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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
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+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60455 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60455)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Highland Mary, by Clayton Mackenzie Legge
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Highland Mary
- The Romance of a Poet
-
-Author: Clayton Mackenzie Legge
-
-Illustrator: William Kirkpatrick
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2019 [EBook #60455]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HIGHLAND MARY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-HIGHLAND MARY
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “Highland Mary.”]
-
-
-
-
- HIGHLAND
- MARY
-
- The Romance of a Poet
-
- A
- NOVEL
-
- By
- CLAYTON MACKENZIE LEGGE
-
- Illustrated by
- WILLIAM KIRKPATRICK
-
- [Illustration]
-
- 1906
- C. M. CLARK PUBLISHING CO.
- BOSTON
-
- Copyright, 1906.
- THE C. M. CLARK PUBLISHING CO.,
- Boston, Mass.
-
- Entered at
- Stationer’s Hall, London.
-
- Dramatic and all other
- RIGHTS RESERVED.
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- THE REV. DR. DONALD SAGE MACKAY, D.D.,
-
- _Pastor of the Collegiate Church_,
-
- NEW YORK CITY.
-
- I RESPECTFULLY DEDICATE THIS BOOK
-
-
-
-
-FOREWORD
-
-
-With apologies to Dame History for having taken liberties with some of
-her famous characters, I would ask the Reader to remember that this story
-is fiction and not history.
-
-I have made use of some of the most romantic episodes in the life of
-Robert Burns, such as his courtship of Mary Campbell and his love affair
-with Jean Armour, “the Belle of Mauchline,” and many of the historical
-references and details are authentic.
-
-But my chief purpose in using these incidents was to make “Highland Mary”
-as picturesque, lovable and interesting a character in Fiction as she has
-always been in the History of Scotland.
-
- CLAYTON MACKENZIE LEGGE.
-
-
-
-
-HIGHLAND MARY
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-In the “but” or living-room (as it was termed in Scotland) of a little
-whitewashed thatched cottage near Auld Ayr in the land of the Doon, sat a
-quiet, sedate trio of persons consisting of two men and a woman. She who
-sat at the wheel busily engaged in spinning was the mistress of the cot,
-a matronly, middle-aged woman in peasant’s cap and ’kerchief.
-
-The other two occupants of the room for years had been inseparable
-companions and cronies, and when not at the village inn could be found
-sitting by the fireside of one of their neighbors, smoking their pipes
-in blissful laziness. And all Ayrshire tolerated and even welcomed Tam
-O’Shanter and his cronie, “Souter Johnny.”
-
-Tam was an Ayrshire farmer, considered fairly well-to-do in the
-neighborhood, while Souter (shoemaker) Johnny was the village cobbler,
-who seldom, if ever, worked at his trade nowadays. All the afternoon
-had they sat by the open fireplace, with its roomy, projecting chimney,
-watching the peat burn, seldom speaking, smoking their old smelly pipes,
-and sighing contentedly as the warmth penetrated their old bones.
-
-Mrs. Burns glanced at her uninvited guests occasionally with no approving
-eye. If they must inflict their presence on her, why couldn’t they talk,
-say something, tell her some of the news, the gossip of the village? she
-thought angrily; their everlasting silence had grown very monotonous to
-the good dame. She wished they would go. It was nearing supper time, and
-Gilbert would soon be in from the field, and she knew that he did not
-approve of the two old cronies hanging around monopolizing the fireplace
-to the exclusion of everyone else, and she did not want any hard words
-between them and Gilbert. Suddenly with a final whirl she fastened the
-end of the yarn she was spinning, and getting up from her seat set the
-wheel back against the whitewashed wall.
-
-Then going to the old deal dresser, she took from one of the drawers a
-white cloth and spread it smoothly over the table, then from the rack,
-which hung above it, she took the old blue dishes and quickly set the
-table for their evening meal. At these preparations for supper the
-old cronies looked eagerly expectant, for none knew better than they
-the excellence of the Widow Burns’ cooking, and a look of pleasant
-anticipation stole over their sober faces as they perceived the platter
-of scones on the table ready to be placed on the hot slab of stone in the
-fireplace.
-
-Knocking the ashes from his pipe, Tam rose unsteadily to his feet, and
-standing with his back to the fire, he admiringly watched the widow as
-she bustled to and fro from table to dresser. “Ah, Mistress Burns, ye’re
-a fine housekeeper,” he remarked admiringly. “An’ ye’re a fine cook.”
-
-Mrs. Burns turned on him sharply. “So is your guidwife,” she said
-shortly, glancing out through the low, deep, square window to where her
-second son could be seen crossing the field to the house. She hoped he
-would take the hint and go.
-
-“Aye, Mistress, I ken ye’re recht,” replied Tam, meekly, with a dismal
-sigh. “But it’s a sorry bet o’ supper I’ll be gang hame to this night,
-an’ ye ken it’s a long journey, too, Mistress Burns,” he insinuated slyly.
-
-“Sure it’s a lang, weary journey, Tam,” said Souter Johnny,
-commiseratingly. “But think o’ the warm welcome ye’ll be haein’ when ye
-meet your guidwife at the door,” and a malicious twinkle gleamed in his
-kindly but keen old eyes.
-
-“How is your guidwife, Tam O’Shanter?” inquired Mistress Burns, as she
-placed some scones on the hot hearthstone to bake.
-
-“She’s a maist unco woman, Mistress,” replied Tam sorrowfully. “There’s
-no livin’ wi’ her o’ late. She’s no a help or comfort to a mon at a’!”
-he whined. Here Tam got a delicious whiff of the baking scones, and his
-mouth as well as his eyes watered as he continued pathetically, “If
-she could only cook like ye, Mistress. Oh, ’twas a sorry day for Tam
-O’Shanter when he took such a scoldin’ beldame for wife,” and Tam sat
-down, the picture of abject distress.
-
-Souter regarded his cronie with a grim smile. He had no pity for Tam, nor
-for any man, in fact, who would not or could not rule his own household.
-(Souter, by the by, had remained a bachelor.) However, he did his best to
-console Tam whenever his marital troubles were discussed.
-
-“Never mind, Tam,” he said sympathetically, helping himself to a scone
-while Mistress Burns’ back was turned. “Ye ken where ye can find all the
-comfort and consolation ye can hold, if ye hae the tippence.”
-
-Tam wiped away a tear (tears came easily to the old tyke in his constant
-state of semi-intoxication) and gave a deep, prolonged sigh. “Aye,
-Souter, an’ I feel mair at home in the Inn than I do with my guidwife,”
-he answered mournfully. “I dinna mind telling ye, she’s driven me to the
-Deil himsel’, by her daur looks an’ ways. The only friend I hae left is
-Old John Barleycorn,” and he wailed in maudlin despair.
-
-“He’s your best enemy, ye mean,” retorted Souter dryly, relighting his
-pipe, after having demolished, with evident relish, the last of his
-stolen scone.
-
-“Waesucks, mon,” he continued, assuming the tone of Dominie Daddy Auld,
-who had tried in vain to convert the two old sinners, much to their
-amusement and inward elation. “Your guidwife told ye weel. Ye’re a
-skellum, Tam, a blethering, blustering, drunken blellum,” and the old
-rogue looked slyly at Mistress Burns to note the effect of his harangue.
-
-“Aye, ye’re right, Souter Johnny,” said the good dame, nodding approval
-to him, and going up to Tam, who was still sitting groaning by the
-fireside, she shook him vigorously by the shoulder. “Stop your groaning
-and grunting, ye old tyke, and listen to me,” she said sharply. “Take
-your friend’s advice and gi’ old John Barleycorn a wide berth.” Here her
-voice dropped to a whisper, “or some day ye’ll be catched wi’ warlocks in
-the mire, Tam O’Shanter.” He stopped his noise and straightened up in his
-chair.
-
-“Aye, and ghosties and witches will come yelpin’ after ye as ye pass
-the auld haunted kirk at Alloway,” added Souter sepulchrally, leaning
-over Tam with fixed eyes and hand outstretched, clutching spasmodically
-at imaginary objects floating before Tam’s suspicious, angry eyes. Tam,
-however, was not to be so easily frightened, and brushing Souter aside,
-he jumped to his feet. “Souter Johnny, dinna ye preach to me, mon,” he
-roared menacingly. “Ye hae no reght. Let Daddy Auld do that! I dinna fear
-the witches or ghosties, not I.” He staggered to the window and pointed
-to an old white horse standing meekly by the roadside.
-
-“Do ye see any auld faithful Maggie standin’ out there?” he cried
-triumphantly. Not waiting for their answer, he continued proudly,
-“Nae witches can catch Tam O’Shanter when he’s astride his auld mare’s
-back, whether he is drunk or sober,” and he glared defiantly at his
-listeners. At that moment the door from the “ben” opened, and Gilbert
-Burns entered the room. An angry frown wrinkled his forehead as his gaze
-fell upon the two old cronies. A hard worker himself, he could not abide
-laziness or shiftlessness in another. He strode swiftly up to Tam, who
-had suddenly lost his defiant attitude, but before he could speak the
-bitter, impatient words which rushed to his lips, his mother, knowing his
-uncertain temper, shook her head at him remonstratingly. “Ah, lad, I’m
-fair ye hae come in to rest a while, an’ to hae a bit o’ supper,” she
-hurriedly said. “Set ye doon. I hae some scones for ye, an’ Mollie has
-some rabbit stew. Noo gie me your bonnet and coat, laddie,” and taking
-them from him she hung them on the peg behind the door, while Gilbert
-with a look of disgust at the two old cronies sat down and proceeded to
-butter his scones in moody silence. Tam and Souter, however, did not
-appear in any wise abashed, and perceiving they were not to be invited to
-eat with Gilbert, they resumed their seats each side of the fireplace and
-heaved a disconsolate sigh.
-
-Mrs. Burns, who had left the room for a moment, now entered bearing a
-large bowl of the steaming stew, which she set before her son, while
-directly after her appeared old Mollie Dunn, the half-witted household
-drudge. The time was when Mollie had been the swiftest mail carrier
-between Dumfries and Mauchline, but she was now content to have a home
-with the Burns family, where, if the twinges of rheumatism assailed her,
-she could rest her bones until relief came. She now stood, a pleased grin
-on her ugly face, watching Gilbert as he helped himself to a generous
-portion of the stew which she had proudly prepared for the evening meal.
-
-“Molly,” said her mistress sharply, “dinna ye stand there idle; fetch me
-some hot water frae the pot.”
-
-Molly got a pan from the rack and hurried to the fireplace, where Tam was
-relighting his pipe with a blazing ember, for the dozenth time. Molly had
-no love for Tam, and finding him in her way, she calmly gave a quick pull
-to his plaidie, and Tam, who was in a crouching position, fell backward,
-sprawling on the hearth in a decidedly undignified attitude. With the
-roar of a wounded lion, he scrambled to his feet, with the assistance
-of Souter, and shaking his fist at the laughing Molly, he sputtered
-indignantly, “Is the Deil himsel’ in ye, Molly Dunn? Ye’re an impudent
-hussy, that’s what ye are.” Molly glared at him defiantly for a moment,
-then calmly proceeded to fill her pan with hot water, while the old man,
-bursting with indignation, staggered over to the dresser where Mistress
-Burns was brewing some tea.
-
-“Mistress Burns,” he remonstrated almost tearfully, “ye should teach
-your servants better manners. Molly Dunn is a——” but he never finished
-his sentence, for Molly, hurrying back with the hot water, ran into him
-and, whether by design or accident it was never known, spilled the hot
-contents of the pan over Tam’s shins, whereupon he gave what resembled
-a burlesque imitation of a Highland fling to the accompaniment of roars
-of pain and anger from himself and guffaws of laughter from Souter and
-Molly. Even Mrs. Burns and Gilbert could not resist a smile at the antics
-of the old tyke.
-
-“Toots, mon,” said Molly, not at all abashed at the mischief she had
-done, “ye’re no hurt; ye’ll get mair than that at hame, I’m tellin’ ye,”
-and she nodded her head sagely.
-
-“Molly, hold your tongue,” said Mistress Burns reprovingly, then she
-turned to Tam. “I hope ye’re nae burnt bad.” But Tam was very angry, and
-turning to Souter he cried wrathfully, “I’m gang hame, Souter Johnny.
-I’ll no stay here to be insulted; I’m gang hame.” And he started for the
-door.
-
-“Dinna mind Molly; she’s daft like,” replied Souter in a soothing voice.
-“Come and sit doon,” and he tried to pull him toward the fireplace, but
-Tam was not to be pacified. His dignity had been outraged.
-
-“Nay, nay, Souter, I thank ye!” he said firmly. “An’ ye, too, Mistress
-Burns, for your kind invitation to stay langer,” she looked at him
-quickly, then gave a little sniff, “but I ken when I’m insulted,” and
-disengaging himself from Souter’s restraining hand, he started for the
-door once more.
-
-“An’ where will ye be gang at this hour, Tam?” insinuated Souter slyly.
-“Ye ken your guidwife’s temper.”
-
-“I’m gang over to the Inn,” replied Tam defiantly, with his hand on the
-open door. “Will ye gang alang wi’ me, Souter? A wee droppie will cheer
-us both,” he continued persuasively.
-
-Souter looked anxiously at Gilbert’s stern, frowning face, then back to
-Tam. “I’d like to amazin’ weel, Tam,” he replied in a plaintive tone,
-“but ye see——”
-
-“Johnny has promised me he’ll keep sober till plantin’ is over,”
-interrupted Gilbert firmly; “after that he can do as he likes.”
-
-“Ye should both be ashamed o’ yoursel’s drinkin’ that vile whisky,” said
-Mrs. Burns angrily, and she clacked her lips in disgust. “It is your
-worst enemy, I’m tellin’ ye.”
-
-“Ye mind, Mistress Burns,” replied Souter, winking his left eye at Tam,
-“ye mind the Scriptures say, ‘Love your enemies.’ Weel, we’re just tryin’
-to obey the Scriptures, eh, Tam?”
-
-“Aye, Souter,” answered Tam with drunken gravity, “I always obey the
-Scriptures.”
-
-“Here, mon, drink a cup of tea before ye gang awa’,” said Mrs. Burns, and
-she took him a brimming cup of the delicious beverage, thinking it might
-assuage his thirst for something stronger. Tam majestically waved it away.
-
-“Nay, I thank ye, Mistress Burns, I’ll no’ deprive ye of it,” he answered
-with extreme condescension. “Tea doesno’ agree with Tam O’Shanter.” He
-pushed open the door. “I’m off to the Inn, where the _tea_ is more to my
-likin’. Guid-day to ye all,” and, slamming the door behind him, he called
-Maggie to his side, and jumping astride her old back galloped speedily
-toward the village Inn. The last heard of him that day was his voice
-lustily singing “The Campbells Are Coming.”
-
-After he left the room Mistress Burns handed Souter the cup of tea
-she had poured for Tam, and soon the silence was unbroken save by an
-occasional sigh from the old tyke as he sipped his tea.
-
-Presently Gilbert set down his empty cup, rose and donned his coat. “Here
-we are drinking tea, afternoon tea, as if we were of the quality,” he
-observed sarcastically, “instead of being out in the fields plowing the
-soil; there’s much to be done ere sundown.”
-
-“Weel, this suits me fine,” murmured Souter contentedly, draining his
-cup. “I ken I was born to be one o’ the quality; work doesno’ agree wi’
-me, o’er weel,” and he snuggled closer in his chair.
-
-“Ye’re very much like my fine brother Robert in that respect,” answered
-Gilbert bitterly, his face growing stern and cold. “But we want no
-laggards here on Mossgiel. Farmers must work, an’ work hard, if they
-would live.” He walked to the window and looked out over the untilled
-ground with hard, angry eyes, and his heart filled with bitterness as
-he thought of his elder brother. It had always fallen to him to finish
-the many tasks his dreaming, thoughtless, erratic brother had left
-unfinished, while the latter sought some sequestered spot where, with
-pencil and paper in hand, he would idle away his time writing verses. And
-for a year now Robert had been in Irvine, no doubt enjoying himself to
-the full, while he, Gilbert, toiled and slaved at home to keep the poor
-shelter over his dear ones. It was neither right nor just, he thought,
-with an aching heart.
-
-“Ye ken, Gilbert,” said Souter Johnny, breaking in on his reverie,
-“Robert wasna’ born to be a farmer. He always cared more, even when a wee
-laddie, for writin’ poetry and dreamin’ o’ the lasses than toilin’ in the
-fields, more’s the pity.”
-
-Mrs. Burns turned on him quickly. “Souter Johnny, dinna ye dare say a
-word against Robert,” she flashed indignantly. “He could turn the best
-furrough o’ any lad in these parts, ye ken that weel,” and Souter was
-completely annihilated by the angry flash that gleamed in the mother’s
-eye, and it was a very humble Souter that hesitatingly held out his cup
-to her, hoping to change the subject. “Hae ye a wee droppie mair tea
-there, Mistress Burns?” he meekly asked.
-
-Mrs. Burns was not to be mollified, however. “Aye, but not for ye, ye
-skellum,” she answered shortly, taking the cup from him and putting it in
-the dishpan.
-
-“Come along, Souter,” said Gilbert, going to the door. “We hae much to do
-ere sundown and hae idled too long, noo. Come.”
-
-“Ye’re workin’ me too hard, Gilbert,” groaned Souter despairingly. “My
-back is nigh broken; bide a wee, mon!”
-
-A sharp whistle from without checked Gilbert as he was about to reply.
-“The Posty has stopped at the gate,” exclaimed Mistress Burns excitedly,
-rushing to the window in time to see old Molly receive a letter from that
-worthy, and then come running back to the house. Hurrying to the door,
-she snatched it from the old servant’s hands and eagerly held it to the
-light. Molly peered anxiously over her shoulder.
-
-“It’s frae Robbie,” she exclaimed delightedly. “Keep quiet, noo, till I
-read it to the end.” As she finished, the tears of gladness rolled down
-her smooth cheek. “Oh, Gilbert,” she said, a little catch in her voice,
-“Robert is comin’ back to us. He’ll be here this day. Read it, lad, read
-for yoursel’.” He took the letter and walked to the fireplace. After a
-slight pause he read it. As she watched him she noticed with sudden
-apprehension the look of anger that darkened his face. She had forgotten
-the misunderstanding which had existed between the brothers since their
-coming to Mossgiel to live, and suddenly her heart misgave her.
-
-“Gilbert lad,” she hesitatingly said as he finished the letter, “dinna
-say aught to Robert when he comes hame about his rhyming, will ye,
-laddie?” She paused and looked anxiously into his sullen face. “He canna
-bear to be discouraged, ye ken,” and she took the letter from him and
-put it in her bosom. Gilbert remained silent and moody, a heavy frown
-wrinkling his brow.
-
-“Perhaps all thoughts of poesy has left him since he has been among
-strangers,” continued the mother thoughtfully. “Ye ken he has been doin’
-right weel in Irvine; and it’s only because the flax dresser’s shop has
-burned to the ground, and he canna work any more, that he decides to come
-hame to help us noo. Ye ken that, Gilbert.” She laid her hand in tender
-pleading on his sunburnt arm.
-
-“He always shirked his work before,” replied Gilbert bitterly, “and nae
-doot he will again. But he maun work, an’ work hard, if he wants to stay
-at Mossgiel. Nae more lyin’ around, scribblin’ on every piece of paper he
-finds, a lot of nonsense, which willna’ put food in his mouth, nor clothe
-his back.” Mrs. Burns sighed deeply and sank into the low stool beside
-her spinning wheel, he hands folded for once idly in her lap, and gave
-herself up to her disquieting thoughts.
-
-“Ye can talk all ye like,” exclaimed Souter, who was ever ready with his
-advice, “but Robert is too smart a lad to stay here for lang. He was
-never cut out for a farmer nae mair was I.”
-
-“A farmer,” repeated Mrs. Burns, with a mirthless little laugh. “An’ what
-is there in a farmer’s life to pay for all the hardships he endures?”
-she asked bitterly. “The constant grindin’ an’ endless toil crushes all
-the life out o’ one in the struggle for existence. Remember your father,
-Gilbert,” and her voice broke at the flood of bitter recollection which
-crowded her thoughts.
-
-“I have na forgotten him, mither,” replied Gilbert quietly. “Nor am I
-likely to, for my ain lot in life is nae better.” And pulling his cap
-down over his eyes, he went back to the window and gazed moodily out
-over the bare, rocky, profitless farm which must be made to yield them
-a living. There was silence for a time, broken only by the regular
-monotonous ticking of the old clock. After a time Mrs. Burns quietly left
-the room.
-
-“Oh, laddie,” whispered Souter as the door closed behind her, coming up
-beside Gilbert, “did ye hear the news that Tam O’Shanter brought frae
-Mauchline?”
-
-“Do you mean about Robert an’ some lassie there?” inquired Gilbert
-indifferently, after a brief pause.
-
-“Aye!” returned Souter impressively, “but she’s nae common lass, Gilbert.
-She’s Squire Armour’s daughter Jean, called the Belle of Mauchline.”
-
-“I ken it’s no serious,” replied Gilbert sarcastically, “for ye ken
-Robert’s heart is like a tinder box, that flares up at the first whisper
-of passion,” and he turned away from the window and started for the door.
-
-“I canna’ understand,” reflected Souter, “how the lad could forget his
-sweetheart, Highland Mary, long enough to take up wi any ither lassie.
-They were mighty fond o’ each ither before he went awa’ a year ago. I can
-swear to that,” and he smiled reminiscently.
-
-A look of despair swept over Gilbert’s face at the idle words of the
-garrulous old man. He leaned heavily against the door, for there was a
-dull, aching pain at his heart of which he was physically conscious.
-For a few moments he stood there with white drawn face, trying hard
-to realize the bitter truth, that at last the day had come, as he had
-feared it must come, when he must step aside for the prodigal brother
-who would now claim his sweetheart. And she would go to him so gladly,
-he knew, without a single thought of his loneliness or his sorrow. But
-she was not to blame. It was only right that she should now be with her
-sweetheart, that he must say farewell to those blissful walks along
-the banks of the Doon which for almost a year he had enjoyed with Mary
-by his side. His stern, tense lips relaxed, and a faint smile softened
-his rugged features. How happy he had been in his fool’s paradise. But
-he loved her so dearly that he had been content just to be with her,
-to listen to the sweetness of her voice as she prattled innocently and
-lovingly of her absent sweetheart. A snore from Souter, who had fallen
-asleep in his chair, roused him from the fond reverie into which he had
-fallen, and brought him back to earth with a start. With a bitter smile
-he told himself he had no right to complain. If he had allowed himself to
-fall in love with his brother’s betrothed, he alone was to blame, and he
-must suffer the consequence. Suddenly a wild thought entered his brain.
-Suppose—and his heart almost stopped beating at the thought—suppose
-Robert had grown to love someone else, while away, even better than he
-did Mary? He had heard rumors of Robert’s many amourous escapades in
-Mauchline; then perhaps Mary would again turn to him for comfort. His
-eyes shone with renewed hope and his heart was several degrees lighter as
-he left the house. Going to the high knoll back of the cottage, he gazed
-eagerly, longingly, across the moor to where, in the hazy distance, the
-lofty turrets of Castle Montgomery, the home of the winsome dairymaid,
-Mary Campbell, reared their heads toward the blue heavens.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
- Ye banks and braes and streams around
- The Castle of Montgomery,
- Green be your woods and fair your flowers,
- Your waters never drumlie,
- There summer first unfolds her robes,
- And there the langest tarry,
- For there I took the last farewell
- O’ my sweet Highland Mary.
-
-
-At the foot of the hill on which stood Castle Montgomery flowed the River
-Doon, winding and twisting itself through richly wooded scenery on its
-way to Ayr Bay. On the hillside of the stream stood the old stone dairy,
-covered with ivy and shaded by overhanging willows. Within its cool,
-shady walls the merry lassies sang at their duties, with hearts as light
-and carefree as the birds that flew about the open door. Their duties
-over for the day, they had returned to their quarters in the long, low
-wing of the castle, and silence reigned supreme over the place, save for
-the trickling of the Doon splashing over the stones as it wended its
-tuneful way to join the waters of the Ayr.
-
-Suddenly the silence was broken; borne on the evening breeze came the
-sound of a sweet, high voice singing:
-
- “Oh where and oh where is my Highland laddie gone,”
-
-sang the sweet singer, plaintively from the hilltop. Nearer and nearer
-it approached as the owner followed the winding path down to the river’s
-bank. Suddenly the drooping willows were parted, and there looked out the
-fairest face surely that mortal eyes had ever seen.
-
-About sixteen years of age, with ringlets of flaxen hair flowing
-unconfined to her waist, laughing blue eyes, bewitchingly overarched by
-dark eyebrows, a rosebud mouth, now parted in song, between two rounded
-dimpled cheeks, such was the bonnie face of Mary Campbell, known to all
-around as “Highland Mary.” Removing her plaidie, which hung gracefully
-from one shoulder, she spread it on the mossy bank, and, casting herself
-down full length upon it, her head pillowed in her hand, she finished
-her song, lazily, dreamily, letting it die out, slowly, softly floating
-into nothingness. Then for a moment she gave herself up to the mere joy
-of living, watching the leaves as they fell noiselessly into the stream
-and were carried away, away until they were lost to vision. Gradually her
-thoughts became more centered. That particular spot was full of sweet
-memories to her. It was here, she mused dreamily, that she and Robert had
-parted a year ago. It was here on the banks of the Doon they so often had
-met and courted and loved, and here it was they had stood hand in hand
-and plighted their troth, while the murmuring stream seemed to whisper
-softly, “For eternity, for all eternity.” And here in this sequestered
-spot, on that second Sunday of May, they had spent the day in taking a
-last farewell. Would she ever forget it? Oh, the pain of that parting!
-Her eyes filled with tears at the recollection of her past misery. But
-she brushed them quickly away with a corner of her scarf. He had promised
-to send for her when he was getting along well, and she had been waiting
-day after day for that summons, full of faith in his word. For had he not
-said as he pressed her to his heart:
-
- “I hae sworn by the heavens to my Mary,
- I hae sworn by the heavens to be true.
- And so may the heavens forget me,
- When I forget my vow.”
-
-A whole year had passed. She had saved all her little earnings, and now
-her box was nearly filled with the linen which she had spun and woven
-with her own fair hands, for she did not mean to come dowerless to her
-husband. In a few months, so he had written in his last letter, he would
-send for her to come to him, and they would start for the new country,
-America, where gold could be picked up in the streets (so she had heard
-it said). They could not help but prosper, and so the child mused on
-happily. The sudden blast of a horn interrupted her sweet day dreams,
-and, hastily jumping to her feet, with a little ejaculation of dismay
-she tossed her plaidie over her back, and, filling her pail from the
-brook, swung it lightly to her strong young shoulder.
-
- “An’ it’s o’ in my heart, I wish him safe at home,”
-
-she trilled longingly, as she retraced her steps up the winding path,
-over the hill, and back to the kitchen, where, after giving the pail into
-the hand of Bess, the good-natured cook, she leaned against the lintel
-of the door, her hands shading her wistful eyes, and gazed long and
-earnestly off to where the sun was sinking behind the horizon in far-off
-Irvine. So wrapped was she in her thoughts she failed to hear the whistle
-of Rory Cam, the Posty, and the bustle and confusion which his coming had
-created within the kitchen. The sharp little shrieks and ejaculations of
-surprise and delight, however, caused her to turn her head inquiringly.
-Looking through the open door, she saw Bess in the center of a gaping
-crowd of servants, reading a letter, the contents of which had evoked
-the delight of her listeners. “An’ he’ll be here this day,” cried Bess
-loudly, folding her letter. “Where’s Mary Campbell?” she demanded,
-looking around the room.
-
-“Here I am, Bess,” said Mary, standing shyly at the door.
-
-“Hae ye heard the news, then, lassie?” asked Bess, grinning broadly.
-
-“Nay; what news?” inquired Mary, wondering why they all looked at her so
-knowingly.
-
-“I’ve just had word frae my sister in Irvine, an’ she said——” Here Bess
-paused impressively. “She said that Rob Burns was burnt out o’ his place,
-an’ that he would be comin’ hame to-day.” Bess, who had good-naturedly
-wished to surprise Mary, was quite startled to see her turn as white as
-a lily and stagger back against the door with a little gasp of startled
-surprise.
-
-“Are ye sure, Bess?” she faltered, her voice shaking with eagerness.
-
-“It’s true as Gospel, lassie; I’ll read ye the letter,” and Bess started
-to take it out, but with a cry of joy Mary rushed through the door like a
-startled fawn, and before the astonished maids could catch their breath
-she had lightly vaulted over the hedge and was flying down the hill and
-over the moor toward Mossgiel farm with the speed of a swallow, her
-golden hair floating behind her like a cloud of glorious sunshine. On,
-on she sped, swift as the wind, and soon Mossgiel loomed up in the near
-distance. Not stopping for breath, she soon reached the door, and without
-pausing to knock burst into the room.
