of the Dean, he brought the same
-qualifications which had, by general consent, distinguished his
-Dryden, "uniting," as the Edinburgh Review expresses it, "to the
-minute knowledge and patient research of the Malones and Chalmerses,
-a vigor of judgment and a vivacity of style to which they had no
-pretensions." His biographical narrative, introductory essays, and
-notes on Swift, show, indeed, an intimacy of acquaintance with the
-obscurest details of the political, social, and literary history of
-the period of Queen Anne, which it is impossible to consider without
-feeling a lively regret that he never accomplished a long-cherished
-purpose of preparing a Life and Edition of Pope on a similar scale.
-It has been specially unfortunate for that "true deacon of the
-craft," as Scott often called Pope, that first Goldsmith, and then
-Scott, should have taken up, only to abandon it, the project of
-writing his life and editing his works.
-
-The Edinburgh Reviewer thus characterizes Scott's Memoir of the
-Dean of St. Patrick's:--
-
-
-"It is not everywhere extremely well written, in a literary point of
-view, but it is drawn up in substance with great intelligence,
-liberality, and good feeling. It is quite fair and moderate in
-politics; and perhaps rather too indulgent and tender towards
-individuals of all descriptions--more full, at least, of kindness and
-veneration for genius and social virtue, than of indignation at
-baseness and profligacy. Altogether, it is not much like the
-production of a mere man of letters, or a fastidious speculator in
-sentiment and morality; but exhibits throughout, and in a very
-pleasing form, the good sense and large toleration of a man of the
-world, with much of that generous allowance for the
-
- 'Fears of the brave and follies of the wise,'
-
-which genius too often requires, and should therefore always be most
-forward to show. It is impossible, however, to avoid noticing that Mr.
-Scott is by far too favorable to the personal character of his author,
-whom we think it would really be injurious to the cause of morality to
-allow to pass either as a very dignified or a very amiable person. The
-truth is, we think, that he was extremely ambitious, arrogant, and
-selfish; of a morose, vindictive, and haughty temper; and though
-capable of a sort of patronizing generosity towards his dependents,
-and of some attachment towards those who had long known and flattered
-him, his general demeanor, both in public and private life, appears to
-have been far from exemplary; destitute of temper and magnanimity, and
-we will add, of principle, in the former; and in the latter, of
-tenderness, fidelity, or compassion."--_Edinburgh Review_, vol. xvii.
-p. 9.
-
-
-I have no desire to break a lance in this place in defence of the
-personal character of Swift. It does not appear to me that he stands
-at all distinguished among politicians (least of all, among the
-politicians of his time) for laxity of principle; nor can I consent
-to charge his private demeanor with the absence either of
-tenderness, or fidelity, or compassion. But who ever dreamed--most
-assuredly not Scott--of holding up the Dean of St. Patrick's as on
-the whole an "exemplary character"? The biographer felt, whatever
-his critic may have thought on the subject, that a vein of morbid
-humor ran through Swift's whole existence, both mental and physical,
-from the beginning. "He early adopted," says Scott, "the custom of
-observing his birthday, as a term not of joy but of sorrow, and of
-reading, when it annually recurred, the striking passage of
-Scripture in which Job laments and execrates the day upon which it
-was said in his father's house _that a man-child was born_;" and I
-should have expected that any man who had considered the black close
-of the career thus early clouded, and read the entry of Swift's
-diary on the funeral of Stella, his epitaph on himself, and the
-testament by which he disposed of his fortune, would have been
-willing, like Scott, to dwell on the splendor of his immortal
-genius, and the many traits of manly generosity "which he
-unquestionably exhibited," rather than on the faults and foibles of
-nameless and inscrutable disease, which tormented and embittered the
-far greater part of his earthly being. What the critic says of the
-practical and businesslike style of Scott's biography, appears very
-just--and I think the circumstance eminently characteristic; nor, on
-the whole, could his edition, as an edition, have been better dealt
-with than in the Essay which I have quoted. It was, by the way,
-written by Mr. Jeffrey, at Constable's particular request. "It was,
-I think, the first time I ever asked such a thing of him," the
-bookseller said to me; "and I assure you the result was no
-encouragement to repeat such petitions." Mr. Jeffrey attacked
-Swift's whole character at great length, and with consummate
-dexterity; and, in Constable's opinion, his article threw such a
-cloud on the Dean, as materially checked, for a time, the popularity
-of his writings. Admirable as the paper is, in point of ability, I
-think Mr. Constable may have considerably exaggerated its effects;
-but in those days it must have been difficult for him to form an
-impartial opinion upon such a question; for, as Johnson said of
-Cave, that "he could not spit over his window without thinking of
-The Gentleman's Magazine," I believe Constable allowed nothing to
-interrupt his paternal pride in the concerns of his Review, until
-the Waverley Novels supplied him with another periodical publication
-still more important to his fortunes.
-
-And this consummation was not long delayed: a considerable addition
-having by that time been made to the original fragment, there
-appeared in The Scots Magazine, for February 1, 1814, an
-announcement, that "Waverley; or, 'Tis Sixty Years Since, a novel,
-in 3 vols., 12mo," would be published in March. And before Scott
-came into Edinburgh, at the close of the Christmas vacation, on the
-12th of January, Mr. Erskine had perused the greater part of the
-first volume, and expressed his decided opinion that Waverley would
-prove the most popular of all his friend's writings.[53] The MS. was
-forthwith copied by John Ballantyne, and sent to press. As soon as a
-volume was printed, Ballantyne conveyed it to Constable, who did not
-for a moment doubt from what pen it proceeded, but took a few days
-to consider of the matter, and then offered £700 for the copyright.
-When we recollect what the state of novel literature in those days
-was, and that the only exceptions to its mediocrity, the Irish Tales
-of Miss Edgeworth, however appreciated in refined circles, had a
-circulation so limited that she had never realized a tithe of £700
-by the best of them--it must be allowed that Constable's offer was a
-liberal one. Scott's answer, however, transmitted through the same
-channel, was that £700 was too much, in case the novel should not
-be successful, and too little in case it should. He added, "If our
-fat friend had said £1000, I should have been staggered." John did
-not forget to hint this last circumstance to Constable, but the
-latter did not choose to act upon it; and he ultimately published
-the work, on the footing of an equal division of profits between
-himself and the author. There was a considerable pause between the
-finishing of the first volume and the beginning of the second.
-Constable had, in 1812, acquired the copyright of the Encyclopædia
-Britannica, and was now preparing to publish the valuable Supplement
-to that work, which has since, with modifications, been incorporated
-into its text. He earnestly requested Scott to undertake a few
-articles for the Supplement; he agreed--and, anxious to gratify the
-generous bookseller, at once laid aside his tale until he had
-finished two essays--those on Chivalry and the Drama. They appear to
-have been completed in the course of April and May, and he received
-for each of them--as he did subsequently for that on Romance--£100.
-
-The two next letters will give us, in more exact detail than the
-author's own recollection could supply in 1830, the history of the
-completion of Waverley. It was published on the 7th of July; and two
-days afterwards he thus writes:--
-
-
-TO J. B. S. MORRITT, ESQ., M. P., LONDON.
-
- EDINBURGH, 9th July, 1814.
-
-MY DEAR MORRITT,--I owe you many apologies for not sooner answering
-your very entertaining letter upon your Parisian journey. I heartily
-wish I had been of your party, for you have seen what I trust will not
-be seen again in a hurry; since, to enjoy the delight of a
-restoration, there is a necessity for a previous _bouleversement_ of
-everything that is valuable in morals and policy, which seems to have
-been the case in France since 1790.[54] The Duke of Buccleuch told me
-yesterday of a very good reply of Louis to some of his attendants, who
-proposed shutting the doors of his apartments to keep out the throng
-of people. "Open the door," he said, "to John Bull; he has suffered a
-great deal in keeping the door open for me."
-
-Now, to go from one important subject to another, I must account for
-my own laziness, which I do by referring you to a small anonymous sort
-of a novel, in three volumes, Waverley, which you will receive by the
-mail of this day. It was a very old attempt of mine to embody some
-traits of those characters and manners peculiar to Scotland, the last
-remnants of which vanished during my own youth, so that few or no
-traces now remain. I had written great part of the first volume, and
-sketched other passages, when I mislaid the MS., and only found it by
-the merest accident as I was rummaging the drawers of an old
-cabinet;[55] and I took the fancy of finishing it, which I did so
-fast, that the last two volumes were written in three weeks. I had a
-great deal of fun in the accomplishment of this task, though I do not
-expect that it will be popular in the south, as much of the humor, if
-there be any, is local, and some of it even professional. You,
-however, who are an adopted Scotchman, will find some amusement in it.
-It has made a very strong impression here, and the good people of
-Edinburgh are busied in tracing the author, and in finding out
-originals for the portraits it contains. In the first case, they will
-probably find it difficult to convict the guilty author, although he
-is far from escaping suspicion. Jeffrey has offered to make oath that
-it is mine, and another great critic has tendered his affidavit _ex
-contrario_; so that these authorities have divided the Gude Town.
-However, the thing has succeeded very well, and is thought highly of.
-I don't know if it has got to London yet. I intend to maintain my
-_incognito_. Let me know your opinion about it. I should be most happy
-if I could think it would amuse a painful thought at this anxious
-moment. I was in hopes Mrs. Morritt was getting so much better, that
-this relapse affects me very much. Ever yours truly,
-
- W. SCOTT.
-
-P. S.--As your conscience has very few things to answer for, you must
-still burthen it with the secret of the Bridal. It is spreading very
-rapidly, and I have one or two little fairy romances, which will make
-a second volume, and which I would wish published, but not with my
-name. The truth is, that this sort of muddling work amuses me, and I
-am something in the condition of Joseph Surface, who was embarrassed
-by getting himself too good a reputation; for many things may please
-people well enough anonymously, which, if they have me in the
-title-page, would just give me that sort of ill name which precedes
-hanging--and that would be in many respects inconvenient if I thought
-of again trying a _grande opus_.
-
-
-This statement of the foregoing letter (repeated still more
-precisely in the following one), as to the time occupied in the
-composition of the second and third volumes of Waverley, recalls to
-my memory a trifling anecdote, which, as connected with a dear
-friend of my youth, whom I have not seen for many years, and may
-very probably never see again in this world, I shall here set down,
-in the hope of affording him a momentary, though not an unmixed
-pleasure, when he may chance to read this compilation on a distant
-shore--and also in the hope that my humble record may impart to some
-active mind in the rising generation a shadow of the influence
-which the reality certainly exerted upon his. Happening to pass
-through Edinburgh in June, 1814, I dined one day with the gentleman
-in question (now the Honorable William Menzies, one of the Supreme
-Judges at the Cape of Good Hope), whose residence was then in George
-Street, situated very near to, and at right angles with, North
-Castle Street. It was a party of very young persons, most of them,
-like Menzies and myself, destined for the Bar of Scotland, all gay
-and thoughtless, enjoying the first flush of manhood, with little
-remembrance of the yesterday, or care of the morrow. When my
-companion's worthy father and uncle, after seeing two or three
-bottles go round, left the juveniles to themselves, the weather
-being hot, we adjourned to a library which had one large window
-looking northwards. After carousing here for an hour or more, I
-observed that a shade had come over the aspect of my friend, who
-happened to be placed immediately opposite to myself, and said
-something that intimated a fear of his being unwell. "No," said he,
-"I shall be well enough presently, if you will only let me sit where
-you are, and take my chair; for there is a confounded hand in sight
-of me here, which has often bothered me before, and now it won't let
-me fill my glass with a good will." I rose to change places with him
-accordingly, and he pointed out to me this hand which, like the
-writing on Belshazzar's wall, disturbed his hour of hilarity. "Since
-we sat down," he said, "I have been watching it--it fascinates my
-eye--it never stops--page after page is finished and thrown on that
-heap of MS., and still it goes on unwearied--and so it will be till
-candles are brought in, and God knows how long after that. It is the
-same every night--I can't stand a sight of it when I am not at my
-books."--"Some stupid, dogged, engrossing clerk, probably,"
-exclaimed myself, or some other giddy youth in our society. "No,
-boys," said our host, "I well know what hand it is--'tis Walter
-Scott's." This was the hand that, in the evenings of three summer
-weeks, wrote the last two volumes of Waverley. Would that all who
-that night watched it had profited by its example of diligence as
-largely as William Menzies!
-
-In the next of these letters Scott enclosed to Mr. Morritt the
-Prospectus of a new edition of the old poems of the Bruce and the
-Wallace, undertaken by the learned lexicographer, Dr. John Jamieson;
-and he announces his departure on a sailing excursion round the
-north of Scotland. It will be observed that when Scott began his
-letter, he had only had Mr. Morritt's opinion of the first volume of
-Waverley, and that before he closed it he had received his friend's
-honest criticism on the work as a whole, with the expression of an
-earnest hope that he would drop his _incognito_ on the title-page of
-a second edition.
-
-
-TO J. B. S. MORRITT, ESQ., M. P., PORTLAND PLACE, LONDON.
-
- ABBOTSFORD, July 24, 1814.
-
-MY DEAR MORRITT,--I am going to say my _vales_ to you for some weeks,
-having accepted an invitation from a committee of the Commissioners
-for the Northern Lights (I don't mean the Edinburgh Reviewers, but the
-_bona-fide_ Commissioners for the Beacons), to accompany them upon a
-nautical tour round Scotland, visiting all that is curious on
-continent and isle. The party are three gentlemen with whom I am very
-well acquainted, William Erskine being one. We have a stout cutter,
-well fitted up and manned for the service by Government; and to make
-assurance double sure, the admiral has sent a sloop of war to cruise
-in the dangerous points of our tour, and sweep the sea of the Yankee
-privateers, which sometimes annoy our northern latitudes. I shall
-visit the Clephanes in their solitude--and let you know all that I see
-that is rare and entertaining, which, as we are masters of our time
-and vessel, should add much to my stock of knowledge.
-
-As to Waverley, I will play Sir Fretful for once, and assure you that
-I left the story to flag in the first volume on purpose; the second
-and third have rather more bustle and interest. I wished (with what
-success Heaven knows) to avoid the ordinary error of novel writers,
-whose first volume is usually their best. But since it has served to
-amuse Mrs. Morritt and you _usque ab initio_, I have no doubt you will
-tolerate it even unto the end. It may really boast to be a tolerably
-faithful portrait of Scottish manners, and has been recognized as such
-in Edinburgh. The first edition of a thousand instantly disappeared,
-and the bookseller informs me that the second, of double the quantity,
-will not supply the market long.--As I shall be very anxious to know
-how Mrs. Morritt is, I hope to have a few lines from you on my return,
-which will be about the end of August or beginning of September. I
-should have mentioned that we have the celebrated engineer, Stevenson,
-along with us. I delight in these professional men of talent; they
-always give you some new lights by the peculiarity of their habits and
-studies, so different from the people who are rounded, and smoothed,
-and ground down for conversation, and who can say all that every other
-person says, and--nothing more.
-
-What a miserable thing it is that our royal family cannot be quiet and
-decent at least, if not correct and moral in their deportment. Old
-farmer George's manly simplicity, modesty of expense, and domestic
-virtue, saved this country at its most perilous crisis; for it is
-inconceivable the number of persons whom these qualities united in his
-behalf, who would have felt but feebly the abstract duty of supporting
-a crown less worthily worn.
-
---I had just proceeded thus far when your kind favor of the 21st
-reached Abbotsford. I am heartily glad you continued to like Waverley
-to the end. The hero is a sneaking piece of imbecility; and if he had
-married Flora, she would have set him up upon the chimney-piece, as
-Count Borowlaski's wife used to do with him.[56] I am a bad hand at
-depicting a hero, properly so called, and have an unfortunate
-propensity for the dubious characters of Borderers, buccaneers,
-Highland robbers, and all others of a Robin Hood description. I do not
-know why it should be, as I am myself, like Hamlet, indifferent
-honest; but I suppose the blood of the old cattle-drivers of
-Teviotdale continues to stir in my veins.
-
-I shall _not_ own Waverley; my chief reason is that it would prevent
-me of the pleasure of writing again. David Hume, nephew of the
-historian, says the author must be of a Jacobite family and
-predilections, a yeoman-cavalry man, and a Scottish lawyer, and
-desires me to guess in whom these happy attributes are united. I shall
-not plead guilty, however; and as such seems to be the fashion of the
-day, I hope charitable people will believe my _affidavit_ in
-contradiction to all other evidence. The Edinburgh faith now is, that
-Waverley is written by Jeffrey, having been composed to lighten the
-tedium of his late transatlantic voyage. So you see the unknown infant
-is like to come to preferment. In truth, I am not sure it would be
-considered quite decorous for me, as a Clerk of Session, to write
-novels. Judges being monks, Clerks are a sort of lay brethren, from
-whom some solemnity of walk and conduct may be expected. So, whatever
-I may do of this kind, "I shall whistle it down the wind, and let it
-prey at fortune."[57] I will take care, in the next edition, to make
-the corrections you recommend. The second is, I believe, nearly
-through the press. It will hardly be printed faster than it was
-written; for though the first volume was begun long ago, and actually
-lost for a time, yet the other two were begun and finished between the
-4th June and the 1st July, during all which I attended my duty in
-Court, and proceeded without loss of time or hindrance of business.
-
-I wish, for poor auld Scotland's sake,[58] and for the manes of Bruce
-and Wallace, and for the living comfort of a very worthy and ingenious
-dissenting clergyman, who has collected a library and medals of some
-value, and brought up, I believe, sixteen or seventeen children (his
-wife's ambition extended to twenty) upon about £150 a year--I say I
-wish, for all these reasons, you could get me among your wealthy
-friends a name or two for the enclosed proposals. The price is, I
-think, too high; but the booksellers fixed it two guineas above what I
-proposed. I trust it will be yet lowered to five guineas, which is a
-more come-at-able sum than six. The poems themselves are great
-curiosities, both to the philologist and antiquary; and that of Bruce
-is invaluable even to the historian. They have been hitherto
-wretchedly edited.
-
-I am glad you are not to pay for this scrawl. Ever yours,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-P. S.--I do not see how my silence can be considered as imposing on
-the public. If I give my name to a book without writing it,
-unquestionably that would be a trick. But, unless in the case of his
-averring facts which he may be called upon to defend or justify, I
-think an author may use his own discretion in giving or withholding
-his name. Harry Mackenzie never put his name in a title-page till the
-last edition of his works; and Swift only owned one out of his
-thousand-and-one publications. In point of emolument, everybody knows
-that I sacrifice much money by withholding my name; and what should I
-gain by it, that any human being has a right to consider as an unfair
-advantage? In fact, only the freedom of writing trifles with less
-personal responsibility, and perhaps more frequently than I otherwise
-might do.
-
- W. S.
-
-
-I am not able to give the exact date of the following reply to one
-of John Ballantyne's expostulations on the subject of _the
-secret_:--
-
- "No, John, I will not own the book--
- I won't, you Picaroon.
- When next I try St. Grubby's brook,
- The A. of Wa--shall bait the hook--
- And flat-fish bite as soon,
- As if before them they had got
- The worn-out wriggler
-
- WALTER SCOTT."
-
-
-Footnotes of the Chapter XXVII.
-
-[46: The late Sir John Marjoribanks of Lees, Bart.]
-
-[47: The inscription for this tankard was penned by the
-late celebrated Dr. James Gregory, Professor of the Practice of
-Physic in the University of Edinburgh; and I therefore transcribe
-it.
-
- GUALTERUM SCOTT
-
- DE ABBOTSFORD
-
- VIRUM SUMMI INGENII
-
- SCRIPTOREM ELEGANTEM
-
- POETARUM SUI SECULI FACILE PRINCIPEM
-
- PATRIÆ DECUS
-
- OB VARIA ERGA IPSAM MERITA
-
- IN CIVIUM SUORUM NUMERUM
-
- GRATA ADSCRIPSIT CIVITAS EDINBURGENSIS
-
- ET HOC CANTHARO DONAVIT
-
- A. D. M.DCCC.XIII.]
-
-[48: _2d King Henry IV._ Act V. Scene 3.]
-
-[49: A good many French officers, prisoners of war, had
-been living on parole in Melrose, and the adjoining villages; and
-Mr. and Mrs. Scott had been particularly kind and hospitable to
-them.]
-
-[50: The battle of Toulouse.]
-
-[51: Sir Adam Ferguson, who had been taken prisoner in the
-course of the Duke of Wellington's retreat from Burgos.]
-
-[52: The names which he particularly mentions are those of
-the late Matthew Weld Hartstonge, Esq., of Dublin, Theophilus Swift,
-Esq., Major Tickell, Thomas Steele, Esq., Leonard Macnally, Esq.,
-and the Rev. M. Berwick.]
-
-[53: Entertaining one night a small party of friends,
-Erskine read the proof sheets of this volume after supper, and was
-confirmed in his opinion by the enthusiastic interest they excited
-in his highly intelligent circle. Mr. James Simpson and Mr. Norman
-Hill, advocates, were of this party, and from the way in which their
-host spoke, they both inferred that they were listening to the first
-effort of some unknown aspirant. They all pronounced the work one of
-the highest classical merit. The sitting was protracted till
-daybreak.--(1839.)]
-
-[54: Mr. Morritt had, in the spring of this year, been
-present at the first levee held at the Tuileries by Monsieur
-(afterwards Charles X.), as representative of his brother Louis
-XVIII. Mr. M. had not been in Paris till that time since 1789.]
-
-[55: [The old writing-desk, in which, while searching for
-some fishing-tackle for a guest, Scott found the long-lost
-manuscript, was given by him to William Laidlaw, who till his death
-cherished with religious care all his memorials of Abbotsford. The
-desk is now a treasured possession of his grandson, Mr. W. L.
-Carruthers, of Inverness.]]
-
-[56: _Count Borowlaski_ was a Polish dwarf, who, after
-realizing some money as an itinerant object of exhibition, settled,
-married, and died (September 5, 1837) at Durham. He was a well-bred
-creature, and much noticed by the clergy and other gentry of that
-city. Indeed, even when travelling the country as a show, he had
-always maintained a sort of dignity. I remember him as going from
-house to house, when I was a child, in a sedan chair, with a servant
-in livery following him, who took the fee--_M. le Comte_ himself
-(dressed in a scarlet coat and bag wig) being ushered into the room
-like any ordinary visitor.
-
-The Count died in his 99th year--
-
- "A SPIRIT brave, yet gentle, has dwelt, as it appears,
- Within three feet of flesh for near one hundred years;
- Which causes wonder, like his constitution, strong,
- That one _so short alive_ should be _alive so long_!"
-
- _Bentley's Miscellany_ for November, 1837.]
-
-[57: _Othello_, Act III. Scene 3.]
-
-[58: Burns--lines _On my early days_.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-
- VOYAGE TO THE SHETLAND ISLES, ETC. -- SCOTT'S DIARY KEPT ON BOARD
- THE LIGHTHOUSE YACHT
-
-1814
-
-
-The gallant composure with which Scott, when he had dismissed a work
-from his desk, awaited the decision of the public--and the healthy
-elasticity of spirit with which he could meanwhile turn his whole
-zeal upon new or different objects--are among the features in his
-character which will always, I believe, strike the student of
-literary history as most remarkable. We have now seen him before the
-fate of Waverley had been determined--before he had heard a word
-about its reception in England, except from one partial
-confidant--preparing to start on a voyage to the northern isles,
-which was likely to occupy the best part of two months, and in the
-course of which he could hardly expect to receive any intelligence
-from his friends in Edinburgh. The Diary which he kept during this
-expedition is--thanks to the leisure of a landsman on board--a very
-full one; and, written without the least notion probably that it
-would ever be perused except in his own family circle, it affords
-such a complete and artless portraiture of the man, as he was in
-himself, and as he mingled with his friends and companions, at one
-of the most interesting periods of his life, that I am persuaded
-every reader will be pleased to see it printed in its original
-state. A few extracts from it were published by himself, in one of
-the Edinburgh Annual Registers--he also drew from it some of the
-notes to his Lord of the Isles, and the substance of several
-others for his romance of the Pirate. But the recurrence of these
-detached passages will not be complained of--expounded and
-illustrated as the reader will find them by the personal details of
-the context.
-
-[Illustration: WILLIAM ERSKINE (LORD KINNEDDER)
-
-_From the water-color portrait by William Nicholson_]
-
-I have been often told by one of the companions of this voyage, that
-heartily as Scott entered throughout into their social enjoyments,
-they all perceived him, when inspecting for the first time scenes of
-remarkable grandeur, to be in such an abstracted and excited mood,
-that they felt it would be the kindest and discreetest plan to leave
-him to himself. "I often," said Lord Kinnedder, "on coming up from
-the cabin at night, found him pacing the deck rapidly, muttering to
-himself--and went to the forecastle, lest my presence should disturb
-him. I remember, that at Loch Corriskin, in particular, he seemed
-quite overwhelmed with his feelings; and we all saw it, and retiring
-unnoticed, left him to roam and gaze about by himself, until it was
-time to muster the party and be gone." Scott used to mention the
-surprise with which he himself witnessed Erskine's emotion on first
-entering the Cave of Staffa. "Would you believe it?" he said--"my
-poor Willie sat down and wept like a woman!" Yet his own
-sensibilities, though betrayed in a more masculine and sterner
-guise, were perhaps as keen as well as deeper than his amiable
-friend's.
-
-The poet's Diary, contained in five little paper books, is as
-follows:--
-
-
-VACATION, 1814.
-
-_Voyage in the Lighthouse Yacht to Nova Zembla, and the Lord knows
-where._
-
-"_July 29, 1814_.--Sailed from Leith about one o'clock on board the
-Lighthouse Yacht, conveying six guns, and ten men, commanded by Mr.
-Wilson. The company: Commissioners of the Northern Lights, Robert
-Hamilton, Sheriff of Lanarkshire; William Erskine, Sheriff of Orkney
-and Zetland; Adam Duff, Sheriff of Forfarshire. Non-commissioners,
-Ipse Ego; Mr. David Marjoribanks, son to John Marjoribanks, Provost of
-Edinburgh, a young gentleman; Rev. Mr. Turnbull, minister of Tingwall,
-in the presbytery of Shetland. But the official chief of the
-expedition is Mr. Stevenson, the Surveyor-Viceroy over the
-Commissioners--a most gentlemanlike and modest man, and well known by
-his scientific skill.[59]
-
-"Reached the Isle of May in the evening; went ashore, and saw the
-light--an old tower, and much in the form of a border-keep, with a
-beacon-grate on the top. It is to be abolished for an oil
-revolving-light, the grate-fire only being ignited upon the leeward
-side when the wind is very high. _Quære_--Might not the grate revolve?
-The isle had once a cell or two upon it. The vestiges of the chapel
-are still visible. Mr. Stevenson proposed demolishing the old tower,
-and I recommended _ruining_ it _à la picturesque_--_i. e._,
-demolishing it partially. The island might be made a delightful
-residence for sea-bathers.
-
-"On board again in the evening: watched the progress of the ship round
-Fifeness, and the revolving motion of the now distant Bell-Rock light
-until the wind grew rough, and the landsmen sick. To bed at eleven,
-and slept sound.
-
-"_30th July_.--Waked at six by the steward; summoned to visit the
-Bell-Rock, where the beacon is well worthy attention. Its dimensions
-are well known; but no description can give the idea of this slight,
-solitary, round tower, trembling amid the billows, and fifteen miles
-from Arbroath, the nearest shore. The fitting up within is not only
-handsome, but elegant. All work of wood (almost) is wainscot; all
-hammer-work brass; in short, exquisitely fitted up. You enter by a
-ladder of rope, with wooden steps, about thirty feet from the bottom,
-where the mason-work ceases to be solid, and admits of round
-apartments. The lowest is a storehouse for the people's provisions,
-water, etc.; above that a storehouse for the lights, of oil, etc.;
-then the kitchen of the people, three in number; then their sleeping
-chamber; then the saloon or parlor, a neat little room; above all, the
-lighthouse; all communicating by oaken ladders, with brass rails, most
-handsomely and conveniently executed. Breakfasted in the parlor.[60]
-On board again at nine, and run down, through a rough sea, to
-Aberbrothock, vulgarly called Arbroath. All sick, even Mr. Stevenson.
-God grant this occur seldom! Landed and dined at Arbroath, where we
-were to take up Adam Duff. We visited the appointments of the
-lighthouse establishment--a handsome tower, with two wings. These
-contain the lodgings of the keepers of the light--very handsome,
-indeed, and very clean. They might be thought too handsome, were it
-not of consequence to give those men, entrusted with a duty so
-laborious and slavish, a consequence in the eyes of the public and in
-their own. The central part of the building forms a single tower,
-corresponding with the lighthouse. As the keepers' families live here,
-they are apprised each morning by a signal that _all is well_. If this
-signal be not made, a tender sails for the rock directly. I visited
-the abbey church for the third time, the first being--_eheu!_[61]--the
-second with T. Thomson. Dined at Arbroath, and came on board at night,
-where I made up this foolish journal, and now beg for wine and water.
-So the vessel is once more in motion.
-
-"_31st July_.--Waked at seven; vessel off Fowlsheugh and Dunnottar.
-Fair wind, and delightful day; glide enchantingly along the coast of
-Kincardineshire, and open the bay of Nigg about ten. At eleven, off
-Aberdeen; the gentlemen go ashore to Girdle-Ness, a projecting point
-of rock to the east of the harbor of Foot-Dee. There the magistrates
-of Aberdeen wish to have a fort and beacon-light. The Oscar, whaler,
-was lost here last year, with all her hands, excepting two; about
-forty perished. Dreadful, to be wrecked so near a large and populous
-town! The view of Old and New Aberdeen from the sea is quite
-beautiful. About noon proceed along the coast of Aberdeenshire, which,
-to the northwards, changes from a bold and rocky to a low and sandy
-character. Along the bay of Belhelvie, a whole parish was swallowed up
-by the shifting sands, and is still a desolate waste. It belonged to
-the Earls of Errol, and was rented at £500 a year at the time. When
-these sands are passed the land is all arable. Not a tree to be seen;
-nor a grazing cow, or sheep, or even a labor-horse at grass, though
-this be Sunday. The next remarkable object was a fragment of the old
-castle of Slains, on a precipitous bank, overlooking the sea. The
-fortress was destroyed when James VI. marched north [A. D. 1594],
-after the battle of Glenlivet, to reduce Huntly and Errol to
-obedience. The family then removed to their present mean habitation,
-for such it seems, a collection of low houses forming a quadrangle,
-one side of which is built on the very verge of the precipice that
-overhangs the ocean. What seems odd, there are no stairs down to the
-beach. Imprudence, or ill-fortune as fatal as the sands of Belhelvie,
-has swallowed up the estate of Errol, excepting this dreary
-mansion-house, and a farm or two adjoining. We took to the boat, and
-running along the coast had some delightful sea-views to the northward
-of the castle. The coast is here very rocky; but the rocks, being
-rather soft, are wasted and corroded by the constant action of the
-waves,--and the fragments which remain, where the softer parts have
-been washed away, assume the appearance of old Gothic ruins. There are
-open arches, towers, steeples, and so forth. One part of this scaur is
-called _Dunbuy_, being colored yellow by the dung of the sea-fowls,
-who build there in the most surprising numbers. We caught three young
-gulls. But the most curious object was the celebrated Buller of
-Buchan, a huge rocky cauldron, into which the sea rushes through a
-natural arch of rock. I walked round the top; in one place the path is
-only about two feet wide, and a monstrous precipice on either side. We
-then rowed into the cauldron or buller from beneath, and saw nothing
-around us but a regular wall of black rock, and nothing above but the
-blue sky. A fishing hamlet had sent out its inhabitants, who, gazing
-from the brink, looked like sylphs looking down upon gnomes. In the
-side of the cauldron opens a deep black cavern. Johnson says it might
-be a retreat from storms, which is nonsense. In a high gale the waves
-rush in with incredible violence. An old fisher said he had seen them
-flying over the natural wall of the buller, which cannot be less than
-200 feet high. Same old man says Slains is now inhabited by a Mr.
-Bowles, who comes so far from the southward that naebody kens whare he
-comes frae. 'Was he frae the Indies?'--'Na; he did not think he came
-that road. He was far frae the southland. Naebody ever heard the name
-of the place; but he had brought more guid out o' Peterhead than a'
-the Lords he had seen in Slains, and he had seen three.' About
-half-past five we left this interesting spot, and after a hard pull
-reached the yacht. Weather falls hazy, and rather calm; but at sea we
-observe vessels enjoying more wind. Pass Peterhead, dimly
-distinguishing two steeples and a good many masts. Mormounthill said
-to resemble a coffin--a likeness of which we could not judge, Mormount
-being for the present invisible. Pass Rattray-Head: near this cape are
-dangerous shelves, called the Bridge of Rattray. Here the wreck of the
-Doris merchant vessel came on shore, lost last year with a number of
-passengers for Shetland. We lie off all night.
-
-"_1st August_.--Off Fraserburgh--a neat little town. Mr. Stevenson and
-the Commissioners go on shore to look at a light maintained there upon
-an old castle, on a cape called Kinnaird's Head. The morning being
-rainy, and no object of curiosity ashore, I remain on board, to make
-up my journal, and write home.
-
-"The old castle, now bearing the light, is a picturesque object from
-the sea. It was the baronial mansion of the Frasers, now Lords
-Saltoun--an old square tower with a minor fortification towards the
-landing-place on the sea-side. About eleven, the Commissioners came
-off, and we leave this town, the extreme point of the Moray Firth, to
-stretch for Shetland--salute the castle with three guns, and stretch
-out with a merry gale. See Mormount, a long flattish-topped hill near
-to the West Trouphead, and another bold cliff promontory projecting
-into the firth. Our gale soon failed, and we are now all but becalmed;
-songs, ballads, recitations, backgammon, and piquet, for the rest of
-the day. Noble sunset and moon rising; we are now out of sight of
-land.
-
-"_2d August_.--At sea in the mouth of the Moray Firth. This day almost
-a blank--light baffling airs, which do us very little good; most of
-the landsmen sick, more or less; piquet, backgammon, and chess, the
-only resources.--_P.M._ A breeze, and we begin to think we have passed
-the Fair Isle, lying between Shetland and Orkney, at which it was our
-intention to have touched. In short, like one of Sinbad's adventures,
-we have run on till neither captain nor pilot know exactly where we
-are. The breeze increases--weather may be called rough; worse and
-worse after we are in our berths, nothing but booming, trampling, and
-whizzing of waves about our ears, and ever and anon, as we fall
-asleep, our ribs come in contact with those of the vessel; hail Duff
-and the Udaller[62] in the after-cabin, but they are too sick to
-answer. Towards morning, calm (comparative), and a nap.
-
-"_3d August_.--At sea as before; no appearance of land; proposed that
-the Sheriff of Zetland do issue a _meditatione fugæ_ warrant against
-his territories, which seem to fly from us. Pass two whalers; speak
-the nearest, who had come out of Lerwick, which is about twenty miles
-distant; stand on with a fine breeze. About nine at night, with
-moonlight and strong twilight, we weather the point of Bard-head, and
-enter a channel about three quarters of a mile broad which forms the
-southern entrance to the harbor of Lerwick, where we cast anchor about
-half-past ten, and put Mr. Turnbull on shore.
-
-"_4th August_.--Harbor of Lerwick. Admire the excellence of this
-harbor of the metropolis of Shetland. It is a most beautiful place,
-screened on all sides from the wind by hills of a gentle elevation.
-The town, a fishing village built irregularly upon a hill ascending
-from the shore, has a picturesque appearance. On the left is Fort
-Charlotte, garrisoned of late by two companies of veterans. The
-Greenlandmen, of which nine fine vessels are lying in the harbor, add
-much to the liveliness of the scene. Mr. Duncan, Sheriff-substitute,
-came off to pay his respects to his principal; he is married to a
-daughter of my early acquaintance, Walter Scott of Scotshall. We go
-ashore. Lerwick, a poor-looking place, the streets flagged instead of
-being causewayed, for there are no wheel-carriages. The streets full
-of drunken riotous sailors from the whale-vessels. It seems these
-ships take about 1000 sailors from Zetland every year, and return them
-as they come back from the fishery. Each sailor may gain from £20 to
-£30, which is paid by the merchants of Lerwick, who have agencies from
-the owners of the whalers in England. The whole return may be between
-£25,000 and £30,000. These Zetlanders, as they get a part of this pay
-on landing, make a point of treating their English messmates, who get
-drunk of course, and are very riotous. The Zetlanders themselves do
-_not_ get drunk, but go straight home to their houses, and reserve
-their hilarity for the winter season, when they spend their wages in
-dancing and drinking. Erskine finds employment as Sheriff, for the
-neighborhood of the fort enables him to make _main forte_, and secure
-a number of the rioters. We visit F. Charlotte, which is a neat little
-fort mounting ten heavy guns to the sea, but only one to the land.
-Major F., the Governor, showed us the fort; it commands both entrances
-of the harbor: the north entrance is not very good, but the south
-capital. The water in the harbor is very deep, as frigates of the
-smaller class lie almost close to the shore. Take a walk with Captain
-M'Diarmid, a gentlemanlike and intelligent officer of the garrison; we
-visit a small fresh-water loch called _Cleik-him-in_; it borders on
-the sea, from which it is only divided by a sort of beach, apparently
-artificial: though the sea lashes the outside of this beach, the water
-of the lake is not brackish. In this lake are the remains of a Picts'
-castle, but ruinous. The people think the castle has not been built on
-a natural island, but on an artificial one formed by a heap of stones.
-These Duns or Picts' castles are so small, it is impossible to
-conceive what effectual purpose they could serve excepting a temporary
-refuge for the chief.--Leave _Cleik-him-in_, and proceed along the
-coast. The ground is dreadfully encumbered with stones; the patches
-which have been sown with oats and barley bear very good crops, but
-they are mere _patches_, the cattle and ponies feeding amongst them,
-and secured by tethers. The houses most wretched, worse than the
-worst herd's house I ever saw. It would be easy to form a good farm
-by enclosing the ground with Galloway dykes, which would answer the
-purpose of clearing it at the same time of stones; and as there is
-plenty of limeshell, marle, and alga-marina, manure could not be
-wanting. But there are several obstacles to improvement, chiefly the
-undivided state of the properties, which lie _run-rig_; then the
-claims of Lord Dundas, the lord of the country, and above all,
-perhaps, the state of the common people, who, dividing their attention
-between the fishery and the cultivation, are not much interested in
-the latter, and are often absent at the proper times of labor. Their
-ground is chiefly dug with the spade, and their ploughs are beyond
-description awkward. An odd custom prevails: any person, without
-exception (if I understand rightly), who wishes to raise a few kail,
-fixes upon any spot he pleases, encloses it with a dry stone wall,
-uses it as a kailyard till he works out the soil, then deserts it and
-makes another. Some dozen of these little enclosures, about twenty or
-thirty feet square, are in sight at once. They are called
-_planty-cruives_; and the Zetlanders are so far from reckoning this an
-invasion, or a favor on the part of the proprietor, that their most
-exaggerated description of an avaricious person is one who would
-refuse liberty for a _planty-cruive_; or to infer the greatest
-contempt of another, they will say, they would not hold a
-_planty-cruive_ of him. It is needless to notice how much this license
-must interfere with cultivation.