-
-Mrs. Burns had put the house in order and, with a clean ’kerchief and cap
-on, sat patiently at her wheel, waiting for Robert to come home, while
-Souter quietly sat in the corner winding a ball of yarn from the skein
-which hung over the back of the chair, and looking decidedly sheepish.
-When Mary burst in the door so unceremoniously they both jumped
-expectantly to their feet, thinking surely it was Robert.
-
-“Why, Mary lass, is it ye?” said Mrs. Burns in surprise. “Whatever brings
-ye over the day? not but we are glad to have ye,” she added hospitably.
-
-“Where is he, Mistress Burns, where’s Robbie?” she panted excitedly, her
-heart in her voice.
-
-“He isna’ here yet, lassie,” replied Mrs. Burns, with a sigh. “But sit ye
-doon. Take off your plaidie and wait for him. There’s a girlie,” and she
-pushed the unresisting girl into a chair.
-
-“Ye’re sure he isna’ here, Mistress Burns?” asked Mary wistfully, looking
-around the room with eager, searching eyes.
-
-“Aye, lassie,” she replied, smiling; “if he were he wouldna’ be hidin’
-from ye, dearie, and after a year of absence, too. But I ken he will
-be here soon noo.” And she went to the window and looked anxiously out
-across the moor.
-
-“It seems so lang since he left Mossgiel, doesna’ it, Mistress Burns?”
-said Mary with a deep sigh of disappointment.
-
-“An’ weel ye might say that,” replied Mrs. Burns. “For who doesna’ miss
-my laddie,” and she tossed her head proudly. “There isna’ another like
-Robbie in all Ayrshire. A bright, honest, upright, pure-minded lad, whom
-any mither might be proud of. I hope he’ll return to us the same laddie
-he was when he went awa’.” The anxious look returned to her comely face.
-
-An odd little smile appeared about the corners of Souter’s mouth as he
-resumed his work.
-
-“Weel, noo, Mistress Burns,” he asked dryly, “do ye expect a healthy lad
-to be out in this sinful world an’ not learn a few things he didna ken
-before? ’Tis only human nature,” continued the old rogue, “an’ ye can
-learn a deal in a year, mind that, an’ that reminds me o’ a good joke.
-Sandy MacPherson——”
-
-“Souter Johnny, ye keep your stories to yoursel’,” interrupted Mrs. Burns
-with a frown. Souter’s stories were not always discreet.
-
-“Irvine and Mauchline are very gay towns,” continued Souter
-reminiscently. “They say some of the prettiest gurls of Scotlan’ live
-there, an’ I hear they all love Robbie Burns, too,” he added slyly,
-looking at Mary out of the corner of his eye.
-
-“They couldna help it,” replied Mary sweetly.
-
-“An’ ye’re nae jealous, Mary?” he inquired in a surprised tone, turning
-to look into the flushed, shy face beside him.
-
-“Jealous of Robert?” echoed Mary, opening her innocent eyes to their
-widest. “Nay! for I ken he loves me better than any other lassie in the
-world.” And she added naïvely, “He has told me so ofttimes.”
-
-“Ye needna fear, Mary,” replied Mrs. Burns, resuming her place at the
-wheel. “I’ll hae no ither lass but ye for my daughter, depend on’t.”
-
-“Thank ye, Mistress Burns,” said Mary brightly. “I ken I’m only a simple
-country lass, but I mean to learn all I can, so that when he becomes a
-great man he’ll no be ashamed of me, for I ken he will be great some
-day,” she continued, her eyes flashing, the color coming and going in
-her cheek as she predicted the future of the lad she loved. “He’s a born
-poet, Mistress Burns, and some day ye’ll be proud of your lad, for genius
-such as Rabbie’s canna always be hid.” Mrs. Burns gazed at the young girl
-in wonder.
-
-“Oh, if someone would only encourage him,” continued Mary earnestly, “for
-I’m fair sure his heart is set on rhyming.”
-
-“I ne’er heard of a body ever makin’ money writin’ verses,” interposed
-Souter, rubbing his chin reflectively with the ball of soft yarn.
-
-“Ah, me,” sighed Mrs. Burns, her hands idle for a moment, “I fear the
-lad does but waste his time in such scribbling. Who is to hear it? Only
-his friends, who are partial to him, of course, but who, alas, are as
-puir as we are, and canna assist him in bringin’ them before the public.
-The fire burns out for lack of fuel,” she continued slowly, watching the
-flickering sparks die one by one in the fireplace. “So will his love
-of writin’ when he sees how hopeless it all is.” She paused and sighed
-deeply. “He maun do mair than write verses to keep a wife and family
-from want,” she continued earnestly, and she looked sadly at Mary’s
-downcast face. “And, Mary, ye too will hae to work, harder than ye hae
-ever known, even as I have; so hard, dearie, that the heart grows sick
-and weary and faint in the struggle to keep the walf awa’.”
-
-“I am no afraid of hard work,” answered Mary bravely, swallowing the
-sympathetic tears which rose to her eyes. “If poverty is to be his
-portion I shall na shrink from sharin’ it wi’ him,” and her eyes shone
-with love and devotion.
-
-Mrs. Burns rose and put her arms lovingly about her. “God bless ye,
-dearie,” she said softly, smoothing the tangled curls away from the broad
-low brow with tender, caressing fingers.
-
-“Listen!” cried Mary, as the wail of the bagpipes was heard in the
-distance. “’Tis old blind Donald,” and running to the window she threw
-back the sash with a cry of delight. “Oh, how I love the music of the
-pipes!” she murmured passionately, and her sweet voice vibrated with
-feeling, for she thought of her home so far away in the Highlands and the
-dear ones she had not seen for so long.
-
-“Isna he the merry one this day,” chuckled Souter, keeping time with his
-feet and hands, not heeding the yarn, which had slipped from the chair,
-and which was fast becoming entangled about his feet.
-
-“It’s fair inspirin’!” cried Mary, clapping her hands ecstatically.
-“Doesna it take ye back to the Highlands, Souter?” she asked happily.
-
-“Aye, lassie,” replied Souter. “But it’s there among the hills and glens
-that the music of the pipes is most entrancin’,” he added loyally, for
-he was a true Highlander. The strains of the “Cock of the North” grew
-louder and louder as old Donald drew near the farm, and Mary, who could
-no longer restrain her joyous impulse, with a little excited laugh, her
-face flushing rosily, ran to the center of the room, where, one hand on
-her hip, her head tossed back, she began to dance. Her motion was harmony
-itself as she gracefully swayed to and fro, darting here and there like
-some elfin sprite, her bare feet twinkling like will-o’-the-wisps, so
-quickly did they dart in and out from beneath her short plaid skirt. With
-words of praise they both encouraged her to do her best.
-
-Louder and louder the old piper blew, quicker and quicker the feet of the
-dancer sped, till, with a gasp of exhaustion, Mary sank panting into the
-big armchair, feeling very warm and very tired, but very happy.
-
-“Ye dance bonnie, dearie, bonnie,” exclaimed Mrs. Burns delightedly,
-pouring her a cup of tea, which Mary drank gratefully.
-
-“Oh, dearie me,” Mary said apologetically, putting down her empty cup,
-“whatever came o’er me? I’m a gaucie wild thing this day, for true, but
-I canna held dancin’ when I hear the pipes,” and she smiled bashfully
-into the kind face bent over her.
-
-“Music affects me likewise,” replied Souter, trying to untangle the yarn
-from around his feet, but only succeeding in making a bad matter worse.
-“Music always goes to my feet like whusky, only whusky touches me here
-first,” and he tapped his head humorously with his forefinger.
-
-“Souter Johnny, ye skellum!” cried Mrs. Burns, noticing for the first
-time the mischief he had wrought. “Ye’re not worth your salt, ye
-ne’er-do-weel. Ye’ve spoiled my yarn,” and she glared at the crestfallen
-Souter with fire in her usually calm eye.
-
-“It was an accident, Mistress Burns,” stammered Souter, awkwardly
-shifting his weight from one foot to the other in his efforts to free
-himself from the persistent embrace of the clinging yarn.
-
-With no gentle hand Mrs. Burns shoved him into a chair and proceeded to
-extricate his feet from the tangled web which held him prisoner. Soon she
-freed the offending members and rose to her feet. “Noo gang awa’,” she
-sputtered. “Ye’ve vexed me sair. Gang out and help Gilbert. I canna bide
-ye round.” Souter took his Tam O’Shanter, which hung over the fireplace,
-and ambled to the door.
-
-“Very weel,” he said meekly, “I’ll go. Souter Johnny can take a hint
-as weel as the next mon,” and he closed the door gently behind him and
-slowly wended his way across the field to where Gilbert was sitting,
-dreamily looking across the moor.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-“Why doesna he come, Mistress Burns?” said Mary pathetically. They had
-come down to the field where Gilbert was now at work the better to watch
-for their loved one’s approach. “Twilight is comin’ on an’ ’tis a lang
-walk to Castle Montgomery at night. I canna wait much langer noo.”
-
-“Never ye mind, lassie; ye shall stay the night with me,” replied Mrs.
-Burns soothingly, “if Robert doesna come.”
-
-“I’ll take ye back, Mary,” said Gilbert eagerly, going up to her. Perhaps
-Robert was not coming after all, he thought with wildly beating heart.
-
-“Thank ye, Gilbert, but I’ll wait a wee bit longer,” answered Mary
-hopefully; “perhaps he’ll be here soon,” and she dejectedly dug her bare
-toes into the damp earth.
-
-“Well, lassie, I canna waste any mair time,” said Mrs. Burns
-energetically. “Ye can stay here with Gilbert, while I return to my
-spinning. Come, Souter, there’s some firewood to be split,” and she
-quickly walked to the house, followed more slowly by the reluctant Souter.
-
-Gilbert, with his soul in his eyes, feasted on the pathetic loveliness
-of the sweet face beside him, gazing wistfully toward Mauchline, and his
-aching heart yearned to clasp her to his breast, to tell her of his
-love, to plead for her pity, her love, herself, for he felt he would
-rather die than give her up to another. He drew closer to her.
-
-“What is the matter, Gilbert?” asked Mary anxiously, noting his pale
-face. “Are ye in pain?”
-
-“Aye, Mary, in pain,” he answered passionately. “Such pain I’ll hope
-ye’ll never know.” He bowed his head.
-
-“I’m so sorry, lad,” she replied innocently. “I wish I could help ye,”
-and she looked compassionately at the suffering man.
-
-He raised his head suddenly and looked into her eyes.
-
-“Are ye goin’ to marry Robert this summer, when he returns?” he asked
-abruptly, his voice husky with emotion.
-
-“Aye, if he wishes it,” answered Mary simply, wondering why he looked so
-strangely white.
-
-“He has been gone a year, ye ken,” continued Gilbert hoarsely. “Suppose
-he has changed and no langer loves ye?” She looked at him with big,
-frightened eyes. She had never thought of that possibility before. What
-if he did no longer love her? she thought fearfully. She looked about her
-helplessly. She felt bewildered, dazed; slowly she sank down on the rocky
-earth, her trembling limbs refusing to support her. Her fair head drooped
-pathetically, like a lily bent and bruised by the storm.
-
-“If Robert doesna want me any more,” she murmured after a pause, a
-pathetic little catch in her voice, “if he loves someone else better than
-he does his Highland Mary, then I—I——”
-
-“Ye’ll soon forget him, Mary,” interrupted Gilbert eagerly, his heart
-throbbing with hope. She raised her eyes from which all the light had
-flown and looked at him sadly, reproachfully.
-
-“Nay, lad, I wouldna care to live any longer,” she said quietly.
-“My heart would just break,” and she smiled a pitiful little smile
-which smote him like a knife thrust. He caught her two hands in his
-passionately and pressed them to his heart with a cry of pain.
-
-“Dinna mind what I said, lass,” he cried, conscience stricken; “dinna
-look like that. I dinna mean to grieve ye, Mary, I love ye too well.”
-And almost before he realized it he had recklessly, passionately,
-incoherently told her of his love for her, his jealousy of his brother,
-his grief and pain at losing her. Mary gazed at him in wonder, scarcely
-understanding his wild words, his excited manner.
-
-“I’m fair pleased that ye love me, Gilbert,” she answered him in her
-innocence. “Ye ken I love ye too, for ye’ve been so kind and good
-to me ever since Robert has been awa’,” and she pressed his hand
-affectionately. With a groan of despair he released her and turned away
-without another word. Suddenly she understood, and a great wave of
-sympathy welled up in her heart. “Oh, Gilbert,” she cried sorrowfully,
-a world of compassion in her voice. “I understand ye noo, laddie, an’
-I’m so sorry, so sorry.” He bit his lips till the blood came. Finally he
-spoke in a tone of quiet bitterness.
-
-“I’ve been living in a fool’s paradise this past year,” he said, “but
-’tis all ended noo. Why, ever since he went awa’ I have wished, hoped,
-and even prayed that Rob would never return to Mossgiel, that ye might
-forget him and his accursed poetry, and in time would become my wife.” He
-threw out his hands with a despairing gesture as he finished.
-
-“Oh, Gilbert,” she faltered, with tears in her eyes, “I never dreamed ye
-thought of me in that way. Had I only known, I——” she broke off abruptly
-and looked away toward the cottage.
-
-“Ye see what a villain I have been,” he continued with a bitter smile.
-“But ye have nothin’ to blame yoursel’ for, Mary. I had no right to think
-of ye ither than as Robert’s betrothed wife.”
-
-“I’m so sorry, lad,” repeated Mary compassionately. Then her downcast
-face brightened. “Let us both forget what has passed this day, and be the
-same good friends as ever, wi’na we, Gilbert?” And she held out her hand
-to him with her old winning smile.
-
-“God bless ye, lassie,” he replied brokenly. Quietly they stood there for
-a few minutes, then with a sudden start they realized that deep twilight
-had fallen upon them. Silently, stealthily it had descended, like a
-quickly drawn curtain. Slowly they wended their way back to the cottage.
-When they reached the door Mary suddenly turned and peered into the
-deepening twilight.
-
-“Listen!” she said breathlessly. “Dinna ye hear a voice, Gilbert?” He
-listened for a minute. Faintly there came on the still air the distant
-murmur of many voices.
-
-“’Tis only the lads on their way to the village,” he replied quietly.
-With a little shiver, Mary drew her plaidie closely about her, for the
-air had grown cool.
-
-“I think I’ll hae to be goin’ noo,” she said dejectedly. “He willna be
-here this night.”
-
-“Very well,” answered Gilbert. “I’ll saddle the mare and take ye back.
-Bide here a wee,” and he left her. She could hardly restrain the
-disappointed tears, which rose to her eyes.
-
-Why didn’t Robert come? What could keep him so late? She so longed to see
-her laddie once more. She idly wondered why the lads, whose voices she
-now heard quite plainly, were coming toward Mossgiel. There was no inn
-hereabouts. By the light of the rising moon she saw them on the moor,
-ever drawing nearer and nearer, but they had no interest for her. Nothing
-interested her now. She leaned back against the wall of the cottage and
-patiently awaited Gilbert’s return.
-
-“He’s comin’! he’s comin’!” suddenly exclaimed the voice of Mrs. Burns
-from within the cottage. “My lad is comin’! Out of my way, ye skellum!”
-and out she ran, her face aglow with love and excitement, followed by
-Souter, who was shouting gleefully, “He’s comin’! he’s comin’! Robbie’s
-comin’!” and off he sped in her footsteps, to meet the returned wanderer.
-
-“It’s Robbie! it’s Robbie!” cried Mary joyously, her nerves a-quiver,
-as she heard the vociferous outburst of welcome from the lads, who were
-bringing him in triumph to his very door.
-
-“Welcome hame, laddie!” shouted the crowd, as they came across the field,
-singing, laughing and joking like schoolboys on a frolic.
-
-“Oh, I canna’, I darena’ meet him before them a’,” she exclaimed aloud,
-blushing rosily, frightened at the thought of meeting him before the
-good-natured country folk.
-
-She would wait till they all went away, and, turning, she ran into the
-house like a timid child. Quickly she hid behind the old fireplace,
-listening shyly, as she heard them approach the open door.
-
-“Thank ye, lads, for your kind welcome,” said Robert as he reached the
-threshold, one arm around his mother. “I didna’ ken I had left so many
-friends in Mossgiel,” and he looked around gratefully at the rugged faces
-that were grinning broadly into his.
-
-“Come doon to the Inn and hae a wee nippie for auld lang syne,” sang out
-Sandy MacPherson, with an inviting wave of the hand.
-
-“Nay, an’ he’ll not gang a step, Sandy MacPherson,” cried Mrs. Burns
-indignantly, clinging closely to her son.
-
-“Nay, I thank ye, Sandy,” laughingly replied Robert. “Ye must excuse me
-to-night. I’ll see ye all later, and we’ll have a lang chat o’er auld
-times.”
-
-“Come awa’ noo, Robert,” said Mrs. Burns lovingly, “an’ I’ll get ye a
-bite and a sup,” and she drew him into the house.
-
-“Good-night, lads; I’ll see ye to-morrow,” he called back to them
-cheerily.
-
-“Good-night,” they answered in a chorus, and with “three cheers for
-Robbie Burns” that made the welkin ring, they departed into the night,
-merrily singing “Should auld acquaintance be forgot?” a song Robert
-himself had written before leaving Mossgiel.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-“Ah, Souter Johnny, how are ye, mon?” cried Robert heartily, as his eyes
-rested on the beaming face of the old man. “Faith, an’ I thought I’d find
-ye here as of old. ’Tis almost a fixture ye are.”
-
-“Ah, weel,” replied Souter nonchalantly, as he shook Robert’s
-outstretched hand, “ye ken the Scripture says, ‘an’ the poor ye have
-always wi’ ye.’” Robert laughed merrily at the old man’s sally.
-
-“Thank goodness, they’ve gone at last,” said Mrs. Burns with a sigh
-of relief, as she entered the room. “Why, laddie, ye had half the
-ne’er-do-weels of Mossgiel a-following ye. They are only a lot of leeches
-and idle brawlers, that’s a’,” and her dark eyes flashed her disapproval.
-
-“I’m sure they have kind hearts, mither, for a’ that,” replied Robert
-reproachfully.
-
-“Ye’re so popular wi’ them a’, Robbie,” cried Souter proudly.
-
-“Aye, when he has a shillin’ to spend on them,” added Mrs. Burns dryly.
-“But sit doon, laddie; ye maun be tired wi’ your lang walk,” and she
-gently pushed him into a chair beside the table.
-
-“I am a wee bittie tired,” sighed Robert gratefully as he leaned back in
-the chair.
-
-“I’ll soon hae something to eat before ye,” replied his mother briskly.
-
-“I’m nae hungry, mother,” answered Robert. “Indeed, I couldna’ eat a
-thing,” he remonstrated as she piled the food before him.
-
-“’Tis in love ye are,” insinuated Souter with a knowing look. “I ken the
-symptoms weel; ye canna’ eat.”
-
-“Ye’re wrong there,” replied Robert with a bright smile. “Love but
-increases my appetite.”
-
-“Aye, for love,” added Souter _sotto voce_.
-
-“Ah, mother dear, how guid it seems to be at hame again, under the old
-familiar roof-tree,” said Robert a little later, as he leaned back
-contentedly in his chair and gazed about the room with eager, alert
-glances. As he sits there with his arms folded let us take a look at
-our hero. Of more than medium height, his form suggested agility as
-well as strength. His high forehead, shaded with black curling hair
-tied at the neck, indicated extensive capacity. His eyes were large,
-dark, and full of fire and intelligence. His face was well formed and
-uncommonly interesting and expressive, although at the first glance his
-features had a certain air of coarseness, mingled with an expression of
-calm thoughtfulness, approaching melancholy. He was dressed carelessly
-in a blue homespun long coat, belted at the waist, over a buff-colored
-vest; short blue pantaloons, tucked into long gray home-knit stockings,
-which came up above his knee, and broad low brogans, made by Souter’s
-hands. He wore a handsome plaid of small white and black checks over one
-shoulder, the ends being brought together under the opposite arm and tied
-loosely behind.
-
-“’Tis a fine hame-comin’ ye’ve had, laddie,” cried old Souter proudly.
-“Faith, it’s just like they give the heir of grand estates. We should hae
-had a big bonfire burnin’ outside our—ahem—palace gates,” and he waved
-his hand grandiloquently.
-
-“Dinna’ ye make fun of our poor clay biggin’, Souter Johnny,” cried Mrs.
-Burns rebukingly. “Be it ever so poor, ’tis our hame.”
-
-“Aye, ’tis our hame, mother,” repeated Robert lovingly. “An’ e’en tho’
-I have been roaming in other parts, still this humble cottage is the
-dearest spot on earth to me. I love it all, every stick and stone, each
-blade of grass, every familiar object that greeted my eager gaze as I
-crossed the moor to this haven of rest, my hame. And my love for it this
-moment is the strongest feeling within me.”
-
-His roving eyes tenderly sought out one by one the familiar bits of
-furniture around the room, and lingered for a moment lovingly on the
-old fireplace. It was there he had first seen Mary Campbell. She had
-come to the cottage on an errand, and as she stood leaning against the
-mantel, the sunlight gleaming through the window upon her golden hair,
-he had entered the room. It was plainly love at first sight, and so he
-had told her that same day, as he walked back to Castle Montgomery with
-the winsome dairymaid. The course of their love had flowed smoothly and
-uneventfully; he loved her with all the depth of his passionate emotional
-nature, and yet his love was more spiritual than physical. She was an
-endless source of inspiration, as many a little song and ode which had
-appeared in the Tarbolton weekly from time to time could testify. How
-long the year had been away from her, he mused dreamily. To-morrow,
-bright and early, he would hurry over to Castle Montgomery and surprise
-her at her duties.
-
-[Illustration: “Gazed straight into the startled eyes of Robert.”]
-
-Mary, from her hiding place, had watched all that happened since Robert
-had come into the room. She had not expected to remain so long hidden,
-she thought wistfully. She had hoped that Mrs. Burns would miss her, and
-that she, or Robert, or someone would look for her, but they had not
-even thought of her, and her lips trembled piteously at their neglect.
-And so she had stayed on, peeping out at them, whenever their backs were
-turned, feeling very lonely, and very miserable, in spite of the pride
-that thrilled her, as she watched her lover sitting there so handsome
-in the full strength of his young manhood. Perhaps they didn’t want her
-here to-night. Perhaps it was true, as Gilbert said, “that Robert didn’t
-love her any more.” The tears could no longer be restrained. If she
-could only slip out unobserved she would go home. She wasn’t afraid,
-she thought miserably. She wondered what they were doing now, they were
-so quiet? Peering shyly around the mantel, she gazed straight into the
-startled eyes of Robert, who with a surprised ejaculation started back in
-amazement.
-
-“Why, Mary Campbell!” cried his mother remorsefully, as she caught sight
-of Mary’s face, “I declare I clear forgot ye, lass.” With a glad cry
-Robert sprang toward her and grasped her two hands in his own, his eyes
-shining with love and happiness.
-
-“Mary, lass, were ye hidin’ awa’ from me?” he asked in tender reproach.
-She dropped her head bashfully without a word. “’Tis o’er sweet in ye,
-dear, to come over to welcome me hame,” he continued radiantly. “Come
-an’ let me look at ye,” and he drew her gently to where the candle light
-could fall on her shy, flushed face. “Oh, ’tis bonnie ye’re looking,
-lassie,” he cried proudly. He raised her drooping head, so that his
-hungry eyes could feast on her beauty. She stood speechless, like a
-frightened child, not daring to raise her eyes to his. “Haven’t ye a word
-of welcome for me, sweetheart?” he whispered tenderly, drawing her to him
-caressingly.
-
-“I’m—I’m very glad to hae ye back again,” she faltered softly, her sweet
-voice scarcely audible.
-
-“Go an’ kiss him, Mary; dinna’ mind us,” cried Souter impatiently. “I can
-see ye’re both asking for it wi’ your eyes,” he insinuated. And he drew
-near them expectantly.
-
-“Hauld your whist, ye old tyke,” flashed Mrs. Burns indignantly. “Robbie
-Burns doesna’ need ye to tell him how to act wi’ the lassies.”
-
-“I’ll not dispute ye there,” replied Souter dryly, winking his eye at
-Robert knowingly.
-
-Robert laughed merrily as he answered, “Ye ken we’re both o’er bashful
-before ye a’.”
-
-“Ah, ye’re a fine pair of lovers, ye are,” retorted Souter disgustedly,
-turning away.
-
-“So the neighbors say, Souter,” responded Robert gayly, giving Mary a
-loving little squeeze.
-
-And surely there never was a handsomer couple, thought Mistress Burns
-proudly, as they stood there together. One so dark, so big and strong,
-the other so fair, so fragile and winsome. And so thought Gilbert Burns
-jealously, as he came quietly into the room. Robert went to him quickly,
-a smile lighting up his dark face, his hand outstretched in greeting.
-
-“I’m o’er glad to see ye again, Gilbert,” he cried impulsively, shaking
-his brother’s limp hand.
-
-“So ye’ve come back again,” said Gilbert, coldly.
-
-“Aye, like a bad penny,” laughingly responded Robert. “Noo that I am
-burned out of my situation, I’ve come hame to help ye in the labors of
-the farm,” and he pressed his brother’s hand warmly.
-
-“I fear your thoughts willna’ lang be on farming,” observed Gilbert
-sarcastically, going to the fireplace and deliberately turning his back
-to Robert.
-
-“I’ll struggle hard to keep them there, brother,” replied Robert simply.
-His brother’s coldness had chilled his extraordinarily sensitive nature.
-He walked slowly back to his seat.
-
-“I ken ye’d rather be writin’ love verses than farmin’, eh, Robert?”
-chimed in Souter thoughtlessly.
-
-“’Tis only a waste of time writin’ poetry, my lad,” sighed Mrs. Burns,
-shaking her head disapprovingly.
-
-“I canna’ help writin’, mother,” answered the lad firmly, a trifle
-defiantly. “For the love of poesy was born in me, and that love was
-fostered at your ain knee ever since my childhood days.”
-
-She sighed regretfully. “I didna’ ken what seed I was sowing then,
-laddie,” she answered thoughtfully.
-
-“Dinna’ be discouraged,” cried Mary eagerly, going to him. “I’ve faith in
-ye, laddie, and in your poetry, too.” She put her hand on his shoulder
-lovingly, as he sat beside the table, looking gloomy and dejected. “Some
-day,” she continued, a thrill of pride in her voice, “ye’ll wake to
-find your name on everybody’s lips. You’ll be rich and famous, mayhap.
-Who kens, ye may even become the Bard o’ Scotland,” she concluded in an
-awestruck tone.
-
-“Nay, Mary, I do not hope for that,” replied Robert, his dark
-countenance relaxing into a smile of tenderness at her wild prophecy,
-although in his own heart he felt conscious of superior talents.
-
-“Waesucks,” chuckled Souter reminiscently. “Do you mind, Robbie, how,
-a year ago, ye riled up the community, an’ the kirk especially, over
-your verses called ‘Holy Willie’s Prayer’? Aye, lad, it was an able
-keen satire, and auld Squire Armour recognized the truth of it, for he
-threatened to hae ye arrested for blaspheming the kirk and the auld licht
-religion. He’ll ne’er forgive ye for that,” and he shook his head with
-conviction.
-
-“He’s an auld Calvinistic hypocrite,” replied Robert carelessly, “and he
-deserved to be satirized alang wi’ the rest of the Elders. Let us hope
-the verses may do them and the kirk some good. They are sadly in need of
-reform.” Then with a gay laugh he told them a funny anecdote concerning
-one of the Elders, and for over an hour they listened to the rich tones
-of his voice as he entertained them with jest and song and story,
-passing quickly from one to the other, as the various emotions succeeded
-each other in his mind, assuming with equal ease the expression of the
-broadest mirth, the deepest melancholy or the most sublime emotion. They
-sat around him spellbound. Never had they seen him in such a changeable
-mood as to-night.
-
-“And noo, laddie, tell us about your life in Irvine and Mauchline,” said
-Mrs. Burns.
-
-Robert had finished his last story, and sat in meditative silence,
-watching the smoldering peat in the fireplace.
-
-He hesitated for a moment. “There is little to tell, mother,” he
-answered, not looking up, “and that little is na worth tellin’.”
-
-“I ken ye’ve come back no richer in pocket than when ye left,” remarked
-Gilbert questioningly. As his brother made no answer, he continued with
-sarcastic irony, “But perhaps there wasna’ enough work for ye there.” He
-watched his brother’s face narrowly.
-
-“There was work enough for a’,” replied Robert in a low tone, an
-agony of remorse in his voice. “An’ I tried to fulfill faithfully the
-uncongenial tasks set before me, but I would sink into dreams, forgetting
-my surroundings, my duties, and would set me doon to put on paper the
-thoughts and fancies which came rushing through my brain, raging like
-so many devils, till they found vent in rhyme; then the conning o’er
-my verses like a spell soothed all into quiet again.” A far away rapt
-expression came over his countenance as he finished, and his dark
-glowing eyes gazed dreamily into space, as if communing with the Muses.
-Mrs. Burns and Mary both watched him with moist, adoring eyes, hardly
-breathing lest they should disturb his reverie. Gilbert stirred in his
-chair restlessly.
-
-“Ye will never prosper unless ye give up this day dreaming,” he
-exclaimed impatiently, rising from his chair and pacing the floor.
-
-Robert looked up, the fire fading from his eyes, his face growing dark
-and forbidding. “I ken that weel, Gilbert,” he answered bitterly. “An’ I
-despair of ever makin’ anything of mysel’ in this world, not e’en a poor
-farmer. I am not formed for the bustle of the busy nor the flutter of the
-gay. I’m but an idle rhymster, a ne’er-do-weel.” He walked quickly to the
-window and stood dejectedly looking out into the night.
-
-“Nay, ye’re a genius, lad,” declared old Souter emphatically, patting
-him affectionately on the shoulder. “I havena’ watched your erratic ways
-for nothin’, an’ I say ye’re a genius. It’s a sad thing to be a genius,
-Robert, an’ I sympathize wi’ ye,” and the old hypocrite shook his head
-dolefully as he took his seat at the fireplace.
-
-“I’m a failure, I ken that weel. I’m a failure,” muttered Robert
-despairingly, his heart heavy and sad.
-
-“Nay, laddie, ye mustna’ talk like that,’tis not right,” cried Mary,
-bravely keeping back the sympathetic tears from her eyes and forcing
-a little smile to her lips. “Ye are only twenty-five,” she continued
-earnestly. “An’ all your life is stretchin’ out before ye. Why, ye mustna
-ever think o’ failure. Ye must think only of bright, happy things, and
-ye’ll see how everythin’ will come out all right. Noo mind that. So
-cheer thee, laddie, or ye’ll make us all sad on this your hame-comin’.
-Come, noo, look pleasant,” and she gave his arm a loving little shake.
-As his stern face melted into a sad smile, she laughed happily. “That’s
-right, laddie.” With a little encouraging nod she left him, and running
-to Mrs. Burns, she gave her a hug and a kiss, until the old lady’s grim
-features relaxed. Then like a bird she flitted to the other side of the
-room.
-
-“Souter Johnny,” she saucily cried, “how dare ye look so mournful like.
-Hae ye a fit o’ the gloom, man?”
-
-“Not a bit o’ it,” retorted Souter energetically, jumping lightly to his
-feet. “Will I stand on my head for ye, Mary, eh?”
-
-Mary laughed merrily as Mrs. Burns replied in scathing tones, “Your
-brains are in your boots, noo, Souter Johnny.”
-
-“Weel, wherever they are,” responded Souter with a quizzical smile, “they
-dinna’ trouble me o’er much. Weel, I think I’ll be turnin’ in noo,” he
-continued, stretching himself lazily. “Good-night to ye all,” and taking
-a candle from the dresser, he slowly left the room.
-
-“Come, lads,’tis bedtime,” admonished Mrs. Burns, glancing at the old
-high clock that stood in the corner. “Mary, ye shall sleep with me, and,
-Robert, ye know where to find your bed. It hasna’ been slept in since ye
-left. Dinna’ forget your candle, Gilbert,” she called out as he started
-for the door. He silently took it from her hand. “Dinna’ forget your
-promise,” she whispered anxiously to him as he left the room in gloomy
-silence.
-
-The look on his face frightened her. There was bitterness and despair
-in the quick glance he gave the happy lovers, who were standing in the
-shadow of the deep window. “The lad looked fair heart-broken,” she mused
-sorrowfully. For a moment she looked after him, a puzzled frown on her
-brow. Then suddenly the truth dawned on her. How blind she had been, why
-hadn’t she thought of that before? The lad was in love. In love with
-Mary Campbell, that was the cause of his bitterness toward his brother.
-“Both in love with the same lass,” she murmured apprehensively, and
-visions of petty meannesses, bitter discords, between the two brothers,
-jealous quarrels, resulting in bloody strife, perhaps; and she shuddered
-at the mental picture her uneasy mind had conjured up. The sooner Robert
-and Mary were married the sooner peace would be restored, she thought
-resolutely. They could start out for themselves, go to Auld Ayr or to
-Dumfries. They couldn’t be much worse off there than here. And determined
-to set her mind easy before she retired, she walked briskly toward the
-couple, who now sat hand in hand, oblivious to earthly surroundings,
-the soft moonlight streaming full upon their happy upturned faces. She
-watched them a moment in silence, loath to break in upon their sweet
-communion. Presently she spoke.
-
-“Robert,” she called softly, “ye’d better gang to your bed noo, lad.”
-
-With a start he came back to earth, and jumping up boyishly, replied with
-a happy laugh, “I forgot, mother, that I was keeping ye and Mary from
-your rest.” He glanced toward the recessed bed in the wall where his
-mother was wont to sleep. “Good-night, mither, good-night, Mary,” he said
-lovingly. Then taking his candle, he started for the door, but turned as
-his mother called his name and looked at her questioningly.
-
-“Laddie, dinna’ think I’m meddling in your affairs,” she said
-hesitatingly, “but I’m fair curious to know when ye an’ Mary will be wed.”
-
-Robert looked inquiringly at Mary, who blushed and dropped her head.
-“Before harvest begins, mither,” he answered hopefully, “if Mary will be
-ready and willing. Will that suit ye, lassie?” And he looked tenderly at
-the drooping head, covered with its wealth of soft, glittering curls.
-
-“I hae all my linen spun and woven,” she faltered, after a nervous
-silence, not daring to look at him. “Ye ken the lassies often came a
-rockin’ and so helped me get it done.” She raised her head and looked in
-his glowing face. “’Tis a very small dowry I’ll be bringin’ ye, laddie,”
-she added in pathetic earnestness.
-
-He gave a little contented laugh. “Ye’re bringin’ me yoursel’, dearie,”
-he murmured tenderly. “What mair could any lad want. I ken I do not
-deserve such a bonnie sweet sonsie lassie for my wife.” He looked away
-thoughtfully for a moment. Then he continued with glowing eyes, “But
-ye mind the verse o’ the song I gave ye before I went awa’?” he said
-lovingly, taking her hand in his. His voice trembled with feeling as he
-fervently recited the lines:
-
- “We have plighted our troth, my Mary,
- In mutual affection to join,
- And cursed be the cause that shall part us,
- The hour and moment o’ time.”
-
-She smiled confidingly up into his radiant face, then laid her
-little head against his breast like a tired child. “Always remember,
-sweetheart,” he continued softly, as if in answer to that look, “that
-Robbie Burns’ love for his Highland Mary will remain forever the
-tenderest, truest passion of his unworthy life.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-Life at Mossgiel passed uneventfully and monotonously. Robert had settled
-down with every appearance of contentment to the homely duties of the
-farmer, and Gilbert could find no fault with the amount of labor done.
-Morning till night he plowed and harrowed the rocky soil, without a word
-of complaint, although the work was very hard and laborious. Planting had
-now begun and his tasks were materially lightened. He had ample leisure
-to indulge in his favorite pastime; and that he failed to take advantage
-of his opportunities for rhyming was a mystery to Gilbert, and a source
-of endless regret to Mary. But his mother could tell of the many nights
-she had seen the candle light gleaming far into the night; and her heart
-was sore troubled when in the morning she would see the evidence of his
-midnight toil, scraps of closely written paper scattered in wild disorder
-over his small table, but she held her peace. The lad loved to do it, she
-mused tenderly, and so long as he was not shirking his work, why disturb
-his tranquillity?
-
-A few weeks after the return of our hero Mary and Mrs. Burns were seated
-in the living-room, Mrs. Burns as usual busy at her wheel, while Mary
-sat sewing at the window, where she could look out across the fields
-and see her sweetheart, who, with a white sheet containing his seed
-corn slung across his shoulder, was scattering the grain in the earth.
-She sang dreamily as she sewed, her sweet face beaming with love and
-happiness. No presentiment warned her of the approaching tragedy that was
-soon to cast its blighting shadow over that happy household—a tragedy
-that was inevitable. The guilty one had sown to the flesh, he must reap
-corruption. The seed had been sown carelessly, recklessly, and now the
-harvest time had come, and such a harvest! The pity of it was that the
-grim reaper must with his devouring sickle ruthlessly cut down such a
-tender, sweet, and innocent flower as she who sat there so happy and so
-blissfully unconscious of her impending doom.
-
-Suddenly, with an exclamation of astonishment, she jumped excitedly to
-her feet. “Mistress Burns,” she cried breathlessly, “here are grand
-lookin’ strangers comin’ up the path. City folk, too, I ken. Look.”
-
-Hastily the good dame ran to the window. “Sure as death, Mary; they’re
-comin’ here,” she cried in amazement. “Oh, lack a day, an’ I’m na dressed
-to receive the gentry.” A look of comical dismay clouded her anxious
-face as she hurriedly adjusted her cap and smoothed out her apron. “Is
-my cap on straight, Mary?” she nervously inquired. Mary nodded her head
-reassuringly. “Oh, dear, whatever can they want?” Steps sounded without.
-“Ye open the door, Mary,” she whispered sibilantly as the peremptory
-knock sounded loudly through the room. Timidly Mary approached the door.
-“Hist, wait,” called Mrs. Burns in sudden alarm. “My ’kerchief isna’
-pinned.” Hastily she pinned the loose end in place, then folding her
-hands, she said firmly, “Noo let them enter.” Mary slowly opened the
-door, which, swinging inward, concealed her from the three strangers, who
-entered with ill-concealed impatience on the part of the two ladies who
-were being laughingly chided by their handsome escort. With a wondering
-look of admiration at the richly dressed visitors, Mary quietly stole out
-and softly shut the door behind her.
-
-With a murmur of disgust the younger of the two ladies, who was about
-nineteen, walked to the fireplace, and raising her quilted blue
-petticoat, which showed beneath the pale pink overdress with its Watteau
-plait, she daintily held her foot to the blaze. A disfiguring frown
-marred the dark beauty of her face as her bold black eyes gazed about her
-impatiently.
-
-“It’s a monstrous shame,” she flashed angrily, “to have an accident
-happen within a few miles of home. Will it delay us long, think you?” she
-inquired anxiously, addressing her companion.
-
-“It depends on the skill of the driver to repair the injury,” replied
-the other lady indifferently. She appeared the elder of the two by some
-few years, and was evidently a lady of rank and fashion. She looked
-distinctly regal and commanding in her large Gainsborough hat tilted on
-one side of her elaborately dressed court wig. A look of amused curiosity
-came over her patrician face as she calmly surveyed the interior of the
-cottage. She inclined her head graciously to Mrs. Burns, who with a deep
-courtesy stood waiting their pleasure.
-
-“We have just met with an accident, guidwife,” laughingly said the
-gentleman, who stood in the doorway brushing the dust from his long
-black cloak. He was a scholarly looking man of middle age, dressed in
-the height of taste and fashion. “While crossing the old bridge yonder,”
-he continued, smiling courteously at Mrs. Burns, “our coach had the
-misfortune to cast a wheel, spilling us all willy-nilly, on the ground,
-and we must crave your hospitality, guidwife.”
-
-“Ye are a’ welcome,” quickly answered Mrs. Burns with another courtesy.
-“Sit doon, please,” and she placed a chair for the lady, who languidly
-seated herself thereon with a low murmur of thanks.
-
-“Allow me to introduce myself,” continued the gentleman, coming into the
-room, his cloak over his arm. “I am Lord Glencairn of Edinburgh. This is
-Lady Glencairn, and yonder lady is Mistress Jean Armour of Mauchline.”
-
-The young lady in question, who was still standing by the fireplace,
-flashed him a look of decided annoyance. She seemed greatly perturbed at
-the enforced delay of the journey. She started violently as she heard
-Mrs. Burns say, “And I am Mrs. Burns, your lordship.” Then she hurried to
-the old lady’s side, a startled look in her flashing eyes.
-
-“Mistress Burns of Mossgiel Farm?” she inquired in a trembling voice.
-
-“Yes, my lady,” replied Mrs. Burns. The young lady’s face went white as
-she walked nervously back to the fireplace.
-
-“My dear Jean, whatever is the matter?” asked Lady Glencairn lazily, as
-she noticed Jean’s perturbation. “Is there anything in the name of Burns
-to frighten you?”
-
-“No, your ladyship,” replied Jean falteringly, turning her face away
-so that her large Gainsborough hat completely shielded her quivering
-features. “I—I am still a trifle nervous from the upset, that is all.”
-She seemed strangely agitated.
-
-“Was it not unlucky?” replied Lady Glencairn in her rich vibrating
-contralto. “’Twill be a most wearisome wait, I fear, but we simply must
-endure it with the best possible grace,” and she unfastened her long
-cloak of black velvet and threw it off her shoulders, revealing her
-matchless form in its tightly fitting gown of amber satin, with all its
-alluring lines and sinuous curves, to the utmost advantage.
-
-“It willna’ be long noo, your ladyship,” replied Mrs. Burns, smiling
-complacently. She had quietly left the room while the two were talking,
-and seeing Souter hovering anxiously around, trying to summon up courage
-to enter, she had commanded him to go to the fields and tell the lads of
-the accident, which he had reluctantly done.
-
-“My lads will soon fix it for ye,” she continued proudly. “Robert is a
-very handy lad, ye ken. He is my eldest son, who has just returned from
-Mauchline,” she explained loquaciously in answer to Lord Glencairn’s
-questioning look.
-
-Jean nervously clutched at the neck of her gown, her face alternately
-flushing and paling. “Your son is here now?” she asked eagerly, turning
-to Mrs. Burns.
-
-“Aye, he’s out yonder in the fields,” she answered simply.
-
-“Oh, then you know the young man?” interrogated Lady Glencairn, glancing
-sharply at Jean.
-
-“Yes, I know him,” she answered with averted gaze. “We met occasionally
-in Mauchline at dancing school, where we fell acquainted.”
-
-Lady Glencairn looked at her with half-closed eyes for a moment, then she
-smilingly said, “And I’ll wager your love for coquetting prompted you to
-make a conquest of the innocent rustic, eh, Jean?”
-
-Jean tossed her head angrily and walked to the window.
-
-“Lady Glencairn, you are pleased to jest,” she retorted haughtily.
-
-“There, there, Jean, you’re over prudish. I vow ’twould be no crime,”
-her ladyship calmly returned. “I’ll wager this young farmer was a gay
-Lothario while in Mauchline,” she continued mockingly.
-
-“Oh, no, your ladyship,” interrupted Mrs. Burns simply. “He was a flax
-dresser.”
-
-“Truly a more respectable occupation, madame,” gravely responded Lord
-Glencairn with a suspicious twinkle in his eye.
-
-“Thank ye, my lord,” answered Mrs. Burns with a deep courtesy. “My lad is
-a good lad, if I do say so, and he has returned to us as pure minded as
-when he went awa’ a year ago.”
-
-Lady Glencairn raised her delicately arched eyebrows in amused surprise.
-Turning to Jean, she murmured drily, “And away from home a year, too! He
-must be a model of virtue, truly.”
-
-Jean gazed at her with startled eyes. “Can she suspect aught?” she asked
-herself fearfully.
-
-“Could I be getting ye a cup of milk?” asked Mrs. Burns hospitably. “’Tis
-a’ I have to offer, but ’tis cool and refreshing.”
-
-“Fresh milk,” repeated Lady Glencairn, rising with delight. “I vow it
-would be most welcome, guidwife.”
-
-“Indeed it would,” responded her husband. And Mrs. Burns with a gratified
-smile hurried from the room.
-
-“My dear, don’t look so tragic,” drawled Lady Glencairn carelessly, as
-she noticed Jean’s pale face and frightened eyes. “We’ll soon be in
-Mauchline. Although why you are in such a monstrous hurry to reach that
-lonesome village after your delightful sojourn in the capital, is more
-than I can conjecture,” and her keen eyes noted with wonder the flush
-mount quickly to the girl’s cheek.
-
-“It is two months since I left my home, your ladyship,” faltered Jean
-hesitatingly. “It’s only natural I should be anxious to see my dear
-parents again.” She dropped her eyes quickly before her ladyship’s
-penetrating gaze.
-
-“Dear parents, indeed,” sniffed Lady Glencairn to herself suspiciously as
-she followed their hostess to the door of the “ben.”
-
-With a nervous little laugh Jean rose quickly from her chair by the
-window and walked toward the door through which they had entered. “The
-accident has quite upset me, Lady Glencairn,” she said constrainedly.
-“Would you mind if I stroll about the fields until my nerves are
-settled?” she asked with a forced laugh.
-
-“No, child, go by all means,” replied her ladyship indolently. “The air
-will do you good, no doubt.”
-
-“I warn you not to wander too far from the house,” interposed Lord
-Glencairn with a kindly smile. “We will not be detained much longer.”
-With a smile of thanks she hastily left the room just as Mrs. Burns
-entered from the “ben” bearing a large blue pitcher filled with foaming
-milk, which she placed on the table before her smiling visitors.
-
-Jean breathed a sigh of relief as she closed the door behind her. She
-felt in another moment she would have screamed aloud in her nervousness.
-That fate should have brought her to the very home of the man she had
-thought still in Mauchline, and to see whom she had hurriedly left
-Edinburgh, filled her with wonder and dread. “I must see him before we
-leave,” she said nervously, clasping and unclasping her hands. But where
-should she find him? She walked quickly down the path and gazed across
-the fields, where in the distance she could see several men at work,
-repairing the disabled coach. Anxiously she strained her eyes to see if
-the one she sought was among them, but he was not there. Quickly she
-retraced her steps. “I must find him. I must speak with him this day,”
-she said determinedly. As she neared the cottage she turned aside and
-walked toward the high stone fence which enclosed the house and yard.
-Swiftly mounting the old stile, she looked about her. Suddenly she gave
-a sharp little exclamation, and her heart bounded violently, for there
-before her, coming across the field, was the man she sought, his hands
-clasped behind him, his head bent low in the deepest meditation. With a
-sigh of relief she sank down on the step and calmly awaited his approach.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-Robert flung the last of his seed corn into the earth with a sigh of
-thankfulness, for though he gave the powers of his body to the labors
-of the farm, he refused to bestow on them his thoughts or his cares. He
-longed to seek the quiet of his attic room, for his soul was bursting
-with song and his nervous fingers fairly itched to grasp his pencil and
-catch and hold forever the pearls dropped from the lap of the Goddess
-Muse into his worshipful soul, ere they faded and dissolved into
-lusterless fragments. Mechanically he turned his footsteps toward the
-cottage, plunged in deep reverie. As he walked slowly along his mind
-suddenly reverted to the year he had spent in Mauchline. It had been his
-first taste of town life. Blessed with a strong appetite for sociability,
-although constitutionally melancholy, and a hair-brained imagination, he
-had become an immediate favorite and welcome guest wherever he visited.
-_Vive l’amour_ and _vive la bagatelle_ had soon become his sole principle
-of action. His heart, which was completely tinder, was eternally lighted
-up by some goddess or other, and it was not long before he regarded
-illicit love with levity, which two months previously he had thought of
-with horror. Poesy was still a darling walk for his mind, but it was
-only indulged in according to the humor of the hour. Having no aim in
-life he had been easily led from the paths of virtue into many forms of
-dissipation, which, when indulged in, afterwards plunged him into the
-deepest melancholy. A few months after his advent into the village he
-had met Jean Armour, the daughter of a master builder. She was one of
-the belles of Mauchline, a wild, willful, imprudent lass, whose sensual
-charms soon ensnared the susceptible heart of the unsophisticated farmer
-lad. The fatal defect of his character was the comparative weakness of
-his volition, and his passions, once lighted up, soon carried him down
-the stream of error and swept him over the precipice he saw directly in
-his course.
-
-Such being their temperaments, it was not to be wondered at when their
-procedure soon became decidedly irregular, their intimacy becoming the
-common talk and gossip of Mauchline.
-
-A few months before Robert returned to Mossgiel farm Jean had received
-an invitation from her god-parents, Lord and Lady Glencairn, to visit
-Edinburgh, which she had accepted with eagerness, for she was becoming
-tired of her latest conquest and longed for the gay life of the capital.
-
-Robert saw her leave Mauchline with no pangs of regret at her inconstancy
-and caprice. He was in a state of profound melancholy at the time, the
-thoughts of how he had fallen from the paths of truth and virtue, the
-thoughts of the pure love of his sweetheart at home, filling his heart
-with grief and remorse. He was thinking of all this as he approached the
-stile. How wretchedly weak and sinful he had been to forget his sworn
-vows to Mary, he thought remorsefully. “May no harping voice from that
-past ever come to disturb her peace of mind,” he prayed fervently.
-
-Jean watched him, drawing ever nearer, with eyes filled with sudden shame
-and dread at what she had to tell him. Why had her brief infatuation for
-the poverty-stricken farmer led her into such depths of imprudence and
-recklessness? she thought angrily. As he reached the bottom of the stile
-she softly spoke his name, and noted with chagrin his startled look of
-surprise and annoyance as he raised his eyes to hers.
-
-“Jean Armour?” he cried in amazement.
-
-“Aren’t you glad to see me?” she asked coquettishly, his presence
-exercising its old fascination for her.
-
-“What has brought ye to Mossgiel?” he asked abruptly, ignoring her
-outstretched hand.
-
-“An accident,” she replied flippantly. “I was on my way home and would
-have been there ere this had it not been for a fortunate mishap.”
-
-“Fortunate mishap?” he repeated questioningly.
-
-“Yes,” she retorted amiably, “otherwise I should have missed seeing you,”
-and she smiled down into his pale startled face.
-
-“I dinna understand why ye left Edinburgh,” he began, when she
-interrupted him.
-
-“Because I thought you were still in Mauchline,” she explained quickly.
-He look at her questioningly. “I left Edinburgh for the sole purpose of
-seeing you, Robert,” she announced quietly, making room for him to sit
-beside her, but he did not accept the invitation.
-
-“Well, noo, that was very kind of ye, Jean,” he replied a little
-uneasily. “But I’m not so conceited as to believe that. I ken the charms
-o’ Edinburgh town, with its handsome officers, soon made ye forget the
-quiet country village, and a’ your old flames, including your bashful
-humble servant,” and he made her a mocking bow.
-
-His tone of satirical raillery made her wince. “Forget?” she cried
-passionately, jumping to her feet. “I wish to heaven I might forget
-everything, but I cannot—I cannot.” The sudden thought of her predicament
-caused her haughty, rebellious spirit to quail, and covering her face
-with her hands, she burst into a paroxysm of tears and sank heavily down
-upon the step.
-
-He regarded the weeping woman silently. Was her attachment for him
-stronger than he had believed? Could it be possible she still entertained
-a passion for him? he asked himself anxiously. But no, that couldn’t
-be; she had left him two months ago with a careless word of farewell on
-her laughing lips. Yet why these tears, these wild words she had just
-uttered? A wave of pity for her swept over him as he realized, if such
-were the case, that he must repulse her advances gently but none the less
-firmly. He had done with her forever when he said his last farewell.
-There could be no raking over of the dead ashes.
-
-Jean angrily wiped away her tears. She must not give way to such
-weakness. She had an errand to perform which would need all her courage.
-He was evidently waiting for some explanation of her strange behavior,
-she told herself with a vain effort to steel her heart. Now was the time
-to tell him all, she thought fearfully, peeking out from behind her
-small linen ’kerchief, with which she was dabbing her eyes, at his cold,
-wondering face. The sooner it was done the sooner she would know what to
-expect at his hands. How should she begin? After a long, nervous pause
-she faltered out, “Have you forgotten the past, Robert, and all that we
-were to each other?”
-
-“Nay, Jean, I remember everything,” he answered remorsefully. “But let
-us not speak of that noo, please. Ye ken that is all ended between us
-forever.” He turned away pale and trembling, for her presence, her looks
-and words recalled many things he wanted to forget, that shamed him to
-remember.
-
-“Ended?” she repeated, an angry flush rising to the roots of her black
-hair. She looked at him in amazement. He, the poverty-stricken farmer,
-had repulsed her, the belle of Mauchline? Could she have heard aright?
-He who had always been at her beck and call, two months ago her willing
-slave, could it be that he was over his infatuation for her? She had
-not thought of that possibility. She had expected him to be humble,
-gratefully flattered by her condescension in seeking him out. If he
-should refuse the proposal she had come so far to make! she thought in
-trepidation. “He must not refuse, he shall not refuse,” and her face
-grew hard and set. But perhaps he was piqued because she had left him
-so unceremoniously two months ago, because she had not written him. Her
-tense lips relaxed into a smile. Oh, well, she would be nice to him
-now; she would make him think she was breaking her heart for him, work
-on his sympathy, then perhaps it would not be necessary to confess her
-humiliating plight. No farmer doomed to lifelong poverty would be averse
-to winning the hand of the daughter of the rich Squire Armour. These
-thoughts, running through her mind, decided her next move, and with
-a fluttering sigh she rose from her seat and descended the step. She
-drew close to him and looking languishingly up into his face, murmured,
-“Why should it be ended, Robert? I love you just the same as I did
-in the past,” and she threw her arms about his neck, clinging to him
-passionately. “You do love me a little, tell me you do.”
-
-“Jean, ye must be daft,” he panted, vainly trying to disengage himself
-from her embrace.
-
-But she continued softly, alluringly, “Think of the old days, when I
-lay in your arms like this, Robbie. Think of those happy hours we spent
-together on the banks of the Doon. You were not cold to me then. Oh, let
-us live them all over again. How happy we will be. Kiss me, Rob,” and she
-lifted her flushed, piquant face, her crimson lips pursed temptingly,
-close to his. The warmth of her seductive body, the white bare arms in
-their short sleeves, which embraced his neck, the half-closed passionate
-eyes gazing invitingly, languorously into his own, fired his naturally
-ardent blood, making his senses to reel from the contact. Slowly his
-arms, which had been restraining her amorous embrace, tightened their
-hold on her, drawing her closer and closer, while the drops of sweat
-poured down his white, yielding face, as with wild bloodshot eyes he
-battled with the temptations which beset him so wantonly, so dangerously.
-With a thrill of elation not unmixed with desire she felt him yielding
-to her embrace, and knew that she had won him again. With a cooing cry
-of delight she was about to press her warm lips to his, when suddenly a
-bird-like voice singing in the distance arrested her impulse.
-
- “Oh where and oh where is my Highland laddie gone?”
-
-rang out the voice of the singer plaintively. With a cry of brief and
-horror Robert tore the clinging arms from about his neck and threw her
-madly from him. “What is the matter, Robert?” she cried fearfully,
-looking at him in amazement.
-
-“I think ye had better go noo, Jean,” he answered harshly, not looking at
-her. “’Twill be best for us both. Oh, how I despise my weakness, I had no
-right, no right noo.” And there was an agony of shame and remorse in his
-voice.
-
-“Do you mean,” she asked white with rage. “That you are not free to do as
-you like?” He remained silent a moment.
-
-Then his face grew calm and peaceful. “The lass whom ye hear singing is
-Mary Campbell, my betrothed wife,” he answered simply. “We are to be
-married when the plantin’ is done. We have been sweethearts for years,
-and if I have in my weakness forgotten my sworn vows to her, by God’s
-help I’ll strive to be more faithful in the future.” His voice vibrated
-with intense feeling as he made the resolution. Then he continued softly
-and tenderly, “And the love I bear my faithful Mary will never cease as
-long as this crimson current flows within me.” A mocking laugh greeted
-his words as he finished.
-
-“I tell you, Robert Burns,” cried Jean threateningly, “she shall never be
-your wife, for I will——” But the angry words died suddenly on her lips at
-an unlooked-for interruption.
-
-“Jean, Jean,” called a lazy voice. Turning quickly she saw with
-apprehension Lady Glencairn standing in the open doorway of the cottage,
-beckoning leisurely to her. Had she heard her imprudent words? she asked
-herself in terror. But no, that were not possible. She had not raised her
-voice. For a moment she hesitated, not knowing what to do. Should she
-tell him the truth now? It would only mean a hurriedly whispered word or
-two, but as she looked at him standing there so proudly erect, the angry,
-puzzled flush which her last hasty words had occasioned still mantling
-his swarthy face, she felt her courage slipping away from her. Why not
-wait and write him? she temporized; that would be much better than
-creating a scene now, with the sharp eye of Lady Glencairn fastened upon
-them. Yes, she would do that, she decided hastily. She turned calmly and
-mounted the stile and without one backward glance descended to the other
-side. “Are you coming?” she asked indifferently over her shoulder, and
-without waiting for his answer walked quickly toward the house. Robert
-after a moment’s indecision gravely followed her, the look of puzzled
-concern still wrinkling his forehead.