-
-"Leaving the _cultivated_ land, we turn more inland, and pass two or
-three small lakes. The muirs are mossy and sterile in the highest
-degree; the hills are clad with stunted heather, intermixed with huge
-great stones; much of an astringent root with a yellow flower, called
-_Tormentil_, used by the islanders in dressing leather in lieu of the
-oak bark. We climbed a hill, about three miles from Lerwick, to a
-cairn which presents a fine view of the indented coast of the island,
-and the distant isles of Mousa and others. Unfortunately the day is
-rather hazy--return by a circuitous route, through the same sterile
-country. These muirs are used as a commonty by the proprietors of the
-parishes in which they lie, and each, without any regard to the extent
-of his peculiar property, puts as much stock upon them as he chooses.
-The sheep are miserable looking, hairy-legged creatures, of all
-colors, even to sky-blue. I often wondered where Jacob got speckled
-lambs; I think now they must have been of the Shetland stock. In our
-return, pass the upper end of the little lake of _Cleik-him-in_, which
-is divided by a rude causeway from another small loch, communicating
-with it, however, by a sluice, for the purpose of driving a mill. But
-such a mill! The wheel is horizontal, with the cogs turned diagonally
-to the water; the beam stands upright, and is inserted in a
-stone-quern of the old-fashioned construction. This simple machine is
-enclosed in a hovel about the size of a pig-sty--and there is the
-mill![63] There are about 500 such mills in Shetland, each incapable
-of grinding more than a sack at a time.
-
-"I cannot get a distinct account of the nature of the land rights. The
-Udal proprietors have ceased to exist, yet proper feudal tenures seem
-ill understood. Districts of ground are in many instances understood
-to belong to Townships or Communities, possessing what may be arable
-by patches, and what is muir as a commonty, _pro indiviso_. But then
-individuals of such a Township often take it upon them to grant feus
-of particular parts of the property thus possessed _pro indiviso_. The
-town of Lerwick is built upon a part of the commonty of Sound, the
-proprietors of the houses having feu-rights from different heritors of
-that Township, but why from one rather than another, or how even the
-whole Township combining (which has not yet been attempted) could
-grant such a right upon principle, seems altogether uncertain. In the
-mean time the chief stress is laid upon occupance. I should have
-supposed, upon principle that Lord Dundas, as superior, possessed the
-_dominium eminens_, and ought to be resorted to as the source of land
-rights. But it is not so. It has been found that the heritors of each
-Township hold directly of the Crown, only paying the _Scat_, or
-Norwegian land-tax, and other duties to his lordship, used and wont.
-Besides, he has what are called property lands in every Township, or
-in most, which he lets to his tenants. Lord Dundas is now trying to
-introduce the system of leases and a better kind of agriculture.[64]
-Return home and dine at Sinclair's, a decent inn--Captain M'Diarmid
-and other gentlemen dine with us.--Sleep at the inn on a straw couch.
-
-"_5th August 1814_.--Hazy disagreeable morning;--Erskine trying the
-rioters--notwithstanding which, a great deal of rioting still in the
-town. The Greenlanders, however, only quarrelled among themselves, and
-the Zetland sailors seemed to exert themselves in keeping peace. They
-are, like all the other Zetlanders I have seen, a strong,
-clear-complexioned, handsome race, and the women are very pretty. The
-females are rather slavishly employed, however, and I saw more than
-one carrying home the heavy sea-chests of their husbands, brothers, or
-lovers, discharged from on board the Greenlanders. The Zetlanders are,
-however, so far provident, that when they enter the navy they make
-liberal allowance of their pay for their wives and families. Not less
-than £15,000 a year has been lately paid by the Admiralty on this
-account; yet this influx of money, with that from the Greenland
-fishery, seems rather to give the means of procuring useless
-indulgences than of augmenting the stock of productive labor. Mr.
-Collector Ross tells me that from the King's books it appears that the
-quantity of spirits, tea, coffee, tobacco, snuff, and sugar, imported
-annually into Lerwick for the consumption of Zetland, averages at sale
-price, £20,000 yearly, at the least. Now the inhabitants of Zetland,
-men, women, and children, do not exceed 22,000 in all, and the
-proportion of foreign luxuries seems monstrous, unless we allow for
-the habits contracted by the seamen in their foreign trips. Tea, in
-particular, is used by all ranks, and porridge quite exploded.
-
-"We parade Lerwick. The most remarkable thing is, that the main street
-being flagged, and all the others very narrow lanes descending the
-hill by steps, anything like a cart, of the most ordinary and rude
-construction, seems not only out of question when the town was built,
-but in its present state quite excluded. A road of five miles in
-length, on the line between Lerwick and Scalloway, has been already
-made--upon a very awkward and expensive plan, and ill-lined as may be
-supposed. But it is proposed to extend this road by degrees: carts
-will then be introduced, and by crossing the breed of their ponies
-judiciously, they will have Galloways to draw them. The streets of
-Lerwick (as one blunder perpetrates another) will then be a bar to
-improvement, for till the present houses are greatly altered, no cart
-can approach the quay. In the garden of Captain Nicolson, R. N., which
-is rather in a flourishing state, he has tried various trees, almost
-all of which have died except the willow. But the plants seem to me to
-be injured in their passage; seeds would perhaps do better. We are
-visited by several of the notables of the island, particularly Mr.
-Mowat, a considerable proprietor, who claims acquaintance with me as
-the friend of my father, and remembers me as a boy. The day clearing
-up, Duff and I walk with this good old gentleman to _Cleik-him-in_,
-and with some trouble drag a boat off the beach into the fresh-water
-loch, and go to visit the Picts' castle. It is of considerable size,
-and consists of three circular walls of huge natural stones admirably
-combined without cement. The outer circuit seems to have been simply a
-bounding wall or bulwark; the second or interior defence contains
-lodgments such as I shall describe. This inner circuit is surrounded
-by a wall of about sixteen or eighteen feet thick, composed, as I
-said, of huge massive stones placed in layers with great art, but
-without mortar or cement. The wall is not perpendicular, but the
-circle lessens gradually towards the top, as an old-fashioned
-pigeon-house. Up the interior of this wall there proceeds a circular
-winding gallery ascending in the form of an inclined plane, so as to
-gain the top by circling round like a corkscrew within the walls. This
-is enlightened by little apertures (about two feet by three) into the
-inside, and also, it is said, by small slits--of which I saw none. It
-is said there are marks of galleries within the circuit, running
-parallel to the horizon; these I saw no remains of; and the interior
-gallery, with its apertures, is so extremely low and narrow, being
-only about three feet square, that it is difficult to conceive how it
-could serve the purpose of communication. At any rate, the size fully
-justifies the tradition prevalent here as well as in the south of
-Scotland, that the Picts were a diminutive race. More of this when we
-see the more perfect specimen of a Pict castle in Mousa, which we
-resolve to examine, if it be possible. Certainly I am deeply curious
-to see what must be one of the most ancient houses in the world, built
-by a people who, while they seem to have bestowed much pains on their
-habitations, knew neither the art of cement, of arches, or of stairs.
-The situation is wild, dreary, and impressive. On the land side are
-huge sheets and fragments of rocks, interspersed with a stinted
-vegetation of grass and heath, which bears no proportion to the rocks
-and stones. From the top of his tower the Pictish Monarch might look
-out upon a stormy sea, washing a succession of rocky capes, reaches,
-and headlands, and immediately around him was the deep fresh-water
-loch on which his fortress was constructed. It communicates with the
-land by a sort of causeway, formed, like the artificial islet itself,
-by heaping together stones till the pile reached the surface of the
-water. This is usually passable, but at present overflooded.--Return
-and dine with Mr. Duncan, Sheriff-substitute--are introduced to Dr.
-Edmonstone, author of a History of Shetland, who proposes to accompany
-us to-morrow to see the Cradle of Noss. I should have mentioned that
-Mr. Stevenson sailed this morning with the yacht to survey some isles
-to the northward; he returns on Saturday, it is hoped.
-
-"_6th August._--Hire a six-oared boat, whaler-built, with a taper
-point at each end, so that the rudder can be hooked on either at
-pleasure. These vessels look very frail, but are admirably adapted to
-the stormy seas, where they live when a ship's boat stiffly and
-compactly built must necessarily perish. They owe this to their
-elasticity and lightness. Some of the rowers wear a sort of coats of
-dressed sheep leather, sewed together with thongs. We sailed out at
-the southern inlet of the harbor, rounding successively the capes of
-the Hammer, Kirkubus, the Ving, and others, consisting of bold cliffs,
-hollowed into caverns, or divided into pillars and arches of fantastic
-appearance, by the constant action of the waves. As we passed the most
-northerly of these capes, called, I think, the Ord, and turned into
-the open sea, the scenes became yet more tremendously sublime. Rocks
-upwards of three or four hundred feet in height presented themselves
-in gigantic succession, sinking perpendicularly into the main, which
-is very deep even within a few fathoms of their base. One of these
-capes is called the Bard-head; a huge projecting arch is named the
-Giant's Leg.
-
- 'Here the lone sea-bird wakes its wildest cry.'[65]
-
-Not lone, however, in one sense, for their numbers and the variety of
-their tribes are immense, though I think they do not quite equal those
-of Dunbuy, on the coast of Buchan. Standing across a little bay, we
-reached the Isle of Noss, having hitherto coasted the shore of
-Bressay. Here we see a detached and precipitous rock, or island, being
-a portion rent by a narrow sound from the rest of the cliff, and
-called the Holm. This detached rock is wholly inaccessible, unless by
-a pass of peril, entitled the Cradle of Noss, which is a sort of
-wooden chair, travelling from precipice to precipice on rings, which
-run upon two cables stretched across over the gulf. We viewed this
-extraordinary contrivance from beneath, at the distance of perhaps one
-hundred fathoms at least. The boatmen made light of the risk of
-crossing it, but it must be tremendous to a brain disposed to be
-giddy. Seen from beneath, a man in the basket would resemble a large
-crow or raven floating between rock and rock. The purpose of this
-strange contrivance is to give the tenant the benefit of putting a few
-sheep upon the Holm, the top of which is level, and affords good
-pasture. The animals are transported in the cradle by one at a time, a
-shepherd holding them upon his knees. The channel between the Holm and
-the isle is passable by boats in calm weather, but not at the time
-when we saw it. Rowing on through a heavy tide, and nearer the
-breakers than any but Zetlanders would have ventured, we rounded
-another immensely high cape, called by the islanders the Noup of Noss,
-but by sailors Hang-cliff, from its having a projecting appearance.
-This was the highest rock we had yet seen, though not quite
-perpendicular. Its height has never been measured: I should judge it
-exceeds 600 feet; it has been conjectured to measure 800 and upwards.
-Our steersman had often descended this precipitous rock, having only
-the occasional assistance of a rope, one end of which he secured from
-time to time round some projecting cliff. The collecting sea-fowl for
-their feathers was the object, and he might gain five or six dozen,
-worth eight or ten shillings, by such an adventure. These huge
-precipices abound with caverns, many of which run much farther into
-the rock than any one has ventured to explore. We entered (with much
-hazard to our boat) one called the Orkney-man's Harbor, because an
-Orkney vessel run in there some years since to escape a French
-privateer. The entrance was lofty enough to admit us without striking
-the mast, but a sudden turn in the direction of the cave would have
-consigned us to utter darkness if we had gone in farther. The dropping
-of the sea-fowl and cormorants into the water from the sides of the
-cavern, when disturbed by our approach, had something in it wild and
-terrible.
-
-"After passing the Noup, the precipices become lower, and sink into a
-rocky shore with deep indentations, called by the natives, _Gios_.
-Here we would fain have landed to visit the Cradle from the top of the
-cliff, but the surf rendered it impossible. We therefore rowed on like
-Thalaba, in 'Allah's name,' around the Isle of Noss, and landed upon
-the opposite side of the small sound which divides it from Bressay.
-Noss exactly resembles in shape Salisbury crags, supposing the sea to
-flow down the valley called the Hunter's bog, and round the foot of
-the precipice. The eastern part of the isle is fine smooth pasture,
-the best I have seen in these isles, sloping upwards to the verge of
-the tremendous rocks which form its western front.
-
-"As we are to dine at Gardie-House (the seat of young Mr. Mowat), on
-the Isle of Bressay, Duff and I--who went together on this
-occasion--resolve to walk across the island, about three miles, being
-by this time thoroughly wet. Bressay is a black and heathy isle, full
-of little lochs and bogs. Through storm and shade, and dense and dry,
-we find our way to Gardie, and have then to encounter the sublunary
-difficulties of wanting the keys of our portmanteaus, etc., the
-servants having absconded to see the Cradle. These being overcome, we
-are most hospitably treated at Gardie. Young Mr. Mowat, son of my old
-friend, is an improver, and a _moderate_ one. He has got a ploughman
-from Scotland, who acts as _grieve_, but as yet with the prejudices
-and inconveniences which usually attach themselves to the most
-salutary experiments. The ploughman complains that the Zetlanders work
-as if a spade or hoe burned their fingers, and that though they only
-get a shilling a day, yet the labor of three of them does not exceed
-what one good hand in Berwickshire would do for 2_s._ 6_d._ The
-islanders retort that a man can do no more than he can; that they are
-not used to be taxed to their work so severely; that they will work
-as their fathers did, and not otherwise; and at first the landlord
-found difficulty in getting hands to work under his Caledonian
-task-master. Besides, they find fault with his _ho_, and _gee_, and
-_wo_, when ploughing. 'He speaks to the horse,' they say, 'and they
-gang--and there's something no canny about the man.' In short, between
-the prejudices of laziness and superstition, the ploughman leads a
-sorry life of it;--yet these prejudices are daily abating, under the
-steady and indulgent management of the proprietor. Indeed, nowhere is
-improvement in agriculture more necessary. An old-fashioned Zetland
-plough is a real curiosity. It had but one handle, or stilt, and a
-coulter, but no sock; it ripped the furrow, therefore, but did not
-throw it aside. When this precious machine was in motion, it was
-dragged by four little bullocks yoked abreast, and as many ponies
-harnessed, or rather strung, to the plough by ropes and thongs of
-rawhide. One man went before, walking backward, with his face to the
-bullocks, and pulling them forward by main strength. Another held down
-the plough by its single handle, and made a sort of slit in the earth,
-which two women, who closed the procession, converted into a furrow,
-by throwing the earth aside with shovels. An antiquary might be of
-opinion that this was the very model of the original plough invented
-by Triptolemus; and it is but justice to Zetland to say, that these
-relics of ancient agricultural art will soon have all the interest
-attached to rarity. We could only hear of one of these ploughs within
-three miles of Lerwick.
-
-"This and many other barbarous habits to which the Zetlanders were
-formerly wedded seem only to have subsisted because their amphibious
-character of fishers and farmers induced them to neglect agricultural
-arts. A Zetland farmer looks to the sea to pay his rent; if the land
-finds him a little meal and kail, and (if he be a very clever fellow)
-a few potatoes, it is very well. The more intelligent part of the
-landholders are sensible of all this, but argue like men of good sense
-and humanity on the subject. To have good farming, you must have a
-considerable farm, upon which capital may be laid out to advantage.
-But to introduce this change suddenly would turn adrift perhaps twenty
-families, who now occupy small farms _pro indiviso_, cultivating by
-patches, or _rundale_ and _runrig_, what part of the property is
-arable, and stocking the pasture as a common upon which each family
-turns out such stock as they can rear, without observing any
-proportion as to the number which it can support. In this way many
-townships, as they are called, subsist indeed, but in a precarious and
-indigent manner. Fishing villages seem the natural resource for this
-excess of population; but, besides the expense of erecting them, the
-habits of the people are to be considered, who, with 'one foot on land
-and one on sea,' would be with equal reluctance confined to either
-element. The remedy seems to be, that the larger proprietors should
-gradually set the example of better cultivation, and introduce better
-implements. They will, by degrees, be imitated by the inferior
-proprietors, and by their tenants; and, as turnips and hay crops
-become more general, a better and heavier class of stock will
-naturally be introduced.
-
-"The sheep in particular might be improved into a valuable stock, and
-would no doubt thrive, since the winters are very temperate. But I
-should be sorry that extensive pasture farms were introduced, as it
-would tend to diminish a population invaluable for the supply of our
-navy. The improvement of the arable land, on the contrary, would soon
-set them beyond the terrors of famine with which the islanders are at
-present occasionally visited; and, combined with fisheries, carried on
-not by farmers, but by real fishers, would amply supply the
-inhabitants, without diminishing the export of dried fish. This
-separation of trades will in time take place, and then the prosperous
-days of Zetland will begin. The proprietors are already upon the
-alert, studying the means of gradual improvement, and no humane person
-would wish them to drive it on too rapidly, to the distress and
-perhaps destruction of the numerous tenants who have been bred under a
-different system.
-
-"I have gleaned something of the peculiar superstitions of the
-Zetlanders, which are numerous and potent. Witches, fairies, etc., are
-as numerous as ever they were in Teviotdale. The latter are called
-_Trows_, probably from the Norwegian _Dwärg_ (or _dwarf_) the D being
-readily converted into T. The dwarfs are the prime agents in the
-machinery of Norwegian superstition. The _trows_ do not differ from
-the fairies of the Lowlands, or _Sighean_ of the Highlanders. They
-steal children, dwell within the interior of green hills, and often
-carry mortals into their recesses. Some, yet alive, pretend to have
-been carried off in this way, and obtain credit for the marvels they
-tell of the subterranean habitations of the trows. Sometimes, when a
-person becomes melancholy and low-spirited, the trows are supposed to
-have stolen the real being, and left a moving phantom to represent
-him. Sometimes they are said to steal only the heart--like Lancashire
-witches. There are cures in each case. The party's friends resort to a
-cunning man or woman, who hangs about the neck a triangular stone in
-the shape of a heart, or conjures back the lost individual, by
-retiring to the hills and employing the necessary spells. A common
-receipt, when a child appears consumptive and puny, is that the
-conjurer places a bowl of water on the patient's head, and pours
-melted lead into it through the wards of a key. The metal assumes of
-course a variety of shapes, from which he selects a portion, after due
-consideration, which is sewn into the shirt of the patient. Sometimes
-no part of the lead suits the seer's fancy. Then the operation is
-recommenced, until he obtains a fragment of such a configuration as
-suits his mystical purpose. Mr. Duncan told us he had been treated in
-this way when a boy.
-
-"A worse and most horrid opinion prevails, or did prevail, among the
-fishers--namely, that he who saves a drowning man will receive at his
-hands some deep wrong or injury. Several instances were quoted to-day
-in company, in which the utmost violence had been found necessary to
-compel the fishers to violate this inhuman prejudice. It is
-conjectured to have arisen as an apology for rendering no assistance
-to the mariners as they escaped from a shipwrecked vessel, for these
-isles are infamous for plundering wrecks. A story is told of the crew
-of a stranded vessel who were warping themselves ashore by means of a
-hawser which they had fixed to the land. The islanders (of Unst, as I
-believe) watched their motions in silence, till an old man reminded
-them that if they suffered these sailors to come ashore, they would
-consume all their winter stock of provisions. A Zetlander cut the
-hawser, and the poor wretches, twenty in number, were all swept away.
-This is a tale of former times--the cruelty would not now be _active_;
-but I fear that even yet the drowning mariner would in some places
-receive no assistance in his exertions, and certainly he would in most
-be plundered to the skin upon his landing. The gentlemen do their
-utmost to prevent this infamous practice. It may seem strange that the
-natives should be so little affected by a distress to which they are
-themselves so constantly exposed. But habitual exposure to danger
-hardens the heart against its consequences, whether to ourselves or
-others. There is yet living a man--if he can be called so--to whom the
-following story belongs: He was engaged in catching sea-fowl upon one
-of the cliffs, with his father and brother. All three were suspended
-by a cord, according to custom, and overhanging the ocean, at the
-height of some hundred feet. This man being uppermost on the cord,
-observed that it was giving way, as unable to support their united
-weight. He called out to his brother who was next to him--'Cut away a
-nail below, Willie,' meaning he should cut the rope beneath, and let
-his father drop. Willie refused, and bid him cut himself, if he
-pleased. He did so, and his brother and father were precipitated into
-the sea. He never thought of concealing or denying the adventure in
-all its parts. We left Gardie-House late; being on the side of the
-Isle of Bressay, opposite to Lerwick, we were soon rowed across the
-bay. A laugh with Hamilton,[66] whose gout keeps him stationary at
-Lerwick, but whose good-humor defies gout and every other provocation,
-concludes the evening.
-
-"_7th August, 1814._--Being Sunday, Duff, Erskine, and I rode to
-Tingwall upon Zetland ponies, to breakfast with our friend Parson
-Turnbull, who had come over in our yacht. An ill-conducted and
-worse-made road served us four miles on our journey. This _Via
-Flaminia_ of Thule terminates, like its prototype, in a bog. It is,
-however, the only road in these isles, except about half a mile made
-by Mr. Turnbull. The land in the interior much resembles the
-Peel-heights, near Ashestiel; but, as you approach the other side of
-the island, becomes better. Tingwall is rather a fertile valley, up
-which winds a loch of about two miles in length. The kirk and manse
-stand at the head of the loch, and command a view down the valley to
-another lake beyond the first, and thence over another reach of land,
-to the ocean, indented by capes and studded with isles; among which,
-that of St. Ninian's, abruptly divided from the mainland by a deep
-chasm, is the most conspicuous. Mr. Turnbull is a Jedburgh man by
-birth, but a Zetlander by settlement and inclination. I have reason to
-be proud of my countryman; he is doing his best, with great patience
-and judgment, to set a good example both in temporals and spirituals,
-and is generally beloved and respected among all classes. His glebe is
-in far the best order of any ground I have seen in Zetland. It is
-enclosed chiefly with dry-stone, instead of the useless turf-dykes;
-and he has sown grass, and has a hay-stack, and a second crop of
-clover, and may claim well-dressed fields of potatoes, barley, and
-oats. The people around him are obviously affected by his example. He
-gave us an excellent discourse and remarkably good prayers, which are
-seldom the excellence of the Presbyterian worship.[67] The
-congregation were numerous, decent, clean, and well-dressed. The men
-have all the air of seamen, and are a good-looking hardy race. Some of
-the old fellows had got faces much resembling Tritons; if they had had
-conchs to blow, it would have completed them. After church, ride down
-the loch to Scalloway--the country wild but pleasant, with sloping
-hills of good pasturage, and patches of cultivation on the lower
-ground. Pass a huge standing stone or pillar. Here, it is said, the
-son of an old Earl of the Orkneys met his fate. He had rebelled
-against his father, and fortified himself in Zetland. The Earl sent a
-party to dislodge him, who, not caring to proceed to violence against
-his person, failed in the attempt. The Earl then sent a stronger
-force, with orders to take him dead or alive. The young Absalom's
-castle was stormed--he himself fled across the loch, and was overtaken
-and slain at this pillar. The Earl afterwards executed the
-perpetrators of this slaughter, though they had only fulfilled his own
-mandate.
-
-"We reach Scalloway, and visit the ruins of an old castle, composed of
-a double tower or keep, with turrets at the corners. It is the
-principal, if not the only ruin of Gothic times in Zetland, and is of
-very recent date, being built in 1600. It was built by Patrick
-Stewart, Earl of Orkney, afterwards deservedly executed at Edinburgh
-for many acts of tyranny and oppression. It was this rapacious lord
-who imposed many of those heavy duties still levied from the
-Zetlanders by Lord Dundas. The exactions by which he accomplished this
-erection were represented as grievous. He was so dreaded that upon his
-trial one Zetland witness refused to say a word till he was assured
-that there was no chance of the Earl returning to Scalloway. Over the
-entrance of the castle are his arms, much defaced, with the unicorns
-of Scotland for supporters, the assumption of which was one of the
-articles of indictment. There is a Scriptural inscription also above
-the door, in Latin, now much defaced:--
-
- 'PATRICIUS ORCHADIÆ ET ZETLANDIÆ COMES. A. D. 1600.
- CUJUS FUNDAMEN SAXUM EST, DOMUS ILLA MANEBIT
- STABILIS: E CONTRA, SI SIT ARENA, PERIT.'
-
-"This is said to have been furnished to Earl Patrick by a Presbyterian
-divine, who slyly couched under it an allusion to the evil practices
-by which the Earl had established his power. He perhaps trusted that
-the language might disguise the import from the Earl.[68] If so, the
-Scottish nobility are improved in literature, for the Duke of Gordon
-pointed out an error in the Latinity.
-
-"Scalloway has a beautiful and very safe harbor, but as it is somewhat
-difficult of access, from a complication of small islands, it is
-inferior to Lerwick. Hence, though still nominally the capital of
-Zetland, for all edictal citations are made at Scalloway, it has sunk
-into a small fishing hamlet. The Norwegians made their original
-settlement in this parish of Tingwall. At the head of this loch, and
-just below the manse, is a small round islet accessible by
-stepping-stones, where they held their courts; hence the islet is
-called Law-ting--Ting, or Thing, answering to our word business,
-exactly like the Latin _negotium_. It seems odd that in
-Dumfries-shire, and even in the Isle of Man, where the race and laws
-were surely Celtic, we have this Gothic word Ting and Tingwald applied
-in the same way. We dined with Mr. Scott of Scalloway, who, like
-several families of this name in Shetland, is derived from the house
-of Scotstarvet. They are very clannish, marry much among themselves,
-and are proud of their descent. Two young ladies, daughters of Mr.
-Scott's, dined with us--they were both Mrs. Scotts, having married
-brothers--the husband of one was lost in the unfortunate Doris. They
-were pleasant, intelligent women, and exceedingly obliging. Old Mr.
-Scott seems a good country gentleman. He is negotiating an exchange
-with Lord Dundas, which will give him the Castle of Scalloway and two
-or three neighboring islands: the rest of the archipelago (seven, I
-think, in number) are already his own. He will thus have command of
-the whole fishing and harbor, for which he parts with an estate of
-more immediate value, lying on the other side of the mainland. I found
-my name made me very popular in this family, and there were many
-inquiries after the state of the Buccleuch family, in which they
-seemed to take much interest. I found them possessed of the remarkable
-circumstances attending the late projected sale of Ancrum, and the
-death of Sir John Scott, and thought it strange that, settled for
-three generations in a country so distant, they should still take an
-interest in those matters. I was loaded with shells and little
-curiosities for my young people.
-
-"There was a report (January was two years) of a kraken or some
-monstrous fish being seen off Scalloway. The object was visible for a
-fortnight, but nobody dared approach it, although I should have
-thought the Zetlanders would not have feared the devil if he came by
-water. They pretended that the suction, when they came within a
-certain distance, was so great as to endanger their boats. The object
-was described as resembling a vessel with her keel turned upmost in
-the sea, or a small ridge of rock or island. Mr. Scott thinks it might
-have been a vessel overset, or a large whale: if the latter, it seems
-odd they should not have known it, as whales are the intimate
-acquaintances of all Zetland sailors. Whatever it was it disappeared
-after a heavy gale of wind, which seems to favor the idea that it was
-the wreck of a vessel. Mr. Scott seems to think Pontopiddan's
-narrations and descriptions are much more accurate than we inland men
-suppose; and I find most Zetlanders of the same opinion. Mr. Turnbull,
-who is not credulous upon these subjects, tells me that this year a
-parishioner of his, a well-informed and veracious person, saw an
-animal, which, if his description was correct, must have been of the
-species of sea-snake, driven ashore on one of the Orkneys two or three
-years ago. It was very long, and seemed about the thickness of a
-Norway log, and swam on the top of the waves, occasionally lifting and
-bending its head. Mr. T. says he has no doubt of the veracity of the
-narrator, but still thinks it possible it may have been a mere log, or
-beam of wood, and that the spectator may have been deceived by the
-motion of the waves, joined to the force of imagination. This for the
-Duke of Buccleuch.
-
-"At Scalloway my curiosity was gratified by an account of the
-sword-dance, now almost lost, but still practised in the Island of
-Papa, belonging to Mr. Scott. There are eight performers, seven of
-whom represent the Seven Champions of Christendom, who enter one by
-one with their swords drawn, and are presented to the eighth
-personage, who is not named. Some rude couplets are spoken (in
-_English_, not _Norse_), containing a sort of panegyric upon each
-champion as he is presented. They then dance a sort of cotillion, as
-the ladies described it, going through a number of evolutions with
-their swords. One of my three Mrs. Scotts readily promised to procure
-me the lines, the rhymes, and the form of the dance. I regret much
-that young Mr. Scott was absent during this visit; he is described as
-a reader and an enthusiast in poetry. Probably I might have interested
-him in preserving the dance, by causing young persons to learn it. A
-few years since, a party of Papa-men came to dance the sword-dance at
-Lerwick as a public exhibition with great applause. The warlike dances
-of the northern people, of which I conceive this to be the only
-remnant in the British dominions,[69] are repeatedly alluded to by
-their poets and historians. The introduction of the Seven Champions
-savors of a later period, and was probably ingrafted upon the dance
-when _mysteries_ and _moralities_ (the first scenic representations)
-came into fashion. In a stall pamphlet, called the history of
-Buckshaven, it is said those fishers sprung from Danes, and brought
-with them their _war-dance_ or _sword-dance_, and a rude wooden cut of
-it is given. We resist the hospitality of our entertainers, and return
-to Lerwick despite a most downright fall of rain. My pony stumbles
-coming down hill; saddle sways round, having but one girth and that
-too long, and lays me on my back. _N. B._ The bogs in Zetland as soft
-as those in Liddesdale. Get to Lerwick about ten at night. No yacht
-has appeared.
-
-"_8th August._--No yacht, and a rainy morning; bring up my journal.
-Day clears up, and we go to pay our farewell visits of thanks to the
-hospitable Lerwegians, and at the Fort. Visit kind old Mr. Mowat, and
-walk with him and Collector Ross to the point of Quaggers, or
-Twaggers, which forms one arm of the southern entrance to the sound of
-Bressay. From the eminence a delightful sea view, with several of
-those narrow capes and deep reaches or inlets of the sea, which indent
-the shores of that land. On the right hand a narrow bay, bounded by
-the isthmus of Sound, with a house upon it resembling an old castle.
-In the indenture of the bay, and divided from the sea by a slight
-causeway, the lake of _Cleik-him-in_, with its Pictish castle. Beyond
-this the bay opens another yet; and, behind all, a succession of
-capes, headlands, and islands, as far as the cape called
-Sumburgh-head, which is the furthest point of Zetland in that
-direction. Inland, craggy, and sable muirs, with cairns, among which
-we distinguish the Wart or Ward of Wick, to which we walked on the
-4th. On the left the island of Bressay, with its peaked hill called
-the Wart of Bressay. Over Bressay see the top of Hang-cliff. Admire
-the Bay of Lerwick, with its shipping, widening out to the northwards,
-and then again contracted into a narrow sound, through which the
-infamous Bothwell was pursued by Kirkaldy of Grange, until he escaped
-through the dexterity of his pilot, who sailed close along a sunken
-rock, upon which Kirkaldy, keeping the weather-gage, struck, and
-sustained damage. The rock is visible at low water, and is still
-called the Unicorn, from the name of Kirkaldy's vessel. Admire Mr.
-Mowat's little farm, of about thirty acres, bought about twenty years
-since for £75, and redeemed from the miserable state of the
-surrounding country, so that it now bears excellent corn; here also
-was a hay crop. With Mr. Turnbull's it makes two. Visit Mr. Ross,
-collector of the customs, who presents me with the most superb
-collection of the stone axes (or adzes, or whatever they are), called
-_celts_. The Zetlanders call them _thunder-bolts_, and keep them in
-their houses as a receipt against thunder; but the Collector has
-succeeded in obtaining several. We are now to dress for dinner with
-the Notables of Lerwick, who give us an entertainment in their
-Town-hall. Oho!
-
-"Just as we were going to dinner, the yacht appeared, and Mr.
-Stevenson landed. He gives a most favorable account of the isles to
-the northward, particularly Unst. I believe Lerwick is the worst part
-of Shetland. Are hospitably received and entertained by the Lerwick
-gentlemen. They are a quick, intelligent race--chiefly of Scottish
-birth, as appears from their names, Mowat, Gifford, Scott, and so
-forth. These are the chief proprietors. The Norwegian or Danish
-surnames, though of course the more ancient, belong, with some
-exceptions, to the lower ranks. The Veteran Corps expects to be
-disbanded, and the officers and Lerwegians seem to part with regret.
-Some of the officers talk of settling here. The price of everything is
-moderate, and the style of living unexpensive. Against these
-conveniences are to be placed a total separation from public life,
-news, and literature; and a variable and inhospitable climate.
-Lerwick will suffer most severely if the Fort is not occupied by some
-force or other; for, between whiskey and frolic, the Greenland sailors
-will certainly burn the little town. We have seen a good deal, and
-heard much more, of the pranks of these unruly guests. A gentleman of
-Lerwick, who had company to dine with him, observed beneath his window
-a party of sailors eating a leg of roast mutton, which he witnessed
-with philanthropic satisfaction, till he received the melancholy
-information, that that individual leg of mutton, being the very
-sheet-anchor of his own entertainment, had been violently carried off
-from his kitchen, spit and all, by these honest gentlemen, who were
-now devouring it. Two others, having carried off a sheep, were
-apprehended, and brought before a Justice of the Peace, who questioned
-them respecting the fact. The first denied he had taken the sheep, but
-said he had seen it taken away by a fellow with a red nose and a black
-wig (this was the Justice's description). 'Don't you think he was like
-his honor, Tom?' he added, appealing to his comrade. 'By G--, Jack,'
-answered Tom, 'I believe it was the very man!' Erskine has been busy
-with these facetious gentlemen, and has sent several to prison, but
-nothing could have been done without the soldiery. We leave Lerwick at
-eight o'clock, and sleep on board the yacht.
-
-"_9th August, 1814._--Waked at seven, and find the vessel has left
-Lerwick harbor, and is on the point of entering the sound which
-divides the small island of Mousa (or Queen's Island) from
-Coningsburgh, a very wild part of the main island so called. Went
-ashore, and see the very ancient castle of Mousa, which stands close
-on the seashore. It is a Pictish fortress, the most entire probably in
-the world. In form it resembles a dice-box, for the truncated cone is
-continued only to a certain height, after which it begins to rise
-perpendicularly, or rather with a tendency to expand outwards. The
-building is round, and has been surrounded with an outer-wall, of
-which hardly the slightest vestiges now remain. It is composed of a
-layer of stones, without cement; they are not of large size, but
-rather small and thin. To give a vulgar comparison, it resembles an
-old ruinous pigeon-house. Mr. Stevenson took the dimensions of this
-curious fort, which are as follows: Outside diameter at the base is
-fifty-two feet; at the top thirty-eight feet. The diameter of the
-interior at the base is nineteen feet six inches; at the top
-twenty-one feet; the curve in the inside being the reverse of the
-outside, or nearly so. The thickness of the walls at the base
-seventeen feet; at the top eight feet six inches. The height outside
-forty-two feet; the inside thirty-four feet. The door or entrance
-faces the sea, and the interior is partly filled with rubbish. When
-you enter you see, in the inner wall, a succession of small openings
-like windows, directly one above another, with broad flat stones,
-serving for lintels; these are about nine inches thick. The whole
-resembles a ladder. There were four of these perpendicular rows of
-windows or apertures, the situation of which corresponds with the
-cardinal points of the compass. You enter the galleries contained in
-the thickness of the wall by two of these apertures, which have been
-broken down. These interior spaces are of two descriptions: one
-consists of a winding ascent, not quite an inclined plane, yet not by
-any means a regular stair; but the edges of the stones, being suffered
-to project irregularly, serve for rude steps--or a kind of assistance.
-Through this narrow staircase, which winds round the building, you
-creep up to the top of the castle, which is partly ruinous. But
-besides the staircase, there branch off at irregular intervals
-horizontal galleries, which go round the whole building, and receive
-air from the holes I formerly mentioned. These apertures vary in size,
-diminishing as they run, from about thirty inches in width by eighteen
-in height, till they are only about a foot square. The lower galleries
-are full man height, but narrow. They diminish both in height and
-width as they ascend, and as the thickness of the wall in which they
-are enclosed diminishes. The uppermost gallery is so narrow and low,
-that it was with great difficulty I crept through it. The walls are
-built very irregularly, the sweep of the cone being different on the
-different sides.
-
-"It is said by Torfæus that this fort was repaired and strengthened by
-Erlind, who, having forcibly carried off the mother of Harold, Earl of
-the Orkneys, resolved to defend himself to extremity in this place
-against the insulted Earl. How a castle could be defended which had no
-opening to the outside for shooting arrows, and which was of a
-capacity to be pulled to pieces by the assailants, who could advance
-without annoyance to the bottom of the wall (unless it were
-battlemented upon the top), does not easily appear. But to Erlind's
-operations the castle of Mousa possibly owes the upper and
-perpendicular, or rather overhanging, part of its elevation, and also
-its rude staircase. In these two particulars it seems to differ from
-all other Picts' castles, which are ascended by an inclined plane, and
-generally, I believe, terminate in a truncated cone, without that
-strange counterpart of the perpendicular or projecting part of the
-upper wall. Opposite to the castle of Mousa are the ruins of another
-Pictish fort: indeed, they all communicate with each other through the
-isles. The island of Mousa is the property of a Mr. Piper, who has
-improved it considerably, and values his castle. I advised him to
-clear out the interior, as he tells us there are three or four
-galleries beneath those now accessible, and the difference of height
-between the exterior and interior warrants his assertion.
-
-"We get on board, and in time, for the wind freshens, and becomes
-contrary. We beat down to Sumburgh-head, through rough weather. This
-is the extreme south-eastern point of Zetland; and as the Atlantic and
-German oceans unite at this point, a frightful tide runs here, called
-Sumburgh-rost. The breeze, contending with the tide, flings the
-breakers in great style upon the high broken cliffs of Sumburgh-head.
-They are all one white foam, ascending to a great height. We wished to
-double this point, and lie by in a bay between that and the northern
-or north-western cape, called Fitful-head, and which seems higher than
-Sumburgh itself--and tacked repeatedly with this view; but a
-confounded islet, called _The Horse_, always baffled us, and, after
-three heats, fairly distanced us. So we run into a roadstead, called
-Quendal Bay, on the south-eastern side, and there anchor for the
-night. We go ashore with various purposes,--Stevenson to see the site
-of a proposed lighthouse on this tremendous cape--Marjoribanks to
-shoot rabbits--and Duff and I to look about us.