-
-“Oh, I beg your pardon; I didn’t know you were indulging in a
-tête-à-tête,” said Lady Glencairn frigidly as they reached the door.
-
-“Lady Glencairn, this is Mr. Robert Burns,” stammered Jean nervously,
-with a flush of embarrassment at her ladyship’s sarcastic smile.
-
-“Oh, indeed, delighted I’m sure,” said her ladyship, with a careless nod,
-which changed to surprised interest as Robert with simple, manly dignity
-removed his Tam O’Shanter and bowed low before the haughty beauty. “What
-an air for a peasant,” she mused. “What dignity,” and she surveyed him
-critically from the top of his head, with its black clustering locks
-which gleamed purple in the sunshine, to the tip of his rough leather
-brogans; noting with admiration his stalwart frame, the well-shaped head
-and massive neck, the strength suggested in the broad shoulders, the
-deep chest, the herculean limbs with the swelling muscles displayed to
-such advantage within the tightly fitting breeches of doe skin. “What a
-handsome creature,” she thought with a thrill of admiration, as she took
-the mental inventory of his good points. “And decidedly interesting,
-I’ll wager, if not dangerous,” she added, smiling contemplatively as she
-caught the look of respectful admiration which gleamed in his wonderfully
-magnetic eyes.
-
-“Oh, James,” she called languidly reëntering the room, “here is the young
-man who has so kindly assisted in repairing the coach—the young man who
-has just returned from Mauchline,” she added significantly.
-
-“Nay, your ladyship, ’tis my brother Gilbert you must thank for his
-assistance, not me,” replied Robert, flushing. As the deep tones of his
-sonorous voice fell on her ear she felt an indefinable thrill of emotion
-steal over her that startled her. She looked at him wonderingly. What
-peculiar magnetism was there in this farmer’s voice that could so easily
-move her, who had always prided herself on her coldness, her indifference
-to all men, including her husband, who was blissfully unconscious of his
-beautiful wife’s sentiments regarding him?
-
-“Your brother had no easy task, I fear, Mr. Burns,” remarked Lord
-Glencairn genially. Then he turned smilingly to Jean, who was standing
-impatiently in the doorway. “What have you been doing all this time, my
-dear Jean?” he asked lightly.
-
-“Ask Mr. Burns,” insinuated Lady Glencairn with an odd little smile at
-Jean’s embarrassed countenance. He looked inquiringly at the surprised
-face of the young farmer.
-
-“Miss Armour has done me the honor of listening to some of my rhyming,”
-quietly replied Robert with a quick glance at Jean, his ready wit coming
-to her rescue.
-
-“So then you are a poet,” murmured Lady Glencairn, with a smile. “Do you
-write love sonnets to your sweethearts, or does the muse incline at this
-season to songs of springtime?”
-
-“Aye, my lady, he has the gift indeed,” spoke up Mrs. Burns
-deprecatingly. “But I dinna’ ken if it amounts to aught.”
-
-“My mother doesna’ care for my poetry,” said Robert simply, turning to
-her ladyship.
-
-“Dinna’ say that, laddie,” replied his mother earnestly. “Ye ken I’m
-o’er fond of those verses to Highland Mary, but——”
-
-“‘Highland Mary’? what a dear name,” interrupted Lady Glencairn sweetly,
-smiling at Robert. “Who is she, may I ask?” and she leaned forward
-questioningly in her chair.
-
-“She is a—a friend,” he replied, flushing to the roots of his hair. Then
-he continued, softly, his eyes lighting up with love and devotion, “An’
-she is as sweet and fragrant as a sprig of pure white heather plucked
-from her native Highlands.”
-
-“Aye, and she’ll make a fine wife for Robert,” added Mrs. Burns
-complacently.
-
-“Aye, finer than I deserve, mither,” he replied, looking uneasily at
-Jean, who had started violently, then quickly leaned back against the
-door post, pale and trembling.
-
-“Marry her? Never! He cannot, he must not,” she muttered to herself,
-frantically.
-
-“Why, Jean!” cried Lady Glencairn, going to her in sudden alarm. “What
-ails you, why do you look so wild?”
-
-“I—I’m—a pain gripped my heart most suddenly,” she faltered. “I find it
-over warm here,” she gasped. “I’ll await you without,” and she left the
-room, a strange, frightened look on her pale face.
-
-With a puzzled frown Lady Glencairn turned and sank thoughtfully into a
-chair. Looking up suddenly, she caught Robert’s eye fastened upon her
-face in eager scrutiny. “Let me see, what were we speaking about?” she
-inquired indifferently.
-
-“Ye were kind enough to ask me about my poetry,” answered Rob quietly.
-Jean’s queer behavior troubled him. What did it all mean? He feared she
-had aroused suspicion in her ladyship’s mind.
-
-“Oh, to be sure, and I vow I’m curious,” she replied brightly. “I should
-like to read one of your poems, Mr. Burns, if you have one at hand.”
-
-“He has bushels of them in the attic, your ladyship,” eagerly spoke Mrs.
-Burns.
-
-“Aye, mother,” laughed Robert, “all waiting for the publisher. Here is
-one I but this day scribbled off, if—if ye really care to read it,” he
-added bashfully, taking a scrap of paper from the pocket of his loose
-shirt and handing it to Lady Glencairn.
-
-She took it with a smile of amused indifference. A farmer and a poet!
-the idea was absurd. With an almost imperceptibly sarcastic lifting of
-her delicate eyebrows she read the title, “‘Flow gently, sweet Afton,
-among thy green braes.’” Then she read the verse in growing wonder and
-astonishment. She had thought to please him with a word of praise,
-even if they were laughably commonplace and prosaic; but it was with
-genuine enthusiasm that she heartily cried, “Really, ’tis a gem, Mr.
-Burns, so charming withal, such beautiful sentiment, and writ in most
-excellent style. Read it, James,” and she handed it to Lord Glencairn,
-who carefully perused it with apparent delight in its rhythmic beauty of
-composition.
-
-“Thank ye, my lady,” replied Robert, flushing. “Your praise is o’er sweet
-to my hungry ear.” She gazed at him in open admiration.
-
-“Here, Robert, are some more,” cried Mrs. Burns, entering the room with a
-box, which she placed before her son. “Show his lordship these, laddie,”
-and she hovered nervously around, her face flushed with excitement,
-watching anxiously every look and expression that passed over the faces
-of their guests.
-
-Robert opened the box and selected a few of the poems at random, which he
-handed to Lord Glencairn without a word.
-
-“‘A man’s a man for a’ that,’ ‘Willie brewed a peck of malt,’ ‘Holy
-Willie’s Prayer,’ ‘The Lass of Balbehmyle,’” read Lord Glencairn slowly,
-glancing over their titles. Then he read them through earnestly, his
-noble face expressing the interest he felt; then with a sigh of pleasure
-he passed them to Lady Glencairn, who devoured the written pages eagerly,
-her face flushed and radiant. When she had finished, she leaned back in
-her chair and fixed her luminous eyes upon her husband’s beaming face.
-
-“James,” said she decidedly, “you will please me well if you will
-influence some publisher to accept this young man’s poems and place them
-before the public. I’m sure he is most deserving, and—he interests me
-greatly.” There was a peculiar glitter in her half-closed eyes as she
-gazed intently at Robert with an enigmatic smile parting her red lips.
-The gracious lady with her high-bred air, her alluring smile, her extreme
-condescension, was a revelation to the country-bred lad, who was brought
-in close contact for the first time with one so far above his station in
-life. He felt his awkwardness more than he had ever thought possible as
-he felt her critical eyes fastened upon him and heard her honeyed words
-of praise and encouragement.
-
-“Mr. Burns,” said his lordship earnestly, “your poems interest me
-greatly, and I declare such genius as you display should be given an
-opportunity to develop. It will afford me much pleasure to take these
-verses, with your permission, back with me to Edinburgh and submit them
-to Sir William Creech, who is the largest publisher there, and a personal
-friend of mine, and if he accepts these poems as a criterion of your
-artistic ability, without the least doubt your success will be at once
-assured.” He put them carefully in the large wallet he had taken from an
-inside pocket while he was talking, and replaced it within his coat.
-
-Robert looked at him, hardly daring to believe his ears. “I—I canna find
-words to express my unbounded gratitude to you, my lord,” he faltered,
-his voice low and shaking.
-
-“I’d advise you to make a collection of your poems, my lad,” continued
-Lord Glencairn quietly, touched by the sight of Robert’s expressive
-features, which he was vainly trying to control. “Chiefly those in the
-Scottish dialect; they are new and will create a sensation. Have them
-ready to forward to town when sent for.” There was a tense silence for a
-moment when he had finished.
-
-Robert dared not trust his voice to speak, to utter his thanks. Finally
-he burst out. “My lord, how can I ever thank ye for this unlooked-for
-generosity to an absolute stranger!” he cried brokenly. “For years
-I have been praying for a publisher to edit my songs, but I could
-see no silver lining to the dark clouds of obscurity hanging over my
-unhappy, friendless head, clouds which threatened to engulf me in
-their maddening embrace. But now,” he continued eloquently, his voice
-ringing with gladness, “the bright sunlight is peeping around the fast
-disappearing cloud, warming my very soul with its joyous rays. Oh, my
-lord, if ever the name of Robert Burns should e’en become familiar to his
-countrymen,’twill be through your graciousness, your benevolence, to a
-poor unknown, humble plowman,” and his eyes filled with tears of love and
-gratitude for his noble benefactor.
-
-Lord Glencairn took a pinch of snuff from the small oblong box he held in
-his hand, and used his handkerchief vigorously to conceal the tears of
-sympathy which had welled up in his eyes as he listened to the recital
-of Robert’s ambitions, his hopes and fears.
-
-“My dear lad,” he said, trying to speak lightly, “I have done nothing as
-yet to deserve such fulsome words of thanks. ’Tis but a trifling thing I
-propose doing, and it pleases me, else perhaps I might not trouble myself
-to speak in your behalf.”
-
-“Ah, noo, sir,” cried Mrs. Burns, wiping away the tears of joy, “’tis
-your big, noble heart which prompts ye to assist a struggling genius to
-something better, higher, and nobler in this life. God bless ye for it.”
-
-The door opened, and Gilbert Burns quietly entered the room. Removing his
-Tam O’Shanter, he bowed respectfully to Lord Glencairn and said briefly,
-“Your Lordship’s coach is repaired.”
-
-With a word of thanks Lord Glencairn rose and assisted his wife into her
-cloak.
-
-“Thank goodness we can proceed on our journey while it is yet light,” she
-said animatedly, going to the door.
-
-“I assure you, Mistress Burns, we have enjoyed your hospitality amazing
-well,” said Lord Glencairn, turning to their hostess. “Believe me, we’ll
-not forget it.”
-
-They left the house, followed by their admiring hosts. Suddenly Lady
-Glencairn gave a little cry of delighted surprise as her eyes rested on
-the drooping figure of Highland Mary, sitting disconsolately on a large
-rock beside the old well. “What a sweet, pretty flower of a lass!” she
-cried enthusiastically. “Come here, child,” she called aloud. Mary looked
-up quickly with a little gasp of surprise, for she had not noticed them
-come out. She rose bashfully to her feet and stood hesitating, her eyes
-timidly fixed on a piece of heather she was holding in her hand.
-
-Lady Glencairn laughed amusedly. “I vow ’tis an uncommon modest shy
-wildflower truly,” she said to her husband. “Come here, child, I’ll not
-bite you,” and she held out her hands toward the wondering girl.
-
-With a little silvery, timid laugh Mary walked quickly toward her. “I’m
-no afraid, my lady,” she replied quietly, but her heart was beating very
-fast, nevertheless, as she stood before the great lady, who was watching
-the flower-like face, with the delicate pink color coming and going, with
-such apparent admiration.
-
-“That’s our Highland Mary,” triumphantly cried Souter, who had just come
-upon the scene.
-
-“Oh, indeed,” replied her ladyship brightly. “So you are Highland Mary.”
-
-“Yes, my lady,” answered Mary with a quaint little courtesy.
-
-“Isn’t she a dear,” said Lady Glencairn aloud to her husband.
-
-She turned to Robert, who was proudly watching Mary, with eyes aglow
-with love and happiness. “No wonder, Mr. Burns,” she said, a sigh
-involuntarily escaping her as she noted his rapt gaze, “that you have
-sought to portray in song and verse the sweet loveliness of this fair
-maiden.” Then she turned suddenly to Mary.
-
-“You’re a very pretty child,” she said carelessly. “But I suppose you
-know that well ere this.” She laughed cynically and turned away.
-
-“She isna used to such compliments, your ladyship,” said Robert, noticing
-the embarrassed blush that mounted to Mary’s cheek. “She’s o’er shy, ye
-ken.”
-
-“That’s the kind we raise in the Highlands,” declared Souter with a
-satisfied air.
-
-“Come, James, it grows late,” wearily said Lady Glencairn, taking her
-husband’s arm. “And here is the coach.” As the vehicle with its prancing
-black horses champing restlessly at their bits drew up to the gate, she
-turned to Mary and said condescendingly, “Good-by, child; I suppose some
-day, when Mr. Burns is the Bard of Scotland, we’ll see you in town with
-him. Be sure to come and see me at Glencairn Hall.”
-
-“Thank ye, my lady,” replied Mary, courtesying deeply, fortunately not
-discerning the sarcasm in the tired tones of the great lady’s voice.
-
-Lord Glencairn helped her into the coach, and then turned to Robert with
-outstretched hand. “My lad,” he said cordially, “you may expect to hear
-from me or Sir William Creech very shortly. Good-by.”
-
-“Good-by, sir,” replied Robert, “and may Heaven bless you.”
-
-“Oh, Lud,” cried Lady Glencairn as they were about to start, “we’re
-forgetting Jean.”
-
-“The young lady strolled alang,” answered Gilbert quietly. “She said you
-would overtake her on the road.”
-
-Lady Glencairn thanked him with a careless nod, and then leaned far out
-of the door to Robert. “Remember, Mr. Burns,” she said softly, pressing
-his hand, “I expect to see you in Edinburgh very soon, don’t forget,”
-and with another lingering look, full of meaning, she withdrew into the
-coach, and soon they were gone in a cloud of dust, while he stood there
-gazing after them like one in a dream with the last rays of the setting
-sun lighting up his dark, passionate face.
-
-“Hurra! ’tis luck ye’re in, laddie,” shouted Souter in his ear. “The
-gentry have noticed ye. Ye should be dancing for joy, mon. I’m off to
-tell the lads of your good fortune,” and away he sped to the village,
-eager as any old gossip to spread the glorious news.
-
-“Isna it all like a dream, Mary?” sighed Mrs. Burns rapturously, leading
-the way into the house, followed by the two lovers, who entered hand
-in hand and seated themselves in blissful silence on the high-backed
-settle under the window, their favorite seat. For a few moments they sat
-motionless, regarding each other with moist eyes. It almost seemed too
-good to be true. In a few weeks perhaps Robert would be a great man,
-thought Mary proudly. “Weel, I always did have faith in Robert’s poetry,”
-suddenly declared Mrs. Burns with conviction.
-
-Robert smiled at his mother’s words. “They would all say that now,” he
-thought, but without bitterness, for it was only the way of the world
-after all.
-
-“Ye’ll soon hae riches noo,” said Mary happily.
-
-“Aye, then ye shall hae a fine new gown, and—and we will be married noo,
-instead of waiting,” answered Robert, taking her tenderly in his arms.
-
-“’Tis a bonnie, bonnie pair ye make,” said Mrs. Burns lovingly. “May God
-bless ye,” and she softly stole away, leaving them to their feast of
-love.
-
-[Illustration: “Slipped quickly behind an old beech tree.”]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-
-Jean left the house filled with terrified dismay. Robert going to
-marry another? then what would become of her? She would be disgraced
-and ruined. The thought drove her frantic. “He shall not marry her; he
-shall give me the protection of his name, for the time being at least,”
-she said to herself angrily. Afterward, the marriage could be easily
-annulled; she did not want him. She did not want to be tied for life to
-any farmer, not she. She would then return to Edinburgh. But suppose he
-would not consent to such an arrangement? Well she would scare him into
-it. He was as much to blame as she was anyway. She would not wait to
-write him after all; she would tell him now. There was nothing to fear.
-She would wait until the others had started, then come back and force her
-claim. If they went on without her, it did not matter much; it was not
-far to the Inn, she mused determinedly. She stopped in her rapid walk and
-retraced her steps. As she neared the cottage the door opened and her
-god-parents came out, and with them were Robert and the others. Before
-they could perceive her, however, she slipped quickly behind an old beech
-tree back of the well and nearest the house. Breathlessly, impatiently,
-she waited while they talked, and talked, till she thought they would
-never go. Then when the coach came and the attendant excitement of its
-departure, like a guilty creature she stole noiselessly across the
-intervening space to the cottage, slipped through the open door, and hid
-herself behind the fireplace, where Mary had concealed herself some weeks
-before.
-
-After Mrs. Burns left the room Jean came boldly out from her hiding place
-and stood before the startled couple, who gazed at her in amazement. She
-looked at them insolently, a sneer on her full lips.
-
-“Sorry to disturb you, Mr. Burns,” she interrupted sarcastically. The
-color slowly faded from his ruddy face. Was she going to expose that
-shameful page in his past history to this innocent child? Would she dare,
-could she be so reckless, so shameless? he asked himself fearfully.
-
-“I thought ye had gone,” he said, dangerously calm, stepping up to her.
-
-“I could not go till I had delivered a message,” she explained, dropping
-her eyes before the determined light in his.
-
-“What is it?” he asked, puzzled by her tone and manner.
-
-“It is of great importance and for your ears alone,” she replied glibly.
-“I’m sure this lady—Miss Campbell, is it not?—will not mind leaving us
-for a moment,” and she smiled amiably into Mary’s innocent inquiring
-face.
-
-He led Mary gently to the door. “It’ll be only for a moment, Mary,” he
-said quietly.
-
-“I dinna’ mind,” she answered brightly. “’Tis near time for me to be
-going hame, ye ken,” and with a smile she left them together.
-
-“Noo, then, what is your message?” he said with calm abruptness, as the
-door closed.
-
-“This!” and she threw back her head defiantly. “You must give up this
-Mary Campbell.”
-
-He looked at her in amazement. “What do ye mean?” he gasped, opening his
-eyes in bewilderment.
-
-“I mean you must make me your wife.” Her pale and agitated face made him
-wonder if she had gone quite daft. Before he could answer she continued
-stridently, “You must marry me now, before it is too late, too late to
-save my name from dishonor and disgrace. Now do you understand?”
-
-A look of incredulous horror slowly blanched his face to ashy whiteness.
-Had he heard aright? Surely she was jesting; it could not be possible—and
-yet, why not? His haggard eyes searched her colorless face as though he
-would read her very soul. Calmly she bore the scrutiny and then, with a
-groan of anguish, he sank into a chair, weak and trembling. “I canna, I
-willna, believe,” he muttered hoarsely. “It’s a lie, it’s a lie, Jean
-Armour!”
-
-“It’s the truth, I tell you,” she cried passionately, wringing her hands.
-“What else think you would force me, the rich Belle of Mauchline, to
-humble my pride and stoop to plead to a poverty-stricken farmer to wed
-me?” She laughed wildly.
-
-“Can it be true, can it be true?” he whispered to himself dully. He felt
-dazed by the suddenness, the total unexpectedness, of the blow. He closed
-his eyes wearily. What was it she wanted him to do, he could not think.
-He sat dumbly waiting for her to speak again.
-
-“You must write out an acknowledgment and sign your name to it,” she
-continued, her voice low and insistent. “It is an irregular marriage I
-know, but it will save me from my father’s wrath, when I can keep my
-plight from him no longer.” He still remained silent, his face hidden
-in his hands. “Will you do this?” she demanded anxiously, “or,” and
-her voice grew hard and threatening, “or shall I appeal to the Parish
-officers to help me save my good name from disgrace?” Quickly he raised
-his head. At his look of indignant scorn she winced and turned away,
-flushing angrily.
-
-With a mirthless little laugh he retorted with bitter emphasis, “Your
-good name, indeed!”
-
-She turned on him defiantly. “I was no worse than other girls,” she
-flippantly retorted. “Only more unfortunate. Will you do what I ask?
-Quick, tell me, someone is coming!” She nervously caught his hand. He did
-not speak. His face grew haggard and old-looking as he stood motionless,
-forming his resolution. It seemed to her an eternity before he answered
-her.
-
-“So be it,” he answered hoarsely, drawing his hand away from hers
-and moving slowly to the door. “I’ll send ye the lines by the posty
-to-morrow.”
-
-With a cry of delight she gratefully held out her hand to him. But he
-quietly opened the door, and, without a word or look at her, stood
-silently holding it back, his head bowed low on his bosom, his face
-cold and repellent. Slowly Jean walked past him out into the deepening
-twilight. She felt a dawning pity in her heart for the wretched lad. She
-could not quite forget those old, happy days, those stolen walks and
-trysts along the banks of the Ayr. No one could make love so ardently as
-he, she thought with a sigh. Of all her lovers he had been the favorite,
-he was so ingenuous, so trustful and confiding, and yet so reckless, so
-imprudent and weak. She knew well he had never really loved her, and the
-thought had made her strive all the harder to win him. He was flattered
-by her open preference for him, and soon became an easy victim, a slave,
-to her seductive charms and sophisticated fascinations, for he was only
-human. And now the heart of that little dairymaid would be broken. A
-quick pang of shame and regret stole over her, but she instantly stifled
-it. She must think of self first, she told herself uneasily. Anyway she
-only wanted the marriage lines in case people should point an accusing
-finger at her. Later—well, the marriage could be annulled privately, and
-no one be the wiser, for marriages were easily annulled in Scotland. She
-walked briskly to where the coach was standing, for they were waiting for
-her, determined to cast all gloomy, depressing thoughts from her for the
-time at least.
-
-Robert mechanically closed the door behind her and walked slowly to the
-dresser. Taking from it a bottle of ink and a quill, he carried them to
-the table, and placing them upon it, sank heavily in a chair. Long he sat
-there, pen in hand, the victim of the profoundest melancholy, the deepest
-despair. The thought that it was his own fault, his indifference to
-consequences, his recklessness, his weak, sinful folly, that had plunged
-himself and others into the awful abyss of grief and sorrow, was like the
-bitterness of death to him. As he sat there with drawn and haggard face,
-while bitter regret gnawed deeply at his conscience, the plaintive tones
-of Mary’s voice came through the window, singing softly:
-
- “Ye banks and braes of bonnie Doon,
- How can ye bloom sae fresh and fair?”
-
-A groan of agony escaped the grief-stricken man at the sound of the
-voice, which was sweeter than all else in the world to him.
-
-“Mary, my lost Highland Mary!” he cried aloud, “how can I give ye up
-forever?” and throwing himself across the table he wept bitter tears of
-anguish and remorse.
-
- “How can ye chant, ye little birds,
- An’ I sae weary, fu’ o’ care?”
-
-continued the sweet voice in mournful cadence. Softly the words floated
-to the ears of the sorrowing man, like the echo of his own harrowing
-thoughts.
-
-As Mary reached the open window she paused and gazed into the room
-eagerly. As she sees her lover sitting there so silent and alone, her
-smile is very sweet and tender.
-
-“Dear laddie; asleep,” she whispers softly. “He must be o’er tired after
-his hard day’s work. God bless my laddie,” and with a smile of ineffable
-sweetness, she wafted a kiss to the bowed head and quickly passed on,
-wending her lonely way back to Castle Montgomery, while the man sitting
-there in agonized silence, with clenched teeth and tense muscles, slowly
-raised his head to listen, in heart-broken silence, to her sweet voice
-floating back to him in silvery melody, as she took up the broken thread
-of her song:
-
- “Thou’lt break my heart, thou warbling bird,
- That wantons thro’ the flow’ring thorn.
- Thou minds me o’ departed joys,
- Departed, never to return.”
-
-The song died away in the distance.
-
-“God pity her, God pity me,” he murmured brokenly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-From the huge, low ceilinged kitchen of Castle Montgomery, which was
-ablaze with light, came the gladsome sound of mirth and revelry, for
-
- “Some merry countre folks togither did convene,
- To burn their nits and pou’ their stocks, and hold their hallowe’en,
- For blythe that night.”
-
-For miles around the annual invitations had been sent broadcast, and
-to-night the capacious kitchen was taxed to its utmost. It was, however,
-a singularly good-natured, if over-hilarious, gathering that had
-assembled to do justice to old Bess’s cooking, and to test their fate
-through the medium of the many charms so well known to all the peasantry.
-
-There was Poosie Nancy in her stiffly-starched frilled cap and her new
-kirtle, complacently nodding here and there to all of her acquaintances
-as they flocked about her. Poosie Nancy was a merry old soul. For years
-she had been the mistress of the Arms Inn, the public house on the high
-road, where Souter and Tam O’Shanter were wont to idle away their time
-and, incidentally, their “siller.” Standing on one foot behind her was
-Molly Dunn. Molly was consciously resplendent in a new plaid frock, made
-by her own unskilled hands, and while it was certainly not a thing of
-beauty, it surely was a joy forever, to the lassies, who laughingly
-twitted her about her handiwork. But she heeded not their good-natured
-jibes. She was admiringly watching Daddy Auld, the little old minister,
-who sat in the midst of an admiring group of his parishioners at the
-other side of the room, who evidently stood in no awe of him, judging
-from the bursts of laughter which greeted his frequent attempts at
-jocularity.
-
-“Where is Tam O’Shanter, Souter Johnny?” suddenly asked old Bess, who
-was proudly doing the honors as mistress of ceremonies. Souter was
-assiduously paying court to the comely Poosie Nancy in the opposite
-corner with an eye to future possibilities.
-
-“He willna be here till late,” he replied impatiently, addressing the
-crowd. “I left him at the Arms Inn, an’ if he drinks much mair whisky,
-he will na’ be here at all, I’m thinkin’,” and he turned eagerly to his
-inamorata, who was fanning herself indifferently with a plantain leaf.
-
-“He’ll fall into the Doon some night an’ be drowned, sure as fate,” said
-she, carelessly dismissing the subject.
-
-“Take your partners for the reel!” shouted big Malcolm Macræ
-stentoriously, at this juncture. Old Donald tuned up his fiddle with
-gleeful alacrity.
-
-Souter ceremoniously offered Poosie his arm, which she condescendingly
-accepted, and majestically they walked to the middle of the floor. With
-much laughing and joking and good-natured rivalry, they were all quickly
-paired off, and soon the rafters rang with the happy voices of the
-hilarious dancers as they merrily sang to the tune that blind Donald was
-scratching out on his old and faithful, though unmelodious, fiddle.
-
-Mary had taken no part in the merrymaking, for she felt heavy and sad
-at heart. From her seat in the corner, where the light was the dimmest,
-she had watched the door with patient anxiety, hoping against hope that
-Robert would come, but she had waited in vain, and now the evening was
-nearly spent and soon they would be going home, happy and tired after
-their sport and entertainment, while she would steal away to her quarters
-over the kitchen and cry herself to sleep, as she had done for many
-nights past. Souter Johnny, who was in his element and the merriest of
-them all, had tried vainly to induce her to join the revelers in their
-sport, and many an honest laddie had sought her hand in the dance,
-only to be shyly refused. So gradually she was left in peace, and soon
-forgotten amid the excitement of their diversions. They had tried some of
-the famous charms, which decided the destinies of many of the lads and
-lassies that night, and now old Bess brought forth her long-hoarded bag
-of nuts, which she divided among them. Amid shouts of mirth and laughter,
-they proceeded to test the most famous of all the charms. As they rushed
-pell-mell to the fireplace and laid each particular nut in the fire,
-for which they had named the lad or lassie of their choice, and stood
-there eagerly watching, open-mouthed, to see how they would burn, Mary,
-with a quickly beating heart, stole unperceived close to the front row of
-watchers, and with a little prayer, quietly threw her pair into the fire.
-For a moment they burned slowly side by side, then with a hop and a jump
-they popped madly about, and finally at opposite sides of the fireplace
-they glowed redly for a time, then expired altogether. With a little,
-suppressed sob, unheeded in the general excitement, she hurried back to
-her seat, pale and trembling. It was as she had feared: the course of
-their love was never again to run smoothly, the charm had spoken. It
-had never been known to predict wrongly. Why had she sought to find out
-her fate? she asked herself pathetically. Unheeding the merry songs and
-dances going on around her, of which they never seemed to weary, and
-the unco tales and funny jokes, she sat there thinking her sweet, sad
-thoughts, and patiently waiting till they should depart for their homes,
-that she might seek the quiet of her bed, where her aching heart might
-find relief in the tears which nowadays were so hard to control. Suddenly
-the laughter subsided, and Mary with a start raised her head to see all
-eyes turned on her.