-
-"I ascended the head by myself, which is lofty, and commands a wild
-sea-view. Zetland stretches away, with all its projecting capes and
-inlets, to the north-eastward. Many of those inlets approach each
-other very nearly; indeed, the two opposite bays at Sumburgh-head
-seem on the point of joining, and rendering that cape an island. The
-two creeks from those east and western seas are only divided by a low
-isthmus of blowing sand, and similar to that which wastes part of the
-east coast of Scotland. It has here blown like the deserts of Arabia,
-and destroyed some houses, formerly the occasional residences of the
-Earls of Orkney. The steep and rocky side of the cape, which faces the
-west, does not seem much more durable. These lofty cliffs are all of
-sand-flag, a very loose and perishable kind of rock, which slides down
-in immense masses, like avalanches, after every storm. The rest lies
-so loose, that, on the very brow of the loftiest crag, I had no
-difficulty in sending down a fragment as large as myself: he thundered
-down in tremendous style, but splitting upon a projecting cliff,
-descended into the ocean like a shower of shrapnel shot. The sea
-beneath rages incessantly among a thousand of the fragments which have
-fallen from the peaks, and which assume an hundred strange shapes. It
-would have been a fine situation to compose an ode to the Genius of
-Sumburgh-head, or an Elegy upon a Cormorant--or to have written and
-spoken madness of any kind in prose or poetry. But I gave vent to my
-excited feelings in a more simple way; and sitting gently down on the
-steep green slope which led to the beach, I e'en slid down a few
-hundred feet, and found the exercise quite an adequate vent to my
-enthusiasm. I recommend this exercise (time and place suiting) to all
-my brother scribblers, and I have no doubt it will save much effusion
-of Christian ink. Those slopes are covered with beautiful short
-herbage. At the foot of the ascent, and towards the isthmus, is the
-old house of Sumburgh, in appearance a most dreary mansion. I found,
-on my arrival at the beach, that the hospitality of the inhabitants
-had entrapped my companions. I walked back to meet them, but escaped
-the gin and water. On board about nine o'clock at night. A little
-schooner lies between us and the shore, which we had seen all day
-buffeting the tide and breeze like ourselves. The wind increases, and
-the ship is made SNUG--a sure sign the passengers will not be so.
-
-"_10th August, 1814._--The omen was but too true--a terrible
-combustion on board, among plates, dishes, glasses, writing-desks,
-etc., etc.; not a wink of sleep. We weigh and stand out into that
-delightful current called _Sumburgh-rost_, or _rust_. This tide
-certainly owes us a grudge, for it drove us to the eastward about
-thirty miles on the night of the first, and occasioned our missing the
-Fair Isle, and now it has caught us on our return. All the landsmen
-sicker than sick, and our Viceroy, Stevenson, qualmish. This is the
-only time that I have felt more than temporary inconvenience, but this
-morning I have headache and nausea; these are trifles, and in a
-well-found vessel, with a good pilot, we have none of that mixture of
-danger which gives dignity to the traveller. But he must have a
-stouter heart than mine, who can contemplate without horror the
-situation of a vessel of an inferior description caught among these
-headlands and reefs of rocks, in the long and dark winter nights of
-these regions. Accordingly, wrecks are frequent. It is proposed to
-have a light on Sumburgh-head, which is the first land made by vessels
-coming from the eastward; Fitful-head is higher, but is to the west,
-from which quarter few vessels come.
-
-"We are now clear of Zetland, and about ten o'clock reach the Fair
-Isle;[70] one of their boats comes off, a strange-looking thing
-without an entire plank in it, excepting one on each side, upon the
-strength of which the whole depends, the rest being patched and
-joined. This trumpery skiff the men manage with the most astonishing
-dexterity, and row with remarkable speed; they have two banks, that
-is, two rowers on each bench, and use very short paddles. The wildness
-of their appearance, with long elf-locks, striped worsted caps, and
-shoes of raw-hide--the fragility of their boat--and their extreme
-curiosity about us and our cutter, give them a title to be
-distinguished as _natives_. One of our people told their steersman, by
-way of jeer, that he must have great confidence in Providence to go to
-sea in such a vehicle; the man very sensibly replied that without the
-same confidence he would not go to sea in the best _tool_ in England.
-We take to our boat, and row for about three miles round the coast, in
-order to land at the inhabited part of the island. This coast abounds
-with grand views of rocks and bays. One immense portion of rock is
-(like the Holm of Noss) separated by a chasm from the mainland. As it
-is covered with herbage on the top, though a literal precipice all
-round, the natives contrive to ascend the rock by a place which would
-make a goat dizzy, and then drag the sheep up by ropes, though they
-sometimes carry a sheep up on their shoulders. The captain of a sloop
-of war, being ashore while they were at this work, turned giddy and
-sick while looking at them. This immense precipice is several hundred
-feet high, and is perforated below by some extraordinary apertures,
-through which a boat might pass; the light shines distinctly through
-these hideous chasms.
-
-"After passing a square bay called the North-haven, tenanted by
-sea-fowl and seals (the first we have yet seen), we come in view of
-the small harbor. Land, and breakfast, for which, till now, none of us
-felt inclination. In front of the little harbor is the house of the
-tacksman, Mr. Strong, and in view are three small assemblages of
-miserable huts, where the inhabitants of the isle live. There are
-about thirty families and 250 inhabitants upon the Fair Isle. It
-merits its name, as the plain upon which the hamlets are situated
-bears excellent barley, oats, and potatoes, and the rest of the isle
-is beautiful pasture, excepting to the eastward, where there is a
-moss, equally essential to the comfort of the inhabitants, since it
-supplies them with peats for fuel. The Fair Isle is about three miles
-long and a mile and a half broad. Mr. Strong received us very
-courteously. He lives here, like Robinson Crusoe, in absolute solitude
-as to society, unless by a chance visit from the officers of a
-man-of-war. There is a signal-post maintained on the island by
-Government, under this gentleman's inspection; when any ship appears
-that cannot answer his signals, he sends off to Lerwick and Kirkwall
-to give the alarm. Rogers[71] was off here last year, and nearly cut
-off one of Mr. Strong's express-boats, but the active islanders
-outstripped his people by speed of rowing. The inhabitants pay Mr.
-Strong for the possessions which they occupy under him as sub-tenants,
-and cultivate the isle in their own way, _i. e._, by digging instead
-of ploughing (though the ground is quite open and free from rocks, and
-they have several scores of ponies), and by raising alternate crops of
-barley, oats, and potatoes; the first and last are admirably good.
-They rather over-manure their crops; the possessions lie runrig, that
-is, by alternate ridges, and the outfield or pasture ground is
-possessed as common to all their cows and ponies. The islanders fish
-for Mr. Strong at certain fixed rates, and the fish is his property,
-which he sends to Kirkwall, Lerwick, or elsewhere, in a little
-schooner, the same which we left in Quendal Bay, and about the arrival
-of which we found them anxious. An equal space of rich land on the
-Fair Isle, situated in an inland county of Scotland, would rent for
-£3000 a year at the very least. To be sure it would not be burdened
-with the population of 250 souls, whose bodies (fertile as it is) it
-cannot maintain in bread, they being supplied chiefly from the
-mainland. Fish they have plenty, and are even nice in their choice.
-Skate they will not touch; dog-fish they say is only food for
-Orkney-men, and when they catch them, they make a point of tormenting
-the poor fish for eating off their baits from the hook, stealing the
-haddocks from their lines, and other enormities. These people, being
-about halfway between Shetland and Orkney, have unfrequent connection
-with either archipelago, and live and marry entirely among themselves.
-One lad told me, only five persons had left the island since his
-remembrance, and of those, three were pressed for the navy. They
-seldom go to Greenland; but this year five or six of their young men
-were on board the whalers. They seemed extremely solicitous about
-their return, and repeatedly questioned us about the names of the
-whalers which were at Lerwick, a point on which we could give little
-information.
-
-"The manners of these islanders seem primitive and simple, and they
-are sober, good-humored and friendly,--but _jimp_ honest. Their
-comforts are, of course, much dependent on _their master's_ pleasure;
-for so they call Mr. Strong. But they gave him the highest character
-for kindness and liberality, and prayed to God he might long be their
-ruler. After mounting the signal-post hill, or Malcolm's Head, which
-is faced by a most tremendous cliff, we separated on our different
-routes. The Sheriff went to rectify the only enormity on the island,
-which existed in the person of a drunken schoolmaster; Marchie[72]
-went to shoot sea-fowl, or rather to frighten them, as his
-calumniators allege. Stevenson and Duff went to inspect the remains or
-vestiges of a Danish lighthouse upon a distant hill, called, as
-usual, the Ward, or Ward-hill, and returned with specimens of copper
-ore. Hamilton went down to cater fish for our dinner, and see it
-properly cooked--and I to see two remarkable indentures in the coast
-called _Rivas_, perhaps from their being rifted or _riven_. They are
-exactly like the Buller of Buchan, the sea rolling into a large open
-basin within the land through a natural archway. These places are
-close to each other; one is oblong, and it is easy to descend into it
-by a rude path; the other gulf is inaccessible from the land, unless
-to a _crags-man_, as these venturous climbers call themselves. I sat
-for about an hour upon the verge, like the cormorants around me,
-hanging my legs over the precipice; but I could not get free of two or
-three well-meaning islanders, who held me fast by the skirts all the
-time--for it must be conceived that our numbers and appointments had
-drawn out the whole population to admire and attend us. After we
-separated, each, like the nucleus of a comet, had his own distinct
-train of attendants.--Visit the capital town, a wretched assemblage of
-the basest huts, dirty without, and still dirtier within; pigs, fowls,
-cows, men, women, and children, all living promiscuously under the
-same roof, and in the same room--the brood-sow making (among the more
-opulent) a distinguished inhabitant of the mansion. The compost, a
-liquid mass of utter abomination, is kept in a square pond of seven
-feet deep; when I censured it, they allowed it might be dangerous to
-the _bairns_; but appeared unconscious of any other objection. I
-cannot wonder they want meal, for assuredly they waste it. A great
-_bowie_ or wooden vessel of porridge is made in the morning; a child
-comes and sups a few spoonfuls; then Mrs. Sow takes her share; then
-the rest of the children or the parents, and all at pleasure; then
-come the poultry when the mess is more cool; the rest is flung upon
-the dunghill--and the goodwife wonders and complains when she wants
-meal in winter. They are a long-lived race, notwithstanding utter and
-inconceivable dirt and sluttery. A man of sixty told me his father
-died only last year, aged ninety-eight; nor was this considered as
-very unusual.
-
-"The clergyman of Dunrossness, in Zetland, visits these poor people once
-a year, for a week or two during summer. In winter this is impossible,
-and even the summer visit is occasionally interrupted for two years.
-Marriages and baptisms are performed, as one of the Isles-men told me,
-_by the slump_, and one of the children was old enough to tell the
-clergyman who sprinkled him with water, 'Deil be in your fingers.' Last
-time, four couple were married; sixteen children baptized. The
-schoolmaster reads a portion of Scripture in the church each Sunday,
-when the clergyman is absent; but the present man is unfit for this part
-of his duty. The women knit worsted stockings, night-caps, and similar
-trifles, which they exchange with any merchant vessels that approach
-their lonely isle. In these respects they greatly regret the American
-war; and mention with unction the happy days when they could get from an
-American trader a bottle of peach-brandy or rum in exchange for a pair
-of worsted stockings or a dozen of eggs. The humanity of their _master_
-interferes much with the favorite but dangerous occupation of the
-islanders, which is _fowling_, that is, taking the young sea-fowl from
-their nests among these tremendous crags. About a fortnight before we
-arrived, a fine boy of fourteen had dropped from the cliff, while in
-prosecution of this amusement, into a roaring surf, by which he was
-instantly swallowed up. The unfortunate mother was laboring at the
-peat-moss at a little distance. These accidents do not, however, strike
-terror into the survivors. They regard the death of an individual
-engaged in these desperate exploits as we do the fate of a brave
-relation who falls in battle, when the honor of his death furnishes a
-balm to our sorrow. It therefore requires all the tacksman's authority
-to prevent a practice so pregnant with danger. Like all other precarious
-and dangerous employments, the occupation of the crags-men renders them
-unwilling to labor at employments of a more steady description. The Fair
-Isle inhabitants are a good-looking race, more like Zetlanders than
-Orkney-men. Evenson, and other names of a Norwegian or Danish
-derivation, attest their Scandinavian descent. Return and dine at Mr.
-Strong's, having sent our cookery ashore, not to overburthen his
-hospitality. In this place, and perhaps in the very cottage now
-inhabited by Mr. Strong, the Duke of Medina Sidonia, Commander-in-Chief
-of the Invincible Armada, wintered, after losing his vessel to the
-eastward of the island. It was not till he had spent some weeks in this
-miserable abode, that he got off to Norway. Independently of the moral
-consideration, that, from the pitch of power in which he stood a few
-days before, the proudest peer of the proudest nation in Europe found
-himself dependent on the jealous and scanty charity of these secluded
-islanders, it is scarce possible not to reflect with compassion on the
-change of situation from the palaces of Estremadura to the hamlet of the
-Fair Isle--
-
- 'Dost thou wish for thy deserts, O Son of Hodeirah?
- Dost thou long for the gales of Arabia?'[73]
-
-"Mr. Strong gave me a curious old chair belonging to Quendale, a
-former proprietor of the Fair Isle, and which a more zealous antiquary
-would have dubbed 'the Duke's chair.' I will have it refitted for
-Abbotsford, however. About eight o'clock we take boat, amid the cheers
-of the inhabitants, whose minds, subdued by our splendor, had been
-secured by our munificence, which consisted in a moderate benefaction
-of whiskey and tobacco, and a few shillings laid out on their staple
-commodities. They agreed no such day had been seen in the isle. The
-signal-post displayed its flags, and to recompense these distinguished
-marks of honor, we hung out our colors, stood into the bay, and
-saluted with three guns,
-
- 'Echoing from a thousand caves."
-
-and then bear away for Orkney, leaving, if our vanity does not deceive
-us, a very favorable impression on the mind of the inhabitants of the
-Fair Isle. The tradition of the Fair Isle is unfavorable to those
-shipwrecked strangers, who are said to have committed several acts of
-violence to extort the supplies of provision, given them sparingly and
-with reluctance by the islanders, who were probably themselves very
-far from being well supplied.
-
-"I omitted to say we were attended in the morning by two very sportive
-whales, but of a kind, as some of our crew who had been on board
-Greenland-men assured us, which it was very dangerous to attack. There
-were two Gravesend smacks fishing off the isle. Lord, what a long
-draught London makes!
-
-"_11th August, 1814._--After a sound sleep to make amends for last
-night, we find, at awaking, the vessel off the Start of Sanda, the
-first land in the Orkneys which we could make. There a lighthouse has
-been erected lately upon the best construction. Landed and surveyed
-it. All in excellent order, and the establishment of the keepers in
-the same style of comfort and respectability as elsewhere, far better
-than the house of the master of the Fair Isle, and rivalling my own
-baronial mansion of Abbotsford. Go to the top of the tower and survey
-the island, which, as the name implies, is level, flat, and sandy,
-quite the reverse of those in Zetland: it is intersected by creeks and
-small lakes, and, though it abounds with shell marle, seems barren.
-There is one dreadful inconvenience of an island life, of which we had
-here an instance. The keeper's wife had an infant in her arms--her
-first-born, too, of which the poor woman had been delivered without
-assistance. Erskine told us of a horrid instance of malice which had
-been practised in this island of Sanda. A decent tenant, during the
-course of three or four successive years, lost to the number of
-twenty-five cattle, stabbed as they lay in their fold by some
-abominable wretch. What made the matter stranger was, that the poor
-man could not recollect any reason why he should have had the ill-will
-of a single being, only that in taking up names for the _militia_, a
-duty imposed upon him by the Justices, he thought he might possibly
-have given some unknown offence. The villain was never discovered.
-
-"The wrecks on this coast were numerous before the erection of the
-lighthouse. It was not uncommon to see five or six vessels on shore at
-once. The goods and chattels of the inhabitants are all said to savor
-of _Flotsome_ and _Jetsome_, as the floating wreck and that which is
-driven ashore are severally called. Mr. Stevenson happened to observe
-that the boat of a Sanda farmer had bad sails--'If it had been His
-(_i. e._, God's) will that you hadna built sae many lighthouses
-hereabout'--answered the Orcadian, with great composure--'I would have
-had new sails last winter.' Thus do they talk and think upon these
-subjects; and so talking and thinking, I fear the poor mariner has
-little chance of any very anxious attempt to assist him. There is one
-wreck, a Danish vessel, now aground under our lee. These Danes are the
-stupidest seamen, by all accounts, that sail the sea. When this light
-upon the Start of Sanda was established, the Commissioners, with
-laudable anxiety to extend its utility, had its description and
-bearings translated into Danish and sent to Copenhagen. But they
-never attend to such trifles. The Norwegians are much better liked, as
-a clever, hardy, sensible people. I forgot to notice there was a
-Norwegian prize lying in the Sound of Lerwick, sent in by one of our
-cruisers. This was a queer-looking, half-decked vessel, all tattered
-and torn, and shaken to pieces, looking like Coleridge's Spectre Ship.
-It was pitiable to see such a prize. Our servants went aboard, and got
-one of their loaves, and gave a dreadful account of its composition. I
-got and cut a crust of it; it was rye-bread, with a slight mixture of
-pine-fir bark or sawings of deal. It was not good, but (as Charles
-XII. said) might be eaten. But after all, if the people can be
-satisfied with such bread as this, it seems hard to interdict it to
-them. What would a Londoner say if, instead of his roll and muffins,
-this black bread, relishing of tar and turpentine, were presented for
-his breakfast? I would to God there could be a Jehovah-jireh, 'a ram
-caught in the thicket,' to prevent the sacrifice of that people.
-
-"The few friends who may see this Journal are much indebted for these
-pathetic remarks to the situation under which they are recorded; for
-since we left the lighthouse we have been struggling with adverse wind
-(pretty high too), and a very strong tide, called the Rost of the
-Start, which, like Sumburgh Rost, bodes no good to our roast and
-boiled. The worst is that this struggle carries us past a most curious
-spectacle, being no less than the carcases of two hundred and
-sixty-five whales, which have been driven ashore in Taftsness Bay, now
-lying close under us. With all the inclination in the world, it is
-impossible to stand in close enough to verify this massacre of
-Leviathans with our own eyes, as we do not care to run the risk of
-being drawn ashore ourselves among the party. In fact, this species of
-spectacle has been of late years very common among the isles. Mr.
-Stevenson saw upwards of a hundred and fifty whales lying upon the
-shore in a bay at Unst, in his northward trip. They are not large, but
-are decided whales, measuring perhaps from fifteen to twenty-five
-feet. They are easily mastered, for the first that is wounded among
-the sounds and straits so common in the isles usually runs ashore. The
-rest follow the blood, and, urged on by the boats behind, run ashore
-also. A cut with one of the long whaling knives under the back-fin is
-usually fatal to these huge animals. The two hundred and sixty-five
-whales, now lying within two or three miles of us, were driven ashore
-by seven boats only.
-
-"_Five o'clock._--We are out of the _Rost_ (I detest that word), and
-driving fast through a long sound among low green islands, which
-hardly lift themselves above the sea--not a cliff or hill to be
-seen--what a contrast to the land we have left! We are standing for
-some creek or harbor, called Lingholm Bay, to lie to or anchor for the
-night; for to pursue our course by night, and that a thick one, among
-these isles, and islets, and sand-banks, is out of the question--clear
-moonlight might do. Our sea is now moderate. But, oh gods and men!
-what misfortunes have travellers to record! Just as the quiet of the
-elements had reconciled us to the thought of dinner, we learn that an
-unlucky sea has found its way into the galley during the last infernal
-combustion, when the lee-side and boltsprit were constantly under
-water; so our soup is poisoned with salt water--our cod and haddocks,
-which cost ninepence this blessed morning, and would have been worth a
-couple of guineas in London, are soused in their primitive
-element--the curry is undone--and all gone to the devil. We all apply
-ourselves to comfort our Lord High Admiral Hamilton, whose despair for
-himself and the public might edify a patriot. His good-humor--which
-has hitherto defied every incident, aggravated even by the
-gout--supported by a few bad puns, and a great many fair promises on
-the part of the steward and cook, fortunately restores his
-equilibrium.
-
-"_Eight o'clock._--Our supplemental dinner proved excellent, and we
-have glided into an admirable roadstead or harbor, called Lingholm
-Bay, formed by the small island of Lingholm embracing a small basin
-dividing that islet from the larger isle of Stronsay. Both, as well as
-Sanda, Eda, and others which we have passed, are low, green, and
-sandy. I have seen nothing to-day worth marking, except the sporting
-of a very large whale at some distance, and H.'s face at the news of
-the disaster in the cook-room. We are to weigh at two in the morning,
-and hope to reach Kirkwall, the capital of Orkney, by breakfast
-to-morrow. I trust there are no _rusts_ or _rosts_ in the road. I
-shall detest that word even when used to signify verd antique or
-patina in the one sense, or roast venison in the other. Orkney shall
-begin a new volume of these exquisite memoranda.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"OMISSION.--At Lerwick the Dutch fishers had again appeared on their
-old haunts. A very interesting meeting took place between them and the
-Lerwegians, most of them being old acquaintances. They seemed very
-poor, and talked of having been pillaged of everything by the French,
-and expected to have found Lerwick ruined by the war. They have all
-the careful, quiet, and economical habits of their country, and go on
-board their busses with the utmost haste so soon as they see the
-Greenland sailors, who usually insult and pick quarrels with them. The
-great amusement of the Dutch sailors is to hire the little ponies, and
-ride up and down upon them. On one occasion, a good many years ago, an
-English sailor interrupted this cavalcade, frightened the horses, and
-one or two Dutchmen got tumbles. Incensed at this beyond their usual
-moderation, they pursued the cause of their overthrow, and wounded him
-with one of their knives. The wounded man went on board his vessel,
-the crew of which, about fifty strong, came ashore with their long
-flinching knives with which they cut up the whales, and falling upon
-the Dutchmen, though twice their numbers, drove them all into the sea,
-where such as could not swim were in some risk of being drowned. The
-instance of aggression, or rather violent retaliation, on their part,
-is almost solitary. In general they are extremely quiet, and employ
-themselves in bartering their little merchandise of gin and
-gingerbread for Zetland hose and night-caps."
-
-
-Footnotes of the Chapter XXVIII.
-
-[59: [Robert Stevenson, the eminent civil engineer, for
-nearly half a century the engineer to the Board of Northern Lights.
-He inaugurated the present Scottish lighthouse system, and no less
-than twenty lighthouses were designed and constructed under his
-superintendence, the most remarkable being the famous Bell Rock
-tower. He died in 1850. Three of his sons, one of whom became his
-biographer, greatly distinguished themselves in their father's
-profession. Robert Louis Stevenson, in his fragment of family
-history, _Records of a Family of Engineers_, has left a vivid
-picture of his grandfather, though it be but an unfinished sketch.]]
-
-[60: On being requested, while at breakfast, to inscribe
-his name in the album of the tower, Scott penned immediately the
-following lines:--
-
-PHAROS LOQUITUR.
-
- "Far in the bosom of the deep,
- O'er these wild shelves my watch I keep;
- A ruddy gem of changeful light,
- Bound on the dusky brow of night,
- The seaman bids my lustre hail,
- And scorns to strike his timorous sail."]
-
-[61: This is, without doubt, an allusion to some happy
-day's excursion when his _first love_ was of the party.]
-
-[62: Erskine--Sheriff of Shetland and Orkney.]
-
-[63: Here occurs a rude scratch of drawing.]
-
-[64: Lord Dundas was created Earl of Zetland in 1838, and
-died in February, 1839.]
-
-[65: Campbell--_Pleasures of Hope_.]
-
-[66: Robert Hamilton, Sheriff of Lanarkshire, and
-afterwards one of the Clerks of Session, was a particular favorite
-of Scott--first, among many other good reasons, because he had been
-a soldier in his youth, had fought gallantly and been wounded
-severely in the American war, and was a very Uncle Toby in military
-enthusiasm; secondly, because he was a brother antiquary of the
-genuine Monkbarns breed; thirdly (last, not least), because he was,
-in spite of the example of the head of his name and race, a steady
-Tory. Mr. Hamilton sent for Scott when upon his deathbed in 1831,
-and desired him to choose and carry off as a parting memorial any
-article he liked in his collection of arms. Sir Walter (by that time
-sorely shattered in his own health) selected the sword with which
-his good friend had been begirt at Bunker's Hill.]
-
-[67: During the winter of 1837-38, this worthy clergyman's
-wife, his daughter, and a servant, perished within sight of the
-manse, from a flaw in the ice on the loch--which they were crossing
-as the nearest way home.--(1839.)]
-
-[68: In his reviewal of Pitcairn's _Trials_ (1831), Scott
-says: "In erecting this Earl's Castle of Scalloway, and other
-expensive edifices, the King's tenants were forced to work in
-quarries, transport stone, dig, delve, climb, and build, and submit
-to all possible sorts of servile and painful labor, without either
-meat, drink, hire, or recompense of any kind. 'My father,' said Earl
-Patrick, 'built his house at Sumburgh on the sand, and it has given
-way already; this of mine on the rock shall abide and endure.' He
-did not or would not understand that the oppression, rapacity, and
-cruelty, by means of which the house arose, were what the clergyman
-really pointed to in his recommendation of a motto. Accordingly, the
-huge tower remains wild and desolate--its chambers filled with sand,
-and its rifted walls and dismantled battlements giving unrestrained
-access to the roaring sea blast."--For more of Earl Patrick, see
-Scott's _Miscellaneous Prose Works_, vol. xxi. pp. 230, 233; vol.
-xxiii. pp. 327, 329.]
-
-[69: Mr. W. S. Rose informs me, that when he was at school
-at Winchester, the morris-dancers there used to exhibit a
-sword-dance resembling that described at Camacho's wedding in Don
-Quixote; and Mr. Morritt adds, that similar dances are even yet
-performed in the villages about Rokeby every Christmas.]
-
-[70: This is a solitary island, lying about halfway between
-Orkney and Zetland.]
-
-[71: An American Commodore.]
-
-[72: Mr. Marjoribanks.]
-
-[73: _Thalaba_, Book VIII.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX
-
- DIARY ON BOARD THE LIGHTHOUSE YACHT CONTINUED. -- THE ORKNEYS.
- --KIRKWALL. -- HOY. -- THE STANDING STONES OF STENNIS, ETC.
-
-1814
-
-
-"_12th August, 1814._--With a good breeze and calm sea we weighed at
-two in the morning, and worked by short tacks up to Kirkwall Bay,
-and find ourselves in that fine basin upon rising in the morning.
-The town looks well from the sea, but is chiefly indebted to the
-huge old cathedral that rises out of the centre. Upon landing we
-find it but a poor and dirty place, especially towards the harbor.
-Farther up the town are seen some decent old-fashioned houses, and
-the Sheriff's interest secures us good lodgings. Marchie goes to
-hunt for a pointer. The morning, which was rainy, clears up
-pleasantly, and Hamilton, Erskine, Duff, and I walk to Malcolm
-Laing's, who has a pleasant house about half a mile from the town.
-Our old acquaintance, though an invalid, received us kindly; he
-looks very poorly, and cannot walk without assistance, but seems to
-retain all the quick, earnest, and vivacious intelligence of his
-character and manner. After this, visit the antiquities of the
-place, namely, the Bishop's palace, the Earl of Orkney's castle, and
-the cathedral, all situated within a stone-cast of each other. The
-two former are ruinous. The most prominent part of the ruins of the
-Bishop's palace is a large round tower, similar to that of Bothwell
-in architecture, but not equal to it in size. This was built by
-Bishop Reid, _tempore Jacobi V._, and there is a rude statue of him
-in a niche in the front. At the north-east corner of the building is
-a square tower of greater antiquity, called the Mense or Mass Tower;
-but, as well as a second and smaller round tower, it is quite
-ruinous. A suite of apartments of different sizes fills up the
-space between these towers, all now ruinous. The building is said to
-have been of great antiquity, but was certainly in a great measure
-reëdified in the sixteenth century.
-
-"Fronting this castle or palace of the Bishop, and about a gun-shot
-distant, is that of the Earl of Orkney. The Earl's palace was built
-by Patrick Stewart, Earl of Orkney, the same who erected that of
-Scalloway, in Shetland. It is an elegant structure, partaking at
-once of the character of a palace and castle. The building forms
-three sides of an oblong square, but one of the sides extends
-considerably beyond the others. The great hall must have been
-remarkably handsome, opening into two or three huge rounds or
-turrets, the lower part of which is divided by stone shafts into
-three windows. It has two immense chimneys, the arches or lintels of
-which are formed by a flat arch, as at Crichton Castle. There is
-another very handsome apartment communicating with the hall like a
-modern drawing-room, and which has, like the former, its projecting
-turrets. The hall is lighted by a fine Gothic-shafted window at one
-end, and by others on the sides. It is approached by a spacious and
-elegant staircase of three flights of steps. The dimensions may be
-sixty feet long, twenty broad, and fourteen high, but doubtless an
-arched roof sprung from the side walls, so that fourteen feet was
-only the height from the ground to the arches. Any modern architect,
-wishing to emulate the real Gothic architecture, and apply it to the
-purposes of modern splendor, might derive excellent hints from this
-room. The exterior ornaments are also extremely elegant. The ruins,
-once the residence of this haughty and oppressive Earl, are now so
-disgustingly nasty, that it required all the zeal of an antiquary to
-prosecute the above investigation. Architecture seems to have been
-Earl Patrick's prevailing taste. Besides this castle and that of
-Scalloway, he added to or enlarged the old castle of Bressay. To
-accomplish these objects, he oppressed the people with severities
-unheard of even in that oppressive age, drew down on himself a
-shameful though deserved punishment, and left these dishonored ruins
-to hand down to posterity the tale of his crimes and of his fall. We
-may adopt, though in another sense, his own presumptuous motto--_Sic
-Fuit, Est, et Erit_.
-
-"We visit the cathedral, dedicated to St. Magnus, which greeted the
-Sheriff's approach with a merry peal. Like that of Glasgow, this
-church has escaped the blind fury of Reformation. It was founded in
-1138, by Ronald, Earl of Orkney, nephew of the Saint. It is of great
-size, being 260 feet long, or thereabout, and supported by
-twenty-eight Saxon pillars, of good workmanship. The round arch
-predominates in the building, but I think not exclusively. The
-steeple (once a very high spire) rises upon four pillars of great
-strength, which occupy each angle of the nave. Being destroyed by
-lightning, it was rebuilt upon a low and curtailed plan. The
-appearance of the building is rather massive and gloomy than
-elegant, and many of the exterior ornaments, carving around the
-doorways, etc., have been injured by time. We entered the cathedral,
-the whole of which is kept locked, swept, and in good order,
-although only the eastern end is used for divine worship. We walked
-some time in the nave and western end, which is left unoccupied, and
-has a very solemn effect as the avenue to the place of worship.
-There were many tombstones on the floor and elsewhere; some,
-doubtless, of high antiquity. One, I remarked, had the shield of
-arms hung by the corner, with a helmet above it of a large
-proportion, such as I have seen on the most ancient seals. But we
-had neither time nor skill to decipher what noble Orcadian lay
-beneath. The church is as well fitted up as could be expected; much
-of the old carved oak remains, but with a motley mixture of modern
-deal pews. All, however, is neat and clean, and does great honor to
-the kirk-session who maintain its decency. I remarked particularly
-Earl Patrick's seat, adjoining to that of the magistrates, but
-surmounting it and every other in the church: it is surrounded with
-a carved screen of oak, rather elegant, and bears his arms and
-initials, and the motto I have noticed. He bears the royal arms
-_without any mark of bastardy_ (his father was a natural son of
-James V.) quarterly, with a lymphad or galley, the ancient arms of
-the county. This circumstance was charged against him on his
-trial.[74] I understand the late Mr. Gilbert Laing Meason left the
-interest of £1000 to keep up this cathedral.
-
-"There are in the street facing the cathedral the ruins of a much
-more ancient castle; a proper feudal fortress belonging to the Earls
-of Orkney, but called the King's Castle. It appears to have been
-very strong, being situated near the harbor, and having, as appears
-from the fragments, very massive walls. While the wicked Earl
-Patrick was in confinement, one of his natural sons defended this
-castle to extremity against the King's troops, and only surrendered
-when it was nearly a heap of ruins, and then under condition he
-should not be brought in evidence against his father.
-
-"We dine at the inn, and drink the Prince Regent's health, being
-that of the day--Mr. Baikie of Tankerness dines with us.
-
-"_13th August, 1814._--A bad morning, but clears up. No letters from
-Edinburgh. The country about Kirkwall is flat, and tolerably
-cultivated. We see oxen generally wrought in the small country
-carts, though they have a race of ponies, like those of Shetland,
-but larger. Marchie goes to shoot on a hill called Whiteford, which
-slopes away about two or three miles from Kirkwall. The grouse is
-abundant, for the gentleman who chaperons Marchie killed thirteen
-brace and a half, with a snipe. There are no partridges nor hares.
-The soil of Orkney is better, and its air more genial than Shetland;
-but it is far less interesting, and possesses none of the wild and
-peculiar character of the more northern archipelago. All vegetables
-grow here freely in the gardens, and there are one or two attempts
-at trees where they are sheltered by walls. How ill they succeed may
-be conjectured from our bringing with us a quantity of brushwood,
-commissioned by Malcolm Laing from Aberbrothock, to be sticks to his
-pease. This trash we brought two hundred miles. I have little to
-add, except that the Orkney people have some odd superstitions about
-a stone on which they take oaths to Odin. Lovers often perform this
-ceremony in pledge of mutual faith, and are said to account it a
-sacred engagement.--It is agreed that we go on board after dinner,
-and sail with the next tide. The magistrates of Kirkwall present us
-with the freedom of their ancient burgh; and Erskine, instead of
-being cumbered with drunken sailors, as at Lerwick, or a drunken
-schoolmaster, as at Fair Isle, is annoyed by his own Substitute.
-This will occasion his remaining two days at Kirkwall, during which
-time it is proposed we shall visit the lighthouse upon the dangerous
-rocks called the Skerries, in the Pentland Frith; and then,
-returning to the eastern side of Pomona, take up the counsellor at
-Stromness. It is further settled that we leave Marchie with Erskine
-to get another day's shooting. On board at ten o'clock, after a
-little bustle in expediting our domestics, washerwomen, etc.
-
-"_14th August, 1814._--Sail about four, and in rounding the mainland
-of Orkney, called Pomona, encounter a very heavy sea; about ten
-o'clock, get into the Sound of Holm or Ham, a fine smooth current
-meandering away between two low green islands, which have little to
-characterize them. On the right of the Sound is the mainland, and a
-deep bay called Scalpa Flow indents it up to within two miles of
-Kirkwall. A canal through this neck of the island would be of great
-consequence to the burgh. We see the steeple and church of Kirkwall
-across the island very distinctly. Getting out of the Sound of Holm,
-we stand in to the harbor or roadstead of Widewall, where we find
-seven or eight foreign vessels bound for Ireland, and a sloop
-belonging to the lighthouse service. These roadsteads are common all
-through the Orkneys, and afford excellent shelter for small vessels.
-The day is pleasant and sunny, but the breeze is too high to permit
-landing at the Skerries. Agree, therefore, to stand over for the
-mainland of Scotland, and visit Thurso. Enter the Pentland Frith, so
-celebrated for the strength and fury of its tides, which is boiling
-even in this pleasant weather; we see a large ship battling with
-this heavy current, and though with all her canvas set and a breeze,
-getting more and more involved. See the two Capes of Dungsby or
-Duncansby, and Dunnet-head, between which lies the celebrated John
-o' Groat's house, on the north-eastern extremity of Scotland. The
-shores of Caithness rise bold and rocky before us,--a contrast to
-the Orkneys, which are all low, excepting the Island of Hoy. On
-Duncansby-head appear some remarkable rocks, like towers, called the
-Stacks of Duncansby. Near this shore runs the remarkable breaking
-tide called the _Merry Men of Mey_, whence Mackenzie takes the
-scenery of a poem--
-
- 'Where the dancing Men of Mey,
- Speed the current to the land.'[75]
-
-Here, according to his locality, the Caithness-man witnessed the
-vision, in which was introduced the song, translated by Gray, under
-the title of The Fatal Sisters. On this subject, Mr. Baikie told me
-the following remarkable circumstance: A clergyman told him, that
-while some remnants of the Norse were yet spoken in North Ronaldsha,
-he carried thither the translation of Mr. Gray, then newly
-published, and read it to some of the old people as referring to the
-ancient history of their islands. But so soon as he had proceeded a
-little way, they exclaimed they knew it very well in the original,
-and had often sung it to himself when he asked them for an old Norse
-song; they called it The Enchantresses.--The breeze dies away
-between two wicked little islands called Swona and Stroma,--the
-latter belonging to Caithness, the former to Orkney.--_Nota Bene_.
-The inhabitants of the rest of the Orcades despise those of Swona
-for eating limpets, as being the last of human meannesses. Every
-land has its fashions. The Fair-Isles-men disdain Orkney-men for
-eating dog-fish. Both islands have dangerous reefs and whirlpools,
-where, even in this fine day, the tide rages furiously. Indeed, the
-large high unbroken billows, which at every swell hide from our deck
-each distant object, plainly intimate what a dreadful current this
-must be when vexed by high or adverse winds. Finding ourselves
-losing ground in the tide, and unwilling to waste time, we give up
-Thurso--run back into the roadstead or bay of Long-Hope, and anchor
-under the fort. The bay has four entrances and safe anchorage in
-most winds, and having become a great rendezvous for shipping (there
-are nine vessels lying here at present) has been an object of
-attention with Government.
-
-"Went ashore after dinner, and visited the fort, which is only
-partly completed: it is a _flêche_ to the sea, with eight guns,
-twenty-four pounders, but without any land defences; the guns are
-mounted _en barbette_, without embrasures, each upon a kind of
-movable stage, which stage wheeling upon a pivot in front, and
-traversing by means of wheels behind, can be pointed in any
-direction that may be thought necessary. Upon this stage, the
-gun-carriage moves forward and recoils, and the depth of the parapet
-shelters the men even better than an embrasure. At a little distance
-from this battery they are building a Martello tower, which is to
-cross the fire of the battery, and also that of another projected
-tower upon the opposite point of the bay. The expedience of these
-towers seems excessively problematical. Supposing them impregnable,
-or nearly so, a garrison of fourteen or fifteen men may be always
-blockaded by a very trifling number, while the enemy dispose of all
-in the vicinity at their pleasure. In the case of Long-Hope, for
-instance, a frigate might disembark 100 men, take the fort in the
-rear, where it is undefended even by a palisade, destroy the
-magazines, spike and dismount the cannon, carry off or cut out any
-vessels in the roadstead, and accomplish all the purposes that could
-bring them to so remote a spot, in spite of a sergeant's party in
-the Martello tower, and without troubling themselves about them at
-all. Meanwhile, Long-Hope will one day turn out a flourishing place;
-there will soon be taverns and slop-shops, where sailors rendezvous
-in such numbers; then will come quays, docks, and warehouses; and
-then a thriving town. Amen, so be it. This is the first fine day we
-have enjoyed to an end since Sunday, 31st ult. Rainy, cold, and
-hazy, have been our voyages around these wild islands; I hope the
-weather begins to mend, though Mr. Wilson, our master, threatens a
-breeze to-morrow. We are to attempt the Skerries, if possible; if
-not, we will, I believe, go to Stromness.
-
-"_15th August, 1814._--Fine morning. We get again into the Pentland
-Frith, and with the aid of a pilot-boat belonging to the lighthouse
-service, from South Ronaldsha, we attempt the Skerries.
-Notwithstanding the fair weather, we have a specimen of the violence
-of the flood-tide, which forms whirlpools on the shallow sunken
-rocks by the islands of Swona and Stroma, and in the deep water
-makes strange, smooth, whirling, and swelling eddies, called by the
-sailors, _wells_. We run through the _wells of Tuftile_ in
-particular, which, in the least stress of weather, wheel a large
-ship round and round, without respect either to helm or sails. Hence
-the distinction of _wells_ and _waves_ in Old English; the _well_
-being that smooth, glassy, oily-looking eddy, the force of which
-seems to the eye almost resistless. The bursting of the waves in
-foam around these strange eddies has a bewildering and confused
-appearance, which it is impossible to describe. Get off the Skerries
-about ten o'clock, and land easily; it is the first time a boat has
-got there for several days. The _Skerries_[76] is an island about
-sixty acres, of fine short herbage, belonging to Lord Dundas; it is
-surrounded by a reef of precipitous rocks, not very high, but
-inaccessible, unless where the ocean has made ravines among them,
-and where stairs have been cut down to the water for the lighthouse
-service. Those inlets have a romantic appearance, and have been
-christened by the sailors, the Parliament House, the Seals'
-Lying-in-Hospital, etc. The last inlet, after rushing through a deep
-chasm, which is open overhead, is continued under ground, and then
-again opens to the sky in the middle of the island; in this hole the
-seals bring out their whelps; when the tide is high, the waves rise
-up through this aperture in the middle of the isle--like the blowing
-of a whale in noise and appearance. There is another round cauldron
-of solid rock, to which the waves have access through a natural arch
-in the rock, having another and lesser arch rising just above it; in
-hard weather, the waves rush through both apertures with a horrid
-noise; the workmen called it the Carron Blast, and, indeed, the
-variety of noises which issued from the abyss, somewhat reminded me
-of that engine. Take my rifle, and walk round the cliffs in search
-of seals, but see none, and only disturb the digestion of certain
-aldermen-cormorants, who were sitting on the points of the crags
-after a good fish breakfast; only made one good shot out of four.
-The lighthouse is too low, and on the old construction, yet it is of
-the last importance. The keeper is an old man-of-war's-man, of whom
-Mr. Stevenson observed that he was a great swearer when he first
-came; but after a year or two's residence in this solitary abode,
-became a changed man. There are about fifty head of cattle on the
-island; they must be got in and off with great danger and
-difficulty. There is no water upon the isle, except what remains
-after rain in some pools; these sometimes dry in summer, and the
-cattle are reduced to great straits. Leave the isle about one; and
-the wind and tide being favorable, crowd all sail, and get on at the
-rate of fourteen miles an hour. Soon reach our old anchorage at the
-Long-Hope, and passing, stand to the north-westward, up the Sound of
-Hoy, for Stromness.
-
-"I should have mentioned, that in going down the Pentland Frith this
-morning, we saw Johnnie Groat's house, or rather the place where it
-stood, now occupied by a storehouse. Our pilot opines there was no
-such man as Johnnie Groat, for, he says, he cannot hear that anybody
-_ever saw him_. This reasoning would put down most facts of
-antiquity. They gather shells on the shore, called _Johnnie Groat's
-buckies_, but I cannot procure any at present. I may also add, that
-the interpretation given to _wells_ may apply to the Wells of Slain,
-in the fine ballad of Clerk Colvill; such eddies in the romantic
-vicinity of Slains Castle would be a fine place for a mermaid.[77]
-
-"Our wind fails us, and, what is worse, becomes westerly. The Sound
-has now the appearance of a fine land-locked bay, the passages
-between the several islands being scarce visible. We have a superb
-view of Kirkwall Cathedral, with a strong gleam of sunshine upon it.
-Gloomy weather begins to collect around us, particularly on the
-island of Hoy, which, covered with gloom and vapor, now assumes a
-majestic mountainous character. On Pomona we pass the Hill of
-Orphir, which reminds me of the clergyman of that parish, who was
-called to account for some of his inaccuracies to the General
-Assembly; one charge he held particularly cheap, namely, that of
-drunkenness. 'Reverend Moderator,' said he, in reply, 'I _do_ drink,
-as other gentlemen do.' This Orphir of the north must not be
-confounded with the Orphir of the south. From the latter came gold,
-silver, and precious stones; the former seems to produce little
-except peats. Yet these are precious commodities, which some of the
-Orkney Isles altogether want, and lay waste and burn the turf of
-their land instead of importing coal from Newcastle. The Orcadians
-seem by no means an alert or active race; they neglect the excellent
-fisheries which lie under their very noses, and in their mode of
-managing their boats, as well as in the general tone of urbanity and
-intelligence, are excelled by the less favored Zetlanders. I observe
-they always crowd their boat with people in the bows, being the
-ready way to send her down in any awkward circumstance. There are
-remains of their Norwegian descent and language in North Ronaldsha,
-an isle I regret we did not see. A missionary preacher came ashore
-there a year or two since, but being a very little black-bearded
-unshaved man, the seniors of the isle suspected him of being an
-ancient Pecht or Pict, and _no canny_, of course. The schoolmaster
-came down to entreat our worthy Mr. Stevenson, then about to leave
-the island, to come up and verify whether the preacher was an
-ancient Pecht, yea or no. Finding apologies were in vain, he rode up
-to the house where the unfortunate preacher, after three nights'
-watching, had got to bed, little conceiving under what odious
-suspicion he had fallen. As Mr. S. declined disturbing him, his
-boots were produced, which being a _little_--_little_--_very little_
-pair, confirmed, in the opinion of all the bystanders, the suspicion
-of Pechtism. Mr. S. therefore found it necessary to go into the poor
-man's sleeping apartment, where he recognized one Campbell,
-heretofore an ironmonger in Edinburgh, but who had put his hand for
-some years to the missionary plough; of course he warranted his
-quondam acquaintance to be no ancient Pecht. Mr. Stevenson carried
-the same schoolmaster who figured in the adventure of the Pecht, to
-the mainland of Scotland, to be examined for his office. He was
-extremely desirous to see a tree; and, on seeing one, desired to
-know what _girss_ it was that grew at the top on't--the leaves
-appearing to him to be grass. They still speak a little Norse, and
-indeed I hear every day words of that language; for instance, _Ja,
-kul_, for '_Yes, sir_.' We creep slowly up Hoy Sound, working under
-the Pomona shore; but there is no hope of reaching Stromness till we
-have the assistance of the evening tide. The channel now seems like
-a Highland loch; not the least ripple on the waves. The passage is
-narrowed, and (to the eye) blocked up by the interposition of the
-green and apparently fertile isle of Græmsay, the property of Lord
-Armadale.[78] Hoy looks yet grander, from comparing its black and
-steep mountains with this verdant isle. To add to the beauty of the
-Sound, it is rendered lively by the successive appearance of seven
-or eight whaling vessels from Davies' Straits; large strong ships,
-which pass successively, with all their sails set, enjoying the
-little wind that is. Many of these vessels display the _garland_;
-that is, a wreath of ribbons which the young fellows on board have
-got from their sweethearts, or come by otherwise, and which hangs
-between the foremast and mainmast, surmounted sometimes by a small
-model of the vessel. This garland is hung up upon the 1st of May,
-and remains till they come into port. I believe we shall dodge here
-till the tide makes about nine, and then get into Stromness: no
-boatman or sailor in Orkney thinks of the wind in comparison of the
-tides and currents. We must not complain, though the night gets
-rainy, and the Hill of Hoy is now completely invested with vapor and
-mist. In the forepart of the day we executed very cleverly a task of
-considerable difficulty and even danger.
-
-"_16th August, 1814._--Get into Stromness Bay, and anchor before the
-party are up. A most decided rain all night. The bay is formed by a
-deep indention in the mainland, or Pomona; on one side of which
-stands Stromness--a fishing village and harbor of _call_ for the
-Davies' Straits whalers, as Lerwick is for the Greenlanders. Betwixt
-the vessels we met yesterday, seven or eight which passed us this
-morning, and several others still lying in the bay, we have seen
-between twenty and thirty of these large ships in this remote place.
-The opposite side of Stromness Bay is protected by Hoy, and Græmsay
-lies between them; so that the bay seems quite land-locked, and the
-contrast between the mountains of Hoy, the soft verdure of Græmsay,
-and the swelling hill of Orphir on the mainland, has a beautiful
-effect. The day clears up, and Mr. Rae, Lord Armadale's factor,
-comes off from his house, called Clestrom, upon the shore opposite
-to Stromness, to breakfast with us. We go ashore with him. His farm
-is well cultivated, and he has procured an excellent breed of horses
-from Lanarkshire, of which county he is a native; strong hardy
-Galloways, fit for labor or hacks. By this we profited, as Mr. Rae
-mounted us all, and we set off to visit the Standing Stones of
-Stenhouse or Stennis.
-
-"At the upper end of the bay, about halfway between Clestrom and
-Stromness, there extends a loch of considerable size, of fresh
-water, but communicating with the sea by apertures left in a long
-bridge or causeway which divides them. After riding about two miles
-along this lake, we open another called the Loch of Harray, of about
-the same dimensions, and communicating with the lower lake, as the
-former does with the sea, by a stream, over which is constructed a
-causeway, with openings to suffer the flow and reflux of the water,
-as both lakes are affected by the tide. Upon the tongues of land
-which, approaching each other, divide the lakes of Stennis and
-Harray, are situated the Standing Stones. The isthmus on the eastern
-side exhibits a semicircle of immensely large upright pillars of
-unhewn stone, surrounded by a mound of earth. As the mound is
-discontinued, it does not seem that the circle was ever completed.
-The flat or open part of the semicircle looks up a plain, where, at
-a distance, is seen a large tumulus. The highest of these stones may
-be about sixteen or seventeen feet, and I think there are none so
-low as twelve feet. At irregular distances are pointed out other
-unhewn pillars of the same kind. One, a little to the westward, is
-perforated with a round hole, perhaps to bind a victim; or rather, I
-conjecture, for the purpose of solemnly attesting the deity, which
-the Scandinavians did by passing their head through a ring,--_vide_
-Eyrbiggia Saga. Several barrows are scattered around this strange
-monument. Upon the opposite isthmus is a complete circle, of
-ninety-five paces in diameter, surrounded by standing stones, less
-in size than the others, being only from ten or twelve to fourteen
-feet in height, and four in breadth. A deep trench is drawn around
-this circle on the outside of the pillars, and four tumuli, or
-mounds of earth, are regularly placed, two on each side.
-
-"Stonehenge excels these monuments, but I fancy they are otherwise
-unparalleled in Britain. The idea that such circles were exclusively
-Druidical is now justly exploded. The northern nations all used such
-erections to mark their places of meeting, whether for religious
-purposes or civil policy; and there is repeated mention of them in
-the Sagas. See the Eyrbiggia Saga,[79] for the establishment of the
-Helga-fels, or holy mount, where the people held their Comitia, and
-where sacrifices were offered to Thor and Woden. About the centre of
-the semicircle is a broad flat stone, probably once the altar on
-which human victims were sacrificed.--Mr. Rae seems to think the
-common people have no tradition of the purpose of these stones, but
-probably he has not inquired particularly. He admits they look upon
-them with superstitious reverence; and it is evident that those
-which have fallen down (about half the original number) have been
-wasted by time, and not demolished. The materials of these monuments
-lay near, for the shores and bottom of the lake are of the same kind
-of rock. How they were raised, transported, and placed upright, is a
-puzzling question. In our ride back, noticed a round entrenchment,
-or _tumulus_, called the Hollow of Tongue.
-
-"The hospitality of Mrs. Rae detained us to an early dinner at
-Clestrom. About four o'clock took our long-boat and rowed down the
-bay to visit the Dwarfie Stone of Hoy. We have all day been pleased
-with the romantic appearance of that island, for though the Hill of
-Hoy is not very high, perhaps about 1200 feet, yet rising
-perpendicularly (almost) from the sea, and being very steep and
-furrowed with ravines, and catching all the mists from the western
-ocean, it has a noble and picturesque effect in every point of view.
-We land upon the island, and proceed up a long and very swampy
-valley broken into peat-bogs. The one side of this valley is formed
-by the Mountain of Hoy, the other by another steep hill, having at
-the top a circular belt of rock; upon the slope of this last hill,
-and just where the principal mountain opens into a wide and
-precipitous and circular _corrie_ or hollow, lies the Dwarfie Stone.
-It is a huge sandstone rock, of one solid stone, being about seven
-feet high, twenty-two feet long, and seventeen feet broad. The upper
-end of this stone is hewn into a sort of apartment containing two
-beds of stone and a passage between them. The uppermost and largest
-is five feet eight inches long, by two feet broad, and is furnished
-with a stone pillow. The lower, supposed for the Dwarf's Wife, is
-shorter, and rounded off, instead of being square at the corners.
-The entrance may be about three feet and a half square. Before it
-lies a huge stone, apparently intended to serve the purpose of a
-door, and shaped accordingly. In the top, over the passage which
-divides the beds, there is a hole to serve for a window or chimney,
-which was doubtless originally wrought square with irons, like the
-rest of the work, but has been broken out by violence into a
-shapeless hole. Opposite to this stone, and proceeding from it in a
-line down the valley, are several small barrows, and there is a very
-large one on the same line, at the spot where we landed. This seems
-to indicate that the monument is of heathen times, and probably was
-meant as the temple of some northern edition of the _Dii Manes_.
-There are no symbols of Christian devotion--and the door is to the
-westward; it therefore does not seem to have been the abode of a
-hermit, as Dr. Barry[80] has conjectured. The Orcadians have no
-tradition on the subject, excepting that they believe it to be the
-work of a dwarf, to whom, like their ancestors, they attribute
-supernatural powers and malevolent disposition. They conceive he may
-be seen sometimes sitting at the door of his abode, but he vanishes
-on a nearer approach. Whoever inhabited this den certainly enjoyed
-
- 'Pillow cold and sheets not warm.'
-
-"Duff, Stevenson, and I now walk along the skirts of the Hill of
-Hoy, to rejoin Robert Hamilton, who in the mean while had rode down
-to the clergyman's house, the wet and boggy walk not suiting his
-gout. Arrive at the manse completely wet, and drink tea there. The
-clergyman (Mr. Hamilton) has procured some curious specimens of
-natural history for Bullock's Museum, particularly a pair of fine
-eaglets. He has just got another of the golden, or white kind, which
-he intends to send him. The eagle, with every other ravenous bird,
-abounds among the almost inaccessible precipices of Hoy, which
-afford them shelter, while the moors, abounding with grouse, and the
-small uninhabited islands and holms, where sheep and lambs are
-necessarily left unwatched, as well as the all-sustaining ocean,
-give these birds of prey the means of support. The clergyman told us
-that a man was very lately alive in the island of ....., who,
-when an infant, was transported from thence by an eagle over a broad
-sound, or arm of the sea, to the bird's nest in Hoy. Pursuit being
-instantly made, and the eagle's nest being known, the infant was
-found there playing with the young eaglets. A more ludicrous
-instance of transportation he himself witnessed. Walking in the
-fields, he heard the squeaking of a pig for some time, without being
-able to discern whence it proceeded, until looking up, he beheld the
-unfortunate grunter in the talons of an eagle, who soared away with
-him towards the summit of Hoy. From this it may be conjectured, that
-the island is very thinly inhabited; in fact, we only saw two or
-three little wigwams. After tea we walked a mile farther, to a point
-where the boat was lying, in order to secure the advantage of the
-flood-tide. We rowed with toil across one stream of tide, which set
-strongly up between Græmsay and Hoy; but, on turning the point of
-Græmsay, the other branch of the same flood-tide carried us with
-great velocity alongside our yacht, which we reached about nine
-o'clock. Between riding, walking, and running, we have spent a very
-active and entertaining day.
-
-"_Domestic Memoranda._--The eggs on Zetland and Orkney are very
-indifferent, having an earthy taste, and being very small. But the
-hogs are an excellent breed--queer wild-looking creatures, with
-heads like wild-boars, but making capital bacon."
-
-
-Footnotes of the Chapter XXIX.
-
-[74: "This noted oppressor was finally brought to trial,
-and beheaded at the Cross of Edinburgh (6th February, 1614). It is
-said that the King's mood was considerably heated against him by
-some ill-chosen and worse written Latin inscriptions with which his
-father and himself had been unlucky enough to decorate some of their
-insular palaces. In one of these, Earl Robert, the father, had given
-his own designation thus: 'Orcadiæ Comes _Rex_ Jacobi Quinti
-Filius.' In this case he was not, perhaps, guilty of anything worse
-than bad Latin. But James VI., who had a keen nose for puzzling out
-treason, and with whom an assault and battery upon Priscian ranked
-in nearly the same degree of crime, had little doubt that the use of
-the nominative _Rex_, instead of the genitive _Regis_, had a
-treasonable savor."--Scott's _Miscellaneous Prose Works_, vol.
-xxiii. p. 232.]
-
-[75: Henry Mackenzie's Introduction to _The Fatal
-Sisters_.--_Works_, 1808, vol. viii. p. 63.]
-
-[76: "A Skerrie means a flattish rock which the sea does
-not overflow."--Edmonstone's _View of the Zetlands_.]
-
-[77: Clerk Colvill falls a sacrifice to a meeting with "a
-fair Mermaid," whom he found washing her "Sark of Silk" on this
-romantic shore. He had been warned by his "gay lady" in these
-words:--
-
- "O promise me now, Clerk Colvill,
- Or it will cost ye muckle strife,
- Ride never by the Wells of Slane,
- If ye wad live and brook your life."]
-
-[78: Sir William Honeyman, Bart.--a Judge of the Court of
-Session by the title of Lord Armadale.]
-
-[79: _Miscellaneous Prose Works_, vol. v. p. 355.]
-
-[80: _History of the Orkney Islands_, by the Rev. George
-Barry, D. D., 4to, Edinburgh, 1805.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX
-
- DIARY CONTINUED. -- STROMNESS. -- BESSY MILLIE'S CHARM. -- CAPE
- WRATH. -- CAVE OF SMOWE. -- THE HEBRIDES. -- SCALPA, ETC.
-
-1814
-
-
-"_Off Stromness, 17th August, 1814._--Went on shore after breakfast,
-and found W. Erskine and Marjoribanks had been in this town all last
-night, without our hearing of them or they of us. No letters from
-Abbotsford or Edinburgh. Stromness is a little dirty straggling
-town, which cannot be traversed by a cart, or even by a horse, for
-there are stairs up and down, even in the principal streets. We
-paraded its whole length like turkeys in a string, I suppose to
-satisfy ourselves that there was a worse town in the Orkneys than
-the metropolis, Kirkwall. We clomb, by steep and dirty lanes, an
-eminence rising above the town, and commanding a fine view. An old
-hag lives in a wretched cabin on this height, and subsists by
-selling winds. Each captain of a merchantman, between jest and
-earnest, gives the old woman sixpence, and she boils her kettle to
-procure a favorable gale. She was a miserable figure; upwards of
-ninety, she told us, and dried up like a mummy. A sort of
-clay-colored cloak, folded over her head, corresponded in color to
-her corpselike complexion. Fine light-blue eyes, and nose and chin
-that almost met, and a ghastly expression of cunning, gave her quite
-the effect of Hecate. She told us she remembered _Gow the pirate_,
-who was born near the House of Clestrom, and afterwards commenced
-buccaneer. He came to his native country about 1725, with a _snow_
-which he commanded, carried off two women from one of the islands,
-and committed other enormities. At length, while he was dining in a
-house in the island of Eda, the islanders, headed by Malcolm Laing's
-grandfather, made him prisoner, and sent him to London, where he
-was hanged. While at Stromness, he made love to a Miss Gordon, who
-pledged her faith to him by shaking hands, an engagement which, in
-her idea, could not be dissolved without her going to London to seek
-back again her 'faith and troth,' by shaking hands with him again
-after execution. We left our Pythoness, who assured us there was
-nothing evil in the intercession she was to make for us, but that we
-were only to have a fair wind through the benefit of her prayers.
-She repeated a sort of rigmarole which I suppose she had ready for
-such occasions, and seemed greatly delighted and surprised with the
-amount of our donation, as everybody gave her a trifle, our faithful
-Captain Wilson making the regular offering on behalf of the ship. So
-much for buying a wind. Bessy Millie's habitation is airy enough for
-Æolus himself, but if she is a special favorite with that divinity,
-he has a strange choice. In her house I remarked a quern, or
-hand-mill.--A cairn, a little higher, commands a beautiful view of
-the bay, with its various entrances and islets. Here we found the
-vestiges of a bonfire, lighted in memory of the battle of
-Bannockburn, concerning which every part of Scotland has its
-peculiar traditions. The Orcadians say that a Norwegian prince, then
-their ruler, called by them Harold, brought 1400 men of Orkney to
-the assistance of Bruce, and that the King, at a critical period of
-the engagement, touched him with his scabbard, saying, 'The day is
-against us.'--'I trust,' returned the Orcadian, 'your Grace will
-_venture again_;' which has given rise to their motto, and passed
-into a proverb. On board at half-past three, and find Bessy Millie a
-woman of her word, for the expected breeze has sprung up, if it but
-last us till we double Cape Wrath. Weigh anchor (I hope) to bid
-farewell to Orkney.[81]
-
-"The land in Orkney is, generally speaking, excellent, and what is
-not fitted for the plough is admirably adapted for pasture. But the
-cultivation is very bad, and the mode of using these extensive
-commons, where they tear up, without remorse, the turf of the
-finest pasture, in order to make fuel, is absolutely execrable. The
-practice has already peeled and exhausted much fine land, and must
-in the end ruin the country entirely. In other respects, their mode
-of cultivation is to manure for barley and oats, and then manure
-again, and this without the least idea of fallow or green crops. Mr.
-Rae thinks that his example--and he farms very well--has had no
-effect upon the natives, except in the article of potatoes, which
-they now cultivate a little more, but crops of turnips are unknown.
-For this slovenly labor the Orcadians cannot, like the Shetland men,
-plead the occupation of fishing, which is wholly neglected by them,
-excepting that about this time of the year all the people turn out
-for the dogfish, the liver of which affords oil, and the bodies are
-a food as much valued here by the lower classes as it is contemned
-in Shetland. We saw nineteen boats out at this work. But cod, tusk,
-ling, haddocks, etc., which abound round these isles, are totally
-neglected. Their inferiority in husbandry is therefore to be
-ascribed to the prejudices of the people, who are all peasants of
-the lowest order. On Lord Armadale's estate, the number of tenantry
-amounts to 300, and the average of rent is about seven pounds each.
-What can be expected from such a distribution? and how is the
-necessary restriction to take place, without the greatest immediate
-distress and hardship to these poor creatures? It is the hardest
-chapter in Economics; and if I were an Orcadian laird, I feel I
-should shuffle on with the old useless creatures, in contradiction
-to my better judgment. Stock is improved in these islands, and the
-horses seem to be better bred than in Shetland; at least, I have
-seen more clever animals. The good horses find a ready sale; Mr. Rae
-gets twenty guineas readily for a colt of his rearing--to be sure,
-they are very good.
-
-"_Six o'clock._--Our breeze has carried us through the Mouth of Hoy,
-and so into the Atlantic. The north-western face of the island forms
-a ledge of high perpendicular cliffs, which might have surprised us
-more, had we not already seen the Ord of Bressay, the Noup of Noss,
-and the precipices of the Fair Isle. But these are formidable
-enough. One projecting cliff, from the peculiarities of its form,
-has acquired the name of the Old Man of Hoy, and is well known to
-mariners as marking the entrance to the Mouth. The other jaw of this
-mouth is formed by a lower range of crags, called the Burgh of
-Birsa. The access through this strait would be easy, were it not for
-the Island of Græmsay, lying in the very throat of the passage, and
-two other islands covering the entrance to the harbor of Stromness.
-Græmsay is infamous for shipwrecks, and the chance of these
-_God-sends_, as they were impiously called, is said sometimes to
-have doubled the value of the land. In Stromness, I saw many of the
-sad relics of shipwrecked vessels applied to very odd purposes, and
-indeed to all sorts of occasions. The gates, or _grinds_, as they
-are here called, are usually of ship planks and timbers, and so are
-their bridges, etc. These casualties are now much less common since
-the lights on the Skerries and the Start have been established.
-Enough of memoranda for the present.--We have hitherto kept our
-course pretty well; and a King's ship about eighteen guns or so, two
-miles upon our lee-boom, has shortened sail, apparently to take us
-under her wing, which may not be altogether unnecessary in the
-latitude of Cape Wrath, where several vessels have been taken by
-Yankee-Doodle. The sloop of war looks as if she could bite hard, and
-is supposed by our folks to be the Malay. If we can speak the
-captain, we will invite him to some grouse, or send him some, as he
-likes best, for Marchie's campaign was very successful.
-
-"_18th August, 1814._--Bessy Millie's charm has failed us. After a
-rainy night, the wind has come round to the north-west, and is
-getting almost contrary. We have weathered Whitten-head, however,
-and Cape Wrath, the north-western extremity of Britain, is now in
-sight. The weather gets rainy and squally. Hamilton and Erskine keep
-their berths. Duff and I sit upon deck, like two great bears, wrapt
-in watch-cloaks, the sea flying over us every now and then. At
-length, after a sound buffeting with the rain, the doubling Cape
-Wrath with this wind is renounced as impracticable, and we stand
-away for Loch Eribol, a lake running into the extensive country of
-Lord Reay. No sickness; we begin to get hardy sailors in that
-particular. The ground rises upon us very bold and mountainous,
-especially a very high steep mountain, called Ben-y-Hope, at the
-head of a lake called Loch Hope. The weather begins to mitigate as
-we get under the lee of the land. Loch Eribol opens, running up into
-a wild and barren scene of crags and hills. The proper anchorage is
-said to be at the head of the lake, but to go eight miles up so
-narrow an inlet would expose us to be wind-bound. A pilot-boat comes
-off from Mr. Anderson's house, a principal tacksman of Lord Reay's.
-After some discussion we anchor within a reef of sunken rocks,
-nearly opposite to Mr. Anderson's house of Rispan; the situation is
-not, we are given to understand, altogether without danger if the
-wind should blow hard, but it is now calm. In front of our anchorage
-a few shapeless patches of land, not exceeding a few yards in
-diameter, have been prepared for corn by the spade, and bear
-wretched crops. All the rest of the view is utter barrenness; the
-distant hills, we are told, contain plenty of deer, being part of a
-forest belonging to Lord Reay, who is proprietor of all the
-extensive range of desolation now under our eye. The water has been
-kinder than the land, for we hear of plenty of salmon, and haddocks,
-and lobsters, and send our faithful minister of the interior, John
-Peters, the steward, to procure some of those good things of this
-very indifferent land, and to invite Mr. Anderson to dine with us.
-Four o'clock,--John has just returned, successful in both
-commissions, and the evening concludes pleasantly.
-
-"_19th August, 1814, Loch Eribol, near Cape Wrath._--Went off before
-eight A. M. to breakfast with our friend Mr. Anderson. His house,
-invisible from the vessel at her moorings, and indeed from any part
-of the entrance into Loch Eribol, is a very comfortable one, lying
-obscured behind a craggy eminence. A little creek, winding up behind
-the crag, and in front of the house, forms a small harbor, and gives
-a romantic air of concealment and snugness. There we found a ship
-upon the stocks, built from the keel by a Highland carpenter, who
-had magnanimously declined receiving assistance from any of the
-ship-carpenters who happened to be here occasionally, lest it should
-be said he could not have finished his task without their aid. An
-ample Highland breakfast of excellent new-taken herring, equal to
-those of Lochfine, fresh haddocks, fresh eggs, and fresh butter, not
-forgetting the bottle of whiskey, and bannocks of barley, and
-oat-cakes, with the Lowland luxuries of tea and coffee. After
-breakfast, took the long-boat, and, under Mr. Anderson's pilotage,
-row to see a remarkable natural curiosity, called Uamh Smowe, or the
-Largest Cave. Stevenson, Marchie, and Duff go by land. Take the
-fowling-piece, and shoot some sea-fowl and a large hawk of an
-uncommon appearance. Fire four shots, and kill three times. After
-rowing about three miles to the westward of the entrance from the
-sea to Loch Eribol, we enter a creek, between two ledges of very
-high rocks, and landing, find ourselves in front of the wonder we
-came to see. The exterior apartment of the cavern opens under a
-tremendous rock, facing the creek, and occupies the full space of
-the ravine where we landed. From the top of the rock to the base of
-the cavern, as we afterwards discovered by plumb, is eighty feet, of
-which the height of the arch is fifty-three feet; the rest, being
-twenty-seven feet, is occupied by the precipitous rock under which
-it opens; the width is fully in proportion to this great height,
-being 110 feet. The depth of this exterior cavern is 200 feet, and
-it is apparently supported by an intermediate column of natural
-rock. Being open to daylight and the sea-air, the cavern is
-perfectly clean and dry, and the sides are incrusted with
-stalactites. This immense cavern is so well proportioned, that I was
-not aware of its extraordinary height and extent, till I saw our two
-friends, who had somewhat preceded us, having made the journey by
-land, appearing like pigmies among its recesses. Afterwards, on
-entering the cave, I climbed up a sloping rock at its extremity, and
-was much struck with the prospect, looking outward from this
-magnificent arched cavern upon our boat and its crew, the view being
-otherwise bounded by the ledge of rocks which formed each side of
-the creek. We now propose to investigate the farther wonders of the
-cave of Smowe. In the right or west side of the cave opens an
-interior cavern of a different aspect. The height of this second
-passage may be about twelve or fourteen feet, and its breadth about
-six or eight, neatly formed into a Gothic portal by the hand of
-nature. The lower part of this porch is closed by a ledge of rock,
-rising to the height of between five and six feet, and which I can
-compare to nothing but the hatch-door of a shop. Beneath this hatch
-a brook finds its way out, forms a black deep pool before the Gothic
-archway, and then escapes to the sea, and forms the creek in which
-we landed. It is somewhat difficult to approach this strange pass,
-so as to gain a view into the interior of the cavern. By clambering
-along a broken and dangerous cliff, you can, however, look into it;
-but only so far as to see a twilight space filled with dark-colored
-water in great agitation, and representing a subterranean lake,
-moved by some fearful convulsion of nature. How this pond is
-supplied with water you cannot see from even this point of vantage,
-but you are made partly sensible of the truth by a sound like the
-dashing of a sullen cataract within the bowels of the earth. Here
-the adventure has usually been abandoned, and Mr. Anderson only
-mentioned two travellers whose curiosity had led them farther. We
-were resolved, however, to see the adventures of this new cave of
-Montesinos to an end. Duff had already secured the use of a fisher's
-boat and its hands, our own long-boat being too heavy and far too
-valuable to be ventured upon this Cocytus. Accordingly the skiff was
-dragged up the brook to the rocky ledge or hatch which barred up the
-interior cavern, and there, by force of hands, our boat's crew and
-two or three fishers first raised the boat's bow upon the ledge of
-rock, then brought her to a level, being poised upon that narrow
-hatch, and lastly launched her down into the dark and deep
-subterranean lake within. The entrance was so narrow, and the boat
-so clumsy, that we, who were all this while clinging to the rock
-like sea-fowl, and with scarce more secure footing, were greatly
-alarmed for the safety of our trusty sailors. At the instant when
-the boat sloped inward to the cave, a Highlander threw himself into
-it with great boldness and dexterity, and, at the expense of some
-bruises, shared its precipitate fall into the waters under the
-earth. This dangerous exploit was to prevent the boat drifting away
-from us, but a cord at its stern would have been a safer and surer
-expedient.
-
-"When our _enfant perdu_ had recovered breath and legs, he brought
-the boat back to the entrance, and took us in. We now found
-ourselves embarked on a deep black pond of an irregular form, the
-rocks rising like a dome all around us, and high over our heads. The
-light, a sort of dubious twilight, was derived from two chasms in
-the roof of the vault, for that offered by the entrance was but
-trifling. Down one of those rents there poured from the height of
-eighty feet, in a sheet of foam, the brook, which, after supplying
-the subterranean pond with water, finds its way out beneath the
-ledge of rock that blocks its entrance. The other skylight, if I may
-so term it, looks out at the clear blue sky. It is impossible for
-description to explain the impression made by so strange a place, to
-which we had been conveyed with so much difficulty. The cave
-itself, the pool, the cataract, would have been each separate
-objects of wonder, but all united together, and affecting at once
-the ear, the eye, and the imagination, their effect is
-indescribable. The length of this pond, or loch as the people here
-call it, is seventy feet over, the breadth about thirty at the
-narrowest point, and it is of great depth.
-
-"As we resolved to proceed, we directed the boat to a natural arch
-on the right hand, or west side of the cataract. This archway was
-double, a high arch being placed above a very low one, as in a Roman
-aqueduct. The ledge of rock which forms this lower arch is not above
-two feet and a half high above the water, and under this we were to
-pass in the boat; so that we were fain to pile ourselves flat upon
-each other like a layer of herrings. By this judicious disposition
-we were pushed in safety beneath this low-browed rock into a region
-of utter darkness. For this, however, we were provided, for we had a
-tinder-box and lights. The view back upon the twilight lake we had
-crossed, its sullen eddies wheeling round and round, and its echoes
-resounding to the ceaseless thunder of the waterfall, seemed dismal
-enough, and was aggravated by temporary darkness, and in some degree
-by a sense of danger. The lights, however, dispelled the latter
-sensation, if it prevailed to any extent, and we now found ourselves
-in a narrow cavern, sloping somewhat upward from the water. We got
-out of the boat, proceeded along some slippery places upon shelves
-of the rock, and gained the dry land. I cannot say _dry_, excepting
-comparatively. We were then in an arched cave, twelve feet high in
-the roof, and about eight feet in breadth, which went winding into
-the bowels of the earth for about an hundred feet. The sides, being
-(like those of the whole cavern) of limestone rock, were covered
-with stalactites, and with small drops of water like dew, glancing
-like ten thousand thousand sets of birthday diamonds under the glare
-of our lights. In some places these stalactites branch out into
-broad and curious ramifications, resembling coral and the foliage of
-submarine plants.
-
-"When we reached the extremity of this passage, we found it declined
-suddenly to a horrible ugly gulf, or well, filled with dark water,
-and of great depth, over which the rock closed. We threw in stones,
-which indicated great profundity by their sound; and growing more
-familiar with the horrors of this den, we sounded with an oar, and
-found about ten feet depth at the entrance, but discovered in the
-same manner, that the gulf extended under the rock, deepening as it
-went, God knows how far. Imagination can figure few deaths more
-horrible than to be sucked under these rocks into some unfathomable
-abyss, where your corpse could never be found to give intimation of
-your fate. A water kelpy, or an evil spirit of any aquatic
-propensities, could not choose a fitter abode; and, to say the
-truth, I believe at our first entrance, and when all our feelings
-were afloat at the novelty of the scene, the unexpected plashing of
-a seal would have routed the whole dozen of us. The mouth of this
-ugly gulf was all covered with slimy alluvious substances, which led
-Mr. Stevenson to observe, that it could have no separate source, but
-must be fed from the waters of the outer lake and brook, as it lay
-upon the same level, and seemed to rise and fall with them, without
-having anything to indicate a separate current of its own. Rounding
-this perilous hole, or gulf, upon the aforesaid alluvious
-substances, which formed its shores, we reached the extremity of the
-cavern, which there ascends like a vent, or funnel, directly up a
-sloping precipice, but hideously black and slippery from wet and
-sea-weeds. One of our sailors, a Zetlander, climbed up a good way,
-and by holding up a light, we could plainly perceive that this vent
-closed after ascending to a considerable height; and here,
-therefore, closed the adventure of the cave of Smowe, for it
-appeared utterly impossible to proceed further in any direction
-whatever. There is a tradition that the first Lord Reay went through
-various subterranean abysses, and at length returned, after
-ineffectually endeavoring to penetrate to the extremity of the Smowe
-cave; but this must be either fabulous, or an exaggerated account of
-such a journey as we performed. And under the latter supposition, it
-is a curious instance how little the people in the neighborhood of
-this curiosity have cared to examine it.
-
-"In returning, we endeavored to familiarize ourselves with the
-objects in detail, which, viewed together, had struck us with so
-much wonder. The stalactites, or limy incrustations, upon the walls
-of the cavern, are chiefly of a dark-brown color, and in this
-respect, Smowe is inferior, according to Mr. Stevenson, to the
-celebrated cave of Macallister in the Isle of Skye. In returning,
-the men with the lights, and the various groups and attitudes of the
-party, gave a good deal of amusement. We now ventured to clamber
-along the side of the rock above the subterranean water, and thus
-gained the upper arch, and had the satisfaction to see our admirable
-and good-humored commodore, Hamilton, floated beneath the lower arch
-into the second cavern. His goodly countenance being illumined by a
-single candle, his recumbent posture, and the appearance of a
-hard-favored fellow guiding the boat, made him the very picture of
-Bibo, in the catch, when he wakes in Charon's boat:--
-
- 'When Bibo thought fit from this world to retreat,
- As full of Champagne as an egg's full of meat,
- He waked in the boat, and to Charon he said,
- That he would be row'd back, for he was not yet dead.'