-
-“Mary, come here, lass,” called Souter Johnny, who was fanning himself
-vigorously.
-
-“It’s your turn noo, Mary,” they cried boisterously. “So gie us a dance
-or a song,” and they all pressed around her with good-natured suggestions.
-
-Old Bess took the shrinking girl by the hand, and leading her forward,
-with a deep courtesy announced, “Hieland Mary will favor us wi’ a song,”
-then she left Mary standing in the center of the room suffering agonies
-of dread as she raised her frightened eyes to the group of laughing,
-good-natured, gaping faces about her.
-
-“I canna’ sing, I canna’ sing, Souter,” she faltered, turning to him
-beseechingly.
-
-“Yes, ye can, dearie, just a—a verse, there’s a girlie,” he answered
-encouragingly. “Come and stand beside me, if that’s any inspiration to
-ye,” he added, smiling good-humoredly.
-
-She ran to his side, and clutching him by the arm, tried to muster up her
-courage, for the good-natured audience were clamorously demanding a song.
-With a frightened little gasp she began to sing the first thing that came
-to her mind. “Oh, where, and oh, where is my Highland laddie gone?” she
-faltered out. A little titter passed through the crowd, for they knew
-that “Rab Burns was nae longer sweet on Mary Campbell,” as they told each
-other in loud whispers. At the cruel sound Mary, whose lips had trembled
-ominously as she thought of her recreant lover, with an indignant look
-at the thoughtless ones, burst into a flood of tears. Quickly Souter
-led her sobbing to a seat, while the others anxiously crowded round,
-conscience-stricken at their thoughtless levity.
-
-“What’s happent? what’s happent? Has she fainted?” they asked in helpless
-confusion, gazing from one to the other.
-
-“She’s only a wee bittie tired,” answered old Souter, tenderly smoothing
-the hair of the sorrowing lass. “Let her alone an’ she’ll be all right.
-Donald,” he called, “start your fiddle; we’re gang to hae anither dance.”
-
-The blind old patriarch smiled serenely, and raising his fiddle to his
-chin began to play, and soon the mirth and fun grew fast and furious as
-the dancers reeled and set, and crosst and cleekit.
-
-While old Donald was playing, and the dance was well started, Souter
-quietly led Mary out in the open air, and sitting down on the doorstep,
-he drew her gently beside him. “Noo, Mary, what is the matter?” he
-inquired kindly. “Winna ye tell old Souter Johnny your trouble?”
-
-“Ye ken why I am unhappy, Souter Johnny,” answered Mary apathetically. He
-sighed and remained silent.
-
-“Have ye an’ Robert quarreled?” he asked presently.
-
-“No,” she answered sadly.
-
-“Weel, come tell old Souter; it may ease your mind, lassie,” and he drew
-her plaid about her shoulders, for the night air was keen.
-
-“Well, ye ken, Souter,” she faltered, a pitiful little break in her
-voice, “Robbie an’ I were to be married after the plantin’ was o’er, and
-’tis noo harvest time, but ne’er a word has he spoke of our marriage
-since that day. He is so changed, Souter, I—I canna understand him at
-all,” and she leaned wearily against his shoulder like a tired child.
-
-“That Armour lass is at the bottom of it all, I ken,” thought Souter
-angrily, drawing her close to him.
-
-“Perhaps,” continued Mary sadly, “perhaps he has grown tired of his
-Highland Mary.” She plucked idly at the fringe of her plaid, a look of
-resignation on her sweet face.
-
-“Tired o’ ye?” repeated Souter incredulously. “A man would be a most
-fearful fool to gie up such a bonnie, sweet lassie as ye are. Noo, if I
-were only younger, Robbie Burns wouldna hae things all his own way, I
-tell ye,” and he nodded his head vigorously.
-
-“I ken he has some trouble,” said Mary, not heeding his jocular efforts
-to cheer her, “that makes him so unhappy like; if he would only let me
-share that trouble wi’ him, whate’er it is, how gladly I would do it.”
-
-Souter rubbed his bearded chin reflectively.
-
-“Weel, Mary, ye ken Robert’s a genius,” he answered soberly. “An’ ye
-can ne’er tell how a genius is gang to act, therefore ye must ne’er be
-surprised, Mary, at whate’er he does, for genius is but anither name for
-eccentricity an’—an’ perverseness,” and he sighed deeply, his kind old
-face wrinkled with perplexity.
-
-“I feel, Souter,” she continued, pathetically calm, “that I am slowly,
-but surely, drifting out o’ his life forever.” She gazed suddenly into
-the face bending over her solicitously.
-
-“Dinna ye know the cause, Souter?” she asked beseechingly.
-
-He brushed his hand across his eyes and slowly shook his head. She sighed
-patiently and turned away her head and gazed listlessly into space. For a
-few moments there was deep silence, broken only by the bursts of laughter
-which came to them at intervals from within.
-
-“Lassie, listen to me,” finally said the old man, his voice cheery and
-hopeful once more. “Ye mustna be so down-hearted; there is a cause
-for everything in this world, an’ I ken Robert loves ye wi’ all his
-heart, just the same as ever. Why, ye can see the glimmer o’ love in
-his e’e whene’er he looks at ye.” He smiled approvingly as Mary’s face
-brightened, then continued decidedly, “Robert is well-nigh daft that he
-hasna heard frae Lord Glencairn all this time; that is why he is sae
-worrid an’ nervous, sae moody an’ neglectful; noo cheer thee, lassie,
-it’ll all come right in time,” and he patted her shoulder lovingly.
-
-“Oh, I feel sae much better, Souter,” she murmured, pressing his hand
-gratefully. “An’ noo I’ll na borrow trouble any mair, thinkin’ Robert
-doesna’ love me.” She smiled happily and jumped lightly to her feet.
-
-“Whist, Mary, why dinna ye make sure o’ that?” whispered Souter, looking
-around him mysteriously. She looked at him wonderingly. “’Tis Hallowe’en,
-ye ken, an’ a’ the witches an’ fairies are about this night an’ will
-grant any wish made. Try a charm, lassie.”
-
-“I did try one,” replied Mary with a sigh. “I burned the nuts, but it
-didna’ come out right; that’s what made me sad.”
-
-“Ah, weel, try anither; go pull a stock.”
-
-“Oh, nay, I’m afraid to go out in the field at night,” she replied
-timidly, drawing back. “But I’ll go if ye’ll come wi’ me.” She held out
-her hand to him.
-
-“Nay, thank ye, Mary,” he said grimly. “I dinna’ care to see the face o’
-my future wife just yet; I fear I couldna’ stand the shock.”
-
-“Well, I darena’ go alone,” answered Mary decidedly, her hand on the
-latch. “Think of anither charm, one I can do indoors.”
-
-“An’ do ye think the fairies will come around where ’tis light?” he cried
-in amazement. “Och, no, ye must go to the darkest place ye can find.”
-His little round eyes gazed into hers with solemn earnestness.
-
-Mary shivered with apprehension and peered into the darkness. “Oh,
-Souter, think o’ the witches,” she said nervously.
-
-“They willna’ hurt ye,” he answered a little impatiently. “Ye maun sow a
-handful of hempseed an’ harrow it o’er wi’ anything ye can draw after ye,
-an’ repeat o’er and o’er,” assuming a guttural monotone:
-
- “Hempseed, I sow thee; hempseed, I sow thee,
- And him that is to be my true love,
- Come after me and draw thee.”
-
-“And will I see him then?” whispered Mary eagerly, drawing near to him.
-
-“Aye,” returned Souter hoarsely. “Look over your left shoulder an’
-ye’ll see your future husband pullin’ hemp. Noo, off wi’ ye; ye’ll
-find some seed in the barn.” Mary tried to summon up her courage, for
-she was highly superstitious, like all the peasantry, and was anxious
-to test the potency of the charm, and finally succeeded in taking a
-few faltering footsteps in the direction of the barn, when suddenly
-the door behind them opened, and Molly Dunn appeared in the doorway.
-She held in one hand a lighted candle, while in the other she carried
-a broken piece of looking-glass, into which she was gazing intently,
-her eyes fixed and staring. Behind her, crowding through the doorway,
-followed the now noiseless revelers, who were stifling their laughter to
-breathlessly watch the outcome of the well-known charm, whose power Molly
-had decided to put to a test, though believing staunchly in its potency.
-Molly majestically walked down the steps and across to the well, where,
-depositing her mirror on the curbing, she took from the pocket of her
-skirt a round, red apple, from which she bit a goodly piece and began
-vigorously to chew upon it, the while holding her candle above her head
-and anxiously watching her reflection in the mirror.
-
-“Molly’s eatin’ the apple at the glass,” chuckled Souter to Mary softly.
-“She’s lookin’ for the face o’ her future husband. Let’s hae some fun wi’
-her.” He motioned to them all to keep silent, and stealing softly over to
-the unconscious Molly, intoned in a deep sepulchral voice, “Molly Dunn,
-if ye would see your future husband, dinna’ ye dare turn your head this
-way.”
-
-Molly gave a shriek of terror, thereby choking herself with the piece of
-apple she was industriously eating, and falling on her knees, her teeth
-chattering in fear, she cried frantically, “The witches! the witches!”
-
-“Nay, I’m the Deil himsel’,” answered Souter in awe-inspiring accents.
-Molly groaned aloud, in mortal terror, not daring to turn around. “An’
-I’ve come for ye, Molly Dunn,” slowly continued her tormentor.
-
-“Nay, nay!” cried Molly, her eyes staring wildly in front of her. “I want
-naught to do wi’ ye; gang awa’, gang awa’!” and she wildly waved her
-hands behind her.
-
-“Not till ye’ve seen the face o’ the man ye’ll wed,” replied the voice.
-“Beauteous fairy of Hallowe’en, come forth,” he commanded majestically,
-beckoning to Mary to come nearer. She did so. “Speak, kind fairy.” He
-whispered to her what to say to the awestruck Molly.
-
-Thus admonished, Mary, who was once more her old light-hearted winsome
-self, raised her sweet voice and spoke in a high falsetto, “Gaze in the
-looking-glass, Molly Dunn; eat o’ the apple, think o’ the one ye desire
-to see, an’ his face will appear beside yours.”
-
-“Behold, I pass the magic wand o’er your head, ye faithless woman,” added
-Souter threateningly.
-
-Hurriedly Molly complied with the injunctions, and patiently she knelt
-there, apple in hand, the candle light glaring full on her eager, ugly
-face, and the wisp of faded hair tied tightly on top of her head, which
-was waving wildly about, while she waited for the face to appear beside
-her own reflection in the glass.
-
-“Do ye see him yet?” asked Mary eagerly, forgetting her rôle of “The
-Fairy of Hallowe’en,” and speaking in her natural tone, while the
-group at the doorway drew closer to the kneeling woman in their excited
-curiosity.
-
-“Nay, not yet,” replied Molly in an awestruck whisper.
-
-“Hold the candle higher,” admonished Souter, “an’ eat quicker.” Molly
-did so. “Noo do you see your handsome lover?” He crept up slyly behind
-Molly, and bending over her shoulder, peered into the glass, where he
-beheld the shadowy reflection of his own face looming up beside that of
-the wondering Molly. With a gasp of pleasure not unmixed with fear, she
-dropped the glass, and turning quickly grabbed the surprised Souter and
-held him close. As she raised her candle to see whom the fairies had
-sent to her, she recognized her tormentor, and with a shriek of rage,
-she clouted the laughing Souter over the head with her candlestick, amid
-peals of laughter from the delighted spectators, until he called for
-mercy.
-
-“Dinna I suit ye, Molly?” he asked in an injured tone, nursing his sorely
-punished head.
-
-“Ye skelpie limmer’s face, ye, how dare ye try sich sportin’ wi’ me?” she
-cried angrily.
-
-“The glass canna’ lie,” called out old Bess with a shake of her frilled
-cap.
-
-“An’ ye seen Souter’s face there, Molly,” laughed Poosie Nancy loudly.
-“There’s no gainsaying that.”
-
-“I want a braw mon, a handsome mon,” whimpered Molly. “Ye’re no a mon at
-all, ye wee skelpie limmer.” The burst of laughter which greeted this
-sally was very disconcerting to Souter, whose height, five feet two
-inches, was distinctly a sore subject.
-
-“Try anither charm, Molly,” said Mary, feeling sorry for the poor
-innocent.
-
-“Aye, I will,” replied Molly eagerly, drying her tears with the back of
-her hand.
-
-“Then come alang,” said Souter, ready to make amends. “Come an’ pull a
-stock. Gie me your hand.” She did so eagerly. “Noo shut your eyes tight;
-that’s it; come along noo.” But Molly braced herself and refused to move.
-
-“I’m afeered o’ the dark an’ the witches,” she faltered, her teeth
-chattering, her eyes so tightly closed that her face was drawn into a
-mass of deep wrinkles.
-
-They all crowded round the couple with words of praise and encouragement,
-and presently Molly was persuaded to take a step forward and then
-another, and finally the two moved slowly away and were swallowed up in
-the darkness.
-
-Meanwhile the rest of the revelers, after a whispered consultation,
-hurried to the outhouse, amid smothered shrieks of laughter.
-
-Molly and Souter walked slowly and timidly toward the field of corn,
-which looked unreal and shadowy in the pale moonlight. Molly’s few
-remaining teeth were now chattering so loudly that Souter began to grow
-nervous. He jerked her arm impatiently.
-
-“Be a mon, Molly,” he hoarsely whispered, his voice a little shaky.
-
-“I’m afeered to,” she answered, opening her eyes and looking fearfully
-around. They took a few more stumbling step, then stopped.
-
-“Och, get off my foot, ye towsie tyke!” cried Souter. Molly hastily
-removed the offending member and on they went again. Suddenly they
-stopped, rooted to the spot in terror. A low, blood-curdling moan had
-rent the stillness. Again it came, chilling the very blood in their veins
-by its awful weirdness.
-
-“The witches! the witches!” gasped Molly in abject fear.
-
-Turning, they beheld a sight that caused their hair to stand on end,
-“the marrow to congeal in their bones,” as Souter afterward explained
-the sensation which came over him. Coming toward them was a score or
-more of hideous apparitions with fire blazing from their eyes and their
-horribly grinning mouths, and groaning and moaning like lost souls. With
-a mortal cry of terror, the frightened couple sped on wings of fear back
-to the friendly light of the kitchen, the ghostly figures darting after
-them with diabolical bursts of laughter. As they slammed the door of
-the house behind them their pursuers stopped and quickly blew out their
-Jack-o’-Lanterns and then threw them to one side.
-
-“I didna ken mortal mon could e’er run so fast,” snickered Poosie Nancy
-to the others as they noiselessly entered the kitchen in time to hear the
-wonderful tale of Souter’s hairbreadth escape from the witches.
-
-Another hour of mirth and jollity, of dance and song soon sped around.
-Souter and Molly were still the center of an admiring group, for they had
-seen the witches with their own eyes, and that distinction was theirs
-alone that night. Suddenly the old clock struck twelve, then began a
-merry scrambling for bonnets and plaids. Having donned them, they noisily
-crowded around their hostesses, who were lined up against the wall,
-waiting ceremoniously to be thanked for their hospitality and to bid
-their parting guests godspeed. As the darts of homely wit and repartee
-flew back and forth among them, causing the lads to burst into uproarious
-laughter or to grin in awkward bashfulness, and the lassies to turn their
-heads away blushingly or to toss their curls coquettishly, the door burst
-in suddenly, and Tam O’Shanter staggered to the center of the floor,
-pale, wild-eyed, and disheveled.
-
-“Tam O’Shanter!” they cried, gazing at him in startled amazement. Souter
-quickly reached his old cronie’s side.
-
-“What’s the matter, mon? hae ye seen a ghost?” he asked concernedly.
-
-“Aye, worse than that, much worse,” hoarsely replied Tam, wiping the
-sweat from off his forehead with a trembling hand.
-
-“What’s happened?” cried old Bess fearfully.
-
-“Calm yoursel’ an’ tell us, Tam,” said Souter soothingly. They brought
-him a chair, for he trembled like an aspen leaf. Throwing himself into
-it, he gazed about him fearfully, the while struggling to regain his
-breath.
-
-“Well,’tis this way, Souter,” he began presently in a husky whisper. “I
-left the Arms Inn about an hour ago or thereabouts an’ started for hame,
-for ’tis a long ride to Carrick, ye ken, an’ a most uncanny ride e’en in
-the daylight.”
-
-“That’s true,” affirmed Poosie Nancy with a nod of conviction to the
-others.
-
-“Weel,” continued Tam impressively, “a few miles beyond the Maypole
-road ye have to pass a dark, uncanny spot, the cairn where the hunters
-found the murdered bairn. Ye ken the spot, Souter?” turning to him for
-confirmation.
-
-Souter nodded his head quickly. “Aye, Tam, I ken it weel, for ’twas
-near there old Mingo’s mother hanged hersel’.” Old Bess looked over her
-shoulder nervously.
-
-“Aye,” eagerly assented Tam, then he continued, “Weel, a weird sight
-awaited me there; my blood runs cold noo. Suddenly I heard a sound o’
-music and revelry, and Maggie stopped still, frightened stiff. I looked
-up, and glimmering thro’ the trees was auld Kirk Alloway all a blaze o’
-light.” He paused to note the effect of his astounding statement.
-
-They looked at each other disbelievingly. Some turned angrily away,
-muttering to themselves. Was old Tam making sport of them?
-
-“Go alang, mon,” cried Poosie Nancy with an incredulous sniff of her pug
-nose. “’Tis naught but an old tumbled down ruin.”
-
-“I’m telling ye gospel truth,” replied Tam earnestly. They crowded around
-again, ready to be convinced, though still eying him distrustfully.
-
-“Well, I was nae afraid,” continued Tam bashfully, “for I was inspired
-by bold John Barleycorn, so I rode Maggie close to the wall an’ there
-thro’ the openin’, I saw inside, and wow! I saw an unco sight!” Tam was
-becoming warmed up with his recital. The eager, excited faces crowding
-around him had restored his courage and flattered his vanity. He paused
-impressively, his eyes fixed and staring, gazing straight past the faces
-of his listeners as though he saw the unco sight again. He noted with
-pleasure the frightened glances they gave over their shoulders. Then he
-proceeded slowly in a sibilant whisper, “There were warlocks and witches
-dancin’ hornpipes and jigs around the Kirk, dressed only in their sarks.
-There were open coffins standin’ around like clothespresses, an’ in each
-coffin stood a corpse holdin’ in its cauld hand a burnin’ light. An’ by
-that light I saw two span-lang wee unchristened bairns, white and cold
-upon the holy table.” Tam wiped the sweat off his brow and moistened his
-dry lips; then he proceeded with his harrowing tale. “Beside the bairns
-lay a bloody knife wi’ gray hairs still sticking to the heft an’——”
-
-But with a shudder of fear, their faces blanched and drawn, they
-exclaimed in doubting horror, “Nay!” “Stop!” “Out on ye, mon!” “It’s
-nae true!” etc. Tam was not to be cut off in the midst of his tale so
-unceremoniously.
-
-He rose excitedly from his seat and continued rapidly. “The dancers were
-twisting and turning like snakes, and there in a winnock-bunker sat Auld
-Nick himsel’, in the shape of a beast, playing the pipes. Och, friends,
-it was an inspirin’ sight, and in my excitement I yelled out——”
-
-“What?” cried the lads in unison.
-
-“‘Well done, Cutty Sark!’” shouted Tam, proudly, well pleased at his own
-temerity.
-
-They boisterously applauded him for his courage, but the lassies still
-clung to each other nervously.
-
-“Then what happened, Tam?” asked Souter quizzingly. He could not quite
-bring himself to believe Tam’s improbable tale, he knew the old sinner so
-well.
-
-“Weel, the lights went out in an instant,” continued Tam dramatically.
-“I had no sooner turned Maggie’s head than out poured those unco witches
-like bees buzzin’ in anger. I didna’ stop to meet them, for Maggie,
-knowing her danger, bounded off like a terrified deer and plunged off
-desperately through the trees toward the brig with all these witches
-followin’ wi’ eldritch screeches, close to her heels till I could feel
-their breath on my clammy neck. Oh, what an awful moment for me! but I
-knew if I could but reach the keystone of the auld brig I would be safe,
-for witches darena cross a running stream, ye ken. Mag did her speedy
-utmost, but old Nannie pursued close behind and flew at me with tooth and
-nail, but she didna’ know my Maggie’s mettle,” Tam laughed gleefully,
-“for with one grand leap she reached the brig and saved her master’s
-life, just as that Carline Nannie caught her by the rump, an’ my poor
-Maggie left behind her old gray tail.”
-
-As he finished his recital he gazed around him triumphantly. There was an
-audible sigh of relief from all.
-
-“That’s a burning shame,” said old Bess sympathetically, alluding to the
-loss of Maggie’s tail.
-
-“What a wonderful experience ye had, Tam,” cried Poosie Nancy admiringly.
-They all congratulated him on his narrow escape and pressed food and
-drink on him, showered him with words of praise, and in short made him
-out a daring hero, much to Souter’s disgust. He sat apart from the rest
-in dignified silence, his heart wounded and sore, for was not his late
-ghostly exploit completely ignored and forgotten? “Le Roi est mort, vive
-le Roi,” he might have said to himself.
-
-“Listen,” cried Tam, jumping to his feet, his face tense with eagerness.
-Faintly the patter, patter of a horse’s hoofs was heard drawing nearer
-and nearer.
-
-“’Tis only someone comin’ alang the highway,” said Souter carelessly.
-
-“’Tis my Maggie,” cried Tam almost tearfully. “She’s comin’ back for
-her master,” and with a bound he reached the open doorway. A few steps
-took him to the stone wall along the other side of which ran the King’s
-Highway. “She’s comin’, she’s comin’, my faithful Maggie is comin’,” he
-cried joyfully.
-
-“She must be an unco sight wi’out a tail, Tam,” sneered Souter. A roar of
-laughter greeted this sarcastic retort.
-
-“Dinna’ ye dare laugh,” cried Tam, turning on them furiously. The
-hoofbeats stopped suddenly. In the misty moonlight they caught a
-glimpse of a huge white creature, looking very spectral and ghost-like,
-impatiently tossing its head from side to side as if in search of
-something or someone. With a glad cry Tam vaulted the fence, old as he
-was, and dashed down the road, calling lovingly, “I’m comin’, Maggie, I’m
-comin’ to ye.” A whinny of delight, a snort of pleasure, greeted him as
-he reached his old mare’s side. Then like a phantom, the old gray mare
-and her rider sped swiftly past them on into the night and away toward
-Carrick.
-
-Silently they watched them, while the hoofbeats grew fainter and fainter
-and then were lost to sound. Such was Tam O’Shanter’s tale, the fame of
-which soon spread throughout all Ayrshire.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-
-In a sequestered spot beside the brook which runs through the lower end
-of the big field at Mossgiel farm, Robert sat dreamily watching the
-shallow brook at his feet slowly trickle along over the stones. He had
-left the field, his heart filled with anger against his brother, who had
-been reproving him for his thoughtlessness, his absent-mindedness; but
-gradually his temper had melted, and removing his bonnet from his fevered
-brow, he had given himself up to his reveries. A little later Gilbert
-found him there, his loose unbleached linen shirt open at the neck,
-eagerly writing on a scrap of paper he held in his hand.
-
-The last few weeks Gilbert had thrown off his cloak of habitual reserve,
-and had treated his brother with less harshness, less severity. He had
-watched the slowly drifting apart of the lovers with wonder and delight.
-Could it be that they were tiring of each other? he asked himself over
-and over again. If that were so then perhaps some day—but he would not
-permit himself to think of the future. He would be happy in the present.
-For he was comparatively happy now, happier than he had ever expected to
-be. Since Robert’s avoidance of her, Mary had again turned to him for
-sympathy, and once more they were on their old friendly footing. True she
-was a sad, despondent companion, but he was blissfully happy just to walk
-beside her from kirk, to listen to the sound of her sweet voice, even
-though his brother was the only topic of conversation, to feel the touch
-of her little hand as he helped her over the stile. He thought of all
-this now as he regarded his brother in thoughtful silence. Presently he
-called his name. Receiving no answer, he strode through the overhanging
-willows and touched him quietly on the shoulder.
-
-With a start Robert looked up into his brother’s face, then he turned
-slowly away. “What is wrong noo, Gilbert?” he asked bitterly. “It seems I
-will be doing nothing right o’ late.”
-
-“Nothin’ is wrong, lad,” replied Gilbert, his face reddening. “I—I only
-came to tell ye I am sorry I spoke sae harshly to ye just noo.”
-
-“Say no more, brother,” replied Robert quickly, rising with outstretched
-hand, his face bright and smiling. So ready was he to forgive any
-unkindness when his pardon was sought. “’Tis all forgot. I ken I do try
-your patience sore wi’ my forgetfulness and carelessness, but I couldna’
-help it. The voice of the Goddess Muse, whom I adore, suddenly whispered
-in my ear and I forgot my work, my surroundings, and stood enraptured,
-entranced behind my patient steed, catchin’ the thoughts and fancies that
-were tumblin’, burstin’ from my brain, eager to be let loose, and this
-is the fruit o’ my inspiration almost perfected.” He handed his brother
-the paper on which he had been writing.
-
-“Is it a song of harvesting?” asked Gilbert sarcastically without
-glancing at it.
-
-“Nay,” replied Robert softly. “’Tis called the ‘Cotter’s Saturday Night,’
-an’ ye will recognize, no doubt, the character and the theme, for ’tis
-partly of our own and of our father’s life I have written. ’Tis my best
-work, Gilbert, I ken truly.” He eagerly watched his brother’s face as he
-slowly read the verses through.
-
-“May the light of success shine on it,” he said kindly, when he had
-finished. “But it seems o’er doubtful noo that the world will e’er see
-this, or any of your verses, for not a word hae ye heard from Edinburgh
-since ye sent Sir William Creech your collection of poems.”
-
-Robert raised his head and regarded his brother in despairing
-hopelessness. “I ken it weel, brother,” he replied. “And my heart grows
-sick and weary, waitin’, waitin’, for tidings, be they good or bad. Two
-lang months have passed since I sent him my collection, an’ still not a
-word, not a sign. Nae doubt they were thrown in a corner, overlooked an’
-neglected.” For a moment he stood there gazing across the fields, his
-vision blurred by the tears of disappointment which filled his eyes. “Oh,
-why did Lord Glencairn raise my hopes so high?” he cried passionately,
-“only to have them dashed to the ground again.” Gilbert remained silent,
-his eyes cast down. The sight of his brother’s misery touched him keenly.
-But there was nothing he could say. “I believed him and trusted to his
-honor, his promise,” continued Robert dejectedly, “an’ for what?” He put
-on his bonnet and clasping his hands behind him in his characteristic
-attitude, slowly walked toward the cottage, a prey to his gloomy thoughts.
-
-“Be patient, Rob, yet a while,” said Gilbert encouragingly, as he walked
-along beside him. “Who kens what the morrow will bring forth?”
-
-“The morrow?” repeated Robert grimly. “Methinks I’ll ne’er know peace an’
-tranquillity again on this earth.”
-
-They strode on in silence. As they neared the cottage Gilbert laid his
-hand on his brother’s shoulder, bringing him to a standstill. “Robert,”
-he said quietly and firmly, “I want to speak to ye about Mary.”
-
-Robert turned his head away abruptly. “What of her?” he asked in a low
-voice.
-
-“What are your intentions toward her?” demanded Gilbert earnestly. “Do ye
-intend to marry her, or are ye but triflin’ idly wi’ her affections?”
-
-Robert turned on him quickly. “Triflin’?” he repeated indignantly. “Nay,
-Gilbert, ye wrong me deeply.”
-
-“Forgive me, but ye ken Mary is not like other lassies to think lightly
-o’,” said Gilbert, his eye searching his brother’s face keenly.
-
-“Heaven forbid,” ejaculated Robert in a low, tense voice.
-
-“I canna’ understand your conduct o’ late,” continued Gilbert earnestly.
-“I fear your stay in Mauchline is responsible for the great change in ye,
-for ye are not the same lad ye were when ye left hame. I fear ye have
-sadly departed from those strict rules of virtue and moderation ye were
-taught by your parents, Robert.”
-
-“What mean ye, Gilbert?” inquired Robert, startled.
-
-“Ah, Rob,” responded Gilbert, shaking his head sadly, “I ken mair than ye
-think; reports travel e’en in the country.”
-
-The thought that his wild escapades were known to his narrow-minded
-though upright brother, and perhaps to others, filled Robert with sudden
-shame. “Weel, Gilbert,” he replied, trying to speak lightly, “Ye ken that
-I have been fallin’ in love and out again wi’ a’ the lassies ever since
-I was fifteen, but nae thought of evil ever entered my mind, ye ken that
-weel.”