-
-"Descending from our superior station on the upper arch, we now
-again embarked, and spent some time in rowing about and examining
-this second cave. We could see our dusky entrance, into which
-daylight streamed faint, and at a considerable distance; and under
-the arch of the outer cavern stood a sailor, with an oar in his
-hand, looking, in the perspective, like a fairy with his wand. We at
-length emerged unwillingly from this extraordinary basin, and again
-enjoyed ourselves in the large exterior cave. Our boat was hoisted
-with some difficulty over the ledge, which appears the natural
-barrier of the interior apartments, and restored in safety to the
-fishers, who were properly gratified for the hazard which their
-skiff, as well as one of themselves, had endured. After this we
-resolved to ascend the rocks, and discover the opening by which the
-cascade was discharged from above into the second cave. Erskine and
-I, by some chance, took the wrong side of the rocks, and, after some
-scrambling, got into the face of a dangerous precipice, where
-Erskine, to my great alarm, turned giddy, and declared he could not
-go farther. I clambered up without much difficulty, and shouting to
-the people below, got two of them to assist the Counsellor, who was
-brought into, by the means which have sent many a good fellow out
-of, the world--I mean a rope. We easily found the brook, and traced
-its descent till it precipitates itself down a chasm of the rock
-into the subterranean apartment, where we first made its
-acquaintance. Divided by a natural arch of stone from the chasm down
-which the cascade falls, there is another rent, which serves as a
-skylight to the cavern, as I already noticed. Standing on a natural
-foot-bridge, formed by the arch which divides these two gulfs, you
-have a grand prospect into both. The one is deep, black, and silent,
-only affording at the bottom a glimpse of the dark and sullen pool
-which occupies the interior of the cavern. The right-hand rent, down
-which the stream discharges itself, seems to ring and reel with the
-unceasing roar of the cataract, which envelops its side in mist and
-foam. This part of the scene alone is worth a day's journey. After
-heavy rains, the torrent is discharged into this cavern with
-astonishing violence; and the size of the chasm being inadequate to
-the reception of such a volume of water, it is thrown up in spouts
-like the blowing of a whale. But at such times the entrance of the
-cavern is inaccessible.
-
-"Taking leave of this scene with regret, we rowed back to Loch
-Eribol. Having yet an hour to spare before dinner, we rowed across
-the mouth of the lake to its shore on the east side. This rises into
-a steep and shattered stack of mouldering calcareous rock and stone,
-called Whitten-head. It is pierced with several caverns, the abode
-of seals and cormorants. We entered one, where our guide promised to
-us a grand sight, and so it certainly would have been to any who had
-not just come from Smowe. In this last cave the sea enters through a
-lofty arch, and penetrates to a great depth; but the weight of the
-tide made it dangerous to venture very far, so we did not see the
-extremity of Friskin's Cavern, as it is called. We shot several
-cormorants in the cave, the echoes roaring like thunder at every
-discharge. We received, however, a proper rebuke from Hamilton, our
-commodore, for killing anything which was not fit for _eating_. It
-was in vain I assured him that the Zetlanders made excellent
-hare-soup out of these sea-fowl. He will listen to no subordinate
-authority, and rules us by the Almanach des Gourmands. Mr. Anderson
-showed me the spot where the Norwegian monarch, Haco, moored his
-fleet, after the discomfiture he received at Largs. He caused all
-the cattle to be driven from the hills, and houghed and slain upon a
-broad flat rock, for the refreshment of his dispirited army. Mr.
-Anderson dines with us, and very handsomely presents us with a
-stock of salmon, haddocks, and so forth, which we requite by a small
-present of wine from our sea stores. This has been a fine day; the
-first fair day here for these eight weeks.
-
-"_20th August, 1814._--Sail by four in the morning, and by half-past
-six are off Cape Wrath. All hands ashore by seven, and no time
-allowed to breakfast, except on beef and biscuit. On this dread
-Cape, so fatal to mariners, it is proposed to build a lighthouse,
-and Mr. Stevenson has fixed on an advantageous situation. It is a
-high promontory, with steep sides that go sheer down to the
-breakers, which lash its feet. There is no landing, except in a
-small creek about a mile and a half to the eastward. There the foam
-of the sea plays at long bowls with a huge collection of large
-stones, some of them a ton in weight, but which these fearful
-billows chuck up and down as a child tosses a ball. The walk from
-thence to the Cape was over rough boggy ground, but good sheep
-pasture. Mr. ---- Dunlop, brother to the laird of Dunlop, took from
-Lord Reay, some years since, a large track of sheep-land, including
-the territories of Cape Wrath, for about £300 a year, for the period
-of two-nineteen years and a life-rent. It is needless to say that
-the tenant has an immense profit, for the value of pasture is now
-understood here. Lord Reay's estate, containing 150,000 square
-acres, and measuring eighty miles by sixty, was, before commencement
-of the last leases, rented at £1200 a year. It is now worth £5000,
-and Mr. Anderson says he may let it this ensuing year (when the
-leases expire) for about £15,000. But then he must resolve to part
-with his people, for these rents can only be given upon the
-supposition that sheep are generally to be introduced on the
-property. In an economical, and perhaps in a political point of
-view, it might be best that every part of a country were dedicated
-to that sort of occupation for which nature has best fitted it. But
-to effect this reform in the present instance, Lord Reay must turn
-out several hundred families who have lived under him and his
-fathers for many generations, and the swords of whose fathers
-probably won the lands from which he is now expelling them. He is a
-good-natured man, I suppose, for Mr. A. says he is hesitating
-whether he shall not take a more moderate rise (£7000 or £8000), and
-keep his Highland tenantry. This last war (before the short peace),
-he levied a fine fencible corps (the Reay fencibles), and might
-have doubled their number. _Wealth_ is no doubt _strength_ in a
-country, while all is quiet and governed by law, but on any
-altercation or internal commotion, it ceases to be strength, and is
-only the means of tempting the strong to plunder the possessors.
-Much may be said on both sides.[82]
-
-"Cape Wrath is a striking point, both from the dignity of its own
-appearance, and from the mental association of its being the extreme
-cape of Scotland, with reference to the north-west. There is no land
-in the direct line between this point and America. I saw a pair of
-large eagles, and if I had had the rifle-gun might have had a shot,
-for the birds, when I first saw them, were perched on a rock within
-about sixty or seventy yards. They are, I suppose, little disturbed
-here, for they showed no great alarm. After the Commissioners and
-Mr. Stevenson had examined the headland, with reference to the site
-of a lighthouse, we strolled to our boat, and came on board between
-ten and eleven. Get the boat up upon deck, and set sail for the
-Lewis with light winds and a great swell of tide. Pass a rocky islet
-called Gousla. Here a fine vessel was lately wrecked; all her crew
-perished but one, who got upon the rocks from the boltsprit, and was
-afterwards brought off. In front of Cape Wrath are some angry
-breakers, called the _Staggs_; the rocks which occasion them are
-visible at low water. The country behind Cape Wrath swells in high
-sweeping elevations, but without any picturesque or dignified
-mountainous scenery. But on sailing westward a few miles,
-particularly after doubling a headland called the Stour of Assint,
-the coast assumes the true Highland character, being skirted with a
-succession of picturesque mountains of every variety of height and
-outline. These are the hills of Ross-shire--a waste and thinly
-peopled district at this extremity of the island. We would willingly
-have learned the names of the most remarkable, but they are only
-laid down in the charts by the cant names given them by mariners,
-from their appearance, as the Sugar-loaf, and so forth. Our breeze
-now increases, and seems steadily favorable, carrying us on with
-exhilarating rapidity, at the rate of eight knots an hour, with the
-romantic outline of the mainland under our lee-beam, and the dusky
-shores of the Long Island beginning to appear ahead. We remain on
-deck long after it is dark, watching the phosphoric effects
-occasioned, or made visible, by the rapid motion of the vessel, and
-enlightening her course with a continued succession of sparks and
-even flashes of broad light, mingled with the foam which she flings
-from her bows and head. A rizard haddock and to bed. Charming
-weather all day.
-
-"_21st August, 1814._--Last night went out like a lamb, but this
-morning came in like a lion, all roar and tumult. The wind shifted
-and became squally; the mingled and confused tides that run among
-the Hebrides got us among their eddies, and gave the cutter such
-concussions, that, besides reeling at every wave, she trembled from
-head to stern, with a sort of very uncomfortable and ominous
-vibration. Turned out about three, and went on deck; the prospect
-dreary enough, as we are beating up a narrow channel between two
-dark and disconsolate-looking islands, in a gale of wind and rain,
-guided only by the twinkling glimmer of the light on an island
-called Ellan Glas.--Go to bed and sleep soundly, notwithstanding the
-rough rocking. Great bustle about four; the light-keeper having seen
-our flag, comes off to be our pilot, as in duty bound. Asleep again
-till eight. When I went on deck, I found we had anchored in the
-little harbor of Scalpa, upon the coast of Harris, a place dignified
-by the residence of Charles Edward in his hazardous attempt to
-escape in 1746. An old man, lately alive here, called Donald
-Macleod, was his host and temporary protector, and could not, until
-his dying hour, mention the distresses of the adventurer without
-tears. From this place, Charles attempted to go to Stornoway; but
-the people of the Lewis had taken arms to secure him, under an idea
-that he was coming to plunder the country. And although his faithful
-attendant, Donald Macleod, induced them by fair words, to lay aside
-their purpose, yet they insisted upon his leaving the island. So the
-unfortunate Prince was obliged to return back to Scalpa. He
-afterwards escaped to South Uist, but was chased in the passage by
-Captain Fergusson's sloop of war. The harbor seems a little neat
-secure place of anchorage. Within a small island, there seems more
-shelter than where we are lying; but it is crowded with vessels,
-part of those whom we saw in the Long-Hope--so Mr. Wilson chose to
-remain outside. The ground looks hilly and barren in the extreme;
-but I can say little for it, as an incessant rain prevents my
-keeping the deck. Stevenson and Duff, accompanied by Marchie, go to
-examine the lighthouse on Ellan Glas. Hamilton and Erskine keep
-their beds, having scarce slept last night--and I bring up my
-journal. The day continues bad, with little intermission of rain.
-Our party return with little advantage from their expedition,
-excepting some fresh butter from the lighthouse. The harbor of
-Scalpa is composed of a great number of little uninhabited islets.
-The masts of the vessels at anchor behind them have a good effect.
-To bed early, to make amends for last night, with the purpose of
-sailing for Dunvegan in the Isle of Skye with daylight."
-
-
-Footnotes of the Chapter XXX.
-
-[81: Lord Teignmouth, in his recent _Sketches of the Coasts
-and Islands of Scotland_, says: "The publication of _The Pirate_
-satisfied the natives of Orkney as to the authorship of the Waverley
-Novels. It was remarked by those who had accompanied Sir Walter
-Scott in his excursions in these Islands, that the vivid
-descriptions which the work contains were confined to those scenes
-which he visited."--Vol. i. p. 28.]
-
-[82: The whole of the immense district called _Lord Reay's
-country_--the habitation, as far back as history reaches, of the
-clan Mackay--has passed, since Sir W. Scott's journal was written,
-into the hands of the noble family of Sutherland.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI
-
- DIARY CONTINUED. -- ISLE OF HARRIS. -- MONUMENTS OF THE CHIEFS OF
- MACLEOD. -- ISLE OF SKYE. -- DUNVEGAN CASTLE. -- LOCH CORRISKIN.
- --MACALLISTER'S CAVE
-
-1814
-
-
-"_22d August, 1814._--Sailed early in the morning from Scalpa
-Harbor, in order to cross the Minch, or Channel, for Dunvegan; but
-the breeze being contrary, we can only creep along the Harris shore,
-until we shall gain the advantage of the tide. The east coast of
-Harris, as we now see it, is of a character which sets human
-industry at utter defiance, consisting of high sterile hills,
-covered entirely with stones, with a very slight sprinkling of
-stunted heather. Within, appear still higher peaks of mountains. I
-have never seen anything more unpropitious, excepting the southern
-side of Griban, on the shores of Loch-na-Gaoil, in the Isle of Mull.
-We sail along this desolate coast (which exhibits no mark of human
-habitation) with the advantage of a pleasant day, and a brisk,
-though not a favorable gale. _Two o'clock_--Row ashore to see the
-little harbor and village of Rowdill, on the coast of Harris. There
-is a decent three-storied house, belonging to the laird, Mr. Macleod
-of the Harris,[83] where we were told two of his female relations
-lived. A large vessel had been stranded last year, and two or three
-carpenters were about repairing her, but in such a style of Highland
-laziness that I suppose she may float next century. The harbor is
-neat enough, but wants a little more cover to the eastward. The
-ground, on landing, does not seem altogether so desolate as from the
-sea. In the former point of view, we overlook all the retired glens
-and crevices, which, by infinite address and labor, are rendered
-capable of a little cultivation. But few and evil are the patches so
-cultivated in Harris, as far as we have seen. Above the house is
-situated the ancient church of Rowdill. This pile was unfortunately
-burned down by accident some years since, by fire taking to a
-quantity of wood laid in for fitting it up. It is a building in the
-form of a cross, with a rude tower at the eastern end, like some old
-English churches. Upon this tower are certain pieces of sculpture,
-of a kind the last which one would have expected on a building
-dedicated to religious purposes. Some have lately fallen in a storm,
-but enough remains to astonish us at the grossness of the architect
-and the age.
-
-"Within the church are two ancient monuments. The first, on the
-right hand of the pulpit, presents the effigy of a warrior
-completely armed in plate armor, with his hand on his two-handed
-broadsword. His helmet is peaked, with a gorget or upper corselet
-which seems to be made of mail. His figure lies flat on the
-monument, and is in bas-relief, of the natural size. The arch which
-surmounts this monument is curiously carved with the figures of the
-apostles. In the flat space of the wall beneath the arch, and above
-the tombstone, are a variety of compartments, exhibiting the arms of
-the Macleods, being a galley with the sails spread, a rude view of
-Dunvegan Castle, some saints and religious emblems, and a Latin
-inscription, of which our time (or skill) was inadequate to decipher
-the first line; but the others announced the tenant of the monument
-to be _Alexander, filius Willielmi MacLeod, de Dunvegan, Anno Dni_
-M.CCCC.XXVIII. A much older monument (said also to represent a laird
-of Macleod) lies in the transept, but without any arch over it. It
-represents the grim figure of a Highland chief, not in feudal armor
-like the former, but dressed in a plaid--(or perhaps a shirt of
-mail)--reaching down below the knees, with a broad sort of hem upon
-its lower extremity. The figure wears a high-peaked open helmet, or
-skull-cap, with a sort of tippet of mail attached to it, which falls
-over the breast of the warrior, pretty much as women wear a
-handkerchief or short shawl. This remarkable figure is bearded most
-tyrannically, and has one hand on his long two-handed sword, the
-other on his dirk, both of which hang at a broad belt. Another
-weapon, probably his knife, seems to have been also attached to the
-baldric. His feet rest on his two dogs entwined together, and a
-similar emblem is said to have supported his head, but is now
-defaced, as indeed the whole monument bears marks of the unfortunate
-fire. A lion is placed at each end of the stone. Who the hero was,
-whom this martial monument commemorated, we could not learn. Indeed,
-our cicerone was but imperfect. He chanced to be a poor devil of an
-excise-officer who had lately made a seizure of a still upon a
-neighboring island, after a desperate resistance. Upon seeing our
-cutter, he mistook it, as has often happened to us, for an armed
-vessel belonging to the revenue, which the appearance and equipment
-of the yacht, and the number of men, make her resemble considerably.
-He was much disappointed when he found we had nothing to do with the
-tribute to Cæsar, and begged us not to undeceive the natives, who
-were so much irritated against him that he found it necessary to
-wear a loaded pair of pistols in each pocket, which he showed to our
-Master, Wilson, to convince him of the perilous state in which he
-found himself while exercising so obnoxious a duty in the midst of a
-fierce-tempered people, and at many miles' distance from any
-possible countenance or assistance. The village of Rowdill consists
-of Highland huts of the common construction, _i. e._, a low circular
-wall of large stones, without mortar, deeply sunk in the ground,
-surmounted by a thatched roof secured by ropes, without any chimney
-but a hole in the roof. There may be forty such houses in the
-village. We heard that the laird was procuring a schoolmaster--he of
-the parish being ten miles distant--and there was a neatness about
-the large house which seems to indicate that things are going on
-well. Adjacent to the churchyard were two eminences, apparently
-artificial. Upon one was fixed a stone, seemingly the staff of a
-cross; upon another the head of a cross, with a sculpture of the
-crucifixion. These monuments (which refer themselves to Catholic
-times of course) are popularly called _The Croshlets_--crosslets, or
-little crosses.
-
-"Get on board at five, and stand across the Sound for Skye with the
-ebb-tide in our favor. The sunset being delightful, we enjoy it upon
-deck, admiring the Sound on each side bounded by islands. That of
-Skye lies in the east, with some very high mountains in the centre,
-and a bold rocky coast in front, opening up into several lochs, or
-arms of the sea;--that of Loch Folliart, near the upper end of which
-Dunvegan is situated, is opposite to us, but our breeze has failed
-us, and the flood-tide will soon set in, which is likely to carry us
-to the northward of this object of our curiosity until next morning.
-To the west of us lies Harris, with its variegated ridges of
-mountains, now clear, distinct, and free from clouds. The sun is
-just setting behind the Island of Bernera, of which we see one
-conical hill. North Uist and Benbecula continue from Harris to the
-southerly line of what is called the Long Island. They are as bold
-and mountainous, and probably as barren as Harris--worse they cannot
-be. Unnumbered islets and holms, each of which has its name and its
-history, skirt these larger isles, and are visible in this clear
-evening as distinct and separate objects, lying lone and quiet upon
-the face of the undisturbed and scarce rippling sea. To our berths
-at ten, after admiring the scenery for some time.
-
-"_23d August, 1814._--Wake under the Castle of Dunvegan, in the Loch
-of Folliart. I had sent a card to the Laird of Macleod in the
-morning, who came off before we were dressed, and carried us to his
-castle to breakfast. A part of Dunvegan is very old; 'its birth
-tradition notes not.' Another large tower was built by the same
-Alaster Macleod whose burial-place and monument we saw yesterday at
-Rowdill. He had a Gaelic surname, signifying the Hump-backed.
-Roderick More (knighted by James VI.) erected a long edifice
-combining these two ancient towers: and other pieces of building,
-forming a square, were accomplished at different times. The whole
-castle occupies a precipitous mass of rock overhanging the lake,
-divided by two or three islands in that place, which form a snug
-little harbor under the walls. There is a courtyard looking out upon
-the sea, protected by a battery, at least a succession of
-embrasures, for only two guns are pointed, and these unfit for
-service. The ancient entrance rose up a flight of steps cut in the
-rock, and passed into this courtyard through a portal, but this is
-now demolished. You land under the castle, and walking round, find
-yourself in front of it. This was originally inaccessible, for a
-brook coming down on the one side, a chasm of the rocks on the
-other, and a ditch in front, made it impervious. But the late
-Macleod built a bridge over the stream, and the present laird is
-executing an entrance suitable to the character of this remarkable
-fortalice, by making a portal between two advanced towers and an
-outer court, from which he proposes to throw a drawbridge over to
-the high rock in front of the castle. This, if well executed, cannot
-fail to have a good and characteristic effect. We were most kindly
-and hospitably received by the chieftain, his lady, and his
-sister;[84] the two last are pretty and accomplished young women, a
-sort of persons whom we have not seen for some time; and I was quite
-as much pleased with renewing my acquaintance with them as with the
-sight of a good field of barley just cut (the first harvest we have
-seen), not to mention an extensive young plantation and some
-middle-aged trees, though all had been strangers to mine eyes since
-I left Leith. In the garden--or rather the orchard which was
-formerly the garden--is a pretty cascade, divided into two branches,
-and called Rorie More's Nurse, because he loved to be lulled to
-sleep by the sound of it. The day was rainy, or at least inconstant,
-so we could not walk far from the castle. Besides the assistance of
-the laird himself, who was most politely and easily attentive, we
-had that of an intelligent gentlemanlike clergyman, Mr. Suter,
-minister of Kilmore, to explain the _carte-de-pays_. Within the
-castle we saw a remarkable drinking-cup, with an inscription dated
-A. D. 993, which I have described particularly elsewhere.[85] I saw
-also a fairy flag, a pennon of silk, with something like round red
-rowan-berries wrought upon it. We also saw the drinking-horn of
-Rorie More, holding about three pints English measure--an ox's horn
-tipped with silver, not nearly so large as Watt of Harden's bugle.
-The rest of the curiosities in the castle are chiefly Indian,
-excepting an old dirk and the fragment of a two-handed sword. We
-learn that most of the Highland superstitions, even that of the
-second-sight, are still in force. Gruagach, a sort of tutelary
-divinity, often mentioned by Martin in his history of the Western
-Islands, has still his place and credit, but is modernized into a
-tall man, always a Lowlander, with a long coat and white waistcoat.
-Passed a very pleasant day. I should have said the fairy flag had
-three properties: produced in battle, it multiplied the numbers of
-the Macleods--spread on the nuptial bed, it insured fertility--and
-lastly, it brought herring into the loch.[86]
-
-"_24th August, 1814._--This morning resist with difficulty Macleod's
-kind and pressing entreaty to send round the ship, and go to the
-cave at Airds by land; but our party is too large to be accommodated
-without inconvenience, and divisions are always awkward. Walk and
-see Macleod's farm. The plantations seem to thrive admirably,
-although I think he hazards planting his trees greatly too tall.
-Macleod is a spirited and judicious improver, and if he does not
-hurry too fast, cannot fail to be of service to his people. He seems
-to think and act much like a chief, without the fanfaronade of the
-character. See a female school patronized by Mrs. M. There are about
-twenty girls, who learn reading, writing, and spinning; and being
-compelled to observe habits of cleanliness and neatness when at
-school, will probably be the means of introducing them by degrees at
-home. The roads around the castle are, generally speaking, very
-good; some are old, some made under the operation of the late act.
-Macleod says almost all the contractors for these last roads have
-failed, being tightly looked after by Government, which I confess I
-think very right. If Government is to give relief where a
-disadvantageous contract has been engaged in, it is plain it cannot
-be refused in similar instances, so that all calculations of
-expenses in such operations are at an end. The day being
-delightfully fair and warm, we walk up to the Church of Kilmore. In
-a cottage, at no great distance, we heard the women singing as they
-_waulked_ the cloth, by rubbing it with their hands and feet, and
-screaming all the while in a sort of chorus. At a distance, the
-sound was wild and sweet enough, but rather discordant when you
-approached too near the performers. In the churchyard (otherwise not
-remarkable) was a pyramidical monument erected to the father of the
-celebrated Simon, Lord Lovat, who was fostered at Dunvegan. It is
-now nearly ruinous, and the inscription has fallen down. Return to
-the castle, take our luncheon, and go aboard at three--Macleod
-accompanying us in proper style with his piper. We take leave of the
-castle, where we have been so kindly entertained, with a salute of
-seven guns. The chief returns ashore, with his piper playing the
-Macleod's Gathering, heard to advantage along the calm and placid
-loch, and dying as it retreated from us.
-
-"The towers of Dunvegan, with the banner which floated over them in
-honor of their guests, now showed to great advantage. On the right
-were a succession of three remarkable hills, with round flat tops,
-popularly called Macleod's Dining-Tables. Far behind these, in the
-interior of the island, arise the much higher and more romantic
-mountains, called Quillen, or Cuillin, a name which they have been
-said to owe to no less a person than Cuthullin, or Cuchullin,
-celebrated by Ossian. I ought, I believe, to notice, that Macleod
-and Mr. Suter have both heard a tacksman of Macleod's, called Grant,
-recite the celebrated Address to the Sun; and another person, whom
-they named, repeat the description of Cuchullin's car. But all agree
-as to the gross infidelity of Macpherson as a translator and editor.
-It ends in the explanation of the Adventures in the cave of
-Montesinos, afforded to the Knight of La Mancha, by the ape of Gines
-de Passamonte--some are true and some are false. There is little
-poetical tradition in this country, yet there should be a great
-deal, considering how lately the bards and genealogists existed as a
-distinct order. Macleod's _hereditary_ piper is called MacCrimmon,
-but the present holder of the office has risen above his profession.
-He is an old man, a lieutenant in the army, and a most capital
-piper, possessing about 200 tunes and pibrochs, most of which will
-probably die with him, as he declines to have any of his sons
-instructed in his art. He plays to Macleod and his lady, but only in
-the same room, and maintains his minstrel privilege by putting on
-his bonnet so soon as he begins to play. These MacCrimmons formerly
-kept a college in Skye for teaching the pipe-music. Macleod's
-present piper is of the name, but scarcely as yet a deacon of his
-craft. He played every day at dinner.--After losing sight of the
-Castle of Dunvegan, we open another branch of the loch on which it
-is situated, and see a small village upon its distant bank. The
-mountains of Quillen continue to form a background to the wild
-landscape with their variegated and peaked outline. We approach
-Dunvegan-head, a bold bluff cape, where the loch joins the ocean.
-The weather, hitherto so beautiful that we had dined on deck _en
-seigneurs_, becomes overcast and hazy, with little or no wind. Laugh
-and lie down.
-
-"_25th August, 1814._--Rise about eight o'clock, the yacht gliding
-delightfully along the coast of Skye, with a fair wind and excellent
-day. On the opposite side lie the islands of Canna, Rum, and Muick,
-popularly Muck. On opening the sound between Rum and Canna, see a
-steep circular rock, forming one side of the harbor, on the point of
-which we can discern the remains of a tower of small dimensions,
-built, it is said, by a King of the Isles to secure a wife of whom
-he was jealous. But, as we kept the Skye side of the Sound, we saw
-little of these islands but what our spy-glasses could show us. The
-coast of Skye is highly romantic, and at the same time displayed a
-richness of vegetation on the lower grounds, to which we have
-hitherto been strangers. We passed three salt-water lochs, or deep
-embayments, called Loch Bracadale, Loch Eynort, and Loch Britta--and
-about eleven o'clock open Loch Scavig. We were now under the western
-termination of the high mountains of Quillen, whose weather-beaten
-and serrated peaks we had admired at a distance from Dunvegan. They
-sunk here upon the sea, but with the same bold and peremptory aspect
-which their distant appearance indicated. They seemed to consist of
-precipitous sheets of naked rock, down which the torrents were
-leaping in a hundred lines of foam. The tops, apparently
-inaccessible to human foot, were rent and split into the most
-tremendous pinnacles; towards the base of these bare and precipitous
-crags, the ground, enriched by the soil washed away from them, is
-verdant and productive. Having passed within the small isle of Soa,
-we enter Loch Scavig under the shoulder of one of these grisly
-mountains, and observe that the opposite side of the loch is of a
-milder character softened down into steep green declivities. From
-the depth of the bay advanced a headland of high rocks which divided
-the lake into two recesses, from each of which a brook seemed to
-issue. Here Macleod had intimated we should find a fine romantic
-loch, but we were uncertain up what inlet we should proceed in
-search of it. We chose, against our better judgment, the southerly
-inlet, where we saw a house which might afford us information. On
-manning our boat and rowing ashore, we observed a hurry among the
-inhabitants, owing to our being as usual suspected for _king's men_,
-although, Heaven knows, we have nothing to do with the revenue but
-to spend the part of it corresponding to our equipment. We find that
-there is a lake adjoining to each branch of the bay, and foolishly
-walk a couple of miles to see that next the farmhouse, merely
-because the honest man seemed jealous of the honor of his own loch,
-though we were speedily convinced it was not that which we had been
-recommended to examine. It had no peculiar merit excepting from its
-neighborhood to a very high cliff or mountain of precipitous
-granite; otherwise, the sheet of water does not equal even
-Cauldshiels Loch. Returned and reëmbarked in our boat, for our
-guide shook his head at our proposal to climb over the peninsula
-which divides the two bays and the two lakes. In rowing round the
-headland, surprised at the infinite number of sea-fowl, then busy
-apparently with a shoal of fish; at the depth of the bay find that
-the discharge from this second lake forms a sort of waterfall or
-rather rapid; round this place were assembled hundreds of trout, and
-salmon struggling to get up into the fresh water; with a net we
-might have had twenty salmon at a haul, and a sailor, with no better
-hook than a crooked pin, caught a dish of trouts, during our
-absence.
-
-"Advancing up this huddling and riotous brook, we found ourselves in
-a most extraordinary scene: we were surrounded by hills of the
-boldest and most precipitous character, and on the margin of a lake
-which seemed to have sustained the constant ravages of torrents from
-these rude neighbors. The shores consisted of huge layers of naked
-granite, here and there intermixed with bogs, and heaps of gravel
-and sand marking the course of torrents. Vegetation there was little
-or none, and the mountains rose so perpendicularly from the water's
-edge, that Borrowdale is a jest to them. We proceeded about one mile
-and a half up this deep, dark, and solitary lake, which is about two
-miles long, half a mile broad, and, as we learned, of extreme depth.
-The vapor which enveloped the mountain ridges obliged us by assuming
-a thousand shapes, varying its veils in all sorts of forms, but
-sometimes clearing off altogether. It is true, it made us pay the
-penalty by some heavy and downright showers, from the frequency of
-which, a Highland boy, whom we brought from the farm, told us the
-lake was popularly called the Water Kettle. The proper name is Loch
-Corriskin, from the deep _corrie_ or hollow in the mountains of
-Cuillin, which affords the basin for this wonderful sheet of water.
-It is as exquisite as a savage scene, as Loch Katrine is as a scene
-of stern beauty. After having penetrated so far as distinctly to
-observe the termination of the lake, under an immense mountain which
-rises abruptly from the head of the waters, we returned, and often
-stopped to admire the ravages which storms must have made in these
-recesses when all human witnesses were driven to places of more
-shelter and security. Stones, or rather large massive fragments of
-rock of a composite kind, perfectly different from the granite
-barriers of the lake, lay upon the rocky beach in the strangest and
-most precarious situations, as if abandoned by the torrents which
-had borne them down from above; some lay loose and tottering upon
-the ledges of the natural rock, with so little security that the
-slightest push moved them, though their weight exceeded many tons.
-These detached rocks were chiefly what are called plum-pudding
-stones. Those which formed the shore were granite. The opposite side
-of the lake seemed quite pathless, as a huge mountain, one of the
-detached ridges of the Quillen, sinks in a profound and almost
-perpendicular precipice down to the water. On the left-hand side,
-which we traversed, rose a higher and equally inaccessible mountain,
-the top of which seemed to contain the crater of an exhausted
-volcano. I never saw a spot on which there was less appearance of
-vegetation of any kind; the eye rested on nothing but brown and
-naked crags,[87] and the rocks on which we walked by the side of the
-loch were as bare as the pavement of Cheapside. There are one or two
-spots of islets in the loch which seem to bear juniper, or some such
-low bushy shrub.
-
-"Returned from our extraordinary walk and went on board. During
-dinner, our vessel quitted Loch Scavig, and having doubled its
-southern cape, opened the bay or salt-water Loch of Sleapin. There
-went again on shore to visit the late discovered and much celebrated
-cavern, called Macallister's cave. It opens at the end of a deep
-ravine running upward from the sea, and the proprietor, Mr.
-Macallister of Strath Aird, finding that visitors injured it, by
-breaking and carrying away the stalactites with which it abounds,
-has secured this cavern by an eight or nine feet wall, with a door.
-Upon inquiring for the key, we found it was three miles up the loch
-at the laird's house. It was now late, and to stay until a messenger
-had gone and returned three miles, was not to be thought of, any
-more than the alternative of going up the loch and lying there all
-night. We therefore, with regret, resolved to scale the wall, in
-which attempt, by the assistance of a rope and some ancient
-acquaintance with orchard breaking, we easily succeeded. The first
-entrance to this celebrated cave is rude and unpromising, but the
-light of the torches with which we were provided is soon reflected
-from roof, floor, and walls, which seem as if they were sheeted with
-marble, partly smooth, partly rough with frost-work and rustic
-ornaments, and partly wrought into statuary. The floor forms a steep
-and difficult ascent, and might be fancifully compared to a sheet of
-water, which, while it rushed whitening and foaming down a
-declivity, had been suddenly arrested and consolidated by the spell
-of an enchanter. Upon attaining the summit of this ascent, the cave
-descends with equal rapidity to the brink of a pool of the most
-limpid water, about four or five yards broad. There opens beyond
-this pool a portal arch, with beautiful white chasing upon the
-sides, which promises a continuation of the cave. One of our sailors
-swam across, for there was no other mode of passing, and informed us
-(as indeed we partly saw by the light he carried), that the
-enchantment of Macallister's cave terminated with this portal,
-beyond which there was only a rude ordinary cavern speedily choked
-with stones and earth. But the pool, on the brink of which we stood,
-surrounded by the most fanciful mouldings in a substance resembling
-white marble, and distinguished by the depth and purity of its
-waters, might be the bathing grotto of a Naiad. I think a statuary
-might catch beautiful hints from the fanciful and romantic
-disposition of the stalactites. There is scarce a form or group that
-an active fancy may not trace among the grotesque ornaments which
-have been gradually moulded in this cavern by the dropping of the
-calcareous water, and its hardening into petrifactions; many of
-these have been destroyed by the senseless rage of appropriation
-among recent tourists, and the grotto has lost (I am informed),
-through the smoke of torches, much of that vivid silver tint which
-was originally one of its chief distinctions. But enough of beauty
-remains to compensate for all that may be lost. As the easiest mode
-of return, I slid down the polished sheet of marble which forms the
-rising ascent, and thereby injured my pantaloons in a way which my
-jacket is ill calculated to conceal. Our wearables, after a month's
-hard service, begin to be frail, and there are daily demands for
-repairs. Our eatables also begin to assume a real nautical
-appearance--no soft bread--milk a rare commodity--and those
-gentlemen most in favor with John Peters, the steward, who prefer
-salt beef to fresh. To make amends, we never hear of sea-sickness,
-and the good-humor and harmony of the party continue uninterrupted.
-When we left the cave we carried off two grandsons of Mr.
-Macallister's, remarkably fine boys; and Erskine, who may be called
-_L'ami des Enfans_, treated them most kindly, and showed them all
-the curiosities in the vessel, causing even the guns to be fired for
-their amusement, besides filling their pockets with almonds and
-raisins. So that, with a handsome letter of apology, I hope we may
-erase any evil impression Mr. Macallister may adopt from our
-storming the exterior defences of his cavern. After having sent them
-ashore in safety, stand out of the bay with little or no wind, for
-the opposite island of Egg."
-
-
-Footnotes of the Chapter XXXI.
-
-[83: The Harris has recently passed into the possession of
-the Earl of Dunmore.--(1839.)]
-
-[84: Miss Macleod, now Mrs. Spencer Perceval.]
-
-[85: See Note, _Lord of the Isles_, Scott's _Poetical
-Works_, vol. x. p. 294 [Cambridge Ed. p. 558].]
-
-[86: The following passage, from the last of Scott's _Letters on
-Demonology_ (written in 1830), refers to the night of this 23d of
-August, 1814. He mentions that twice in his life he had experienced the
-sensation which the Scotch call _eerie_: gives a night-piece of his
-early youth in the castle of Glammis, which has already been quoted
-(_ante_, vol. i. p. 197), and proceeds thus: "Amid such tales of ancient
-tradition, I had from Macleod and his lady the courteous offer of the
-haunted apartment of the castle, about which, as a stranger, I might be
-supposed interested. Accordingly I took possession of it about the
-witching hour. Except, perhaps, some tapestry hangings, and the extreme
-thickness of the walls, which argued great antiquity, nothing could have
-been more comfortable than the interior of the apartment; but if you
-looked from the windows, the view was such as to correspond with the
-highest tone of superstition. An autumnal blast, sometimes clear,
-sometimes driving mist before it, swept along the troubled billows of
-the lake, which it occasionally concealed, and by fits disclosed. The
-waves rushed in wild disorder on the shore, and covered with foam the
-steep pile of rocks, which, rising from the sea in forms something
-resembling the human figure, have obtained the name of Macleod's
-Maidens, and, in such a night, seemed no bad representative of the
-Norwegian goddesses, called Choosers of the Slain, or Riders of the
-Storm. There was something of the dignity of danger in the scene; for,
-on a platform beneath the windows, lay an ancient battery of cannon,
-which had sometimes been used against privateers even of late years. The
-distant scene was a view of that part of the Quillen mountains, which
-are called, from their form, Macleod's Dining-Tables. The voice of an
-angry cascade, termed the Nurse of Rorie Mhor, because that chief slept
-best in its vicinity, was heard from time to time mingling its notes
-with those of wind and wave. Such was the haunted room at Dunvegan; and,
-as such, it well deserved a less sleepy inhabitant. In the language of
-Dr. Johnson, who has stamped his memory on this remote place,--'I looked
-around me, and wondered that I was not more affected; but the mind is
-not at all times equally ready to be moved.' In a word, it is necessary
-to confess that, of all I heard or saw, the most engaging spectacle was
-the comfortable bed in which I hoped to make amends for some rough
-nights on shipboard, and where I slept accordingly without thinking of
-ghost or goblin, till I was called by my servant in the morning."]
-
-[87:
-
- "Rarely human eye has known
- A scene so stern as that dread lake,
- With its dark ledge of barren stone.
- Seems that primeval earthquake's sway
- Hath rent a strange and shatter'd way
- Through the rude bosom of the hill,
- And that each naked precipice,
- Sable ravine, and dark abyss,
- Tells of the outrage still.
- The wildest glen, but this, can show
- Some touch of Nature's genial glow;
- On high Benmore green mosses grow,
- And heath-bells bud in deep Glencroe,
- And copse on Cruchan-Ben;
- But here--above, around, below,
- On mountain or in glen,
- Nor tree, nor shrub, nor plant, nor flower,
- Nor aught of vegetative power,
- The weary eye may ken;
- For all is rocks at random thrown,
- Black waves, bare crags, and banks of stone,
- As if were here denied
- The summer's sun, the spring's sweet dew,
- That clothe with many a varied hue
- The bleakest mountain-side."
-
- _Lord of the Isles_, iii. 14.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII
-
- DIARY CONTINUED. -- CAVE OF EGG. -- IONA. -- STAFFA. --
- DUNSTAFFNAGE. -- DUNLUCE CASTLE. -- GIANT'S CAUSEWAY. -- ISLE OF
- ARRAN, ETC. --DIARY CONCLUDED
-
-1814
-
-
-"_26th August, 1814._--At seven this morning were in the Sound which
-divides the Isle of Rum from that of Egg. Rum is rude, barren, and
-mountainous; Egg, although hilly and rocky, and traversed by one
-remarkable ridge called Scuir-Egg, has, in point of soil, a much
-more promising appearance. Southward of both lies Muick, or Muck, a
-low and fertile island, and though the least, yet probably the most
-valuable of the three. Caverns being still the order of the day, we
-man the boat and row along the shore of Egg, in quest of that which
-was the memorable scene of a horrid feudal vengeance. We had rounded
-more than half the island, admiring the entrance of many a bold
-natural cave which its rocks exhibit, but without finding that which
-we sought, until we procured a guide. This noted cave has a very
-narrow entrance, through which one can hardly creep on knees and
-hands. It rises steep and lofty within, and runs into the bowels of
-the rock to the depth of 255 measured feet. The height at the
-entrance may be about three feet, but rises to eighteen or twenty,
-and the breadth may vary in the same proportion. The rude and stony
-bottom of this cave is strewed with the bones of men, women, and
-children, being the sad relics of the ancient inhabitants of the
-island, 200 in number, who were slain on the following occasion: The
-Macdonalds of the Isle of Egg, a people dependent on Clanranald, had
-done some injury to the Laird of Macleod. The tradition of the isle
-says, that it was by a personal attack on the chieftain, in which
-his back was broken; but that of the other isles bears that the
-injury was offered to two or three of the Macleods, who, landing
-upon Egg and using some freedom with the young women, were seized by
-the islanders, bound hand and foot, and turned adrift in a boat,
-which the winds and waves safely conducted to Skye. To avenge the
-offence given, Macleod sailed with such a body of men as rendered
-resistance hopeless. The natives, fearing his vengeance, concealed
-themselves in this cavern, and after strict search, the Macleods
-went on board their galleys, after doing what mischief they could,
-concluding the inhabitants had left the isle. But next morning they
-espied from their vessel a man upon the island, and, immediately
-landing again, they traced his retreat, by means of a light snow on
-the ground, to this cavern. Macleod then summoned the subterraneous
-garrison, and demanded that the individuals who had offended him
-should be delivered up. This was peremptorily refused. The chieftain
-thereupon caused his people to divert the course of a rill of water,
-which, falling over the mouth of the cave, would have prevented his
-purposed vengeance. He then kindled at the entrance of the cavern a
-huge fire, and maintained it until all within were destroyed by
-suffocation. The date of this dreadful deed must have been recent,
-if one can judge from the fresh appearance of those relics. I
-brought off, in spite of the prejudices of our sailors, a skull,
-which seems that of a young woman.
-
-"Before reëmbarking, we visit another cave opening to the sea, but
-of a character widely different, being a large open vault as high as
-that of a cathedral, and running back a great way into the rock at
-the same height; the height and width of the opening give light to
-the whole. Here, after 1745, when the Catholic priests were scarcely
-tolerated, the priest of Egg used to perform the Romish service. A
-huge ledge of rock, almost halfway up one side of the vault, served
-for altar and pulpit; and the appearance of a priest and Highland
-congregation in such an extraordinary place of worship might have
-engaged the pencil of Salvator. Most of the inhabitants of Egg are
-still Catholics, and laugh at their neighbors of Rum, who, having
-been converted by the cane of their chieftain, are called
-_Protestants of the yellow stick_. The Presbyterian minister and
-Catholic priest live upon this little island on very good terms.
-The people here were much irritated against the men of a revenue
-vessel who had seized all the stills, etc., in the neighboring Isle
-of Muck, with so much severity as to take even the people's bedding.
-We had been mistaken for some time for this obnoxious vessel. Got on
-board about two o'clock, and agreed to stand over for Coll, and to
-be ruled by the wind as to what was next to be done. Bring up my
-journal.
-
-"_27th August, 1814._--The wind, to which we resigned ourselves,
-proves exceedingly tyrannical, and blows squally the whole night,
-which, with the swell of the Atlantic, now unbroken by any islands
-to windward, proves a means of great combustion in the cabin. The
-dishes and glasses in the steward's cupboards become
-locomotive--portmanteaus and writing-desks are more active than
-necessary--it is scarce possible to keep one's self within bed, and
-impossible to stand upright if you rise. Having crept upon deck
-about four in the morning, I find we are beating to windward off the
-Isle of Tyree, with the determination on the part of Mr. Stevenson
-that his constituents should visit a reef of rocks called Skerry
-Vhor where he thought it would be essential to have a lighthouse.
-Loud remonstrances on the part of the Commissioners, who one and all
-declare they will subscribe to his opinion, whatever it may be,
-rather than continue this infernal buffeting. Quiet perseverance on
-the part of Mr. S., and great kicking, bouncing, and squabbling upon
-that of the Yacht, who seems to like the idea of Skerry Vhor as
-little as the Commissioners. At length, by dint of exertion, come in
-sight of this long ridge of rocks (chiefly under water), on which
-the tide breaks in a most tremendous style. There appear a few low
-broad rocks at one end of the reef, which is about a mile in length.
-These are never entirely under water, though the surf dashes over
-them. To go through all the forms, Hamilton, Duff, and I resolve to
-land upon these bare rocks in company with Mr. Stevenson. Pull
-through a very heavy swell with great difficulty, and approach a
-tremendous surf dashing over black pointed rocks. Our rowers,
-however, get the boat into a quiet creek between two rocks, where we
-contrive to land well wetted. I saw nothing remarkable in my way,
-excepting several seals, which we might have shot, but, in the
-doubtful circumstances of the landing, we did not care to bring
-guns. We took possession of the rock in name of the Commissioners,
-and generously bestowed our own great names on its crags and creeks.
-The rock was carefully measured by Mr. S. It will be a most desolate
-position for a lighthouse--the Bell Rock and Eddystone a joke to it,
-for the nearest land is the wild island of Tyree, at fourteen miles'
-distance. So much for the Skerry Vhor.
-
-"Came on board proud of our achievement; and, to the great delight
-of all parties, put the ship before the wind, and run swimmingly
-down for Iona. See a large square-rigged vessel, supposed an
-American. Reach Iona about five o'clock. The inhabitants of the Isle
-of Columba, understanding their interest as well as if they had been
-Deal boatmen, charged two guineas for pilotage, which Captain W.
-abridged into fifteen shillings, too much for ten minutes' work. We
-soon got on shore, and landed in the bay of Martyrs, beautiful for
-its white sandy beach. Here all dead bodies are still landed, and
-laid for a time upon a small rocky eminence, called the Sweyne,
-before they are interred. Iona, the last time I saw it, seemed to me
-to contain the most wretched people I had anywhere seen. But either
-they have got better since I was here, or my eyes, familiarized with
-the wretchedness of Zetland and the Harris, are less shocked with
-that of Iona. Certainly their houses are better than either, and the
-appearance of the people not worse. This little fertile isle
-contains upwards of 400 inhabitants, all living upon small farms,
-which they divide and subdivide as their families increase, so that
-the country is greatly over-peopled, and in some danger of a famine
-in case of a year of scarcity. Visit the nunnery and _Reilig Oran_,
-or burial-place of St. Oran, but the night coming on we return on
-board.
-
-"_28th August, 1814._--Carry our breakfast ashore--take that repast
-in the house of Mr. Maclean, the schoolmaster and cicerone of the
-island--and resume our investigation of the ruins of the cathedral
-and the cemetery. Of these monuments, more than of any other, it may
-be said with propriety,--
-
- 'You never tread upon them but you set
- Your feet upon some ancient history.'
-
-I do not mean to attempt a description of what is so well known as
-the ruins of Iona. Yet I think it has been as yet inadequately
-performed, for the vast number of carved tombs containing the
-reliques of the great exceeds credibility. In general, even in the
-most noble churches, the number of the vulgar dead exceed in all
-proportion the few of eminence who are deposited under monuments.
-Iona is in all respects the reverse: until lately, the inhabitants
-of the isle did not presume to mix their vulgar dust with that of
-chiefs, reguli, and abbots. The number, therefore, of carved and
-inscribed tombstones is quite marvellous, and I can easily credit
-the story told by Sacheverell, who assures us that 300 inscriptions
-had been collected, and were lost in the troubles of the seventeenth
-century. Even now, many more might be deciphered than have yet been
-made public, but the rustic step of the peasants and of Sassenach
-visitants is fast destroying these faint memorials of the valiant of
-the Isles. A skilful antiquary remaining here a week, and having (or
-assuming) the power of raising the half-sunk monuments, might make a
-curious collection. We could only gaze and grieve; yet had the day
-not been Sunday, we would have brought our seamen ashore, and
-endeavored to have raised some of these monuments. The celebrated
-ridges called _Jomaire na'n Righrean_, or Graves of the Kings, can
-now scarce be said to exist, though their site is still pointed out.
-Undoubtedly, the thirst of spoil, and the frequent custom of burying
-treasures with the ancient princes, occasioned their early
-violation; nor am I any sturdy believer in their being regularly
-ticketed off by inscriptions into the tombs of the Kings of
-Scotland, of Ireland, of Norway, and so forth. If such inscriptions
-ever existed, I should deem them the work of some crafty bishop or
-abbot, for the credit of his diocese or convent. Macbeth is said to
-have been the last King of Scotland here buried; sixty preceded him,
-all doubtless as powerful in their day, but now unknown--_carent
-quia vate sacro_. A few weeks' labor of Shakespeare, an obscure
-player, has done more for the memory of Macbeth than all the gifts,
-wealth, and monuments of this cemetery of princes have been able to
-secure to the rest of its inhabitants. It also occurred to me in
-Iona (as it has on many similar occasions) that the traditional
-recollections concerning the monks themselves are wonderfully faint,
-contrasted with the beautiful and interesting monuments of
-architecture which they have left behind them. In Scotland
-particularly, the people have frequently traditions wonderfully
-vivid of the persons and achievements of ancient warriors, whose
-towers have long been levelled with the soil. But of the monks of
-Melrose, Kelso, Aberbrothock, Iona, etc., etc., etc., they can tell
-nothing but that such a race existed, and inhabited the stately
-ruins of these monasteries. The quiet, slow, and uniform life of
-those recluse beings glided on, it may be, like a dark and silent
-stream, fed from unknown resources, and vanishing from the eye
-without leaving any marked trace of its course. The life of the
-chieftain was a mountain torrent thundering over rock and precipice,
-which, less deep and profound in itself, leaves on the minds of the
-terrified spectators those deep impressions of awe and wonder which
-are most readily handed down to posterity.
-
-"Among the various monuments exhibited at Iona is one where a
-Maclean lies in the same grave with one of the Macfies or Macduffies
-of Colonsay, with whom he had lived in alternate friendship and
-enmity during their lives. 'He lies above him during death,' said
-one of Maclean's followers, as his chief was interred, 'as he was
-above him during life.' There is a very ancient monument lying among
-those of the Macleans, but perhaps more ancient than any of them; it
-has a knight riding on horseback, and behind him a minstrel playing
-on a harp: this is conjectured to be Reginald Macdonald of the
-Isles, but there seems no reason for disjoining him from his kindred
-who sleep in the cathedral. A supposed ancestor of the Stewarts,
-called Paul Purser, or Paul the Purse-bearer (treasurer to the King
-of Scotland), is said to lie under a stone near the Lords of the
-Isles. Most of the monuments engraved by Pennant are still in the
-same state of preservation, as are the few ancient crosses which are
-left. What a sight Iona must have been, when 360 crosses, of the
-same size and beautiful workmanship, were ranked upon the little
-rocky ridge of eminences which form the background to the cathedral!
-Part of the tower of the cathedral has fallen since I was here. It
-would require a better architect than I am, to say anything
-concerning the antiquity of these ruins, but I conceive those of the
-nunnery and of the _Reilig nan Oran_, or Oran's chapel, are
-decidedly the most ancient. Upon the cathedral and buildings
-attached to it, there are marks of repairs at different times, some
-of them of a late date being obviously designed not to enlarge the
-buildings, but to retrench them. We take a reluctant leave of Iona,
-and go on board.
-
-"The haze and dulness of the atmosphere seem to render it dubious
-if we can proceed, as we intended, to Staffa to-day--for mist among
-these islands is rather unpleasant. Erskine reads prayers on deck to
-all hands, and introduces a very apt allusion to our being now in
-sight of the first Christian Church from which Revelation was
-diffused over Scotland and all its islands. There is a very good
-form of prayer for the Lighthouse Service, composed by the Rev. Mr.
-Brunton.[88] A pleasure vessel lies under our lee from Belfast, with
-an Irish party related to Macneil of Colonsay. The haze is fast
-degenerating into downright rain, and that right heavy--verifying
-the words of Collins:--
-
- 'And thither where beneath the _showery west_
- The mighty Kings of three fair realms are laid.'[89]
-
-After dinner, the weather being somewhat cleared, sailed for Staffa,
-and took boat. The surf running heavy up between the island and the
-adjacent rock, called Booshala, we landed at a creek near the
-Cormorant's cave. The mist now returned so thick as to hide all view
-of Iona, which was our land-mark; and although Duff, Stevenson, and
-I had been formerly on the isle, we could not agree upon the proper
-road to the cave. I engaged myself, with Duff and Erskine, in a
-clamber of great toil and danger, and which at length brought me to
-the _Cannon-ball_, as they call a round granite stone moved by the
-sea up and down in a groove of rock, which it has worn for itself,
-with a noise resembling thunder. Here I gave up my research, and
-returned to my companions, who had not been more fortunate. As night
-was now falling, we resolved to go aboard and postpone the adventure
-of the enchanted cavern until next day. The yacht came to an anchor
-with the purpose of remaining off the island all night, but the
-hardness of the ground, and the weather becoming squally, obliged us
-to return to our safer mooring at Y-Columb-Kill.
-
-"_29th August, 1814._--Night squally and rainy--morning ditto--we
-weigh, however, and return toward Staffa, and, very happily, the day
-clears as we approach the isle. As we ascertained the situation of
-the cave, I shall only make this memorandum, that when the weather
-will serve, the best landing is to the lee of Booshala, a little
-conical islet or rock, composed of basaltic columns placed in an
-oblique or sloping position. In this way, you land at once on the
-flat causeway, formed by the heads of truncated pillars, which leads
-to the cave. But if the state of tide renders it impossible to land
-under Booshala, then take one of the adjacent creeks; in which case,
-keeping to the left hand along the top of the ledge of rocks which
-girdles in the isle, you find a dangerous and precipitous descent to
-the causeway aforesaid, from the table. Here we were under the
-necessity of towing our Commodore, Hamilton, whose gallant heart
-never fails him, whatever the tenderness of his toes may do. He was
-successfully lowered by a rope down the precipice, and proceeding
-along the flat terrace or causeway already mentioned, we reached the
-celebrated cave. I am not sure whether I was not more affected by
-this second, than by the first view of it. The stupendous columnar
-side walls--the depth and strength of the ocean with which the
-cavern is filled--the variety of tints formed by stalactites
-dropping and petrifying between the pillars, and resembling a sort
-of chasing of yellow or cream-colored marble filling the interstices
-of the roof--the corresponding variety below, where the ocean rolls
-over a red, and in some places a violet-colored rock, the basis of
-the basaltic pillars--the dreadful noise of those august billows so
-well corresponding with the grandeur of the scene--are all
-circumstances elsewhere unparalleled. We have now seen in our voyage
-the three grandest caverns in Scotland,--Smowe, Macallister's cave,
-and Staffa; so that, like the Troglodytes of yore, we may be
-supposed to know something of the matter. It is, however, impossible
-to compare scenes of natures so different, nor, were I compelled to
-assign a preference to any of the three, could I do it but with
-reference to their distinct characters, which might affect different
-individuals in different degrees. The characteristic of the Smowe
-cave may in this case be called the terrific, for the difficulties
-which oppose the stranger are of a nature so uncommonly wild, as,
-for the first time at least, convey an impression of terror--with
-which the scenes to which he is introduced fully correspond. On the
-other hand, the dazzling whiteness of the incrustations in
-Macallister's cave, the elegance of the entablature, the beauty of
-its limpid pool, and the graceful dignity of its arch, render its
-leading features those of severe and chastened beauty. Staffa, the
-third of these subterraneous wonders, may challenge sublimity as its
-principal characteristic. Without the savage gloom of the Smowe
-cave, and investigated with more apparent ease, though, perhaps,
-with equal real danger, the stately regularity of its columns forms
-a contrast to the grotesque imagery of Macallister's cave, combining
-at once the sentiments of grandeur and beauty. The former is,
-however, predominant, as it must necessarily be in any scene of the
-kind.
-
-"We had scarce left Staffa when the wind and rain returned. It was
-Erskine's object and mine to dine at Torloisk on Loch Tua, the seat
-of my valued friend, Mrs. Maclean Clephane, and her accomplished
-daughters. But in going up Loch Tua between Ulva and Mull with this
-purpose,--
-
- 'So thick was the mist on the ocean green,
- Nor cape nor headland could be seen.'[90]
-
-It was late before we came to anchor in a small bay presented by the
-little island of Gometra, which may be regarded as a continuation of
-Ulva. We therefore dine aboard, and after dinner, Erskine and I take
-the boat and row across the loch under a heavy rain. We could not
-see the house of Torloisk, so very thick was the haze, and we were a
-good deal puzzled how and where to achieve a landing; at length,
-espying a cartroad, we resolved to trust to its guidance, as we knew
-we must be near the house. We therefore went ashore with our
-servants, _à la bonne aventure_, under a drizzling rain. This was
-soon a matter of little consequence, for the necessity of crossing a
-swollen brook wetted me considerably, and Erskine, whose foot
-slipped, most completely. In wet and weary plight we reached the
-house, after a walk of a mile, in darkness, dirt, and rain, and it
-is hardly necessary to say, that the pleasure of seeing our friends
-soon banished all recollection of our unpleasant voyage and journey.
-
-"_30th August, 1814._--The rest of our friends come ashore by
-invitation, and breakfast with the ladies, whose kindness would fain
-have delayed us for a few days, and at last condescended to ask for
-one day only--but even this could not be, our time wearing short.
-Torloisk is finely situated upon the coast of Mull, facing Staffa.
-It is a good comfortable house, to which Mrs. Clephane has made some
-additions. The grounds around have been dressed, so as to smooth
-their ruggedness, without destroying the irregular and wild
-character peculiar to the scene and country. In this, much taste has
-been displayed. At Torloisk, as at Dunvegan, trees grow freely and
-rapidly; and the extensive plantations formed by Mrs. C. serve to
-show that nothing but a little expense and patience on the part of
-the proprietors, with attention to planting in proper places at
-first, and in keeping up fences afterward, are a-wanting to remove
-the reproach of nakedness, so often thrown upon the Western Isles.
-With planting comes shelter, and the proper allotment and division
-of fields. With all this Mrs. Clephane is busied, and, I trust,
-successfully; I am sure, actively and usefully. Take leave of my
-fair friends, with regret that I cannot prolong my stay for a day or
-two. When we come on board, we learn that Staffa-Macdonald is just
-come to his house of Ulva: this is a sort of unpleasant dilemma, for
-we cannot now go there without some neglect towards Mrs. Maclean
-Clephane; and, on the other hand, from his habits with all of us, he
-may be justly displeased with our quitting his very threshold
-without asking for him. However, upon the whole matter, and being
-already under weigh, we judged it best to work out of the loch, and
-continue our purpose of rounding the northern extremity of Mull, and
-then running down the Sound between Mull and the mainland. We had
-not long pursued our voyage before we found it was like to be a very
-slow one. The wind fell away entirely, and after repeated tacks we
-could hardly clear the extreme north-western point of Mull by six
-o'clock--which must have afforded amusement to the ladies whose
-hospitable entreaties we had resisted, as we were almost all the
-while visible from Torloisk. A fine evening, but scarce a breath of
-wind.
-
-"_31st August, 1814._--Went on deck between three and four in the
-morning, and found the vessel almost motionless in a calm sea,
-scarce three miles advanced on her voyage. We had, however, rounded
-the north-western side of Mull, and were advancing between the
-north-eastern side and the rocky and wild shores of Ardnamurchan on
-the mainland of Scotland. Astern were visible in bright moonlight
-the distant mountains of Rum; yet nearer, the remarkable ridge in
-the Isle of Egg, called Scuir-Egg; and nearest of all, the low isle
-of Muick. After enjoying this prospect for some time, returned to my
-berth. Rise before eight--a delightful day, but very calm, and the
-little wind there is, decidedly against us. Creeping on slowly, we
-observe, upon the shore of Ardnamurchan, a large old castle called
-Mingary. It appears to be surrounded with a very high wall, forming
-a kind of polygon, in order to adapt itself to the angles of a
-precipice overhanging the sea, on which the castle is founded.
-Within or beyond the wall, and probably forming part of an inner
-court, I observed a steep roof and windows, probably of the
-seventeenth century. The whole, as seen with a spy-glass, seems
-ruinous. As we proceed, we open on the left hand Loch Sunart,
-running deep into the mainland, crossed by distant ridges of rocks,
-and terminating apparently among the high mountains above Strontian.
-On the right hand we open the Sound of Mull, and pass the Bloody
-Bay, which acquired that name from a desperate battle fought between
-an ancient Lord of the Isles and his son. The latter was assisted by
-the Macleans of Mull, then in the plenitude of their power, but was
-defeated. This was a sea-fight; galleys being employed on each side.
-It has bequeathed a name to a famous pibroch.
-
-"Proceeding southward, we open the beautiful bay of Tobermory, or
-Mary's Well. The mouth of this fine natural roadstead is closed by
-an isle called Colvay, having two passages, of which only one, the
-northerly, is passable for ships. The bay is surrounded by steep
-hills, covered with copsewood, through which several brooks seek the
-sea in a succession of beautiful cascades. The village has been
-established as a fishing station by the Society for British
-Fisheries. The houses along the quay are two and three stories high,
-and well built; the feuars paying to the Society sixpence per foot
-of their line of front. On the top of a steep bank, rising above the
-first town, runs another line of second-rate cottages, which pay
-fourpence per foot; and behind are huts, much superior to the
-ordinary sheds of the country, which pay only twopence per foot. The
-town is all built upon a regular plan, laid down by the Society. The
-new part is reasonably clean, and the old not unreasonably dirty.
-We landed at an excellent quay, which is not yet finished, and found
-the little place looked thriving and active. The people were getting
-in their patches of corn; and the shrill voices of the children
-attending their parents in the field, and loading the little ponies
-which are used in transporting the grain, formed a chorus not
-disagreeable to those whom it reminds of similar sounds at home. The
-praise of comparative cleanliness does not extend to the lanes
-around Tobermory, in one of which I had nearly been effectually
-bogged. But the richness of the round steep green knolls, clothed
-with copse, and glancing with cascades, and a pleasant peep at a
-small fresh-water loch embosomed among them--the view of the bay,
-surrounded and guarded by the island of Colvay--the gliding of two
-or three vessels in the more distant Sound--and the row of the
-gigantic Ardnamurchan mountains closing the scene to the north,
-almost justify the eulogium of Sacheverell, who, in 1688, declared
-the bay of Tobermory might equal any prospect in Italy. It is said
-that Sacheverell made some money by weighing up the treasures lost
-in the Florida, a vessel of the Spanish Armada, which was wrecked in
-the harbor. He himself affirms, that though the use of the
-diving-bells was at first successful, yet the attempt was afterwards
-disconcerted by bad weather.
-
-"Tobermory takes its name from a spring dedicated to the Virgin,
-which was graced by a chapel; but no vestiges remain of the chapel,
-and the spring rises in the middle of a swamp, whose depth and dirt
-discouraged the nearer approach of Protestant pilgrims. Mr.
-Stevenson, whose judgment is unquestionable, thinks that the village
-should have been built on the island called Colvay, and united to
-the continent by a key, or causeway, built along the southernmost
-channel, which is very shallow. By this means the people would have
-been much nearer the fishings, than retired into the depth of the
-bay.
-
-"About three o'clock we get on board, and a brisk and favorable
-breeze arises, which carries us smoothly down the Sound. We soon
-pass Arros, with its fragment of a castle, behind which is the house
-of Mr. Maxwell (an odd name for this country), chamberlain to the
-Duke of Argyle, which reminds me of much kindness and hospitality
-received from him and Mr. Stewart, the Sheriff-Substitute, when I
-was formerly in Mull. On the shore of Morven, on the opposite side,
-pass the ruins of a small fortalice, called Donagail, situated as
-usual on a precipice overhanging the sea. The 'woody Morven,' though
-the quantity of shaggy diminutive copse, which springs up where it
-obtains any shelter, still shows that it must once have merited the
-epithet, is now, as visible from the Sound of Mull, a bare
-country--of which the hills towards the sea have a slope much
-resembling those in Selkirkshire, and accordingly afford excellent
-pasture, and around several farmhouses well-cultivated and improved
-fields. I think I observe considerable improvement in husbandry,
-even since I was here last: but there is a difference in coming from
-Oban and Cape Wrath.--Open Loch Alline, a beautiful salt-water lake,
-with a narrow outlet to the Sound. It is surrounded by round hills,
-sweetly fringed with green copse below, and one of which exhibits to
-the spy-glass ruins of a castle. There is great promise of beauty in
-its interior, but we cannot see everything. The land on the southern
-bank of the entrance slopes away into a sort of promontory, at the
-extremity of which are the very imperfect ruins of the castle of
-Ardtornish, to which the Lords of the Isles summoned parliaments,
-and from whence one of them dated a treaty with the Crown of England
-as an independent Prince. These ruins are seen to most advantage
-from the south, where they are brought into a line with one high
-fragment towards the west predominating over the rest. The shore of
-the promontory on the south side becomes rocky, and when it slopes
-round to the west, rises into a very bold and high precipitous bank,
-skirting the bay on the western side, partly cliffy, partly covered
-with brushwood, with various streams dashing over it from a great
-height. Above the old castle of Ardtornish, and about where the
-promontory joins the land, stands the present mansion, a neat
-whitewashed house, with several well-enclosed and well-cultivated
-fields surrounding it.
-
-"The high and dignified character assumed by the shores of Morven,
-after leaving Ardtornish, continues till we open the Loch Linnhe,
-the commencement of the great chain of inland lakes running up to
-Fort William, and which it is proposed to unite with Inverness by
-means of the Caledonian Canal. The wisdom of the plan adopted in
-this national measure seems very dubious. Had the canal been of more
-moderate depth, and the burdens imposed upon passing vessels less
-expensive, there can be no doubt that the coasters, sloops, and
-barks would have carried on a great trade by means of it. But the
-expense and plague of lochs, etc., may prevent these humble vessels
-from taking this abridged voyage, while ships above twenty or thirty
-tons will hesitate to engage themselves in the intricacies of a long
-lake navigation, exposed, without room for manoeuvring, to all the
-sudden squalls of the mountainous country. Ahead of us, in the mouth
-of Loch Linnhe, lies the low and fertile isle of Lismore, formerly
-the appanage of the Bishops of the Isles, who, as usual, knew where
-to choose church patrimony. The coast of the Mull, on the right hand
-of the Sound, has a black, rugged, and unimproved character. Above
-Scallister Bay are symptoms of improvement. Moonlight has risen upon
-us as we pass Duart Castle, now an indistinct mass upon its
-projecting promontory. It was garrisoned for Government so late as
-1780, but is now ruinous. We see, at about a mile's distance, the
-fatal shelve on which Duart exposed the daughter of Argyle, on which
-Miss Baillie's play of The Family Legend is founded, but now,--
-
- 'Without either sign or sound of their shock,
- The waves flowed over the Lady's rock.'[91]
-
-The placid state of the sea is very different from what I have seen it,
-when six stout rowers could scarce give a boat headway through the
-conflicting tides. These fits of violence so much surprised and offended
-a body of the Camerons, who were bound upon some expedition to Mull, and
-had been accustomed to the quietness of lake-navigation, that they drew
-their dirks, and began to stab the waves--from which popular tale this
-run of tide is called _the Men of Lochaber_. The weather being
-delightfully moderate, we agree to hover hereabout all night, or anchor
-under the Mull shore, should it be necessary, in order to see
-Dunstaffnage to-morrow morning. The isle of Kerrera is now in sight,
-forming the bay of Oban. Beyond lie the varied and magnificent summits
-of the chain of mountains bordering Loch Linnhe, as well as those
-between Loch Awe and Loch Etive, over which the summit of Ben Cruachan
-is proudly prominent. Walk on deck, admiring this romantic prospect,
-until ten; then below, and turn in.
-
-"_1st September, 1814._--Rise betwixt six and seven, and having
-discreetly secured our breakfast, take boat for the old castle of
-Dunstaffnage, situated upon a promontory on the side of Loch Linnhe
-and near to Loch Etive. Nothing could exceed the beauty of the day
-and of the prospect. We coasted the low, large, and fertile isle of
-Lismore, where a Catholic Bishop, Chisholm, has established a
-seminary of young men intended for priests, and what is a better
-thing, a valuable lime-work. Report speaks well of the lime, but
-indifferently of the progress of the students. Tacking to the shore
-of the loch, we land at Dunstaffnage, once, it is said, the seat of
-the Scottish monarchy, till success over the Picts and Saxons
-transferred their throne to Scoone, Dunfermline, and at length to
-Edinburgh. The castle is still the King's (nominally), and the Duke
-of Argyle (nominally also) is hereditary keeper. But the real right
-of property is in the family of the depute-keeper, to which it was
-assigned as an appanage, the first possessor being a natural son of
-an Earl of Argyle. The shell of the castle, for little more now
-remains, bears marks of extreme antiquity. It is square in form,
-with round towers at three of the angles, and is situated upon a
-lofty precipice, carefully scarped on all sides to render it
-perpendicular. The entrance is by a staircase, which conducts you to
-a wooden landing-place in front of the portal-door. This
-landing-place could formerly be raised at pleasure, being of the
-nature of a drawbridge. When raised, the place was inaccessible. You
-pass under an ancient arch, with a low vault (being the porter's
-lodge) on the right hand, and flanked by loopholes, for firing upon
-any hostile guest who might force his passage thus far. This admits
-you into the inner court, which is about eighty feet square. It
-contains two mean-looking buildings, about sixty or seventy years
-old; the ancient castle having been consumed by fire in 1715. It is
-said that the nephew of the proprietor was the incendiary. We went
-into the apartments, and found they did not exceed the promise of
-the exterior; but they admitted us to walk upon the battlements of
-the old castle, which displayed a most splendid prospect. Beneath,
-and far projected into the loch, were seen the woods and houses of
-Campbell of Lochnell. A little summer-house, upon an eminence,
-belonging to this wooded bank, resembles an ancient monument. On
-the right, Loch Etive, after pouring its waters like a furious
-cataract over a strait called Connell Ferry, comes between the
-castle and a round island belonging to its demesne, and nearly
-insulates the situation. In front is a low rocky eminence on the
-opposite side of the arm, through which Loch Etive flows into Loch
-Linnhe. Here was situated _Beregenium_, once, it is said, a British
-capital city; and, as our informant told us, the largest market town
-in Scotland. Of this splendor are no remains but a few trenches and
-excavations, which the distance did not allow us to examine. The
-ancient masonry of Dunstaffnage is mouldering fast under time and
-neglect. The foundations are beginning to decay, and exhibit gaps
-between the rock and the wall; and the battlements are become
-ruinous. The inner court is encumbered with ruins. A hundred pounds
-or two would put this very ancient fortress in a state of
-preservation for ages, but I fear this is not to be expected. The
-stumps of large trees, which had once shaded the vicinity of the
-castle, gave symptoms of decay in the family of Dunstaffnage. We
-were told of some ancient spurs and other curiosities preserved in
-the castle, but they were locked up. In the vicinity of the castle
-is a chapel which had once been elegant, but by the building up of
-windows, etc., is now heavy enough. I have often observed that the
-means adopted in Scotland for repairing old buildings are generally
-as destructive of their grace and beauty, as if that had been the
-express object. Unfortunately most churches, particularly, have gone
-through both stages of destruction, having been first repaired by
-the building up of the beautiful shafted windows, and then the roof
-being suffered to fall in, they became ruins indeed, but without any
-touch of the picturesque farther than their massive walls and
-columns may afford. Near the chapel of Dunstaffnage is a remarkable
-echo.
-
-"Reëmbarked, and, rowing about a mile and a half or better along the
-shore of the lake, again landed under the ruins of the old castle of
-Dunolly. This fortress, which, like that of Dunstaffnage, forms a
-marked feature in this exquisite landscape, is situated on a bold
-and precipitous promontory overhanging the lake. The principal part
-of the ruins now remaining is a square tower or keep of the ordinary
-size, which had been the citadel of the castle; but fragments of
-other buildings, overgrown with ivy, show that Dunolly had once been
-a place of considerable importance. These had enclosed a courtyard,
-of which the keep probably formed one side, the entrance being by a
-very steep ascent from the land side, which had formerly been cut
-across by a deep moat, and defended doubtless by outworks and a
-drawbridge. Beneath the castle stands the modern house of
-Dunolly,--a decent mansion, suited to the reduced state of the
-MacDougalls of Lorn, who, from being Barons powerful enough to give
-battle to and defeat Robert Bruce, are now declined into private
-gentlemen of moderate fortune.
-
-"This very ancient family is descended from Somerled, Thane, or
-rather, under that name, _King_ of Argyle and the Hebrides. He had
-two sons, to one of whom he left his insular possessions--and he
-became founder of the dynasty of the Lords of the Isles, who
-maintained a stirring independence during the Middle Ages. The other
-was founder of the family of the MacDougalls of Lorn. One of them
-being married to a niece of the Red Cumming, in revenge of his
-slaughter at Dumfries, took a vigorous part against Robert Bruce in
-his struggles to maintain the independence of Scotland. At length
-the King, turning his whole strength towards MacDougall, encountered
-him at a pass near Loch Awe; but the Highlanders, being possessed of
-the strong ground, compelled Bruce to retreat, and again gave him
-battle at Dalry, near Tynedrum, where he had concentrated his
-forces. Here he was again defeated; and the tradition of the
-MacDougall family bears, that in the conflict the Lord of Lorn
-engaged hand to hand with Bruce, and was struck down by that
-monarch. As they grappled together on the ground, Bruce being
-uppermost, a vassal of MacDougall, called MacKeoch, relieved his
-master by pulling Bruce from him. In this close struggle the King
-left his mantle and brooch in the hands of his enemies, and the
-latter trophy was long preserved in the family, until it was lost in
-an accidental fire. Barbour tells the same story, but I think with
-circumstances somewhat different. When Bruce had gained the throne
-for which he fought so long, he displayed his resentment against the
-MacDougalls of Lorn, by depriving them of the greatest part of their
-domains, which were bestowed chiefly upon the Steward of Scotland.
-Sir Colin Campbell, the Knight of Loch Awe, and the Knight of
-Glenurchy, Sir Dugald Campbell, married daughters of the Steward,
-and received with them great portion of the forfeiture of
-MacDougall. Bruce even compelled or persuaded the Lord of the Isles
-to divorce his wife, who was a daughter of MacDougall, and take in
-marriage a relation of his own. The son of the divorced lady was not
-permitted to succeed to the principality of the Isles, on account of
-his connection with the obnoxious MacDougall. But a large appanage
-was allowed him upon the Mainland, where he founded the family of
-Glengarry.
-
-"The family of MacDougall suffered farther reduction during the
-great civil war, in which they adhered to the Stewarts, and in 1715
-they forfeited the small estate of Dunolly, which was then all that
-remained of what had once been a principality. The then
-representative of the family fled to France, and his son (father of
-the present proprietor) would have been without any means of
-education, but for the spirit of clanship, which induced one of the
-name, in the humble situation of keeper of a public-house at
-Dumbarton, to take his young chief to reside with him, and be at the
-expense of his education and maintenance until his fifteenth or
-sixteenth year. He proved a clever and intelligent man, and made
-good use of the education he received. When the affair of 1745 was
-in agitation, it was expected by the south-western clans that
-Charles Edward would have landed near Oban, instead of which he
-disembarked at Loch-nan-augh, in Arisaig. Stuart of Appin sent
-information of his landing to MacDougall, who gave orders to his
-brother to hold the clan in readiness to rise, and went himself to
-consult with the chamberlain of the Earl of Breadalbane, who was
-also in the secret. He found this person indisposed to rise,
-alleging that Charles had disappointed them both in the place of
-landing, and the support he had promised. MacDougall then resolved
-to play cautious, and went to visit the Duke of Argyle, then
-residing at Roseneath, probably without any determined purpose as to
-his future proceedings. While he was waiting the Duke's leisure, he
-saw a horseman arrive at full gallop, and shortly after, the Duke
-entering the apartment where MacDougall was, with a map in his hand,
-requested him, after friendly salutations, to point out
-Loch-nan-augh on that map. MacDougall instantly saw that the secret
-of Charles's landing had transpired, and resolved to make a merit
-of being the first who should give details. The persuasions of the
-Duke determined him to remain quiet, and the reward was the
-restoration of the little estate of Dunolly, lost by his father in
-1715. This gentleman lived to a very advanced stage of life, and was
-succeeded by Peter MacDougall, Esq., now of Dunolly. I had these
-particulars respecting the restoration of the estate from a near
-relation of the family, whom we met at Dunstaffnage.
-
-"The modern house of Dunolly is on the neck of land under the old
-castle, having on the one hand the lake with its islands and
-mountains; on the other, two romantic eminences tufted with
-copsewood, of which the higher is called Barmore, and is now
-planted. I have seldom seen a more romantic and delightful
-situation, to which the peculiar state of the family gave a sort of
-moral interest. Mrs. MacDougall, observing strangers surveying the
-ruins, met us on our return, and most politely insisted upon our
-accepting fruit and refreshments. This was a compliment meant to
-absolute strangers, but when our names became known to her, the good
-lady's entreaties that we would stay till Mr. MacDougall returned
-from his ride became very pressing. She was in deep mourning for the
-loss of an eldest son, who had fallen bravely in Spain and under
-Wellington, a death well becoming the descendant of so famed a race.
-The second son, a lieutenant in the navy, had, upon this family
-misfortune, obtained leave to visit his parents for the first time
-after many years' service, but had now returned to his ship. Mrs. M.
-spoke with melancholy pride of the death of her eldest son, with
-hope and animation of the prospects of the survivor. A third is
-educated for the law. Declining the hospitality offered us, Mrs. M.
-had the goodness to walk with us along the shore towards Oban, as
-far as the property of Dunolly extends, and showed us a fine spring,
-called _Tobar nan Gall_, or the Well of the Stranger, where our
-sailors supplied themselves with excellent water, which has been
-rather a scarce article with us, as it soon becomes past a
-landsman's use on board ship. On the seashore, about a quarter of a
-mile from the castle, is a huge fragment of the rock called
-_plum-pudding stone_, which art or nature has formed into a gigantic
-pillar. Here, it is said, Fion or Fingal tied his dog Bran--here
-also the celebrated Lord of the Isles tied up his dogs when he came
-upon a visit to the Lords of Lorn. Hence it is called _Clach nan
-Con_; _i. e._, the Dog's Stone. A tree grew once on the top of this
-bare mass of composite stone, but it was cut down by a curious
-damsel of the family, who was desirous to see a treasure said to be
-deposited beneath it. Enjoyed a pleasant walk of a mile along the
-beach to Oban, a town of some consequence, built in a semicircular
-form, around a good harbor formed by the opposite isle of Kerrera,
-on which Mrs. M. pointed out the place where Alexander II. died,
-while, at the head of a powerful armament, he meditated the
-reduction of the Hebrides. The field is still called Dal-ry--the
-King's field.