-
-“Aye, I ken that,” answered Gilbert quickly, “until ye went to Mauchline.
-And noo ye have come back a changed lad, your vows to Mary forgotten. If
-I thought ye would try to wrong her——” he stopped abruptly, for Robert
-had faced him, white and trembling, his eyes flashing indignantly.
-
-“Stop, Gilbert!” he commanded, intensely calm. “Mary Campbell’s purity is
-as sacred to me as an angel’s in heaven. I would sooner cut my tongue out
-by the roots than to willingly say aught to cause her a moment’s misery
-or sorrow. Ye cruelly misjudge me, Gilbert.” He turned away, feeling hurt
-and angry that he should be so misunderstood by his brother, and yet was
-he misjudging him, was he not indeed causing her much sorrow? he asked
-himself bitterly.
-
-Soon the whole guilty truth must be disclosed, his faithlessness, his
-unworthiness. If she suffered now, what would be her misery when she
-learned that an insurmountable barrier had arisen between them, cruelly
-separating them forever. The thought filled him with unspeakable anguish.
-
-“Forgive me, Rob, for my hasty words,” said Gilbert remorsefully. “But ye
-ken Mary is very dear to—to us all; that is why I spoke so plainly.”
-
-At that moment the door of the cottage opened and the object of their
-discussion stepped into view. The poor little moth could not help
-fluttering around the candle, and so she was to be found at Mossgiel
-whenever her duties would permit her to steal away.
-
-“Oh, here ye are, lads,” she called out to them, her face brightening.
-“Will ye be comin’ in to tea noo?” They did not answer. “My, what long
-faces ye both have,” she continued, smiling. “This isna’ the Sabbath Day,
-so there’s no need of such sorrowful faces.”
-
-“I didna’ ken ye were here,” answered Gilbert, going toward her.
-
-Robert sat down by the well, the look of pain on his melancholy face
-deepening as he listened to her gentle voice. He closed his eyes wearily
-and leaned back against the curbing, the paper held loosely in his hand.
-It was so hard to realize that never again would he press that form to
-his aching heart, that he must renounce her utterly. Oh, if he could only
-die now, how much better it would be for them all, he weakly told himself.
-
-“I’m going to stay here to tea wi’ ye this night,” said Mary wistfully.
-Why didn’t Robert speak to her just one word of greeting? she thought
-sadly. “Your mother bade me tell ye supper is waiting whenever ye are
-ready.” She took a few halting steps toward the well. “Are ye comin’ in,
-Robert?” she inquired timidly.
-
-“In a wee,” he answered quietly, without looking at her. “After I have
-finished my poem.” Mary turned back, crushed to the heart by his apparent
-coldness.
-
-“Weel, lads,” cried Mrs. Burns brightly, stepping out on the low, broad
-stoop followed by Souter, who held a cup of steaming tea in one hand and
-some oatcakes in the other, on which he nibbled with evident relish.
-“I heard your voices and couldna’ stay within,” and she beamed on them
-lovingly.
-
-“Ye’re at it again, I see, Robert,” observed Souter tactlessly. Robert
-flushed angrily. He was easily irritated in his present state of mind.
-“Ye’ll write yoursel’ into the grave, mon; ye’re not lookin’ very peart
-the noo.”
-
-Mrs. Burns regarded her eldest son with anxious eyes. “Aye, I fear,
-laddie, ye are too intent on your rhymin’,” she said solicitously.
-His abstracted moods, his melancholy moroseness had filled her loving
-heart with gloomy forebodings. “Sae much livin’ in the clouds, my son,
-is unhealthful, an’ does but make ye moody an’ uncertain in temper. Is
-it worth while to wreck body, mind an’ soul to gain a little fame an’
-fortune, which, alas, seem so very far off?” she asked, putting her hand
-lovingly on his bowed head.
-
-“Ye dinna’ understand, mither,” he replied sadly. “I love to write. ’Tis
-my very life; thought flows unbidden from my brain.” He rose to his feet
-and pointing to the stream, which could be faintly seen at the foot of
-the hill, continued with mournful finality, “Why, mother, I might as well
-try to stop the waters of yonder rushin’ brook as to attempt to smother
-the poetic fancies that cry for utterance. Nay, ’tis too late noo to
-dissuade me from my purpose,” and he turned and watched the setting sun
-slowly sink behind the distant hills in a flood of golden splendor.
-
-Souter noticed with uneasiness the gloom which had settled upon them all
-as the result of his careless words. Why was he such a thoughtless fool?
-Ah, well, he would make them forget their troubles.
-
-“Och, Mistress Burns,” he cried, smacking his lips with apparent relish,
-“’tis a mighty fine cup of tea, a perfectly grand cup. It fair cheers the
-heart of mon,” and he drained it to the bottom.
-
-“An’ where do ye think the oatcakes were made, Souter?” asked Mary
-brightly.
-
-“Weel, I’m no’ a good hand at guessin’,” he answered, thoughtfully
-scratching his head; “but by their taste an’ sweetness, I should say that
-Mistress Burns made them hersel’.”
-
-The good dame regarded him witheringly. “I didna’ ken that oatcakes were
-sweet, Souter,” she retorted.
-
-Mary laughed softly at his discomfiture. “Weel, they come frae my sister
-in Applecross.”
-
-“Applecross!” he repeated, his face lighting up with pleasure. “Noo I
-mind they did have the Highland flavor, for true.”
-
-“Aye, an’ ye finished the last one for that reason, no doubt,” replied
-Mrs. Burns wrathfully. “Ye’re a pig, mon. Come awa’, lads, your supper
-will be gettin’ cold,” and she led the way inside, followed meekly by
-Souter. Gilbert waited for Mary to enter, but she stood wistfully gazing
-at Robert. With a sigh he left them together, and Robert entered the
-cottage.
-
-Mary slowly approached Robert as he stood looking across to the distant
-hills, and patiently waited for him to speak to her, but he stood there
-in tense silence, not daring to trust himself to even look at the pure
-flower-like face held up to his so pleadingly.
-
-“Robbie,” she said timidly after a pause, which seemed interminable to
-them both, “willna’ ye let the sunlight enter your heart an’ be your old
-bonnie sel’ once mair? It will make us all sae happy.” She put her hand
-on his arm lovingly. “Why are ye sae changed, laddie? Dinna’ ye want me
-to love ye any mair?”
-
-At the gentle touch of her fingers an uncontrollable wave of passionate
-love and longing came over him, sweeping away all resolutions
-resistlessly. “Oh, my Mary, my Mary,” he cried hoarsely. “I do want your
-love, I do want it noo an’ forever,” and he clasped her lovingly to his
-aching heart. Blissfully she lay in his strong arms while he showered
-her flushed and happy face with the hungry, fervent, loving kisses which
-he had denied himself so long, and murmured little caressing words of
-endearment which filled her soul with rapture and happiness. “How I love
-ye, Mary,” he breathed in her ear again and again as he held her close.
-
-“An’ how happy ye make me once mair, laddie,” she answered, nestling
-against him lovingly.
-
-“An’ how happy we will——,” he began, then stopped pale and trembling, for
-grim recollection had suddenly loomed up before him with all its train
-of bitter, ugly facts; and conscience began to drum insistently into his
-dulled ear. “Tell her the truth now, the whole truth,” it said. But the
-voice of the tempter whispered persuasively, saying, “Why tell her now?
-wait, let her be happy while she may, put it off as long as possible.”
-
-“What is it, Robbie?” cried Mary fearfully. “Tell me what is troublin’
-ye; dinna’ be afraid.” His bowed head bent lower and lower.
-
-“Oh, Mary, I’m sae unworthy, sae unworthy of all your pure thoughts, your
-tender love,” he faltered despairingly, resolved to tell her all. “Ye
-dinna’ ken all my weakness, my deception, and into what depths of sin I
-have fallen.” She sought to interrupt him, but he continued rapidly, his
-voice harsh with the nervous tension, his face pallid from the stress of
-his emotions. “I have a confession to make ye——”
-
-“Nay, nay, laddie,” cried Mary, putting her hand over his trembling
-lips. “Dinna’ tell me anything. I want nae confession from ye, except
-that o’ your love,” and she smoothed his cheek tenderly. “Ye ken that is
-music to my ears at all times, but if ye are deceivin’ me, if ye have na
-always been true to me, an’ your vows, why, laddie, keep the knowledge
-to yourself’. I am content noo, and ye ken happiness is such a fleetin’
-thing that I mean to cling to it as long as I can.” She took his hands
-in both her own and held them close to her heart. “Ye ken, Robbie, ill
-news travels apace and ’twill reach my ears soon enough,” she continued
-with a mournful little quaver in her voice. “But no matter what comes,
-what ye may do, my love for ye will overlook it all; I will see only your
-virtues, my love, not your vices.”
-
-Robert bowed his head in heart-broken silence. Grief, shame, and remorse
-like tongues of fiery flames were scorching and burning into his very
-soul. Quietly they sat there engrossed in their thoughts, till the voice
-of Mrs. Burns calling to them from the cottage to come to supper roused
-them from their lethargy.
-
-“We’re comin’ right awa’,” answered Mary brightly. “Come, laddie, we
-mustna’ keep the folks waitin’.”
-
-She took his listless hand and drew him gently to the door and into the
-cottage.
-
-Silently they took their places at the table, around which the others
-were already seated.
-
-“By the way,” said old blind Donald, the fiddler, who had dropped in on
-his way to Mauchline for a bite and a cup, “Poosie Nancy told me to tell
-ye, Mistress Burns, that she wa drop in to see ye this night.”
-
-“We’ll be glad to see her,” replied Mrs. Burns hospitably.
-
-“And Daddy Auld says he’ll be along, too,” continued Donald, grinning
-broadly. “That is, if he isna’ too busy convertin’ souls.”
-
-“Convertin’ souls,” sneered Souter incredulously.
-
-“Aye, ye should see the Jolly Beggars he was haranguin’. They were
-jumpin’, an’ rantin’, an’ singin’ like daft Methodists.”
-
-“The auld hypocrites!” cried Mrs. Burns, buttering a scone which she
-placed in the old man’s tremulous hand. “They didna’ go to the manse for
-conversion; ’tis a square meal they are after. They ken the kind old
-heart o’ Daddy Auld.”
-
-Souter leaned back in his chair and smiled reminiscently. “That reminds
-me o’ a guid story,” he began, chuckling.
-
-“Never mind that story noo,” remonstrated Mrs. Burns, who was in constant
-dread of Souter’s risque stories. “That’ll keep.”
-
-“I never _can_ tell that damn story,” ejaculated Souter wrathfully.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-
-They had finished their meager supper, and now sat comfortably around the
-fire, Mrs. Burns and Mary busy with their knitting, the men contentedly
-smoking, while old Donald discordantly tuned up his fiddle.
-
-“Noo, Donald,” said Souter briskly, “play us something lively.”
-
-“Aye, I’ll play ye the Highland Fling, Souter Johnny, an’ ye can dance.
-Come alang noo,” and he started to play vigorously, keeping time with his
-foot.
-
-“Aye, get out on the floor, Souter,” said Gilbert, pulling him out of his
-chair.
-
-“Nay, nay, lad,” expostulated Souter fretfully, “I be too old to fling
-the toe noo.”
-
-“Go alang wi’ ye, mon,” retorted Mrs. Burns encouragingly; “a Scotsman,
-and a Highlander besides, is ne’er too old to——”
-
-“To learn,” interrupted Gilbert brightly, swinging the old man to the
-middle of the floor. “Let her go.”
-
-“I havena danced for years,” said Souter apologetically. Carefully
-knocking the ashes out of his pipe he deposited it in the pocket of his
-capacious waistcoat and proceeded to divest himself of his coat. “Ye ken
-I was the champion dancer of my clan, Clan McDougal, when I was a young
-lad,” he announced boastingly. “An’ mony a time I have cheered an’ amused
-the lads, while tentin’ on the fields of Culloden, before the big battle.
-An’ that reminds me o’ a guid——”
-
-“Never mind the story,” said Gilbert impatiently. “Gie us a dance.”
-
-After a few preliminary movements Souter caught the swinging measure of
-the dance, and once started he limbered up surprisingly. On he danced
-nimbly, and untiringly, soon ably proving to his delighted audience
-that he had not forgotten his old-time accomplishment. “I’ll show these
-Lowlanders what a Highlander can do,” thought the old man proudly.
-Panting with excitement and eagerness he failed to hear the metallic
-patter of horses’ hoofs drawing near the cottage. Nearer and nearer they
-came unheeded by all save one.
-
-From his seat by the fireplace, where he sat in melancholy silence,
-Robert heard the sound, but gave it no heed. Suddenly it ceased. He
-raised his head to listen. Someone had surely stopped at the gate, he
-thought, straining his ears eagerly, but the noise of the fiddle and the
-dancing drowned all sound from without. He glanced quickly at the smiling
-faces of the others as they good-naturally watched the dancer. “I must
-hae been mistaken,” he muttered uneasily. Suddenly he leaned forward,
-grasping his chair hard; surely he had heard his name faintly called.
-He listened intently. Yes, there it was again; this time the voice was
-nearer. A woman’s voice, too. What could it mean? He rose to his feet,
-his heart thumping fiercely, his muscles alert and tense, his eyes fixed
-on the door, his mind filled with gloomy presentiment.
-
-At that moment an imperative knock sounded loudly through the room, and
-almost at the same time the door flew open violently, and Jean Armour
-impetuously dashed in. Closing the door quickly behind her she leaned
-back against it, pale and exhausted. Her riding habit of green and gold
-was splashed and discolored with mud. The large hat with its gleaming
-white plume hung limply over her shoulder, while her black disheveled
-hair streamed over her face and down her back in bewildering confusion.
-She had evidently ridden fast and furious, for she stood there with her
-eyes closed, her hand on her heart, gasping for breath.
-
-Quickly Mrs. Burns led the exhausted girl to a seat. In a few moments
-she raised her drooping head and with wild frightened eyes searched the
-room till her gaze fell on Robert, who was leaning white and speechless
-against the fireplace, a great fear in his heart.
-
-She rose quickly and going to him said in a tense, rapid whisper,
-“Robert, my father knows all, but through no fault of mine. Some idle
-gossip reached his ear to-day, and when he returned home and learned my
-condition his rage was terrible. He cursed you like a madman, and would
-have done me bodily harm had I remained within sight. But I feared for my
-life, and fled before I had explained the truth to him. I have come to
-you to protect me.”
-
-He listened to her in stony silence. The blow had fallen so suddenly, so
-unexpectedly, it found him totally unprepared to ward off its paralyzing
-effects. He tried to speak, but the words refused to leave his parched
-tongue. He felt benumbed and cold, all the blood in his body seeming to
-have suddenly congealed. As he stood there with the eyes of all riveted
-upon him he felt like the veriest criminal that walked the earth.
-
-For a moment there was a tense silence. Jean stood there anxiously gazing
-into Robert’s stricken face, as he vainly strove to utter a sound. Mary
-had watched the little scene before her in growing wonder and alarm and
-now leaned back against the wall, her heart beating with some unknown,
-nameless fear. What did this highborn lady want with her laddie? she
-asked herself jealously.
-
-[Illustration: “‘She is my wife, mither.’”]
-
-Mrs. Burns stood grimly waiting for some explanation of the scene she
-had just witnessed, but had not heard nor understood. “Robert, my son,”
-she said finally, her voice cold and firm, “what does Squire Armour’s
-daughter want of ye?” There was no answer. “What is she to ye, Robert?”
-she sternly insisted. Slowly he raised his head. As she saw his wild and
-haggard face, from which all the life and youth had fled, she started
-back in horror, a startled exclamation on her lips.
-
-With a despairing, heart-broken look at Mary’s wondering face, he bowed
-his head and falteringly uttered the fatal words, “She is my wife,
-mither.”
-
-Had a thunderbolt from a clear sky unroofed the humble cot, it would not
-have created the consternation, the terror which those few words struck
-to those loving hearts.
-
-Mrs. Burns was the first to rally from the shock. “Your wife?” she
-repeated incredulously, looking from one to the other.
-
-With a cry of grief and pain Mary sank weak and trembling into a chair,
-like a deer wounded unto death. She gazed at them heart-brokenly, while
-her little hands nervously fluttered about her face. No, no, he could not
-mean it. They were only joking, surely. “Not that, Robbie, ye dinna mean
-that, dearie?” she gasped piteously, holding out a beseeching hand to
-him. His bowed head bent lower.
-
-“Do ye mean ye have legally married this lass?” asked Gilbert eagerly.
-Mary would be free then, he thought wildly. Free to be wooed and won.
-
-“We were married a few weeks ago,” answered Robert dully. “I had not the
-courage to tell ye before.”
-
-“Besides,” interposed Jean, arranging her disordered toilet, “I wished to
-keep the marriage from my father for a—a time.” She blushed crimson.
-
-“I willna believe my son ever married ye of his own free will,” cried
-Mrs. Burns bitterly, “fine rich lady that ye are. He loves only that
-sweet lass, Mary Campbell.” Quickly she reached Mary’s side, and, raising
-the stricken child in her motherly arms, she kissed her tenderly and
-pressed the golden head gently against her loving heart.
-
-Jean looked at them, a look of resentment in her flashing eyes. “I know
-that full well,” she answered sullenly. “I know Robert hasn’t married
-me because he wanted to, but because——” she looked down shame-faced.
-“Because there was no alternative. Now you know the truth,” she concluded
-bitterly.
-
-“Ye shameless creature!” cried Mrs. Burns, her eyes blazing with
-indignation. “Ye have trapped him into this marriage, but ye shall na
-stay beneath this roof, ye limmer,” and she glared at the flushed defiant
-girl in righteous anger.
-
-“Mither, mither!” cried Robert distractedly, “dinna, for God’s sake; she
-is my wife in truth, an’ she must stay wi’ me noo till I can prepare
-anither hame for her. Dinna make it harder for me.” He gazed pleadingly
-in his mother’s stern and angry face.
-
-Mary pressed her lips to the quivering cheek. “Mistress Burns,” she said
-softly, “what is to be, will be. I forgive them both wi’ all my heart.”
-She paused and sighed with gentle resignation. Then she continued,
-“An’—an’ I hope they will both find peace in their new life.” She turned
-quietly to Jean, who was nervously tapping her whip against her skirt.
-“I ken ye’ll make Robert a good wife,” she said earnestly. “So dinna let
-any thought o’ me sadden your heart, or—or yours, Robert.” She turned and
-looked at him tenderly. “I—I forgive ye,” she whispered. Turning to Mrs.
-Burns again, she continued pleadingly, “Ye must welcome Robert’s wife to
-her new hame, Mistress Burns. We all maun make this a merry hame-comin’
-for—the—bride.” Her plaintive voice broke abruptly, and the burning tears
-welled up to her eyes, but she dashed them quickly away and continued
-bravely, a pathetic little smile hovering about her trembling lips, “I’ll
-go out noo an’ make some fresh tea for ye, and ye’ll all stay right here,
-till I come back, an’ Donald shall play for ye again—an’ we’ll—all—be—sae
-merry—won’t w-we? I’ll bring it w-when—it’s quite—ready.” She smiled at
-them through her tears. Then she took the teapot from the dresser and
-softly left the room.
-
-“God bless her brave and noble heart,” breathed Robert brokenly.
-
-As she left the room Mrs. Burns drew herself sternly erect, and after a
-moment’s hesitation turned slowly to Jean. “I bid ye welcome to Mossgiel
-Farm,” she said coldly. “I am sorry I spoke so bitterly to ye just noo.
-I—I will try to love ye as Robert’s wife, but noo I—I can only think o’
-Mary an’ her sorrow. I’ll leave ye for a bit; Mary may need me.” Her
-voice faltered and broke, and with a sob of grief she hurriedly left the
-room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-
-Ever since the morning she had received her marriage lines Jean had been
-trying to summon up sufficient courage to tell her father the whole truth
-about her secret marriage to Robert, to throw herself upon his mercy,
-but each time when she had approached him in fear and trembling, her
-courage had ignominiously failed her. She knew only too well her father’s
-irascible temper and uncertain moods. And so days passed into weeks and
-still she procrastinated, but she knew she could not conceal from his
-observing eyes her condition much longer. But whether to confess all and
-run the risk of being thrown from her father’s door like some abandoned
-outcast, or to contrive some excuse to leave home to pay a visit to
-some friend, and then, when it was all over, to return, that was the
-question which disturbed her waking thoughts. If she did the latter, she
-thought, she could easily have her marriage annulled and no one would be
-the wiser. But did she really want to have her marriage annulled? she
-asked herself thoughtfully. She didn’t understand herself at all these
-days. He had strangely stirred her heart at their last meeting, to its
-very depths. She knew he did not love her, that he loved the little
-dairymaid, but almost imperceptibly a great change was taking place in
-her feelings toward him. At times a great longing came over her to go
-to him, throw herself at his feet and beg to share his hardships, his
-poverty, with him. But she had not the courage, and so she battled with
-the conflicting emotions that constantly beset her day and night. Her
-temper soon became moody and uncertain, she was in constant fear of her
-mother’s anxious, watchful eyes, and yet she felt she would go daft if
-she remained alone in her chamber with her disturbing thoughts. So day
-after day she could be found in her saddle madly galloping over the
-country, trying to get away, far away, from her trouble. But all in vain;
-it was always before her; there was no escaping it. But at last the day
-came when she knew she must make her decision, and almost in desperation
-she decided on her course of procedure. Hastily galloping home, she left
-her horse at the door, and going to her room, scribbled a short note to
-her father and left it on the table in his study. Then she had slipped
-guiltily past the room where her mother sat peacefully sewing, and sped
-swiftly along the hall to the door. As she reached it, it burst inward
-and she staggered back half fainting, for there on the threshold stood
-her father, his face white with rage, his jaw set and determined. He
-seized her roughly by the arm, and thrusting her back into the house,
-had taken one understanding look at her figure in its tight-fitting
-habit, then with an outburst of bitter anger and shame he cursed her
-and the author of her disgrace, cursed her like a madman, cursed her
-till he was spent with the force of his passion. She tried to explain,
-to tell him the truth, that she was a wife, but the words froze on her
-lips. His words and manner struck terror to her very soul; she feared
-for her very life’s safety. With all her despairing strength she freed
-herself from his clutch and stood cowering, panting, her hands raised to
-shield herself from the blow she expected every moment to fall on her
-defenseless body from the insane man. As he approached her with hand
-upraised, she gave one quick shriek, one wild look around and darting
-under his arm reached the door. Quickly she opened it and sped like a
-swallow to the side of her waiting horse. With one bound she was on his
-back, and away she galloped like the wind, leaving her astonished father
-standing in the doorway shaking his fist after her in impotent anger.
-
-She had given rein to her horse, not heeding or caring where he took her.
-Her one and only thought was to get away, far away; so she rode on and
-on, over brook and brush, through bog and mire till gradually her fear
-had subsided, and, reining in her horse, she looked around, and with a
-thrill of joy and wonder she saw Mossgiel Farm in the distance. Surely
-fate had guided her horse’s footsteps in this direction, she thought
-eagerly. Her course was clear now, she would go to him, to her husband,
-he would protect her. So she had continued her journey to the cottage,
-where she brought naught but misery and sorrow to its inmates.
-
-As Mrs. Burns left the room Jean gazed after her in bitter silence. She
-wished she had not come. She knew she was not welcome. Far better to have
-faced her father’s anger. “But the die is cast. I have made my bed,”
-she told herself wearily. She realized how futile it was to repine over
-the past, and she felt too exhausted, too miserably unhappy to think of
-the future. She would stay here perhaps a night, then she didn’t know,
-couldn’t think what would happen. At all events she could never return
-to her father’s home now. He had spurned her from him, and she was not
-wanted here. Nobody wanted her now. Her lips quivered convulsively and
-big tears of self-pity rolled quietly down her pale cheeks.
-
-Gilbert looked uneasily from his brother’s grief-stricken face to the
-weary, wan face of the bride. How long were they going to sit there
-side by side without a word to each other? he thought uneasily. He felt
-a great wave of pity well up in his heart for the unwelcome, unloved
-addition to their family. True she was mostly to blame for her present
-misfortune. Her imprudence, her misconduct had been well known to many,
-before his brother had gone to Mauchline to live. He felt sorry for
-Robert, too, even while he bitterly reproached him for being the author
-of Mary’s unhappiness. They must make the best of things now, he thought
-philosophically. “Ye had better take off your bonnet, lassie,” he said
-kindly, breaking the oppressive silence. “Ye’ll be staying here the
-night.” She raised her head and looked at him with flashing eyes.
-
-“Full well I know that all here hate and despise me,” she burst forth
-bitterly, not heeding his request.
-
-Robert slowly raised his head and looked at her. There was sorrow and
-compassion in his dark melancholy eyes. “Jean,” he said quietly, “our
-lives have been linked togither by a stern, inexorable fate. We have both
-been guilty of a grievous sin, and noo we must face the results bravely.”
-He rose and walked to her and stood humbly by her side. “I hope ye’ll
-forgive me, Jean, for wreckin’ your life and plungin’ ye into sae much
-misery.”
-
-Slowly Jean bowed her head, her face flushing guiltily. Surely she had
-the more need to ask his forgiveness. She had not expected to find such
-nobility of character, and it moved her deeply.
-
-“There is naught to forgive,” she cried in a low stifled voice. “I alone
-am to blame. I am unfit, unworthy to be your wife. Oh, I’m so miserable,
-so unhappy,” and she burst into tears.
-
-Souter led old Donald silently out of the room. There was nothing either
-one could say to the wretched couple, so they sat outside and talked
-it all over in the way old men have. They had not been seated long,
-however, when they espied coming toward them, at a furious gallop,
-a horse and rider. As they drew near Souter perceived with sudden
-apprehension that it was none other than Squire Armour. He rose anxiously
-to his feet.
-
-“Do ye ken wha’ it is, Souter?” inquired Donald in a quavering voice.
-
-“It’s Squire Armour himsel’,” whispered Souter cautiously.
-
-“Ma certie!” ejaculated Donald, shaking his white locks in mild alarm.
-
-“I’d better warn the lass,” said Souter hastily, as the Squire drew up to
-the gate. Going to the door he quickly told them of the newcomer, then
-turned to intercept the irate visitor, who was coming swiftly up the walk.
-
-“Heavens, my father here!” cried Jean in a frightened whisper. “Oh,
-I dare not face his wrath. Protect me, Robert,” and she clung to him
-fearfully.
-
-“Out o’ my way, mon!” they heard the harsh voice of Squire Armour
-shouting. “Out o’ my way,” and pushing aside the courageous little man he
-strode wrathfully into the room.
-
-“Weel, I’ll stay and see the fun through,” said Souter to himself grimly.
-
-“So, my lass,” cried the old Squire triumphantly, “I’ve found ye just
-where I expected ye’d be, in the arms o’ your dissolute lover. Come awa’,
-ye shameless bairn.”
-
-He started toward her, but Robert passed her quickly behind him.
-
-“Keep back, Squire Armour,” he said firmly. “I’m nae a mild-mannered man,
-an’ ye may learn it to your cost.”
-
-Squire Armour glanced at him savagely. “Dinna ye dare talk to me, ye
-libertine, ye blasphemous rhymster. Ye dare to stand there wi’ my
-daughter, proclaiming her dishonor to my very eyes?”
-
-“There is no dishonor, Squire Armour,” replied Robert calmly, “for your
-daughter is—my wife.”
-
-“Your wife!” echoed the old man, staggering back in amazement. “I’ll nae
-believe it. It’s a lie. I’d rather see my daughter disgraced forever than
-be your wife.”
-
-“Father, are you mad?” gasped Jean in horrified accents.
-
-“An’ ye an Elder in the Kirk, a so-called ‘God-fearin’ man’!” cried
-Robert scathingly, his eyes blazing with scorn. “I tell ye, Squire
-Armour, she is my wife, an’ all your bitter, unreasoning hatred o’ me
-canna’ alter that unhappy fact.”
-
-For a moment the old man stood gazing at them in helpless rage. Then he
-turned to Jean, his voice trembling with suppressed emotion. “What proofs
-have ye?” he asked hoarsely.
-
-“I have my marriage lines, father,” she answered quickly.
-
-“Where were ye married?”
-
-“Why, father, we——” began Jean hesitatingly.
-
-“Was it in the Kirk?” he interrupted sternly.
-
-“No,” she faltered. “It was——”
-
-“Not in the Kirk?” he cried, his voice rising menacingly. “Who was the
-minister? Who married ye?”
-
-“There was no minister, father.”
-
-“Nae minister!” he exclaimed in horror.
-
-“Wait, father, you don’t understand,” cried Jean quickly; “’twas a Scotch
-marriage; ye ken what that is—and,” she bowed her head guiltily, “why it
-is. And here are my lines signed by Robert acknowledging me as his wife.”