-
-"Having taken leave of Mrs. MacDougall, we soon satisfied our
-curiosity concerning Oban, which owed its principal trade to the
-industry of two brothers, Messrs. Stevenson, who dealt in
-ship-building. One is now dead, the other almost retired from
-business, and trade is dull in the place. Heard of an active and
-industrious man, who had set up a nursery of young trees, which
-ought to succeed, since at present, whoever wants plants must send
-to Glasgow; and how much the plants suffer during a voyage of such
-length, any one may conceive. Go on board after a day delightful for
-the serenity and clearness of the weather, as well as for the
-objects we had visited. I forgot to say, that through Mr.
-MacDougall's absence we lost an opportunity of seeing a bronze
-figure of one of his ancestors, called _Bacach_, or the lame, armed
-and mounted as for a tournament. The hero flourished in the twelfth
-century. After a grand council of war, we determine, as we are so
-near the coast of Ulster, that we will stand over and view the
-celebrated Giant's Causeway; and Captain Wilson receives directions
-accordingly.
-
-_"2d September, 1814._--Another most beautiful day. The heat, for
-the first time since we sailed from Leith, is somewhat incommodious;
-so we spread a handsome awning to save our complexions, God wot, and
-breakfast beneath it in style. The breeze is gentle, and quite
-favorable. It has conducted us from the extreme cape of Mull, called
-the Black Head of Mull, into the Sound of Islay. We view in passing
-that large and fertile island, the property of Campbell of
-Shawfield, who has introduced an admirable style of farming among
-his tenants. Still farther behind us retreats the Island of Jura,
-with the remarkable mountains called the Paps of Jura, which form a
-landmark at a great distance. They are very high, but in our eyes,
-so much accustomed of late to immense height, do not excite much
-surprise. Still farther astern is the small isle of Scarba, which,
-as we see it, seems to be a single hill. In the passage or sound
-between Scarba and the extremity of Jura, is a terrible run of tide,
-which, contending with the sunk rocks and islets of that foul
-channel, occasions the succession of whirlpools called the Gulf of
-Corrievreckan. Seen at this distance, we cannot judge of its
-terrors. The sight of Corrievreckan and of the low rocky isle of
-Colonsay, betwixt which and Islay we are now passing, strongly
-recalls to my mind poor John Leyden and his tale of the Mermaid and
-MacPhail of Colonsay.[92] Probably the name of the hero should have
-been MacFie, for to the MacDuffies (by abridgment MacFies) Colonsay
-of old pertained. It is said the last of these MacDuffies was
-executed as an oppressor by order of the Lord of the Isles, and lies
-buried in the adjacent small island of Oransay, where there is an
-old chapel with several curious monuments, which, to avoid losing
-this favorable breeze, we are compelled to leave unvisited. Colonsay
-now belongs to a gentleman named MacNeil. On the right beyond it,
-opens at a distance the western coast of Mull, which we already
-visited in coming from the northward. We see the promontory of Ross,
-which is terminated by Y-Columb-kill, also now visible. The shores
-of Loch Tua and Ulva are in the blue distance, with the little
-archipelago which lies around Staffa. Still farther, the hills of
-Rum can just be distinguished from the blue sky. We are now arrived
-at the extreme point of Islay, termed, from the strong tides, the
-_Runs of Islay_. We here only feel them as a large but soft swell of
-the sea, the weather being delightfully clear and serene. In the
-course of the evening we lose sight of the Hebrides, excepting
-Islay, having now attained the western side of that island.
-
-"_3d September, 1814._--In the morning early, we are off
-Innistulhan, an islet very like Inchkeith in size and appearance,
-and, like Inchkeith, displaying a lighthouse. Messrs. Hamilton,
-Duff, and Stevenson go ashore to visit the Irish lighthouse and
-compare notes. A fishing-boat comes off with four or five stout
-lads, without neckerchiefs or hats, and the best of whose joint
-garments selected would hardly equip an Edinburgh beggar. Buy from
-this specimen of Paddy in his native land some fine John Dories for
-threepence each. The mainland of Ireland adjoining to this island
-(being part of the county of Donegal) resembles Scotland, and,
-though hilly, seems well cultivated upon the whole. A brisk breeze
-directly against us. We beat to windward by assistance of a strong
-tide-stream, in order to weather the head of Innishowen, which
-covers the entrance of Lough Foyle, with the purpose of running up
-the loch to see Londonderry, so celebrated for its siege in 1689.
-But short tacks and long tacks were in vain, and at dinner-time,
-having lost our tide, we find ourselves at all disadvantage both
-against wind and sea. Much combustion at our meal, and the
-manoeuvres by which we attempted to eat and drink remind me of the
-enchanted drinking-cup in the old ballad,--
-
- 'Some shed it on their shoulder,
- Some shed it on their thigh;
- And he that did not hit his mouth
- Was sure to hit his eye.'[93]
-
-In the evening, backgammon and cards are in great request. We have
-had our guns shotted all this day for fear of the Yankees--a
-privateer having been seen off Tyree Islands, and taken some
-vessels--as is reported.--About nine o'clock weather the Innishowen
-head, and enter the Lough, and fire a gun as a signal for a pilot.
-The people here are great smugglers, and at the report of the gun,
-we see several lights on shore disappear.--About the middle of the
-day, too, our appearance (much resembling a revenue cutter)
-occasioned a smoke being made in the midst of a very rugged cliff on
-the shore--a signal probably to any of the smugglers' craft that
-might be at sea. Come to anchor in eight fathom water, expecting our
-pilot.
-
-_"4th September, 1814._--Waked in the morning with good hope of
-hearing service in Derry Cathedral, as we had felt ourselves under
-weigh since daylight; but these expectations vanished when, going on
-deck, we found ourselves only halfway up Lough Foyle, and at least
-ten miles from Derry. Very little wind, and that against us; and the
-navigation both shoally and intricate. Called a council of war; and
-after considering the difficulty of getting up to Derry, and the
-chance of being wind-bound when we do get there, we resolve to
-renounce our intended visit to that town. We had hardly put the ship
-about, when the Irish Æolus shifted his trumpet, and opposed our
-exit, as he had formerly been unfavorable to our progress up the
-lake. At length, we are compelled to betake ourselves to towing, the
-wind fading into an absolute calm. This gives us time enough to
-admire the northern, or Donegal, side of Lough Foyle--the other
-being hidden from us by haze and distance. Nothing can be more
-favorable than this specimen of Ireland.--A beautiful variety of
-cultivated slopes, intermixed with banks of wood; rocks skirted with
-a distant ridge of heathy hills, watered by various brooks; the
-glens or banks being, in general, planted or covered with copse; and
-finally, studded by a succession of villas and gentlemen's seats,
-good farmhouses, and neat white-washed cabins. Some of the last are
-happily situated upon the verge of the sea, with banks of copse or a
-rock or two rising behind them, and the white sand in front. The
-land, in general, seems well cultivated and enclosed--but in some
-places the enclosures seem too small, and the ridges too crooked,
-for proper farming. We pass two gentlemen's seats, called White
-Castle and Red Castle; the last a large good-looking mansion, with
-trees, and a pretty vale sloping upwards from the sea. As we
-approach the termination of the Lough, the ground becomes more rocky
-and barren, and the cultivation interrupted by impracticable
-patches, which have been necessarily abandoned. Come in view of
-Green Castle, a large ruinous castle, said to have belonged to the
-MacWilliams. The remains are romantically situated upon a green bank
-sloping down to the sea, and are partly covered with ivy. From their
-extent, the place must have been a chieftain's residence of the very
-first consequence. Part of the ruins appear to be founded upon a
-high red rock, which the eye at first blends with the masonry. To
-the east of the ruins, upon a cliff overhanging the sea, are a
-modern fortification and barrack-yard, and beneath, a large battery
-for protection of the shipping which may enter the Lough; the guns
-are not yet mounted. The Custom-house boat boards us and confirms
-the account that American cruisers are upon the coast. Drift out of
-the Lough, and leave behind us this fine country, all of which
-belongs in property to Lord Donegal; other possessors only having
-long leases, at sixty years, or so forth. Red Castle, however,
-before distinguished as a very good-looking house, is upon a
-perpetual lease. We discharge our pilot--the gentlemen go ashore
-with him in the boat, in order to put foot on Irish land. I shall
-defer that pleasure till I can promise myself something to see. When
-our gentlemen return, we read prayers on deck. After dinner go
-ashore at the small fishing-village of Port Rush, pleasantly
-situated upon a peninsula, which forms a little harbor. Here we are
-received by Dr. Richardson, the inventor of the fiorin-grass (or of
-some of its excellencies). He cultivates this celebrated vegetable
-on a very small scale, his whole farm not exceeding four acres. Here
-I learn, with inexpressible surprise and distress, the death of one
-of the most valued of the few friends whom these memoranda might
-interest.[94] She was, indeed, a rare example of the soundest good
-sense, and the most exquisite purity of moral feeling, united with
-the utmost grace and elegance of personal beauty, and with manners
-becoming the most dignified rank in British society. There was a
-feminine softness in all her deportment, which won universal love,
-as her firmness of mind and correctness of principle commanded
-veneration. To her family her loss is inexpressibly great. I know
-not whether it was the purity of her mind, or the ethereal cast of
-her features and form, but I could never associate in my mind her
-idea and that of mortality; so that the shock is the more heavy, as
-being totally unexpected. God grant comfort to the afflicted
-survivor and his family!
-
-"_5th September, 1814._--Wake, or rather rise at six, for I have
-waked the whole night, or fallen into broken sleeps only to be
-hag-ridden by the nightmare. Go ashore with a heavy heart, to see
-sights which I had much rather leave alone. Land under Dunluce, a
-ruined castle built by the MacGilligans, or MacQuillens, but
-afterwards taken from them by a Macdonnell, ancestor of the Earls of
-Antrim, and destroyed by Sir John Perrot, Lord-Lieutenant in the
-reign of Queen Elizabeth. This Macdonnell came from the Hebrides at
-the head of a Scottish colony. The site of the castle much resembles
-Dunnottar, but it is on a smaller scale. The ruins occupy perhaps
-more than an acre of ground, being the level top of a high rock
-advanced into the sea, by which it is surrounded on three sides, and
-divided from the mainland by a deep chasm. The access was by a
-narrow bridge, of which there now remains but a single rib, or
-ledge, forming a doubtful and a precarious access to the ruined
-castle. On the outer side of the bridge are large remains of
-outworks, probably for securing cattle, and for domestic
-offices--and the vestiges of a chapel. Beyond the bridge are an
-outer and inner gateway, with their defences. The large gateway
-forms one angle of the square enclosure of the fortress, and at the
-other landward angle is built a large round tower. There are
-vestiges of similar towers occupying the angles of the precipice
-overhanging the sea. These towers were connected by a curtain, on
-which artillery seems to have been mounted. Within this circuit are
-the ruins of an establishment of feudal grandeur on the large scale.
-The great hall, forming, it would seem, one side of the inner court,
-is sixty paces long, lighted by windows which appear to have been
-shafted with stone, but are now ruined. Adjacent are the great
-kitchen and ovens, with a variety of other buildings, but no square
-tower, or keep. The most remarkable part of Dunluce, however, is
-that the whole mass of plum-pudding rock on which the fort is built
-is completely perforated by a cave sloping downwards from the inside
-of the moat or dry-ditch beneath the bridge, and opening to the sea
-on the other side. It might serve the purpose of a small harbor,
-especially if they had, as is believed, a descent to the cave from
-within the castle. It is difficult to conceive the use of the
-aperture to the land, unless it was in some way enclosed and
-defended. Above the ruinous castle is a neat farmhouse. Mrs. More,
-the good-wife, a Scoto-Hibernian, received us with kindness and
-hospitality which did honor to the nation of her birth, as well as
-of her origin, in a house whose cleanliness and neatness might have
-rivalled England. Her churn was put into immediate motion on our
-behalf, and we were loaded with all manner of courtesy, as well as
-good things. We heard here of an armed schooner having been seen off
-the coast yesterday, which fired on a boat that went off to board
-her, and would seem therefore to be a privateer, or armed smuggler.
-
-"Return on board for breakfast, and then again take boat for the
-Giant's Causeway--having first shotted the guns, and agreed on a
-signal, in case this alarming stranger should again make his
-appearance. Visit two caves, both worth seeing, but not equal to
-those we have seen: one, called Port Coon, opens in a small cove, or
-bay--the outer reach opens into an inner cave, and that again into
-the sea. The other, called Down Kerry, is a sea-cave, like that on
-the eastern side of Loch Eribol--a high arch up which the sea
-rolls:--the weather being quiet, we sailed in very nearly to the
-upper end. We then rowed on to the celebrated Causeway, a platform
-composed of basaltic pillars, projecting into the sea like the pier
-of a harbor. As I was tired, and had a violent headache, I did not
-land, but could easily see that the regularity of the columns was
-the same as at Staffa; but that island contains a much more
-extensive and curious specimen of this curious phenomenon.
-
-"Row along the shores of this celebrated point, which are extremely
-striking as well as curious. They open into a succession of little
-bays, each of which has precipitous banks graced with long ranges of
-the basaltic pillars, sometimes placed above each other, and divided
-by masses of interweaving strata, or by green sloping banks of earth
-of extreme steepness. These remarkable ranges of columns are in some
-places chequered by horizontal strata of a red rock or earth, of the
-appearance of ochre; so that the green of the grassy banks, the
-dark-gray or black appearance of the columns, with those red seams
-and other varieties of the interposed strata, have most uncommon and
-striking effects. The outline of these cliffs is as singular as
-their coloring. In several places the earth has wasted away from
-single columns, and left them standing insulated and erect, like the
-ruined colonnade of an ancient temple, upon the verge of the
-precipice. In other places, the disposition of the basaltic ranges
-presents singular appearances, to which the guides give names
-agreeable to the images which they are supposed to represent. Each
-of the little bays or inlets has also its appropriate name. One is
-called the Spanish Bay, from one of the Spanish Armada having been
-wrecked there. Thus our voyage has repeatedly traced the memorable
-remnants of that celebrated squadron. The general name of the cape
-adjacent to the Causeway is Bengore Head. To those who have seen
-Staffa, the peculiar appearance of the Causeway itself will lose
-much of its effect; but the grandeur of the neighboring scenery will
-still maintain the reputation of Bengore Head. The people ascribe
-all these wonders to Fin MacCoul, whom they couple with a Scottish
-giant called Ben-an something or other. The traveller is plied by
-guides, who make their profit by selling pieces of crystal, agate,
-or chalcedony, found in the interstices of the rocks. Our party
-brought off some curious joints of the columns, and, had I been
-quite as I am wont to be, I would have selected four to be capitals
-of a rustic porch at Abbotsford. But, alas! alas! I am much out of
-love with vanity at this moment. From what we hear at the Causeway,
-we have every reason to think that the pretended privateer has been
-a gentleman's pleasure-vessel.--Continue our voyage southward, and
-pass between the Main of Ireland and the Isle of Rachrin, a rude
-heathy-looking island, once a place of refuge to Robert Bruce. This
-is said, in ancient times, to have been the abode of banditti, who
-plundered the neighboring coast. At present it is under a long lease
-to a Mr. Gage, who is said to maintain excellent order among the
-islanders. Those of bad character he expels to Ireland, and hence it
-is a phrase among the people of Rachrin, when they wish ill to any
-one, '_May Ireland be his hinder end_.' On the Main we see the
-village of Ballintry, and a number of people collected, the remains
-of an Irish fair. Close by is a small island, called Sheep Island.
-We now take leave of the Irish coast, having heard nothing of its
-popular complaints, excepting that the good lady at Dunluce made a
-heavy moan against the tithes, which had compelled her husband to
-throw his whole farm into pasture. Stand over toward Scotland, and
-see the Mull of Cantyre light.
-
-"_6th September, 1814._--Under the lighthouse at the Mull of
-Cantyre; situated on a desolate spot among rocks, like a Chinese
-pagoda in Indian drawings. Duff[95] and Stevenson go ashore at six.
-Hamilton follows, but is unable to land, the sea having got up. The
-boat brings back letters, and I have the great comfort to learn all
-are well at Abbotsford. About eight the tide begins to run very
-strong, and the wind rising at the same time, makes us somewhat
-apprehensive for our boat, which had returned to attend D. and S. We
-observe them set off along the hills on foot, to walk, as we
-understand, to a bay called Carskey, five or six miles off, but the
-nearest spot at which they can hope to reëmbark in this state of the
-weather. It now becomes very squally, and one of our jibsails
-splits. We are rather awkwardly divided into three parties--the
-pedestrians on shore, with whom we now observe Captain Wilson,
-mounted upon a pony--the boat with four sailors, which is stealing
-along in-shore, unable to row, and scarce venturing to carry any
-sail--and we in the yacht, tossing about most exceedingly. At length
-we reach Carskey, a quiet-looking bay, where the boat gets into
-shore, and fetches off our gentlemen.--After this the coast of
-Cantyre seems cultivated and arable, but bleak and unenclosed, like
-many other parts of Scotland. We then learn that we have been
-repeatedly in the route of two American privateers, who have made
-many captures in the Irish Channel, particularly at Innistruhul, at
-the back of Islay, and on the Lewis. They are the Peacock, of
-twenty-two guns, and 165 men, and a schooner of eighteen guns,
-called the Prince of Neuchatel. These news, added to the increasing
-inclemency of the weather, induce us to defer a projected visit to
-the coast of Galloway; and indeed it is time one of us was home on
-many accounts. We therefore resolve, after visiting the lighthouse
-at Pladda, to proceed for Greenock. About four drop anchor off
-Pladda, a small islet lying on the south side of Arran. Go ashore
-and visit the establishment. When we return on board, the wind being
-unfavorable for the mouth of Clyde, we resolve to weigh anchor and
-go into Lamlash Bay.
-
-"_7th September, 1814._--We had ample room to repent last night's
-resolution, for the wind, with its usual caprice, changed so soon as
-we had weighed anchor, blew very hard, and almost directly against
-us, so that we were beating up against it by short tacks, which made
-a most disagreeable night; as, between the noise of the wind and the
-sea, the clattering of the ropes and sails above, and of the
-movables below, and the eternal '_ready about_,' which was repeated
-every ten minutes when the vessel was about to tack, with the lurch
-and clamor which succeeds, sleep was much out of the question. We
-are not now in the least sick, but want of sleep is uncomfortable,
-and I have no agreeable reflections to amuse waking hours,
-excepting the hope of again rejoining my family. About six o'clock
-went on deck to see Lamlash Bay, which we have at length reached
-after a hard struggle. The morning is fine and the wind abated, so
-that the coast of Arran looks extremely well. It is indented with
-two deep bays. That called Lamlash, being covered by an island with
-an entrance at either end, makes a secure roadstead. The other bay,
-which takes its name from Brodick Castle, a seat of the Duke of
-Hamilton, is open. The situation of the castle is very fine, among
-extensive plantations, laid out with perhaps too much formality, but
-pleasant to the eye, as the first tract of plantation we have seen
-for a long time. One stripe, however, with singular want of taste,
-runs straight up a finely rounded hill, and turning by an obtuse
-angle, cuts down the opposite side with equal lack of remorse. This
-vile habit of opposing the line of the plantation to the natural
-line and bearing of the ground is one of the greatest practical
-errors of early planters. As to the rest, the fields about Brodick,
-and the lowland of Arran in general, seem rich, well enclosed, and
-in good cultivation. Behind and around rise an amphitheatre of
-mountains, the principal a long ridge with fine swelling serrated
-tops, called Goat-Fell. Our wind now altogether dies away, while we
-want its assistance to get to the mouth of the Firth of Clyde, now
-opening between the extremity of the large and fertile Isle of Bute,
-and the lesser islands called the Cumbrays. The fertile coast of
-Ayrshire trends away to the south-westward, displaying many
-villages, and much appearance of beauty and cultivation. On the
-north-eastward arises the bold and magnificent screen formed by the
-mountains of Argyleshire and Dumbartonshire, rising above each other
-in gigantic succession. About noon a favorable breath of wind
-enables us to enter the mouth of the Clyde, passing between the
-larger Cumbray and the extremity of Bute. As we advance beyond the
-Cumbray, and open the opposite coast, see Largs, renowned for the
-final defeat of the Norwegian invaders by Alexander III. [A. D.
-1263]. The ground of battle was a sloping, but rather gentle, ascent
-from the sea, above the modern Kirk of Largs. Had Haco gained the
-victory, it would have opened all the south-west of Scotland to his
-arms. On Bute, a fine and well-improved island, we open the Marquis
-of Bute's house of Mount Stewart, neither apparently large nor
-elegant in architecture, but beautifully situated among well-grown
-trees, with an open and straight avenue to the seashore. The whole
-isle is prettily varied by the rotation of crops: and the rocky
-ridges of Goat-Fell and other mountains in Arran are now seen behind
-Bute as a background. These ridges resemble much the romantic and
-savage outline of the mountains of Cullin, in Skye. On the southward
-of Largs is Kelburn, the seat of Lord Glasgow, with extensive
-plantations; on the northward Skelmorlie, an ancient seat of the
-Montgomeries. The Firth, closed to appearance by Bute and the
-Cumbrays, now resembles a long irregular inland lake, bordered on
-the one side by the low and rich coast of Renfrewshire, studded with
-villages and seats, and on the other by the Highland mountains. Our
-breeze dies totally away, and leaves us to admire this prospect till
-sunset. I learn incidentally, that, in the opinion of honest Captain
-Wilson, I have been myself the cause of all this contradictory
-weather. 'It is all,' says the Captain to Stevenson, 'owing to the
-cave at the Isle of Egg,'--from which I had abstracted a skull.
-Under this odium I may labor yet longer, for assuredly the weather
-has been doggedly unfavorable. Night quiet and serene, but dead
-calm--a fine contrast to the pitching, rolling, and walloping of
-last night.
-
-"_8th September._--Waked very much in the same situation--a dead
-calm, but the weather very serene. With much difficulty, and by the
-assistance of the tide, we advanced up the Firth, and, passing the
-village of Gourock, at length reached Greenock. Took an early
-dinner, and embarked in the steamboat for Glasgow. We took leave of
-our little yacht under the repeated cheers of the sailors, who had
-been much pleased with their erratic mode of travelling about, so
-different from the tedium of a regular voyage. After we reached
-Glasgow--a journey which we performed at the rate of about eight
-miles an hour, and with a smoothness of motion which probably
-resembles flying--we supped together and prepared to
-separate.--Erskine and I go to-morrow to the Advocate's at
-Killermont, and thence to Edinburgh. So closes my journal. But I
-must not omit to say, that among five or six persons, some of whom
-were doubtless different in tastes and pursuits, there did not
-occur, during the close communication of more than six weeks aboard
-a small vessel, the slightest difference of opinion. Each seemed
-anxious to submit his own wishes to those of his friends. The
-consequence was, that by judicious arrangement all were gratified in
-their turn, and frequently he who made some sacrifices to the views
-of his companions was rewarded by some unexpected gratification
-calculated particularly for his own amusement. Thus ends my little
-excursion, in which, bating one circumstance, which must have made
-me miserable for the time wherever I had learned it, I have enjoyed
-as much pleasure as in any six weeks of my life. We had constant
-exertion, a succession of wild and uncommon scenery, good-humor on
-board, and objects of animation and interest when we went ashore--
-
- 'Sed fugit interea--fugit irrevocabile tempus.'"
-
-
-Footnotes of the Chapter XXXII.
-
-[88: The Rev. Alexander Brunton, D. D., now (1836)
-Professor of Oriental Languages in the University of Edinburgh.]
-
-[89: _Ode on the Superstitions of the Highlands._]
-
-[90:
-
- "So thick a haze o'erspreads the sky,
- They cannot see the Sun on high."
-
- Southey's _Inchcape Rock_.]
-
-[91: Southey's _Inchcape Rock_.]
-
-[92: See _Minstrelsy of the Border_, vol. iv. pp. 285-306
-(Edin. Ed.).]
-
-[93: _The Boy and the Mantle_--Percy's _Reliques_, vol.
-iii. p. 10.]
-
-[94: Harriet, Duchess of Buccleuch, died August 24, 1814.]
-
-[95: Adam Duff, Esq., afterwards and for many years Sheriff
-of the county of Edinburgh, died on 17th May, 1840.--(1845.)]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII
-
- LETTER IN VERSE FROM ZETLAND AND ORKNEY. -- DEATH OF THE DUCHESS
- OF BUCCLEUCH. -- CORRESPONDENCE WITH THE DUKE. -- ALTRIVE LAKE.
- --NEGOTIATION CONCERNING THE LORD OF THE ISLES COMPLETED. --
- SUCCESS OF WAVERLEY. -- CONTEMPORANEOUS CRITICISMS ON THE NOVEL.
- -- LETTERS TO SCOTT FROM MR. MORRITT, MR. LEWIS, AND MISS MACLEAN
- CLEPHANE. --LETTER FROM JAMES BALLANTYNE TO MISS EDGEWORTH
-
-1814
-
-
-I question if any man ever drew his own character more fully or more
-pleasingly than Scott has done in the preceding diary of a six
-weeks' pleasure voyage. We have before us, according to the scene
-and occasion, the poet, the antiquary, the magistrate, the planter,
-and the agriculturist; but everywhere the warm yet sagacious
-philanthropist--everywhere the courtesy, based on the unselfishness,
-of the thorough-bred gentleman;--and surely never was the tenderness
-of a manly heart portrayed more touchingly than in the closing
-pages. I ought to mention that Erskine received the news of the
-Duchess of Buccleuch's death on the day when the party landed at
-Dunstaffnage; but, knowing how it would affect Scott, took means to
-prevent its reaching him until the expedition should be concluded.
-He heard the event casually mentioned by a stranger during dinner at
-Port Rush, and was for the moment quite overpowered.
-
-Of the letters which Scott wrote to his friends during those happy
-six weeks, I have recovered only one, and it is, thanks to the
-leisure of the yacht, in verse. The strong and easy heroics of the
-first section prove, I think, that Mr. Canning did not err when he
-told him that if he chose he might emulate even Dryden's command
-that noble measure; and the dancing anapæsts of the second show that
-he could with equal facility have rivalled the gay graces of Cotton,
-Anstey, or Moore. This epistle did not reach the Duke of Buccleuch
-till his lovely Duchess was no more; and I shall annex to it some
-communications relating to that affliction, which afford a contrast,
-not less interesting than melancholy, to the light-hearted glee
-reflected in the rhymes from the region of Magnus Troil.
-
-
-TO HIS GRACE THE DUKE OF BUCCLEUCH, ETC., ETC., ETC.
-
- LIGHTHOUSE YACHT IN THE SOUND OF LERWICK, ZETLAND, 8th August, 1814.
-
- Health to the chieftain from his clansman true!
- From her true Minstrel, health to fair Buccleuch!
- Health from the isles, where dewy Morning weaves
- Her chaplet with the tints that Twilight leaves;
- Where late the sun scarce vanished from the sight,
- And his bright pathway graced the short-lived night,
- Though darker now as autumn's shades extend,
- The north winds whistle and the mists ascend!--
- Health from the land where eddying whirlwinds toss
- The storm-rocked _cradle_ of the Cape of Noss;
- On outstretched cords the giddy engine slides,
- His own strong arm the bold adventurer guides,
- And he that lists such desperate feat to try,
- May, like the sea-mew, skim 'twixt surf and sky,
- And feel the mid-air gales around him blow,
- And see the billows rage five hundred feet below.
-
- Here by each stormy peak and desert shore,
- The hardy islesman tugs the daring oar,
- Practised alike his venturous course to keep,
- Through the white breakers or the pathless deep,
- By ceaseless peril and by toil to gain
- A wretched pittance from the niggard main.
- And when the worn-out drudge old ocean leaves,
- What comfort greets him, and what hut receives?
- Lady! the worst your presence ere has cheered
- (When want and sorrow fled as you appeared)
- Were to a Zetlander as the high dome
- Of proud Drumlanrig to my humble home.
- Here rise no groves, and here no gardens blow,
- Here even the hardy heath scarce dares to grow;
- But rocks on rocks, in mist and storm arrayed,
- Stretch far to sea their giant colonnade,
- With many a cavern seam'd, the dreary haunt
- Of the dun seal and swarthy cormorant.
- Wild round their rifted brows with frequent cry,
- As of lament, the gulls and gannets fly,
- And from their sable base, with sullen sound,
- In sheets of whitening foam the waves rebound.
-
- Yet even these coasts a touch of envy gain
- From those whose land has known oppression's chain;
- For here the industrious Dutchman comes once more
- To moor his fishing craft by Bressay's shore;
- Greets every former mate and brother tar,
- Marvels how Lerwick 'scaped the rage of war,
- Tells many a tale of Gallic outrage done,
- And ends by blessing God and Wellington.
- Here too the Greenland tar, a fiercer guest,
- Claims a brief hour of riot, not of rest;
- Proves each wild frolic that in wine has birth,
- And wakes the land with brawls and boisterous mirth.
- A sadder sight on yon poor vessel's prow
- The captive Norse-man sits in silent woe,
- And eyes the flags of Britain as they flow.
- Hard fate of war, which bade her terrors sway
- His destined course, and seize so mean a prey;
- A bark with planks so warp'd and seams so riven,
- She scarce might face the gentlest airs of heaven:
- Pensive he sits, and questions oft if none
- Can list his speech and understand his moan;
- In vain--no islesman now can use the tongue
- Of the bold Norse, from whom their lineage sprung.
- Not thus of old the Norse-men hither came,
- Won by the love of danger or of fame;
- On every storm-beat cape a shapeless tower
- Tells of their wars, their conquests, and their power;
- For ne'er for Grecia's vales, nor Latian land,
- Was fiercer strife than for this barren strand;
- A race severe--the isle and ocean lords,
- Loved for its own delight the strife of swords;
- With scornful laugh the mortal pang defied,
- And blest their gods that they in battle died.
-
- Such were the sires of Zetland's simple race,
- And still the eye may faint resemblance trace
- In the blue eye, tall form, proportion fair,
- The limbs athletic, and the long light hair--
- (Such was the mien, as Scald and Minstrel sings,
- Of fair-haired Harold, first of Norway's Kings);
- But their high deeds to scale these crags confined,
- Their only warfare is with waves and wind.
-
- Why should I talk of Mousa's castled coast?
- Why of the horrors of the Sumburgh Rost?
- May not these bald disjointed lines suffice,
- Penn'd while my comrades whirl the rattling dice--
- While down the cabin skylight lessening shine
- The rays, and eve is chased with mirth and wine?
- Imagined, while down Mousa's desert bay
- Our well-trimm'd vessel urged her nimble way,
- While to the freshening breeze she leaned her side,
- And bade her bowsprit kiss the foamy tide?
-
- Such are the lays that Zetland Isles supply;
- Drenched with the drizzly spray and dropping sky,
- Weary and wet, a sea-sick minstrel I.----W. SCOTT.
-
-
- POSTSCRIPTUM.
-
- KIRKWALL, ORKNEY, August 13, 1814.
-
- In respect that your Grace has commissioned a Kraken,
- You will please be informed that they seldom are taken;
- It is January two years, the Zetland folks say,
- Since they saw the last Kraken in Scalloway bay;
- He lay in the offing a fortnight or more,
- But the devil a Zetlander put from the shore,
- Though bold in the seas of the North to assail
- The morse and the sea-horse, the grampus and whale.
- If your Grace thinks I'm writing the thing that is not,
- You may ask at a namesake of ours, Mr. Scott--
- (He's not from our clan, though his merits deserve it,
- But springs, I'm informed, from the Scotts of Scotstarvet;)[96]
- He questioned the folks who beheld it with eyes,
- But they differed confoundedly as to its size.
- For instance, the modest and diffident swore
- That it seemed like the keel of a ship, and no more--
- Those of eyesight more clear, or of fancy more high,
- Said it rose like an island 'twixt ocean and sky--
- But all of the hulk had a steady opinion
- That 't was sure a _live_ subject of Neptune's dominion--
- And I think, my Lord Duke, your Grace hardly would wish,
- To cumber your house, such a kettle of fish.
- Had your order related to nightcaps or hose,
- Or mittens of worsted, there's plenty of those.
- Or would you be pleased but to fancy a whale?
- And direct me to send it--by sea or by mail?
- The season, I'm told, is nigh over, but still
- I could get you one fit for the lake at Bowhill.
- Indeed, as to whales, there's no need to be thrifty,
- Since one day last fortnight two hundred and fifty,
- Pursued by seven Orkneymen's boats and no more,
- Betwixt Truffness and Luffness were drawn on the shore!
- You'll ask if I saw this same wonderful sight;
- I own that I did not, but easily might--
- For this mighty shoal of leviathans lay
- On our lee-beam a mile, in the loop of the bay,
- And the islesmen of Sanda were all at the spoil,
- And _flinching_ (so term it) the blubber to boil;
- (Ye spirits of lavender, drown the reflection
- That awakes at the thoughts of this odorous dissection.)
- To see this huge marvel full fain would we go,
- But Wilson, the wind, and the current said no.
- We have now got to Kirkwall, and needs I must stare
- When I think that in verse I have once called it _fair_;
- 'Tis a base little borough, both dirty and mean--
- There is nothing to hear, and there's nought to be seen,
- Save a church, where, of old times, a prelate harangued,
- And a palace that's built by an earl that was hanged.
- But farewell to Kirkwall--aboard we are going,
- The anchor's a-peak and the breezes are blowing;
- Our commodore calls all his band to their places,
- And 't is time to release you--good-night to your Graces!
-
-
-TO HIS GRACE THE DUKE OF BUCCLEUCH, ETC.
-
- GLASGOW, September 8, 1814.
-
-MY DEAR LORD DUKE,--I take the earliest opportunity, after landing, to
-discharge a task so distressing to me, that I find reluctance and fear
-even in making the attempt, and for the first time address so kind and
-generous a friend without either comfort and confidence in myself, or
-the power of offering a single word of consolation to his affliction.
-I learned the late calamitous news (which indeed no preparation could
-have greatly mitigated) quite unexpectedly, when upon the Irish
-coast; nor could the shock of an earthquake have affected me in the
-same proportion. Since that time I have been detained at sea, thinking
-of nothing but what has happened, and of the painful duty I am now to
-perform. If the deepest interest in this inexpressible loss could
-qualify me for expressing myself upon a subject so distressing, I know
-few whose attachment and respect for the lamented object of our
-sorrows can or ought to exceed my own, for never was more attractive
-kindness and condescension displayed by one of her sphere, or returned
-with deeper and more heartfelt gratitude by one in my own. But selfish
-regret and sorrow, while they claim a painful and unavailing
-ascendance, cannot drown the recollection of the virtues lost to the
-world, just when their scene of acting had opened wider, and to her
-family when the prospect of their speedy entry upon life rendered her
-precept and example peculiarly important. And such an example! for of
-all whom I have ever seen, in whatever rank, she possessed most the
-power of rendering virtue lovely--combining purity of feeling and
-soundness of judgment with a sweetness and affability which won the
-affections of all who had the happiness of approaching her. And this
-is the partner of whom it has been God's pleasure to deprive your
-Grace, and the friend for whom I now sorrow, and shall sorrow while I
-can remember anything. The recollection of her excellencies can but
-add bitterness, at least in the first pangs of calamity, yet it is
-impossible to forbear the topic; it runs to my pen as to my thoughts,
-till I almost call in question, for an instant, the Eternal Wisdom
-which has so early summoned her from this wretched world, where pain
-and grief and sorrow is our portion, to join those to whom her
-virtues, while upon earth, gave her so strong a resemblance. Would to
-God I could say, _be comforted_; but I feel every common topic of
-consolation must be, for the time at least, even an irritation to
-affliction. Grieve, then, my dear Lord, or I should say my dear and
-much honored friend,--for sorrow for the time levels the highest
-distinctions of rank; but do not grieve as those who have no hope. I
-know the last earthly thoughts of the departed sharer of your joys and
-sorrows must have been for your Grace and the dear pledges she has
-left to your care. Do not, for their sake, suffer grief to take that
-exclusive possession which disclaims care for the living, and is not
-only useless to the dead, but is what their wishes would have most
-earnestly deprecated. To time, and to God, whose are both time and
-eternity, belongs the office of future consolation; it is enough to
-require from the sufferer under such a dispensation to bear his
-burthen of sorrow with fortitude, and to resist those feelings which
-prompt us to believe that that which is galling and grievous is
-therefore altogether beyond our strength to support. Most bitterly do
-I regret some levity which I fear must have reached you when your
-distress was most poignant, and most dearly have I paid for venturing
-to anticipate the time which is not ours, since I received these
-deplorable news at the very moment when I was collecting some trifles
-that I thought might give satisfaction to the person whom I so highly
-honored, and who, among her numerous excellencies, never failed to
-seem pleased with what she knew was meant to afford her pleasure.
-
-But I must break off, and have perhaps already written too much. I
-learn by a letter from Mrs. Scott, this day received, that your Grace
-is at Bowhill--in the beginning of next week I will be in the
-vicinity; and when your Grace can receive me without additional pain,
-I shall have the honor of waiting upon you. I remain, with the deepest
-sympathy, my Lord Duke, your Grace's truly distressed and most
-grateful servant,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-The following letter was addressed to Scott by the Duke of
-Buccleuch, before he received that which the Poet penned on landing
-at Glasgow. I present it here, because it will give a more exact
-notion of what Scott's relations with his noble patron really were,
-than any other single document which I could produce: and to set
-that matter in its just light is essential to the business of this
-narrative. But I am not ashamed to confess that I embrace with
-satisfaction the opportunity of thus offering to the readers of the
-present time a most instructive lesson. They will here see what pure
-and simple virtues and humble piety may be cultivated as the only
-sources of real comfort in this world and consolation in the
-prospect of futurity,--among circles which the giddy and envious mob
-are apt to regard as intoxicated with the pomps and vanities of
-wealth and rank; which so many of our popular writers represent
-systematically as sunk in selfish indulgence--as viewing all below
-them with apathy and indifference--and last, not least, as
-upholding, when they do uphold, the religious institutions of their
-country, merely because they have been taught to believe that their
-own hereditary privileges and possessions derive security from the
-prevalence of Christian maxims and feelings among the mass of the
-people.
-
-
-TO WALTER SCOTT, ESQ., POST OFFICE, GREENOCK.
-
- BOWHILL, September 3, 1814.
-
-MY DEAR SIR,--It is not with the view of distressing you with my
-griefs, in order to relieve my own feelings, that I address you at
-this moment. But knowing your attachment to myself, and more
-particularly the real affection which you bore to my poor wife, I
-thought that a few lines from me would be acceptable, both to explain
-the state of my mind at present, and to mention a few circumstances
-connected with that melancholy event.
-
-I am calm and resigned. The blow was so severe that it stunned me, and
-I did not feel that agony of mind which might have been expected. I
-now see the full extent of my misfortune; but that extended view of it
-has come gradually upon me. I am fully aware how imperative it is upon
-me to exert myself to the utmost on account of my children. I must
-not depress their spirits by a display of my own melancholy feelings.