-She took from the bosom of her gown a folded paper which she handed to
-her father.
-
-He read it through carefully. “This is na legal or binding,” he exclaimed
-angrily.
-
-“’Tis perfectly legal, Squire Armour,” replied Robert calmly, “even if it
-is irregular, and is as binding as though we were married in Kirk.”
-
-“It shall be set aside,” fumed the old man. “I will not have it so. Ye
-shall both renounce it, I tell ye.”
-
-“Oh, father,” cried Jean tearfully, going to his side. “’Tis too late
-now; would you shame me in the eyes of the world?”
-
-“Do these few written lines make your shame any the less?” he shouted
-wrathfully. “Will not all the neighbors know why he had to give them to
-ye? Ye would throw awa’ your life on this poverty-stricken, shiftless
-rhymster, but ye shall not do it; ye must give him up, do ye hear?” and
-he raised his arm menacingly.
-
-“No, no, no, father,” she exclaimed frantically, falling on her knees
-beside him; “I cannot give him up now, I cannot.” After all the weary
-weeks of anxious fears and doubts she knew at last that she had found
-her heart, and now asked no greater happiness than to be allowed to
-remain with her husband to share his humble life, to be the mother of his
-family. All the old ambitious thoughts were gone forever. She wondered
-that they ever existed.
-
-“Ye shameless bairn, ye must an’ shall!” he replied fiercely. “This is
-the end o’ it all,” and he vindictively tore into little bits the paper
-Jean had given into his hands. “We’ll hear nae mair of that, my lass, an’
-I swear ye shall never see Robert Burns again, make up your mind to that.”
-
-With a cry of despair Jean sank half fainting into a chair.
-
-As he witnessed Squire Armour’s fiendish act Robert’s heart gave a great
-bound that sent the blood coursing madly through his veins. The marriage
-lines were destroyed; then he was free, free! Oh, the music in that word!
-Free to do as he wished. A sob of anguish caused him to look around at
-the kneeling figure of the unfortunate girl. Quickly the eager light died
-out of his face as he noted her suffering. Going to the kneeling girl
-he raised her gently to her feet, and holding her by the hand faced the
-inhuman father. “Squire Armour, ye would condemn your ain flesh an’ blood
-to shame an’ disgrace because o’ your hatred for me,” he said quietly,
-“but it shall not be. I defy ye. Come, Jean, we will go to the Kirk at
-once and Daddy Auld will marry us.” They turned to go, but the old man
-stepped between them and the door, his arms upraised, his eyes wild and
-glaring.
-
-“I’d sooner see her in her grave than bear the accursed name of Robert
-Burns,” he cried with solemn intensity. “Great though her imprudence
-has been, she can still look to a higher, an’ better connection than a
-marriage with ye.” Turning to Jean he continued sternly, “Speak, lass,
-say that ye’ll obey me, or the bitter curse o’ your parents will haunt
-an’ follow ye all the rest o’ your days.”
-
-“Think of the disgrace, father,” wailed the unhappy girl, clinging to his
-arm beseechingly.
-
-“We’ll forget and forgive it all if ye’ll come back,” he replied, the
-great love for his child revealing itself in his eager tones. “Ye’re nae
-longer that man’s wife. Come an’ none will ever know o’ your dishonor.”
-
-“My God, mon!” exclaimed Robert in horrified accents, “where is your
-father’s pride, your ain honor, your manhood!”
-
-But Squire Armour heeded him not. “Come, my daughter, come,” he said
-tenderly, leading the weak, wavering girl to the door.
-
-“Ye canna expect to keep this a secret from the world, Squire Armour,”
-cried Robert indignantly. “Matters have gone too far for that; soon your
-daughter’s name will be blasted irretrievably, while mine will be coupled
-with that of blackguard. It must not be. Ye must let Jean go to the Kirk
-wi’ me this very night or I shall inform the Elders in the Kirk.”
-
-“Ye’ll have no time to turn informer, my laddie,” snarled Squire Armour,
-turning on him fiercely; “for I mean to have ye brought before the
-Kirk sessions, an’ ye’ll be punished as ye deserve for the sin ye have
-committed, an’ ye shall sit on the cutty stool, where all your friends
-an’ neighbors can jeer an’ scoff at ye. This very night will I send the
-parish officers after ye, Robert Burns. Ye can take this warning or no,
-just as ye please, but I hope they find ye here. Come, lass, we’ll go
-hame to your mither, noo.” He drew the terrified, half-fainting girl
-firmly through the door and down the path to the road.
-
-“Ye’re an old hypocrite!” hooted Souter, following them to the gate,
-where he stood shaking his fist angrily after the departing visitors, and
-shouting his frank opinion of the Squire in no mild or flattering terms.
-
-“I alone am to blame,” cried Robert despairingly, as he watched them
-gallop madly away into the threatening night. “An’ only the bitterest
-sorrow, the most poignant grief will I know until that wrong is righted.”
-
-“What will ye do noo, lad?” asked Mrs. Burns, breaking in upon the
-melancholy sadness which enveloped him like a pall. (She had entered the
-room in time to hear Squire Armour’s parting injunction.) “Ye heard what
-the Squire threatened. Oh, dinna disdain the littleness of prudence, my
-son.”
-
-“I willna, mother,” replied Robert dully, after a pause. “I have decided
-to go awa’ from Mossgiel.”
-
-“Go awa’?” she repeated fearfully. “Nay, nay, laddie, ye mustna! I fear
-for ye in your present state o’ mind.”
-
-“I must, mother,” he answered wildly. “I willna sit on the cutty stool
-to be made the laughing stock o’ the whole neighborhood, to bring shame
-on ye all.” He walked restlessly up and down the room as he continued
-feverishly, “I willna stay here to skulk from covert to covert under all
-the terrors of a jail, for I ken that in a little while the merciless
-pack of the law will be baying at my heels like bloodhounds.” He turned
-to her suddenly, “Mother, I mean to leave Scotland, perhaps forever.”
-
-“Oh, nay, nay, my bairn; I canna, I willna, let ye go,” answered his
-mother, clinging to him passionately.
-
-“There, there, mither, dinna make it harder for me.” He put his arm
-around her tenderly and pressed her to him for a moment. “Noo, mother,”
-he said quietly, “will ye pack my chest? I have nae time to spare,” and
-he led her gently to the door.
-
-“Where will ye be goin’?” inquired Gilbert.
-
-“To the Indies, to Jamaica,” replied Robert quickly. “Ye ken Dr. Douglas
-has a place for me there as overseer of his plantation. He has offered it
-to me mony times.” He turned in nervous haste to his mother, who stood
-in the doorway anxiously watching him. “Hurry, mither, please, I am in
-torture o’ mind.”
-
-“Very well, laddie,” she answered sorrowfully. “God will direct your
-footsteps aright,” and she closed the door behind her and quickly made
-her way to his chamber.
-
-“Will ye see Mary before ye go, Robert?” asked Gilbert.
-
-He felt an infinite pity for his brother, who was leaving behind him
-everything he held dear.
-
-“If she will come to me,” faltered Robert. “Tell her I’m goin’ an’ that
-I will go wi’ a lighter heart if she bids me godspeed. Watch o’er an’
-protect her, Gilbert,” he continued, placing his hand on his brother’s
-shoulder. “An’ I hope one day she may forget faithless Robert Burns,
-an’—an’ ye, Gilbert, will be made happy.” He turned away as he finished,
-grief gnawing at his heart.
-
-An eager light flashed in Gilbert’s eyes as he answered fervently, “I
-would lay doon my life to serve her,” and with a quick look into the
-averted face he quietly left the room.
-
-Mechanically Rob took his bonnet from the peg and throwing his long plaid
-around him went out into the air, and silently, sorrowfully he stood
-there watching the gloomy clouds that hung low in the heavens through
-eyes misty with tears. His soul was filled with unutterable sorrow at
-the coming parting, with dread of the unknown future to be passed alone
-in a strange, inhospitable foreign land. Oh, the agony of that thought,
-alone! Suddenly there came floating softly, peacefully, borne on the
-back of the south wind, which was blowing gently against his face, the
-alluring, seductive voice of the Goddess Muse. Insistently she urged her
-way into the dulled and listless ear of the grief-stricken man. Not for
-long was she denied admission, however. With a cry of joy, that even in
-that dreaded hour of parting his Goddess had not deserted him, he eagerly
-opened the book he held in his hand, his favorite book, “Tristam Shandy”
-by Sterne, and wrote quickly, lovingly on the flyleaf the impassioned
-words which were being whispered in his ear. Hungrily the pencil sped
-over the paper, till, with a sigh of regret, he dropped his hand, the
-voice was hushed, the message was finished. As he stood there eagerly
-reading his verses by the light which streamed through the window, the
-door softly opened and Mary came swiftly to his side, her pure face
-pitiful in its childlike sorrow.
-
-“Is it true ye are gang awa’ frae Scotland, Robbie?” she asked
-breathlessly. He bowed his head. “Oh, my heart beats heavy for ye,
-laddie.” There was infinite compassion in her voice. “But ye maun be
-brave noo if ever ye were.” She nestled her little hand in his. He
-clasped it fervently.
-
-“O, Mary, my Highland lassie!” he cried passionately, “I want to hear ye
-say before I go that ye forgive me for the sorrow I have brought into
-your pure young life.”
-
-“Hush, laddie,” she answered softly, “there is naught to forgive; ye had
-to do your duty like an honorable mon. I hae been very happy wi’ ye,
-laddie, an’ the memory o’ that happiness will be wi’ me always.” She
-leaned against him for a brief moment, then slowly drew herself away
-and looked tenderly up into his face. “In this sad parting hour,” she
-faltered, “I can tell ye without shame that I love ye wi’ a’ my being,
-an’ will until I dee.”
-
-“Heaven bless ye, Mary,” he whispered brokenly. “The thought of your love
-will gie me courage to bear my exile bravely.”
-
-“Exile!” she repeated shuddering. “Oh, what a drear word, to think ye
-must be exiled in your noble youth, that ye maun leave your hame, your
-country, to live alone in some foreign clime.” The tears streamed down
-her pallid cheeks. “We will a’ miss ye sair, lad,” she continued bravely,
-“and we will pray for ye, an’—an’—oh, ’twill be sae hard to say good-by,
-perhaps forever.” She threw her arms about his neck and clung to him
-passionately.
-
-He held the weeping child in his strong, loving embrace, his face close
-to hers. “Oh, why was I born, only to bring sorrow, pain an’ disgrace to
-those I hold dear?” he cried in an agony of grief and remorse. “Bitterly
-am I atonin’ for my act o’ imprudence; an exile, a failure,” he gave a
-mirthless little laugh; “aye, a failure, for e’en the hopes of success
-held out to me have a’ vanished in disappointment. Oblivion has enveloped
-me in its darkening pall, for whichever way I turn naught but darkest
-gloom, with not e’en a ray of light, meets my wretched gaze.” A flash of
-lightning pierced the darkness, followed shortly by a heavy, prolonged
-roll of thunder. She nestled closer to his side.
-
-“Be not discouraged, laddie,” she said; “’tis always darkest before dawn,
-an’ who kens what may yet happen?”
-
-“Ah, nae, nae,” he interrupted with a despairing shake of his head, “e’en
-the elements conspire against me, for I maun face this coming storm on
-foot to reach Greenock. ’Tis all a part of my just punishment.” The wind
-had risen and with it a driving mist which soon enveloped them in its
-damp embrace. But they heeded it not.
-
-“Bide a wee, dinna go to-night,” she pleaded, while the wind tossed her
-tangled curls seductively around his neck and in his sorrowing face.
-“Listen to the wind. Oh,’tis a bad night to start on a journey,” and she
-clung to him tighter, her skirts flapping about his limbs like some live
-thing, thrilling him by their touch.
-
-“Before ye came out, lassie,” he replied quietly, stilling the tumult
-in his heart, “I wrote some verses in this book as a parting song; how
-appropriate they are for this occasion ye will see. Listen,” and holding
-the book up to the light he began to read:
-
- “The gloomy night is gathering fast,
- Loud roars the wild inconstant blast;
- Yon murky cloud is foul with rain,
- I see it driving o’er the plain;
- Chill runs my blood to hear it rave,
- I think upon the stormy wave,
- Where many a danger I must dare,
- Far from the bonnie banks of Ayr;
- ’Tis not the surging billows’ roar,
- ’Tis not that fatal deadly shore,
- Tho’ death in every shape appear,
- The wretched have no more to fear;
- But round my heart the ties are bound,
- That heart transpierced with many a wound;
- These bleed afresh, these ties I tear,
- To leave the bonnie banks of Ayr.”
-
-The wind had risen rapidly and the old beech tree was shrieking and
-groaning overhead as its branches strove like maniac arms with the
-tempest. The Ayr could be plainly heard roaring its diapason on its rocky
-banks in the darkness below, while the thunder crashed overhead and the
-lurid glare of lightning ever and again lit up the yard.
-
-Unheeding its warning he continued, his melancholy sonorous voice, with
-its mournful cadences, floating out with passionate longing, filling his
-listener with unutterable sadness:
-
- “Farewell, old Coila’s hills and dales,
- Her heathy moors and winding vales;
- The scenes where wretched fancy roves,
- Pursuing past unhappy loves.
- Farewell my friends, farewell my foes,
- My peace with thee, my love with those;
- The bursting tears my heart declare,
- Farewell the bonnie banks of Ayr.”
-
-As his voice died away he heard the sound of sobbing, and looked up, to
-see his mother standing in the doorway.
-
-“Come awa’, lad, come in out of the night air!” she called tenderly,
-controlling her sobs.
-
-Silently they entered the cottage. Robert crossed the room to his
-brother’s side.
-
-“Gilbert,” he said quietly, “ye take the songs an’ verses ye will find
-on my table an’ send them to Mr. Aiken. Mayhap they will bring you in a
-bit o’ money to help ye in your struggle wi’ poverty, an’ forgive me
-that I maun leave ye to battle wi’ misfortune alone.” Turning to Mary he
-continued, lovingly, “Mary, lass, will ye accept my Bible as a parting
-gift?” She looked at him with shining eyes. “Ye’ll find it in the oak box
-with the glass lid in the attic.”
-
-“I’ll prize it for aye, Robert,” she sobbed gratefully, pressing his
-hand, “an’ our prayers will follow ye to that far distant land, where I
-hope success awaits ye.”
-
-He drew her to him gently and pressed a kiss on her pure brow. “Farewell,
-lassie, may ye be happy,” he breathed fervently. Turning again to Gilbert
-he spoke rapidly, “Farewell, brother, give my love to the dear brothers
-an’ sisters when they come hame.” He shook his hand warmly.
-
-“God keep ye, Robert,” answered Gilbert quietly.
-
-Gently Robert drew his weeping mother into his arms. Tenderly he pulled
-down the apron which she had flung over her head to hide her sorrow, and
-wiped away her tears. “Noo, mother,” he whispered brokenly, “I—I maun say
-good-by; the day has drawn to its close an’ I maun start on my journey to
-Greenock. Dinna greet, dear mither.” He let her weep on unconstrainedly a
-few moments.
-
-Finally her bitter sobbing ceased and looking up into his face she cried
-passionately, “I canna give ye up, my son, never to see ye again.” She
-took his cheeks lovingly between her hands.
-
-“Ye’re making it hard for me to go, mither,” he cried, utterly
-distracted. “But the die is cast, my hands are on the plow, an’ I canna
-turn back noo. Ye ken there is naught but disappointment an’ disgrace
-to look forward to here, an’——” Suddenly a loud cheer from outside the
-cottage interrupted him. They listened in silent wonder. Above the noise
-of the wind, which had risen to a gale, and the swish of the rain, which
-now beat in swirling gusts about the cottage, came the voices of Souter
-and Donald shouting and cheering like boys on a frolic. Quickly they
-opened the door. A gust of wind dashed the rain fiercely in their faces.
-Through the mist and gloom they could vaguely make out the outlines of a
-coach standing at the gate, which had approached unheard in the storm.
-
-“Robert, Robert!” cried Souter, looming up out of the darkness and
-looking decidedly weatherbeaten. “’Tis news I have, great and glorious
-news.”
-
-“News?” they all repeated in wonder.
-
-“What is it, mon?” asked Rob, trembling with excitement.
-
-“It can speak for itsel’,” replied Souter gleefully, “for here it is.” He
-pointed behind him. They looked down the path and saw rapidly approaching
-the door a tall man, enveloped in a long cloak, escorted by a servant in
-livery. At that moment the light fell on his wet face and they started
-forward in amazement.
-
-“Lord Glencairn?” cried Robert incredulously, his heart throbbing with a
-strange new-born hope.
-
-“Aye, my lad, and near drowned,” laughed the visitor genially. Robert
-grasped his outstretched hand and drew him to the door.
-
-With words of welcome and delight they made room for him to enter.
-Quickly he removed his wet cloak from his shoulders and threw it to his
-servant, who hung it beside the fire, while descanting on the inclemency
-of the weather. Nervously and anxiously they waited for the great man to
-speak his errand.
-
-Presently he turned from the fireplace, and, addressing Robert, he said
-brightly, “Well, Mr. Burns, you see I have not forgotten you.”
-
-“Oh, my lord,” faltered Robert, his face white with suppressed feeling,
-“I—I had despaired of seein’ you mair; do ye—bring me—hope? Is it—am
-I——” his faltering voice stopped abruptly, but his eager eyes continued
-to search the noble face which was looking so kindly into his, as if he
-would draw the news from him.
-
-“It is good news,” answered Lord Glencairn, smiling brightly, “and you
-are famous; yes, my lad, your poems are at last published and already
-have become the rage in Edinburgh; the name of Robert Burns is on the
-tongue of all, high and low, prince and peasant.”
-
-“Thank God,” cried Mary softly, a look of rapture on her face.
-
-Mrs. Burns turned excitedly to her son, her hands clasped nervously. “Oh,
-laddie, laddie, ye’re a great mon, noo!” she exclaimed proudly.
-
-For a moment Robert stood there speechless, a look of incredulous wonder
-on his face. “My lord,” he faltered at last, “can it be true, what you’re
-telling me, that my songs are—accepted, read an’—praised in Edinburgh?”
-Lord Glencairn bowed. “Oh, sir,” he continued, with a nervous catch in
-his voice, “it seems too good to be true, too good.”
-
-Gradually the warm color came back to the pale face, the hurried
-breathing, which seemed almost to smother him, became calmer, the
-nervous, excited tension relaxed, and, with a smile of rapture and
-content on his upturned face, he exclaimed fervently, “At last my hopes
-and ambitions are realized, the bright sunlight of success has crowned my
-efforts; my verses are known an’ loved in Edinburgh! Oh, do ye hear that,
-my loved ones?” He stretched out his arms lovingly to them. “Nae mair
-poverty for us noo, mither, nae—nor disappointments.” He turned to Lord
-Glencairn, who was being assisted into his cloak. “Oh, sir, I canna tell
-ye what is in my heart,” he continued earnestly, “but ’tis overflowing
-wi’ love an’ gratitude to ye.”
-
-“There, there, my lad, time is precious,” replied Lord Glencairn kindly,
-buttoning up his cloak. “’Tis late and we have far to go and the
-postchaise is awaiting us. I came here not only to bring you news, Mr.
-Burns, but to take you back with me to Edinburgh.” He laughed heartily at
-the look of startled amazement that appeared on the faces before him.
-
-“To Edinburgh!” gasped Robert unbelievingly.
-
-“Aye, lad,” replied his lordship earnestly, his eyes flashing with
-admiration for the modest young genius. “To Edinburgh, where fame and
-fortune await you, where society stands with outstretched arms to receive
-you as a conquering hero come to claim his own. To the capital city,
-where all unite in paying homage to the wonderful genius of Robert Burns,
-our Scottish Bard. Will you come?” and he held out his hand invitingly to
-the wondering lad, who was gazing at him, his soul in his eyes.
-
-“Am I dreaming?” he cried slowly, looking about him for some confirmation
-of his fears. “Go to Edinburgh wi’ ye, sir, as the Bard of Scotland? O
-God, can this be true? My wildest hopes ne’er held out such dreams o’
-greatness, such happiness.” His voice vibrated with feeling. He paused
-and took a deep breath, then he continued joyfully, all the sorrows of
-the past forgotten in his excitement, “A few moments ago, my lord, I
-was bidding farewell to these, my loved ones, forever. I was about to
-start for the Indies, a wretched exile, a disappointed failure, and noo
-fate once mair alters my destiny.” With a glad laugh he seized Lord
-Glencairn’s outstretched hand, and, turning to his loved ones, he cried,
-his voice ringing out clear and strong, a conscious thrill of pride
-running through it, “Nae more tears, mither, except those of happiness,
-nae more sorrow or care, for I can leave ye all wi’ a light heart noo,
-wi’ joy instead o’ sadness. ’Tis true I go from here an outcast, but I’ll
-return to ye a hero.”
-
-
-
-
-BOOK II
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-
-The scene that opened on our hero in Edinburgh was altogether new, and in
-a variety of other respects highly interesting, especially to one of his
-disposition of mind. To use an expression of his own, he “found himself
-suddenly translated from the veriest shades of life,” into the presence,
-and indeed into the society, of a number of persons previously known to
-him by report as of the highest distinction in his country. From those
-men of letters in general his reception was particularly flattering.
-And they interested themselves collectively and individually in the
-cultivation of his genius.
-
-In Edinburgh literature and fashionable society are a good deal mixed.
-Our Bard was an acceptable guest in the gayest and most elevated circles,
-and received from female beauty and elegance those flattering attentions
-above all others most grateful to him. A taste for letters is not always
-conjoined with habits of temperance and regularity, and Edinburgh at this
-period contained perhaps an uncommon proportion of men of considerable
-talents, devoted to social excesses, in which their talents were wasted
-and debased.
-
-Robert entered into several parties of this description with his usual
-vehemence. His generous affections, his ardent eloquence, his brilliant
-and daring imagination fitted him to be the idol of such associations.
-The sudden alteration of his habits of life operated on him physically as
-well as morally. The humble fare of the Ayrshire peasant he had exchanged
-for the luxuries of the Scottish metropolis, and naturally the effect of
-this change could not be inconsiderable. He saw the danger, and at times
-formed resolutions to guard against it, but he had embarked on the tide
-of dissipation and was borne along its stream. Some six months after
-his triumphant entrance into the city he had returned to Mossgiel for a
-fleeting visit to his home, and to assist his brother, who had taken upon
-himself the entire support of their aged mother, and who was struggling
-with many difficulties on the farm of Mossgiel. It will easily be
-conceived with what pleasure and pride he was received by his mother, his
-sisters, and brothers. He had left them poor and friendless; he returned
-to them high in public estimation and easy circumstances. He returned to
-them unchanged in his ardent affections, and ready to share with them
-to the uttermost farthing the pittance that fortune had bestowed. He
-had been keenly disappointed not to find Mary there. He learned, to his
-sorrow, that she had gone back to the Highlands shortly after he left
-for Edinburgh. He felt that she was lost to him now forever, for, while
-his heart prompted him to hurry to her side, reason told him that the
-visit would but fill her cup of sorrow to the brim. For, believing as he
-did, that he was still bound to Jean in spite of the destruction of her
-marriage lines, he knew he would only have to part from her again, to
-leave her there with her sad thoughts, her loneliness, while he returned
-to the gay life, where it was so easy to forget or at least to still the
-voice of sorrow. Having remained with them a few days he proceeded again
-to Edinburgh, first stopping off at Mauchline to call at the home of
-Squire Armour, only to be met with curses and to be driven from the door
-by the stern, unyielding man.
-
-Robert returned to Edinburgh, his heart filled with bitterness and
-sorrow. For a while he brooded over his troubles, which threatened to
-plunge him into a state of extreme melancholy. But at last resentment
-and anger crowded out all other thoughts, and it was not long before
-he succeeded in drowning recollection in the midst of the society and
-dissipation of the metropolis.
-
-A year passed by, during which time he had vainly tried to get word to
-Jean Armour. He had heard that she had given birth to twins, and the
-thought that they were without the protection of a father’s name filled
-him with grief and remorse. Time and again he had written her, only to
-have his letters returned unopened. Finally he had received a letter
-from her father, stating that “the children were dead and that Jean
-had quite forgotten him, and was about to be joined in wedlock with a
-neighboring rich farmer; that now he hoped Robert would leave him and his
-daughter in peace,” etc., etc. He laid down the letter with a thrill of
-joy stirring his blood. Free at last! He had done his duty as a man of
-honor, and now, after all the bitter heartache and the long separation,
-he was free to marry his little sweetheart. “Oh, thank God!” he cried
-aloud, in an ecstasy of joy. “Thank God, the miserable tangle in our
-lives will soon be straightened.” He had long entertained a desire to
-visit those parts of his native country which were so celebrated in the
-rural songs of Scotland, and he would now gratify that desire with Mary’s
-home as the objective point. As soon as arrangements could be made he
-started for the Highlands on horseback, accompanied by a friend, one Will
-Nichol, and, his fame having preceded him, they were royally entertained
-on their journey through the country. Finally they arrived in Dornoch,
-where Mary was living quietly with her sister, and soon the long parted
-lovers were clasped in each other’s arms. Later that day he told her the
-glorious news of his release, his freedom from all ties, told her of
-his undying love, and swore that never again should they be parted in
-this life. And Mary with a prayer of thankfulness in her faithful heart,
-blushingly gave her willing consent to a speedy marriage. The next day
-they all returned by easy stages to Edinburgh. Mrs. Dunlop, an old friend
-of Robert’s, took the country maiden under her protecting wing and gave
-her a home until the marriage could be solemnized, the date having been
-set one month from the time of their arrival.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-
-John Anderson, the proprietor of the “Bull’s Head,” stood gazing
-wrathfully upon the scene of disorder which met his eyes as he opened
-the door of the sitting-room of his distinguished lodger’s apartments.
-It was early evening, and still that lodger remained in bed, although he
-had been called at different intervals throughout the day by the irate,
-though kind-hearted, landlord himself. “Dear—dear—dear,” he muttered to
-himself, as he arranged the furniture, “I’ll just give Robbie a bit o’
-my mind.” He went to the door of the sleeping apartment and looked in.
-“Sleepin’ like a bairn,” he said softly, “an’—an’ wi’ his boots on. Ma
-certie!” He raised his hands in horror. “Weel, I’m glad ye’re nae under
-the bed. Ah, weel, young blood must hae its course. I mind I was young
-mysel’, an’ if I do say it I could drink mair whusky than any mon in the
-toon. Oh, those were happy days,” and he sang softly to himself, as he
-continued his work about the room:
-
- “We are na fou’
- We’re nat that fou’,
- But just a droppie in our ee.
- The cock may craw,
- The day may daw’,
- An’ ay we’ll taste the barley bree.”
-
-A knock on the door interrupted his song.
-
-“Weel, who is it?” he called impatiently.
-
-“Open the door,” replied a female voice eagerly.
-
-“A lassie,” exclaimed John in amazement. “Oh, Robbie, ye devil.” He
-swung open the door and stood back to allow the gorgeously dressed lady
-to enter the room. Her dress of rich purple brocaded silk, cut in the
-extreme of fashion, rustled stiffly over the polished floor. Her head
-with its powdered wig was held haughtily erect as she surveyed the room
-with sparkling black eyes that nervously took in her surroundings,
-through the tiny holes in the black mask which concealed her face.
-
-“I—I thought—isn’t Mr. Burns at home?” she stammered uneasily.
-
-“Weel, what may ye be wantin’ wi’ Mr. Burns?” asked John cautiously. He
-had been bothered to death with answering the questions of the silly
-women who flocked to the parlors of the inn in hopes of seeing their idol.
-
-The lady turned on him sharply. “None of your business, my good man,” she
-retorted haughtily. “How dare you question me, sirrah?”
-
-John was quite taken aback by the imperious tones, but he still had his
-suspicions. “Weel, I thought perhaps ye were one o’ the artless bonnie
-wenches who were here last night wi’ the lads makin’ merry till the wee
-sma’ hours. If ye are——” he paused significantly.
-
-She flashed him an angry look. “Make your mind easy on that score, my
-good fellow,” she retorted icily. “I have called to interview Mr. Burns
-on an important matter. Is he at home?”
-
-“Aye; he is in there asleep,” replied John, pointing to a door beside the
-large book cabinet, which nearly occupied one side of the room.
-
-“Asleep!” she repeated incredulously. “Lud, he retires uncommon early for
-a gallant,” and there was a note of disappointment in her deep contralto
-voice.
-
-“Early is it?” said John, with a knowing smile. “Faith, he hasna been up
-this day.”
-
-“What?” she ejaculated in horror. “Not all day? Then you must awaken him
-immediately. I must have speech with him at once,” and she spread her
-voluminous draperies over the wide lounge and calmly seated herself. “Do
-you hear?” she cried impatiently, as John made no move.