-I have many new duties to perform,--or rather, perhaps, I now feel
-more pressingly the obligation of duties which the unceasing exertions
-of my poor wife rendered less necessary, or induced me to attend to
-with less than sufficient accuracy. I have been taught a severe
-lesson; it may and ought to be a useful one. I feel that my lot,
-though a hard one, is accompanied by many alleviations denied to
-others. I have a numerous family, thank God, in health, and profiting,
-according to their different ages, by the admirable lessons they have
-been taught. My daughter, Anne, worthy of so excellent a mother,
-exerts herself to the utmost to supply her place, and has displayed a
-fortitude and strength of mind beyond her years, and (as I had
-foolishly thought) beyond her powers. I have most kind friends willing
-and ready to afford me every assistance. These are my worldly
-comforts, and they are numerous and great.
-
-Painful as it may be, I cannot reconcile it to myself to be totally
-silent as to the last scene of this cruel tragedy. As she had lived,
-so she died,--an example of every noble feeling--of love, attachment,
-and the total want of everything selfish. Endeavoring to the last to
-conceal her suffering, she evinced a fortitude, a resignation, a
-Christian courage, beyond all power of description. Her last
-injunction was to attend to her poor people. It was a dreadful but
-instructive moment. I have learned that the most truly heroic spirit
-may be lodged in the tenderest and the gentlest breast. Need I tell
-_you_ that she expired in the full hope and expectation, nay, in the
-firmest certainty, of passing to a better world, through a steady
-reliance on her Saviour? If ever there was a proof of the efficacy of
-our religion in moments of the deepest affliction, and in the hour of
-death, it was exemplified in her conduct. But I will no longer dwell
-upon a subject which must be painful to you. Knowing her sincere
-friendship for you, I have thought it would give you pleasure, though
-a melancholy one, to hear from me that her last moments were such as
-to be envied by every lover of virtue, piety, and true and genuine
-religion.
-
-I will endeavor to do in all things what I know she would wish. I have
-therefore determined to lay myself open to all the comforts my
-friends can afford me. I shall be most happy to cultivate their
-society as heretofore. I shall love them more and more, because I know
-they loved her. Whenever it suits your convenience I shall be happy to
-see you here. I feel that it is particularly my duty not to make my
-house the house of mourning to my children; for I know it was _her_
-decided opinion that it is most mischievous to give an early
-impression of gloom to the mind.
-
-You will find me tranquil, and capable of going through the common
-occupations of society. Adieu for the present. Yours very sincerely,
-
- BUCCLEUCH, etc.
-
-
-TO HIS GRACE THE DUKE OF BUCCLEUCH, ETC., ETC., ETC.
-
- EDINBURGH, 11th September, 1814.
-
-MY DEAR LORD DUKE,--I received your letter (which had missed me at
-Greenock) upon its being returned to this place, and cannot
-sufficiently express my gratitude for the kindness which, at such a
-moment, could undertake the task of writing upon such a subject to
-relieve the feelings of a friend. Depend upon it, I am so far worthy
-of your Grace's kindness, that, among many proofs of it, this
-affecting and most distressing one can never be forgotten. It gives me
-great though melancholy satisfaction to find that your Grace has had
-the manly and Christian fortitude to adopt that resigned and patient
-frame of spirit, which can extract from the most bitter calamity a
-wholesome mental medicine. I trust in God, that, as so many and such
-high duties are attached to your station, and as He has blessed you
-with the disposition that draws pleasure from the discharge of them,
-your Grace will find your first exertions, however painful, rewarded
-with strength to persevere, and finally with that comfort which
-attends perseverance in that which is right. The happiness of hundreds
-depends upon your Grace almost directly, and the effect of your
-example in the country, and of your constancy in support of a
-constitution daily undermined by the wicked and designing, is almost
-incalculable. Justly, then, and well, has your Grace resolved to
-sacrifice all that is selfish in the indulgence of grief, to the
-duties of your social and public situation. Long may you have health
-and strength to be to your dear and hopeful family an example and
-guide in all that becomes their high rank. It is enough that one
-light, and alas, what a light that was!--has been recalled by the
-Divine Will to another and a better sphere.
-
-I wrote a hasty and unconnected letter immediately on landing. I am
-detained for two days in this place, but shall wait upon your Grace
-immediately on my return to Abbotsford. If my society cannot, in the
-circumstances, give much pleasure, it will, I trust, impose no
-restraint.
-
-Mrs. Scott desires me to offer her deepest sympathy upon this
-calamitous occasion. She has much reason, for she has lost the
-countenance of a friend such as she cannot expect the course of human
-life again to supply. I am ever, with much and affectionate respect,
-your Grace's truly faithful humble servant,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-TO J. B. S. MORRITT, ESQ., M. P., WORTHING.
-
- EDINBURGH, September 14, 1814.
-
-MY DEAR MORRITT,--"At the end of my tour on the 22d August"!!! Lord
-help us!--this comes of going to the Levant and the Hellespont, and
-your Euxine, and so forth. A poor devil who goes to Nova Zembla and
-Thule is treated as if he had been only walking as far as Barnard
-Castle or Cauldshiels Loch.[97] I would have you to know I only
-returned on the 10th current, and the most agreeable thing I found was
-your letter. I am sure you must know I had need of something pleasant,
-for the news of the death of the beautiful, the kind, the
-affectionate, and generous Duchess of Buccleuch gave me a shock,
-which, to speak God's truth, could not have been exceeded unless by my
-own family's sustaining a similar deprivation. She was indeed a light
-set upon a hill, and had all the grace which the most accomplished
-manners and the most affable address could give to those virtues by
-which she was raised still higher than by rank. As she always
-distinguished me by her regard and confidence, and as I had many
-opportunities of seeing her in the active discharge of duties in which
-she rather resembled a descended angel than an earthly being, you will
-excuse my saying so much about my own feelings on an occasion where
-sorrow has been universal. But I will drop the subject. The survivor
-has displayed a strength and firmness of mind seldom equalled, where
-the affection has been so strong and mutual, and amidst the very high
-station and commanding fortune which so often render self-control more
-difficult, because so far from being habitual. I trust, for his own
-sake, as well as for that of thousands to whom his life is directly
-essential, and hundreds of thousands to whom his example is important,
-that God, as He has given him fortitude to bear this inexpressible
-shock, will add strength of constitution to support him in the
-struggle. He has written to me on the occasion in a style becoming a
-man and a Christian, submissive to the will of God, and willing to
-avail himself of the consolations which remain among his family and
-friends. I am going to see him, and how we shall meet, God knows; but
-though "an iron man of iron mould" upon many of the occasions of life
-in which I see people most affected, and a peculiar contemner of the
-commonplace sorrow which I see paid to the departed, this is a case in
-which my stoicism will not serve me. They both gave me reason to think
-they loved me, and I returned their regard with the most sincere
-attachment--the distinction of rank being, I think, set apart on all
-sides. But God's will be done. I will dwell no longer upon this
-subject. It is much to learn that Mrs. Morritt is so much better, and
-that if I have sustained a severe wound from a quarter so little
-expected, I may promise myself the happiness of your dear wife's
-recovery.
-
-I will shortly mention the train of our voyage, reserving particulars
-till another day. We sailed from Leith, and skirted the Scottish
-coast, visiting the Buller of Buchan and other remarkable
-objects--went to Shetland--thence to Orkney--from thence round Cape
-Wrath to the Hebrides, making descents everywhere, where there was
-anything to be seen--thence to Lewis and the Long Island--to Skye--to
-Iona--and so forth, lingering among the Hebrides as long as we could.
-Then we stood over to the coast of Ireland, and visited the Giant's
-Causeway and Port Rush, where Dr. Richardson, the inventor
-(discoverer, I would say) of the celebrated fiorin-grass, resides. By
-the way, he is a chattering charlatan, and his fiorin a mere humbug.
-But if he were Cicero, and his invention were potatoes, or anything
-equally useful, I should detest the recollection of the place and the
-man, for it was there I learned the death of my friend. Adieu, my dear
-Morritt; kind compliments to your lady; like poor Tom, "I cannot daub
-it farther." When I hear where you are, and what you are doing, I will
-write you a more cheerful epistle. Poor Mackenzie, too, is gone--the
-brother of our friend Lady Hood--and another Mackenzie, son to the
-Man of Feeling. So short time have I been absent, and such has been
-the harvest of mortality among those whom I regarded!
-
-I will attend to your corrections in Waverley. My principal employment
-for the autumn will be reducing the knowledge I have acquired of the
-localities of the islands into scenery and stage-room for The Lord of
-the Isles, of which renowned romance I think I have repeated some
-portions to you. It was elder born than Rokeby, though it gave place
-to it in publishing.
-
-After all, scribbling is an odd propensity. I don't believe there is
-any ointment, even that of the Edinburgh Review, which can cure the
-infected. Once more, yours entirely,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-Before I pass from the event which made August, 1814, so black a
-month in Scott's calendar, I may be excused for once more noticing
-the kind interest which the Duchess of Buccleuch had always taken in
-the fortunes of the Ettrick Shepherd, and introducing a most
-characteristic epistle which she received from him a few months
-before her death. The Duchess--"fearful" (as she said) "of seeing
-herself in print"--did not answer the Shepherd, but forwarded his
-letter to Scott, begging him to explain that circumstances did not
-allow the Duke to concede what he requested, but to assure him that
-they both retained a strong wish to serve him whenever a suitable
-opportunity should present itself. Hogg's letter was as follows:--
-
-
-TO HER GRACE THE DUCHESS OF BUCCLEUCH, DALKEITH PALACE. FAVORED BY
-MESSRS. GRIEVE AND SCOTT, HATTERS, EDINBURGH.[98]
-
- ETTRICKBANK, March 17, 1814.
-
-May it please your Grace,--I have often grieved you by my
-applications for this and that. I am sensible of this, for I have
-had many instances of your wishes to be of service to me, could you
-have known what to do for that purpose. But there are some eccentric
-characters in the world, of whom no person can judge or know what will
-prove beneficial, or what may prove their bane. I have again and again
-received of your Grace's private bounty, and though it made me love
-and respect you the more, I was nevertheless grieved at it. It was
-never your Grace's money that I wanted, but the honor of your
-countenance; indeed my heart could never yield to the hope of being
-patronized by any house save that of Buccleuch, whom I deemed bound to
-cherish every plant that indicated anything out of the common way on
-the Braes of Ettrick and Yarrow.
-
-I know you will be thinking that this long prelude is to end with a
-request. No, Madam! I have taken the resolution of never making
-another request. I will, however, tell you a story, which is, I
-believe, founded on a fact:--
-
-There is a small farm at the head of a water called *****, possessed
-by a mean fellow named ****. A third of it has been taken off and laid
-into another farm--the remainder is as yet unappropriated. Now, there
-is a certain poor bard, who has two old parents, each of them upwards
-of eighty-four years of age; and that bard has no house nor home to
-shelter those poor parents in, or cheer the evening of their lives. A
-single line from a certain very great and very beautiful lady, to a
-certain Mr. Riddle,[99] would insure that small pendicle to the bard
-at once. But she will grant no such thing! I appeal to your Grace if
-she is not a very bad lady that? I am your Grace's ever obliged and
-grateful
-
- JAMES HOGG,
- THE ETTRICK SHEPHERD.
-
-[Illustration: JAMES HOGG
-
-_From the water-color portrait by Denning_]
-
-Though the Duke of Buccleuch would not dismiss a poor tenant merely
-because Hogg called him "a mean fellow," he had told Scott that if
-he could find an unappropriated "pendicle," such as this letter
-referred to, he would most willingly bestow it on the Shepherd. It
-so happened, that when Scott paid his first visit at Bowhill after
-the death of the Duchess, the Ettrick Shepherd was mentioned: "My
-friend," said the Duke, "I must now consider this poor man's case as
-_her_ legacy;" and to this feeling Hogg owed, very soon afterwards,
-his establishment at Altrive, on his favorite braes of Yarrow.
-
-As Scott passed through Edinburgh on his return from his voyage, the
-negotiation as to The Lord of the Isles, which had been protracted
-through several months, was completed--Constable agreeing to give
-fifteen hundred guineas for one half of the copyright, while the
-other moiety was retained by the author. The sum mentioned had been
-offered by Constable at an early stage of the affair, but it was not
-until now accepted, in consequence of the earnest wish of Scott and
-Ballantyne to saddle the publisher of the new poem with part of
-their old "quire stock,"--which, however, Constable ultimately
-persisted in refusing. It may easily be believed that John
-Ballantyne's management of money matters during Scott's six weeks'
-absence had been such as to render it doubly convenient for the Poet
-to have this matter settled on his arrival in Edinburgh--and it may
-also be supposed that the progress of Waverley during that interval
-had tended to put the chief parties in good-humor with each other.
-
-In returning to Waverley, I must observe most distinctly that
-nothing can be more unfounded than the statement which has of late
-years been frequently repeated in memoirs of Scott's life, that the
-sale of the first edition of this immortal Tale was slow. It
-appeared on the 7th of July, and the whole impression (1000 copies)
-had disappeared within five weeks; an occurrence then unprecedented
-in the case of an anonymous novel, put forth at what is called among
-publishers _the dead season_. A second edition, of 2000 copies, was
-at least projected by the 24th of the same month;[100]--that
-appeared before the end of August, and it, too, had gone off so
-rapidly, that when Scott passed through Edinburgh, on his way from
-the Hebrides, he found Constable eager to treat, on the same terms
-as before, for a third of 1000 copies. This third edition was
-published in October, and when a fourth of the like extent was
-called for in November, I find Scott writing to John Ballantyne, "I
-suppose Constable won't quarrel with a work on which he has netted
-£612 in four months, with a certainty of making it £1000 before the
-year is out;" and, in fact, owing to the diminished expense of
-advertising, the profits of this fourth edition were to each party
-£440. To avoid recurring to these details, I may as well state at
-once, that a fifth edition of 1000 copies appeared in January, 1815;
-a sixth of 1500 in June, 1816; a seventh of 2000 in October, 1817;
-an eighth of 2000 in April, 1821; that in the collective editions,
-prior to 1829, 11,000 were disposed of; and that the sale of the
-current edition, with notes, begun in 1829, has already reached
-40,000 copies. Well might Constable regret that he had not ventured
-to offer £1000 for the whole copyright of Waverley!
-
-I must now look back for a moment to the history of the
-composition.--The letter of September, 1810, was not the only piece
-of discouragement which Scott had received, during the progress of
-Waverley, from his first confidant. James Ballantyne, in his
-deathbed _memorandum_, says: "When Mr. Scott first questioned me as
-to my hopes of him as a novelist, it somehow or other did chance
-that they were not very high. He saw this, and said: 'Well, I don't
-see why I should not succeed as well as other people. At all events,
-faint heart never won fair lady--'tis only trying.' When the first
-volume was completed, I still could not get myself to think much of
-the Waverley-Honor scenes; and in this I afterwards found that I
-sympathized with many. But, to my utter shame be it spoken, when I
-reached the exquisite descriptions of scenes and manners at
-Tully-Veolan, what did I do but pronounce them at once to be utterly
-vulgar!--When the success of the work so entirely knocked me down as
-a man of taste, all that the good-natured author said was: 'Well, I
-really thought you were wrong about the Scotch. Why, Burns, by his
-poetry, had already attracted universal attention to everything
-Scottish, and I confess I could n't see why I should not be able to
-keep the flame alive, merely because I wrote Scotch in prose, and he
-in rhyme.'"--It is, I think, very agreeable to have this manly
-avowal to compare with the delicate allusion which Scott makes to
-the affair in his Preface to the Novel.
-
-The only other friends originally entrusted with his secret appear
-to have been Mr. Erskine and Mr. Morritt. I know not at what stage
-the former altered the opinion which he formed on seeing the tiny
-fragment of 1805. The latter did not, as we have seen, receive the
-book until it was completed; but he anticipated, before he closed
-the first volume, the station which public opinion would ultimately
-assign to Waverley. "How the story may continue," Mr. Morritt then
-wrote, "I am not able to divine; but, as far as I have read, pray
-let us thank you for the Castle of Tully-Veolan, and the delightful
-drinking-bout at Lucky Mac-Leary's, for the characters of the Laird
-of Balmawhapple and the Baron of Bradwardine; and no less for Davie
-Gelatly, whom I take to be a transcript of William Rose's motley
-follower, commonly yclept Caliban.[101] If the completion be equal
-to what we have just devoured, it deserves a place among our
-standard works far better than its modest appearance and anonymous
-title-page will at first gain it in these days of prolific
-story-telling. Your manner of narrating is so different from the
-slipshod sauntering verbiage of common novels, and from the stiff,
-precise, and prim sententiousness of some of our female moralists,
-that I think it can't fail to strike anybody who knows what style
-means; but, amongst the gentle class, who swallow every blue-backed
-book in a circulating library for the sake of the story, I should
-fear half the knowledge of nature it contains, and all the real
-humor, may be thrown away. Sir Everard, Mrs. Rachael, and the Baron
-are, I think, in the first rank of portraits for nature and
-character; and I could depone to their likeness in any court of
-taste. The ballad of St. Swithin, and scraps of _old songs_, were
-measures of danger if you meant to continue your concealment; but,
-in truth, you wear your disguise something after the manner of
-Bottom the weaver; and in spite of you the truth will soon peep
-out." And next day he resumes: "We have finished Waverley, and were
-I to tell you all my admiration, you would accuse me of
-complimenting. You have quite attained the point which your
-_postscript-preface_ mentions as your object--the discrimination of
-Scottish character, which had hitherto been slurred over with
-clumsy national daubing." He adds, a week or two later: "After all,
-I need not much thank you for your confidence. How could you have
-hoped that I should not discover you? I had heard you tell half the
-anecdotes before--some turns you owe to myself; and no doubt most of
-your friends must have the same sort of thing to say."
-
-Monk Lewis's letter on the subject is so short that I must give it
-as it stands:--
-
-
-TO WALTER SCOTT, ESQ., ABBOTSFORD.
-
- THE ALBANY, August 17, 1814.
-
-MY DEAR SCOTT,--I return some books of yours which you lent me '_sixty
-years since_'--and I hope they will reach you safe. I write in great
-haste; and yet I must mention, that hearing Waverley ascribed to you,
-I bought it, and read it with all impatience. I am now told it is not
-yours, but William Erskine's. If this is so, pray tell him from me
-that I think it excellent in every respect, and that I believe every
-word of it.
-
- Ever yours, M. G. LEWIS.
-
-
-Another friend (and he had, I think, none more dear), the late
-Margaret Maclean Clephane of Torloisk, afterwards Marchioness of
-Northampton, writes thus from Kirkness, in Kinross-shire, on the
-11th October:--
-
-
-"In this place I feel a sort of pleasure, not unallied to pain, from
-the many recollections that every venerable tree, and every sunny
-bank, and every honeysuckle bower, occasions; and I have found
-something here that speaks to me in the voice of a valued
-friend--_Waverley_. The question that rises, it is perhaps improper to
-give utterance to. If so, let it pass as an exclamation.--Is it
-possible that Mr. Erskine can have written it? The poetry, I think,
-would prove a different descent in any court in Christendom. The turn
-of the phrases in many places is so peculiarly yours, that I fancy I
-hear your voice repeating them; and there wants but verse to make all
-Waverley an enchanting poem--varying to be sure from grave to gay, but
-with so deepening an interest as to leave an impression on the mind
-that few--very few poems--could awaken. But, why did not the author
-allow me to be his Gaelic Dragoman? Oh! Mr. ----, whoever you are, you
-might have safely trusted--M. M. C."
-
-
-There was one person with whom it would, of course, have been more
-than vain to affect any concealment. On the publication of the third
-edition, I find him writing thus to his brother Thomas, who had by
-this time gone to Canada as paymaster of the 70th regiment:--
-
-
-DEAR TOM,--A novel here called Waverley has had enormous success. I
-sent you a copy, and will send you another, with The Lord of the
-Isles, which will be out at Christmas. The success which it has had,
-with some other circumstances, has induced people
-
- "To lay the bantling at a certain door,
- Where lying store of faults, they'd fain heap more."[102]
-
-You will guess for yourself how far such a report has credibility; but
-by no means give the weight of your opinion to the transatlantic
-public; for you must know there is also a counter-report, that _you_
-have written the said Waverley. Send me a novel intermixing your
-exuberant and natural humor with any incidents and descriptions of
-scenery you may see--particularly with characters and traits of
-manners. I will give it all the cobbling that is necessary, and, if
-you do but exert yourself, I have not the least doubt it will be worth
-£500; and, to encourage you, you may, when you send the MS., draw on
-me for £100, at fifty days' sight--so that your labors will at any
-rate not be quite thrown away. You have more fun and descriptive
-talent than most people; and all that you want--_i. e._, the mere
-practice of composition--I can supply, or the devil's in it. Keep this
-matter a dead secret, and look knowing when Waverley is spoken of. If
-you are not Sir John Falstaff, you are as good a man as he, and may
-therefore face Colville of the Dale. You may believe I don't want to
-make you the author of a book you have never seen; but if people will,
-upon their own judgment, suppose so, and also on their own judgment
-give you £500 to try your hand on a novel, I don't see that you are a
-pin's-point the worse. Mind that your MS. attends the draft. I am
-perfectly serious and confident that in two or three months you might
-clear the cobs. I beg my compliments to the hero who is afraid of
-Jeffrey's scalping-knife.
-
-
-In truth, no one of Scott's intimate friends ever had, or could have
-had, the slightest doubt as to the parentage of Waverley: nor,
-although he abstained from communicating the fact formally to most
-of them, did he ever affect any real concealment in the case of such
-persons; nor, when any circumstance arose which rendered the
-withholding of direct confidence on the subject incompatible with
-perfect freedom of feeling on both sides, did he hesitate to make
-the avowal.
-
-Nor do I believe that the mystification ever answered much purpose,
-among literary men of eminence beyond the circle of his personal
-acquaintance. But it would be difficult to suppose that he had ever
-wished that to be otherwise; it was sufficient for him to set the
-mob of readers at gaze, and above all, to escape the annoyance of
-having productions, actually known to be his, made the daily and
-hourly topics of discussion in his presence.[103]
-
-Mr. Jeffrey had known Scott from his youth--and, in reviewing
-Waverley, he was at no pains to conceal his conviction of its
-authorship. He quarrelled, as usual, with carelessness of style, and
-some inartificialities of plot, but rendered justice to the
-substantial merits of the work, in language which I shall not mar by
-abridgment. The Quarterly was far less favorable in its verdict.
-Indeed, the articles on Waverley, and afterwards on Guy Mannering,
-which appeared in that journal, will bear the test of ultimate
-opinion as badly as any critical pieces which our time has produced.
-They are written in a captious, cavilling strain of quibble, which
-shows as complete blindness to the essential interest of the
-narrative, as the critic betrays on the subject of the Scottish
-dialogue, which forms its liveliest ornament, when he pronounces
-that to be "a dark dialogue of Anglified Erse." With this remarkable
-exception, the professional critics were, on the whole, not slow to
-confess their belief, that, under a hackneyed name and trivial form,
-there had at last appeared a work of original creative genius,
-worthy of being placed by the side of the very few real masterpieces
-of prose fiction. Loftier romance was never blended with easier,
-quainter humor, by Cervantes himself. In his familiar delineations
-he had combined the strength of Smollett with the native elegance
-and unaffected pathos of Goldsmith; in his darker scenes he had
-revived that real tragedy which appeared to have left our stage with
-the age of Shakespeare; and elements of interest so diverse had been
-blended and interwoven with that nameless grace, which, more surely
-perhaps than even the highest perfection in the command of any one
-strain of sentiment, marks the master-mind cast in Nature's most
-felicitous mould.
-
-Scott, with the consciousness (avowed long afterwards in his General
-Preface) that he should never in all likelihood have thought of a
-Scotch novel had he not read Maria Edgeworth's exquisite pieces of
-Irish character, desired James Ballantyne to send her a copy of
-Waverley on its first appearance, inscribed "from the author." Miss
-Edgeworth, whom Scott had never then seen, though some literary
-correspondence had passed between them, thanked the nameless
-novelist, under cover to Ballantyne, with the cordial generosity of
-kindred genius;[104] and the following answer, not from Scott, but
-from Ballantyne--(who had kept a copy, now before me)--is not to be
-omitted:--
-
-
-TO MISS EDGEWORTH, EDGEWORTHSTOWN, IRELAND.
-
- EDINBURGH, 11th November, 1814.
-
-MADAM,--I am desired by the Author of Waverley to acknowledge, in his
-name, the honor you have done him by your most flattering approbation
-of his work--a distinction which he receives as one of the highest
-that could be paid him, and which he would have been proud to have
-himself stated his sense of, only that being _impersonal_, he thought
-it more respectful to require my assistance than to write an anonymous
-letter.
-
-There are very few who have had the opportunities that have been
-presented to me, of knowing how very elevated is the admiration
-entertained by the Author of Waverley for the genius of Miss
-Edgeworth. From the intercourse that took place betwixt us while the
-work was going through my press, _I know_ that the exquisite truth and
-power of your characters operated on his mind at once to excite and
-subdue it. He felt that the success of his book was to depend upon the
-characters, much more than upon the story; and he entertained so just
-and so high an opinion of your eminence in the management of both, as
-to have strong apprehensions of any comparison which might be
-instituted betwixt his picture and story and yours; besides, that
-there is a richness and _naïveté_ in Irish character and humor, in
-which the Scotch are certainly defective, and which could hardly fail,
-as he thought, to render his delineations cold and tame by the
-contrast. "If I could but hit Miss Edgeworth's wonderful power of
-vivifying all her persons, and making them live as _beings_ in your
-mind, I should not be afraid:"--Often has the Author of Waverley used
-such language to me; and I knew that I gratified him most when I could
-say,--"Positively this _is_ equal to Miss Edgeworth." You will thus
-judge, Madam, how deeply he must feel such praise as you have bestowed
-upon his efforts. I believe he himself thinks the Baron the best drawn
-character in his book--I mean the Bailie--honest Bailie Macwheeble. He
-protests it is the most _true_, though from many causes he did not
-expect it to be the most popular. It appears to me, that amongst so
-many splendid portraits, all drawn with such strength and truth, it is
-more easy to say which is your favorite, than which is best. Mr. Henry
-Mackenzie agrees with you in your objection to the resemblance to
-Fielding. He says you should never be forced to recollect, _maugre_
-all its internal evidence to the contrary, that such a work is a work
-of fiction, and all its fine creations but of air. The character of
-Rose is less finished than the author had at one period intended; but
-I believe the characters of humor grew upon his liking, to the
-prejudice, in some degree, of those of a more elevated and sentimental
-kind. Yet what can surpass Flora, and her gallant brother?
-
-I am not authorized to say--but I will not resist my impulse to say to
-Miss Edgeworth, that another novel, descriptive of more ancient
-manners still, may be expected erelong from the Author of Waverley.
-But I request her to observe, that I say this in strict
-confidence--not certainly meaning to exclude from the knowledge of
-what will give them pleasure, her respectable family.
-
-Mr. Scott's poem, The Lord of the Isles, promises fully to equal the
-most admired of his productions. It is, I think, equally powerful, and
-certainly more uniformly polished and sustained. I have seen three
-cantos. It will consist of six.
-
-I have the honor to be, Madam, with the utmost admiration and respect,
-
-Your most obedient and most humble servant,
-
- JAMES BALLANTYNE.
-
-
-Footnotes of the Chapter XXXIII.
-
-[96: The Scotts of Scotstarvet, and other families of the
-name in Fife and elsewhere, claim no kindred with the great clan of
-the Border--and their armorial bearings are different.]
-
-[97: Lord Byron writes to Mr. Moore, August 3, 1814: "Oh! I
-have had the most amusing letter from Hogg, the Ettrick Minstrel and
-Shepherd. I think very highly of him as a poet, but he and half of
-these Scotch and Lake troubadours are spoilt by living in little
-circles and petty coteries. London and the world is the only place
-to take the conceit out of a man--in the milling phrase. Scott, he
-says, is gone to the Orkneys in a gale of wind, during which wind,
-he affirms, the said Scott, he is sure, is not at his ease, to say
-the least of it. Lord! Lord! if these home-keeping minstrels had
-crossed your Atlantic or my Mediterranean, and tasted a little open
-boating in a white squall--or a gale in 'the Gut,'--or the Bay of
-Biscay, with no gale at all--how it would enliven and introduce them
-to a few of the sensations!--to say nothing of an illicit amour or
-two upon shore, in the way of Essay upon the Passions, beginning
-with simple adultery, and compounding it as they went along."--_Life
-and Works_, vol. iii. p. 102. Lord Byron, by the way, had written on
-July the 24th to Mr. Murray, "_Waverley_ is the best and most
-interesting novel I have redde since--I don't know when,"
-etc.--_Ibid._ p. 98.]
-
-[98: Mr. Grieve was a man of cultivated mind and generous
-disposition, and a most kind and zealous friend of the Shepherd.]
-
-[99: Major Riddell, the Duke's Chamberlain at Branksome
-Castle.]
-
-[100: See letter to Mr. Morritt, _ante_, p. 120.]
-
-[101: This alludes to some mummery in which David Hinves,
-of merry memory, wore a Caliban-like disguise. He lived more than
-forty years in the service of Mr. W. S. Rose, and died in it last
-year. Mr. Rose was of course extremely young when he first picked up
-Hinves--a bookbinder by trade, and a preacher among the Methodists.
-A sermon heard casually under a tree in the New Forest had such
-touches of good feeling and broad humor, that the young gentleman
-promoted him to be his valet on the spot. He was treated latterly
-more like a friend than a servant by his master, and by all his
-master's intimate friends. Scott presented him with a copy of all
-his works; and Coleridge gave him a corrected (or rather an altered)
-copy of _Christabel_, with this inscription on the flyleaf: "DEAR
-HINVES,--Till this book is concluded, and with it '_Gundimore_, a
-poem, by the same author,' accept of this _corrected_ copy of
-_Christabel_ as a _small_ token of regard; yet such a testimonial as
-I would not pay to any one I did not esteem, though he were an
-emperor. Be assured I shall send you for your private library every
-work I have published (if there be any to be had) and whatever I
-shall publish. Keep steady to the FAITH. If the fountain-head be
-always full, the stream cannot be long empty. Yours sincerely,
-
- S. T. COLERIDGE."
-
-11th November, 1816--Muddeford.
-
-Mr. Rose imagines that the warning, "keep steady to the faith," was
-given in allusion to Ugo Foscolo's "supposed license in religious
-opinions."--_Rhymes_ (Brighton, 1837), p. 92.--(1839.)]
-
-[102: Garrick's Epilogue to _Polly Honeycombe_, 1760.]
-
-[103: ["Except the first opening of the _Edinburgh Review_,
-no work that has appeared in my time made such an instant and
-universal impression. It is curious to remember it. The unexpected
-newness of the thing, the profusion of original characters, the
-Scotch language, Scotch scenery, Scotch men and women, the
-simplicity of the writing, and the graphic force of the
-descriptions, all struck us with an electric shock of delight. I
-wish I could again feel the sensations produced by the first year of
-these two Edinburgh works. If the concealment of the authorship of
-the novels was intended to make mystery heighten their effect, it
-completely succeeded. The speculations and conjectures, and nods and
-winks, and predictions and assertions were endless, and occupied
-every company, and almost every two men who met and spoke in the
-street. It was proved by a thousand indications, each refuting the
-other, and all equally true in fact, that they were written by old
-Henry Mackenzie, and by George Cranstoun, and William Erskine, and
-Jeffrey, and above all by Thomas Scott.... But 'the great unknown'
-as the true author was then called, always took good care, with all
-his concealment, to supply evidence amply sufficient for the
-protection of his property and his fame; in so much that the
-suppression of the name was laughed at as a good joke not merely by
-his select friends in his presence, but by himself. The change of
-line, at his age, was a striking proof of intellectual power and
-richness. But the truth is that these novels were rather the
-outpourings of old thoughts than new inventions."--Lord Cockburn's
-_Memorials of His Time_.]]
-
-[104: [Miss Edgeworth wrote from Edgeworthstown, October
-23, 1814, addressing her letter to the Author of _Waverley_ (see
-_Life and Letters of Maria Edgeworth_, vol. i. pp. 239-244):--
-
- _Aut Scotus, aut Diabolus._
-
-We have this moment finished _Waverley_. It was read aloud to this large
-family, and I wish the author could have witnessed the impression it
-made--the strong hold it seized of the feelings both of young and
-old--the admiration raised by the beautiful description, of nature--by
-the new and bold delineations of character--the perfect manner in which
-every character is sustained in every change of situation from first to
-last, without effort, without the affectation of making the persons
-speak in character--the ingenuity with which each person introduced in
-the drama is made useful and necessary to the end--the admirable art
-with which the story is constructed and with which the author keeps his
-own secrets till the proper moment when they should be revealed, whilst
-in the mean time, with the skill of Shakespeare, the mind is prepared by
-unseen degrees for all the changes of feeling and fortune, so that
-nothing, however extraordinary, shocks us as improbable; and the
-interest is kept up to the last moment. We were so possessed with the
-belief that the whole story and every character in it was real, that we
-could not endure the occasional addresses from the author to the reader.
-They are like Fielding; but for that reason we cannot bear them, we
-cannot bear that an author of such high powers, of such original genius,
-should for a moment stoop to imitation. This is the only thing we
-dislike, these are the only passages we wish omitted in the whole work;
-and let the unqualified manner in which I say this, and the very
-vehemence of my expression of this disapprobation, be a sure pledge to
-the author of the sincerity of all the admiration I feel for his genius.
-
-I have not yet said half we felt in reading the work. The characters
-are not only finely drawn as separate figures, but they are grouped
-with great skill, and contrasted so artfully, and yet so naturally,
-as to produce the happiest dramatic effect and at the same time to
-relieve the feelings and attention in the most agreeable manner. The
-novelty of the Highland world which is discovered to our view
-excites curiosity and interest powerfully; but though it is all new
-to us it does not embarrass or perplex, or strain the attention. We
-never are harassed by doubts of the probability of any of these
-modes of life; though we did not know them, we are quite certain
-they did exist exactly as they are represented. We are sensible that
-there is a peculiar merit in the work which is in a measure lost
-upon us, the dialects of the Highlanders and Lowlanders, etc. But
-there is another and a higher merit with which we are as much struck
-and as much delighted as any true-born Scotchman could be: the
-various gradations of Scotch feudal character, from the high-born
-chieftain and the military baron, to the noble-minded lieutenant
-Evan Dhu, the robber Bean Lean, and the savage Callum Beg. The
-Pre--the Chevalier is beautifully drawn,--
-
- "A prince: aye, every inch a prince!"
-
-His polished manners, his exquisite address, politeness, and
-generosity, interest the reader irresistibly, and he pleases the
-more from the contrast between him and those who surround him. I
-think he is my favorite character; the Baron Bradwardine is my
-father's. He thinks it required more genius to invent, and more
-ability uniformly to sustain, this character than any one of the
-masterly characters with which the book abounds. There is indeed
-uncommon art in the manner in which his dignity is preserved by his
-courage and magnanimity, in spite of all his pedantry and his
-_ridicules_.... I acknowledge that I am not as good a judge as my
-father and brothers are of his recondite learning and his law Latin,
-yet I feel the humor, and was touched to the quick by the strokes of
-generosity, gentleness, and pathos in this old man, who is, by the
-bye, all in good time worked up into a very dignified father-in-law
-for the hero....
-
-Jinker, in the battle, pleading the cause of the mare he had sold to
-Balmawhapple, and which had thrown him for want of the proper bit,
-is truly comic; my father says that this and some other passages
-respecting horsemanship could not have been written by any one who
-was not master both of the great and little horse.
-
-I tell you without order the great and little strokes of humor and
-pathos just as I recollect, or am reminded of them at this moment by
-my companions.... Judging by our own feeling as authors, we guess
-that he would rather know our genuine first thoughts, than wait for
-cool second thoughts, or have a regular eulogium or criticism put in
-the most lucid manner, and given in the finest sentences that ever
-were rounded.
-
-Is it possible that I have got thus far without having named Flora
-or Vich Ian Vohr--the last Vich Ian Vohr! Yet our minds were full of
-them the moment before I began this letter; and could you have seen
-the tears forced from us by their fate, you would have been
-satisfied that the pathos went to our hearts. Ian Vohr from the
-first moment he appears, till the last, is an admirably drawn and
-finely sustained character--new, perfectly new to the English
-reader--often entertaining--always heroic--sometimes sublime. The
-gray spirit, the Bodach Glas, thrills us with horror. _Us!_ What
-effect must it have upon those under the influence of the
-superstitions of the Highlands?...
-
-Flora we could wish was never called Miss MacIvor, because in this
-country there are tribes of vulgar Miss Macs, and this association
-is unfavorable to the sublime and beautiful of your Flora--she is a
-true heroine.... There is one thing more we could wish changed or
-omitted in Flora's character.... In the first visit to her, where
-she is to sing certain verses, there is a walk, in which the
-description of the place is beautiful, but too long, and we did not
-like the preparation for a scene--the appearance of Flora and her
-harp was too like a common heroine; she should be far above all
-stage effect or novelist's trick.
-
-These are, without reserve, the only faults we found or can find in
-this work of genius. We should scarcely have thought them worth
-mentioning, except to give you proof positive that we are not
-flatterers. Believe me, I have not, nor can I convey to you the full
-idea of the pleasure, the delight we have had in reading _Waverley_,
-nor of the feeling of sorrow with which we came to the end of the
-history of persons whose real presence had so filled our minds--we
-felt that we must return to the flat realities of life, that our
-stimulus was gone, and we were little disposed to read the
-"Postscript, which should have been a Preface."
-
-"Well, let us hear it," said my father, and Mrs. Edgeworth read on.
-
-Oh! my dear sir, how much pleasure would my father, my mother, my
-whole family as well as myself have lost, if we had not read to the
-last page! And the pleasure came upon us so unexpectedly--we had
-been so completely absorbed that every thought of ourselves, of our
-own authorship, was far, far away.
-
-Thank you for the honor you have done us, and for the pleasure you
-have given us, great in proportion to the opinion we had formed of
-the work we had just perused--and believe me, every opinion I have
-in this letter expressed was formed before any individual in the
-family had peeped to the end of the book or knew how much we owed
-you.
-
- Your obliged and grateful MARIA EDGEWORTH.]
-
-
-
-
-END OF VOLUME FOUR
-
-[Transcriber's note: Only obvious printer's errors have been
-corrected (e.g.: 3 s instead of 2, etc.). The author's spelling has
-been maintained and inconsistencies have not been standardised.]
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Memoirs of the Life of Sir Walter
-Scott, Volume 4 (of 10), by John Gibson Lockhart
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