-
-“I hae excellent hearin’, mum,” replied John carelessly, “but I ken when
-I’m well off, an’ I hae nae desire to feel the toe o’ Robert’s boot.”
-
-“A pest on your stubbornness, fool,” she cried angrily, springing to her
-feet.
-
-“An’ I hae my doubts o’ a lass who comes to a mon’s lodgings at night,”
-continued John, resenting her impatience. “It’s na respectable.”
-
-She looked him over insolently, then shrugged her shoulders. “I protest,
-landlord,” she replied, in a mocking tone, “I am quite respectable, even
-if I am here unchaperoned. But, Lud, I like not conventionalities, and
-this adventure suits my madcap spirit well.” She walked to the door of
-the sleeping chamber and was about to open it, when his voice arrested
-her.
-
-“I ken it all the time,” he cried indignantly. “Ye’re a brazen hussy.”
-
-“Landlord!” she gasped in astonishment.
-
-“An’ ye can leave my inn,” continued John, now thoroughly aroused. “We
-are respectable, if ye are na.”
-
-“Peace, fool!” she exclaimed furiously. “I am Lady Glen——” she stopped
-and bit her lips angrily at the indiscreet slip of her tongue. Suddenly
-a daring thought entered her mind. One glance at his face told her that
-he had not caught the name. To think was to act with my lady. Then she
-continued glibly, “I am Lady Nancy Gordon, daughter of the Duke of
-Gordon, of Gordon Castle. It will be all over town in a day,” she thought
-with malicious satisfaction.
-
-John staggered back as though he had been shot. “Ye Lady Nancy?” he
-gasped in amazement. “Oh, my lady, I ask your pardon.”
-
-“’Tis not easily granted, numskull,” replied the imperious beauty, her
-black eyes flashing dangerously. The sound of a carriage rolling over the
-cobble stones suddenly arrested her attention. For a moment she listened
-intently, then, with a startled exclamation, she turned to John and said
-in a frightened whisper, “’Fore heaven! if it should be my husband—my
-father, I mean, in pursuit of me.” She ran hastily to the window from
-where a view of the street could be obtained and threw open the casement.
-
-“It would serve ye right, my lady,” said John to himself.
-
-“Great heavens! ’tis my uncle, Sir William Creech!” she gasped. Then she
-said aloud, “Landlord, ’tis my father, as I feared! Oons! what a scrape
-I’m in.” She closed the shutter hastily.
-
-“’Twill ruin your reputation to be found here at night, my lady,” cried
-John concernedly, trotting nervously to the window.
-
-“O Lud,” she replied airily, “I’m not concerned over my reputation, ’tis
-already torn to ribbons by my dear friends. ’Tis my—my father’s wrath I
-fear. He is like to do some mischief.” An imperious knocking sounded on
-the door below.
-
-“He has found ye, lassie,” cried old John excitedly. “Go down to him;
-dinna let him find ye here in Robbie’s chamber. Ye ken the blame will all
-fall on the lad,” and he sought to escort her to the door, but she evaded
-his outstretched hand with laughing unconcern.
-
-“Nay, nay, my good fellow. I protest, I will not see him,” she exclaimed,
-with reckless abandon. She would keep up the impersonation till the end.
-Another such chance to blast her enemy’s reputation would not come to her
-in a lifetime, she thought wickedly. “Listen,” she cried impetuously. “My
-father, the Duke of Gordon, while he admires the poetry of Mr. Burns,
-does not admire the man himself, consequently he did not send him an
-invitation to attend the masked ball which is given at Gordon Castle
-to-night,” she explained glibly. “’Twas a monstrous insult to the Bard
-of Scotland, and I told my father so, and that I would not countenance
-it. Then I stole away, as I thought, unobserved, and came here to induce
-Mr. Burns to return with me. Once inside the castle my father will be
-forced to receive him graciously. Now, hurry, landlord, tell him to dress
-and we’ll slip out quietly, and, with your connivance, elude my—father’s
-vigilance.” She watched him narrowly to note the effect of her story.
-
-“My lady,” replied John proudly, “the lad goes to Athol Castle to-night,
-so ye had better gang hame wi’ your father.” She gave a quick start
-of delighted satisfaction. So he was going after all. If she had only
-known that and felt sure of it, she might have spared herself this
-nerve-racking experiment, she thought impatiently.
-
-The pounding had kept up incessantly, and now a stern, commanding voice
-called out for the landlord.
-
-“He’s calling me,” said John nervously; “ye’d better go doon an’ explain
-a’ to him,” he told her pleadingly.
-
-“Landlord, where the devil are you?” They could hear the heavy tread of
-feet walking about the rooms below.
-
-“He’s inside the house,” whispered John, wringing his hands.
-
-“O Lud, he seems most angry, doesn’t he?” she said in a subdued voice.
-She had suddenly grown tired of the deception, and was eager now to get
-away. “I—I think perhaps ’twould be best if he—er—my father didn’t find
-me here after all,” she admitted. “I—I really dare not face his anger.”
-She jumped up quickly, all her bravado vanished. “Get me out of this
-place, landlord, quick, quick!” she gasped, clinging to him. Oh, why had
-she come? Sir William would make such a disagreeable scene if he found
-her here.
-
-“Into that room wi’ ye!” cried John quickly, pointing to a small door
-in the opposite side of the room; “an’ I’ll get your father out o’ the
-house.”
-
-“Why couldn’t the old fossil have stayed at home?” she said to herself
-angrily. “This promised to be such a romantic adventure, landlord,” she
-said aloud, poutingly. “And now ’tis all spoiled. Plague take it. Hurry,
-landlord, and get my—father away, for I must return to the ball before
-my absence is noticed.” She went into the room, her heart filled with
-apprehension, and closed the door, which John promptly locked.
-
-“Thank the Lord,” he muttered with a sigh of relief. “I breathe easier.”
-Going to the door leading to the hall, he listened for a moment. From
-below came the sound of clinking glasses. He closed the door quickly. The
-coast was clear now. His guidwife was waiting on the customer. He hurried
-across the room and was about to release his prisoner, when he heard the
-door of Robert’s chamber open. He turned quickly and found his lodger
-yawning in the doorway.
-
-“Well, John Anderson, my Jo John,” said he lazily, “what’s all the row
-here, eh?”
-
-John looked up guiltily. “Are ye up, laddie?” he stammered.
-
-“Nay, John, I’m walkin’ round in my bed,” retorted Robert dryly. “Dinna
-ye think it’s time for me to be up?” he asked. “What’s the matter, mon?
-stand still, ye make me dizzy.”
-
-John was uneasily walking up and down, casting surreptitious glances at
-the door of the room which held the fair captive. “Oh, Johnny, my Jo
-John,” laughed Robert as he caught sight of the old man’s lugubrious
-countenance, “ye’ve been drinkin’ too much Usqubaugh.”
-
-“Too much what, Robbie?” he asked nervously.
-
-“Usqubaugh. Dinna ken what that is? It’s whisky, whisky, whisky.”
-
-“Oh, I ken, laddie,” replied John, smiling grimly. “Ye needna’ repeat it;
-one whisky is enough.”
-
-“Not for me,” laughed Robert, slapping him on the shoulder. “Ye dinna ken
-my capacity.” The noise of a chair overturning in the next room arrested
-his attention.
-
-“What’s that?” he asked quickly.
-
-“It’s n—nothing,” stammered John.
-
-“There’s somebody in that room,” exclaimed Rob, putting his ear to the
-crack in the door. “I hear her walking around.”
-
-“Nay, nay, Rob, it’s nobody,” protested John, pushing him away.
-
-“Oh, oh, John Anderson, my Jo John!” cried Rob, pointing an accusing
-finger at the flushed, embarrassed face of the old man, “I’m on to ye.”
-
-“For shame, Robbie, an’ me wi’ an old wife below stairs,” he answered
-indignantly.
-
-“Faith, I’ll just find out who it is,” chuckled Rob, going toward the
-door.
-
-“Nay, nay, lad!” remonstrated John, holding him back. “Wait, I’ll tell ye
-who it is.”
-
-“Ah, I knew it,” ejaculated Rob triumphantly. “Who is it?”
-
-“It’s—it’s the Bailie,” faltered John.
-
-“The Bailie? what’s he doing in there?”
-
-“Weel, he—he came to arrest ye for debt,” glibly lied the old man. “So I
-told him to wait in there till ye came hame, an’ noo he’s my prisoner;
-that’s a’, Robbie.”
-
-Rob grasped his hand gratefully. “Ye’re a true friend, John Anderson. Let
-me see, how much do I owe him?”
-
-John backed quickly away from him. “Nay, nay, laddie!” he said decidedly.
-“I havena anither penny.”
-
-“Neither have I,” laughed Rob ruefully. “So I’ll leave ye to get him out
-the best way ye can; he’s your prisoner, not mine. I’d like to pitch
-him down stairs. Come on, John, between us we ought to manage the old
-Shylock.”
-
-“Nay, nay, Robbie,” he retorted dryly. “Take my word for it, we’d hae our
-hands full.”
-
-“Weel, I’ll get into the rest of my clothes, for I’m due in society,”
-yawned Rob, going to his room. “Get rid of him, John; do what ye like
-with him; he’s no friend of mine,” and he went in and closed the door
-behind him.
-
-John softly followed him to the door and turned the key in the lock.
-“I’ll take nae chances,” he said grimly.
-
-“Good-evening,” said a sweet voice timidly. He turned around and with
-a gasp of astonishment beheld a young girl standing in the doorway.
-Suddenly he gave a great start. Could his eyes deceive him? Was that
-beautiful creature in the long white opera cloak, her golden locks piled
-in a gorgeous mass high upon her little head, really the barefooted lass
-he had seen only a few days ago, in her short skirt of plaid?
-
-“Mary Campbell, is it yoursel’, lass?” he finally gasped.
-
-“Aye, ’tis really me,” laughed Mary happily. “I’m goin’ to the ball at
-Athol Castle with Mrs. Dunlop. I wanted Robbie to see me in my gown
-before I went, so Mrs. Dunlop left me here, while she drove over to pick
-up Mrs. McLehose; then she’ll return for me. Where is Robbie, John?”
-
-“He’s in there dressing, Mary, but whist, I’ve something to tell ye
-first.”
-
-“About Robbie?” she asked anxiously.
-
-“Aye, there’s the devil to pay here, Mary.” The old man’s face looked
-gloomy and perturbed. “There’s a—a lady in that room.”
-
-“A—a lady!” gasped Mary in amazement, looking at the door of Robbie’s
-chamber.
-
-“Aye, Lady Nancy Gordon hersel’.”
-
-“Then it’s true,” cried Mary, sinking into a chair, a great fear tugging
-at her heart. “It’s true, then, all the stories I hear, that Robert is
-be—bewitched wi’ her. I wouldna’ believe it before. Mrs. Dunlop says it
-isna’ true, that Robbie hasna’ changed, but noo what can I think? Oh,
-laddie, oh, laddie!” and she sank back pale and trembling.
-
-“There, lassie, Robert doesna’ care a penny for that lass,” he said
-tenderly. “She is only a heartless coquette, o’er fond of adventure,”
-and he laid his wrinkled hand caressingly on the golden head. “Noo look
-here, Mary, ye mustna’ expect Robert to be an angel all the time. He
-thinks only of ye, and he loves ye just as fondly, e’en if he does smile
-and make love to the ladies who throw themsel’s at his feet. He would
-lose his popularity, ye ken. ’Tis only an amusin’ pastime, lassie, an’
-but gives him inspiration for his poetry, so dinna’ take it to heart.
-Ye ken Rob is highly sensitive, a most temperamental lad, who is very
-susceptible to the charms of the fair sex, but whist, Mary, he isn’t
-marrying any of them. There is only one lassie who will be his wife noo,
-and she’s nae far away from me this moment.” And he nodded his head
-sagely.
-
-“Why dinna’ they leave him alone?” sighed Mary disconsolately. “’Tis very
-unmaidenly in them to seek for his favor so openly.”
-
-“Noo, lassie,” said John seriously, “we maun get Lady Nancy out o’ this
-scrape, for the house is watched noo by her father, who suspects her
-presence here.”
-
-He walked up and down the room for a few moments plunged in deep thought.
-All at once his face brightened.
-
-“I have thought o’ a scheme, lassie,” he said suddenly. “Let Lady Nancy
-take this long cloak of yours; ’twill cover her o’er entirely; then she
-can walk boldly out past her father; he will think ’tis ye, Mary, and
-will na’ stop her. Ye’re both of a height,” and he regarded her with
-anxious eyes.
-
-“Why should I help her?” said Mary, her heart still heavy and sore.
-
-“For Robbie’s sake,” pleaded John. “Her father will blame the lad for it
-all; perhaps he will shoot him, and he an innocent man. Why, lassie, he
-doesna’ even ken the lass is in the house.”
-
-“Doesna’ ken it?” repeated Mary, smiling incredulously. “Why, John,
-Robert isna’ blind. If she is in his room——”
-
-“But she isna’ in his room, Mary,” interrupted John. “She’s in there,
-scared to death,” and he pointed to the door opposite.
-
-“Oh!” comprehended Mary with a sigh of relief. “That’s different. I’ll
-help her noo, John,” and she jumped eagerly to her feet, her face flushed
-and earnest.
-
-“That’s the girlie,” replied John heartily. Going to the door, he opened
-it and whispered to Lady Nancy to come out.
-
-“Lud, I thought you were never coming,” she flashed as she hastily
-entered the room. She stopped short upon seeing Mary.
-
-“This lady will help ye get away,” said John, looking angrily at the
-bogus Lady Nancy.
-
-[Illustration: “Mary quickly divested herself of her mantle and threw it
-about the bare shoulders of the disdainful lady.”]
-
-“Where have I seen that face before?” Lady Glencairn asked herself
-nervously, looking closely into Mary’s flushed, innocent face, that
-reminded her so guiltily of Lady Nancy Gordon herself.
-
-Mary quickly divested herself of her mantle and threw it about the bare
-shoulders of the disdainful lady, who hastily drew the large hood over
-her elaborate court wig, entirely concealing it within its voluminous
-folds.
-
-With a quick careless word of thanks to Mary, she walked to the door, and
-calling to John, who was quietly turning the key in Robert’s door, to
-show her the way out, she swiftly left the room, and with wildly beating
-heart, passed her uncle at the outer door, and mingled her presence with
-the stream of gallant courtiers and laughing, gayly-dressed ladies that
-wended its boisterous way along the crowded thoroughfare.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-
-When Mary found herself alone she sat down pensively in the big leather
-chair, feeling very sad and thoughtful. Of course she trusted Robert
-absolutely, but how could he really love such an ignorant little country
-girl like herself, when there were so many grand, rich, beautiful ladies
-surrounding him all the time and suing for his favors, even seeking him
-out in his own rooms? But her face brightened as she thought of what
-John had told her. “It isna’ his fault if the women lose their hearts
-over him,” he had said, and in her heart she felt she could not blame
-anyone for loving Robbie. She rose and softly approached his door. Then
-she paused. No, she would wait till he came and found her himself. But
-she did wish he would hurry and finish dressing before Mrs. Dunlop came
-back. She strolled aimlessly about the room looking with listless eyes
-at the collections of souvenirs and bric-a-brac which filled the mantels
-and covered the tables. She noted with wonder the profusion of ladies’
-gloves, ’kerchief, scarfs, a slipper or two and a motley collection of
-other articles littering the table. She picked up a beautiful pink mask
-and idly turned it over; on the back she read, “Dropped by Lady Nancy at
-the Charity Ball given in honor of the Prince of Wales.” She put it down,
-her lips trembling. He must prize it very highly, she thought with a
-pang of jealousy; but as she read the various inscriptions on the back
-of a number of the others, she smiled and told herself what a silly she
-was. Of course he couldn’t be in love with all the owners of those many
-favors. She picked up the mask again and held it before her eyes. How
-funny to cover one’s face in such a manner, she thought. She fastened the
-elastic behind her ear, and with a woman’s curiosity wondered how she
-looked in it. She quickly spied the large cheval mirror in the cabinet.
-“How funny I do look,” she said to herself with a little amused laugh,
-as she caught sight of her reflection. “Nobody would ever know me.” As
-she drew closer to the mirror in pleased wonder her dancing eyes slowly
-wandered from the top of the glittering coil of her golden hair, dwelt
-for an instant in blushing modesty on the gleaming, bare shoulders,
-and rested in loving, blissful content on her simple trailing robe of
-ivory-tinted embroidered silk. She looked angelically lovely as she stood
-there innocently admiring her winsome reflection.
-
-“Is that really the Highland Mary who used to wander barefooted through
-the glens and vales, the simple dairymaid who made butter for Colonel
-Montgomery?” she asked herself dreamily. “Am I awake, I wonder? How
-Souter Johnny would open his eyes if he could only see me noo in this
-beautiful gown, carrying a fan an’ wi’ my hair done up high.” She laughed
-gleefully but softly at the thought. “Wouldna’ they be proud to see me
-such a grand lady.” She walked stiffly across the room with all the
-dignity she could command, her chin held high and taking quick little
-pleased glances over her shoulder at her reflection. It was Mary’s
-first long gown, and it was not to be wondered at, when in turning
-quickly around a chair she easily became entangled in her train, and
-with a little frightened gasp she suddenly found herself on her knees
-endeavoring to extricate her feet from the clinging mass of silk and
-linen in which they were enmeshed. Finally she succeeded in regaining
-her feet, but not until she had with extreme care seated herself did she
-breathe a sigh of relief. She eyed her train ruefully. “If I should fall
-doon before all the great people at the ball, I should be so ashamed,”
-she said, sighing dismally. “They would all laugh at me. But Robert says
-I am nicer than anyone in all the world.” She reveled in that thought an
-instant, then her face lengthened. “But I ken there is a difference, a
-great difference; I am only a simple country lass without any learnin’
-whatever, while Lady Nancy is——” she rose suddenly as a thought occurred
-to her, her hands clasped tightly together. “Suppose he should grow
-ashamed of his ignorant little country wife,” she whispered with
-trembling lips; “it would break my heart in twain.”
-
-She held out her hands passionately toward her unseen lover. “Ye
-willna’ ever regret makin’ me your wife, will ye dear?” she whispered
-imploringly. “Ye willna’ be sorry in years to come.” Quickly her loving,
-trustful faith reasserted itself. “Nay, nay, my heart tells me ye
-willna’, so I’ll be foolish nae more. I’ll tell him what a silly lass
-I’ve been an’ how he’ll laugh at my doubting fears.” She took a step
-toward his door, when it opened and Robert came quickly into the room,
-dressed for the ball, looking very handsome in his plain and unpretending
-dress of blue homespun, for he still retained the same simplicity of
-manner and appearance that he brought with him from the country. He
-stopped in amazement as he came face to face with his unexpected visitor.
-
-Mary with a thrill of joy at the sight of her lover waited eagerly for
-the words of praise which she knew her appearance would elicit, and for
-which she hungered, but as he stood looking at her so calmly, so coldly,
-her joy turned to wonder and fear. What was the matter? Didn’t she please
-him? With a little gasp she put her hand nervously to her face. As it
-came in contact with the mask, which she had forgotten to remove, her
-heart gave a quick bound of relief. Of course! He didn’t know her. “He
-doesna’ ken who I am at all,” she thought gleefully.
-
-As his eyes rested upon the pink mask, Robert gave a sudden start, then
-glanced quickly at the table. No, it wasn’t there. So then this was Lady
-Nancy herself. He recognized her hair, her figure, and above all the
-mask. “So my haughty lady thinks it safer to play wi’ fire incognito,
-eh?” he thought grimly. “Weel, I’ll teach ye a lesson, my fine lady; ye
-need one badly.” Then aloud, “I’m indeed honored, madam, by your presence
-here to-night,” he said, bowing low before her.
-
-Mary courtesied deeply. Oh, it was so exciting to be talking with her
-Robbie, and how surprised he would be when she unmasked.
-
-“Haven’t ye a word to say to me, fair lady?” continued Robert softly, as
-she stood silently before him.
-
-“He’ll sure ken my voice,” she thought in trepidation; “if I could only
-talk like a lady.” She wondered if she could imitate the haughty tones of
-Lady Nancy Gordon herself. She’d try. She seated herself languidly. “Then
-you don’t recognize me?” she asked, disguising her lyric voice, as near
-as possible, in the lazy drawl of Lady Glencairn’s voice.
-
-He started and looked at her intently. It didn’t sound like Lady Nancy at
-all, but who else could she be? he thought blankly. “Your voice sounds
-like—but nae, I maun be mistaken,” he said doubtfully. “Nay, madam, I do
-not recognize you. Will you not remove——”
-
-“What, my face?” laughed Mary. She had marvelously lost all trace of her
-country intonation. “Oh, nay, sir! I’m too much attached to it.”
-
-“Well ye might be, fair lady!” replied Robert, “but why do ye hide your
-beauty so jealously?” He reached out his hand to lift the mask from her
-face, but, with a rippling laugh, she eluded him, and from behind the
-high-backed settle made reply.
-
-“Be not impatient, Mr. Burns,” she said saucily; “you shall see my face
-in good time, I warrant ye!” It must be Lady Nancy after all, he told
-himself.
-
-“’Tis a promise of paradise, madam!” he cried fervently, entering into
-the spirit of adventure.
-
-Mary looked at him reproachfully. Did he think she was really Lady
-Gordon? she wondered. The thought gave her pause. Well, she would find
-out how much he really cared for her, how much truth there was in the
-gossip she had heard. “Rumor sayeth, Mr. Burns, that ye are in love with
-the beautiful Lady Nancy Gordon; is that so?” she asked, fanning herself
-languorously.
-
-He smiled quizzically into her face. “Rumor hath many tongues, fair lady,
-and most of them lying ones. The lady doesna’ suit my taste; even her
-money couldna’ tempt me, an’ I need the money badly. That will take her
-conceit down a peg I’ll warrant,” he thought grimly.
-
-“But she is very beautiful, I hear,” said Mary, filled with delight at
-his answer.
-
-“That I grant ye. Mistress Nancy is most adept in the use of the
-hare’s foot an’ of the paint box. I’ll wager she can teach even our
-incomparable actress, Mrs. Siddons, a few tricks in the art of makeup.
-Oh, but ye should see the lady in the early morning. ’Fore heaven, she
-resembles damaged goods!” Now would come the explosion of wounded pride
-and outraged dignity, he thought calmly, but his amazement was unbounded
-when the seeming Lady Nancy jumped up and down, ecstatically clapping her
-hands in a very undignified manner. “Ye seem o’er pleased at my remark,”
-he exclaimed with a puzzled frown.
-
-“I am, I am pleased!” she cried joyfully.
-
-“What?” he stammered taken aback—“why, I—I thought ye were——” He stopped,
-flushed and embarrassed.
-
-“Were Lady Nancy Gordon!” she finished. “O Lud, if I were, I wouldn’t
-feel complimented at all the flattering things I’ve heard!” and she went
-off in a peal of merry laughter.
-
-“Who are ye then, who comes to my chamber at night?” he asked curtly,
-chagrined at his mistake. She shook her head and laughed softly.
-
-“Ye shall know in good time,” she replied coquettishly. “I—I must make
-certain that ye dinna’ love—me.” She smiled, but her heart was beating
-wildly.
-
-“I love only one maiden, an’ I make her my wife within a week,” he
-answered with dignity.
-
-“An’ ye’ve no regrets for Lady Nancy, nor for Mrs. McLehose, nor—nor
-any o’ the grand ladies ye’ll be givin’ up to marry the little country
-maiden?” she asked softly, forgetting in her eagerness her lapse into her
-natural speech.
-
-“None, my lady,” he replied firmly. “Noo, lets call a truce to this
-masquerade! I am at a loss to understand your errand here to-night,
-but do not press ye for an explanation, and as I am due at the Duke of
-Athol’s, I must bid ye good-night.” He bowed coldly, and started to leave
-her.
-
-But with a cry of joy, which thrilled him to the heart, she drew near to
-him with outstretched arms. “Robbie, lad, canna’ ye guess who I am?” she
-cried. “I’m nae a grand lady at all, I’m only your Highland Mary.” With a
-quick movement, she tore off the mask from her flushed and radiant face
-and threw it far from her.
-
-“Mary, is it ye?” he gasped, almost speechless with surprise. He could
-scarcely believe his senses. This radiantly beautiful lady his Highland
-Mary? was such a metamorphosis possible?
-
-She made him a little courtesy. “Aye, ’tis Mary!” she answered, her heart
-beating fast with pleasure. Quickly she told him how she had come, why
-she had come, and how long she had waited, just to hear his words of
-approval. “Do I please ye, laddie?” she asked shyly.
-
-For a moment he could not speak. Her wonderful perfection of beauty
-startled him. He drew her closely into his arms, kissing her with almost
-pathetic tenderness. “Mary, my love, my sweet lass!” and his voice
-trembled. “Pleased! Good Heavens, what little words those are to express
-my feelings. I can tell ye how you look, for nothing can ever make ye
-vain! Ye’re the most beautiful lassie I’ve ever seen! Ah, but I’m proud
-of ye this night. Ye’re fit to wear a coronet, Mary lass! I ken there
-will not be a grand lady at the ball to-night who will look half sae
-bonnie, nor hae such sweet, dainty manners, as my country sweetheart.”
-He held her off at arm’s length and glanced with affectionate adoration,
-from the fair, golden-crowned head down to the point of the small
-pearl-embroidered slipper that peeped beneath the edge of the rich,
-sheeny white robe.
-
-“It seems so strange to be here in Edinburgh, decked out in all this
-finery,” she murmured dreamily, “and on my way to a real ball. Is it
-really me?”
-
-“Aye, ’tis ye, Mary, I’ll swear to that!” he cried heartily, kissing
-the sweet, ingenuous face raised to his so wistfully. She blushed with
-pleasure, and bashfully turned her head away. “Ye dinna’ think I look
-awkward, do ye laddie?” she inquired in a low, timid voice.
-
-“Nay, ye’re grace itself, sweetheart!” he replied reassuringly, raising
-her chin till her drooping eyes met his.
-
-“An’ ye wouldna ken I was only a dairymaid if it werena for my speech,
-would ye?” she interrogated, with pathetic hopefulness. Her concerned,
-anxious little face and wistful manner touched him deeply.
-
-“I wouldna have ye changed for all the world, Mary!” he told her
-tenderly, pressing his lips to the one little curl which hung unconfined
-over her snowy shoulder. “Be your own pure, sweet self always, for ye’re
-the fairest of all God’s creatures to me noo.”
-
-She gave a deep sigh of absolute content, and leaned against him silently
-for a moment. Then she looked up at him brightly. “This fine dress makes
-me quite a grand lady, doesna’ it?” she prattled innocently.
-
-“Aye! every inch a queen!” and he made her a deep bow.
-
-“But it isna mine, Robbie,” she whispered confidentially. “I borrowed it
-for the night only, like Cinderella in the fairy book, to make my début
-into fashionable society,” and she laughed gleefully, like a little child
-telling a wonderful secret. “It’s Mrs. Dunlop’s wedding gown, Robbie;
-isna it just sweet?” She passed her hand gently over the folds of the
-silk and there was awe and reverence in the touch. “Oh, how I love to
-smooth it, ’tis so soft an’ rich an’ glossy; it isna’ wrong to love the
-beautiful things, is it, laddie?” she asked earnestly.
-
-“Nay,” replied Robert, smiling tenderly at her naïveté. “Love the pretty
-things all ye like, dearie, for hereafter ye shall have the finest gowns
-in town. Ye shall select whatsoever your fancy pleases—dresses, bonnets,
-mits, boots,” and he enumerated on his fingers all the articles he could
-remember so dear to a woman’s heart.
-
-“Shall I really, really?” she gasped as he finished, looking at him with
-wondering eyes. “I hae never bought a pretty thing in a’ my life, ye ken,
-an’ oh, won’t it be just sweet? We’ll go to the shops to-morrow, an’ Mrs.
-Dunlop will help me select my—my wedding gown.” She held her head away
-bashfully, blushing pink before the sudden fire that gleamed in the dark
-eyes bent on her so devotedly.
-
-“Your wedding gown?” he repeated, with dreamy softness. “Let it be silk,
-Mary, white, soft and shimmering, to float around ye like a cloud of
-sunshine. An’ ye must have a bridal veil too, lassie, one sae fine an’
-transparent that it will cover ye o’er like the morning mist.”
-
-“I would be afraid to buy so much,” she replied gravely. “’Twould be too
-costly, an’ ye canna’ afford to waste sae much money to deck me out like
-a lady,” and she shook her head in firm disapproval.
-
-He laughed heartily at her sober face and air of housewifely prudence.
-“My dear,” he whimsically told her, “dinna’ ye mind the cost. A weddin’
-doesna’ often happen in one’s lifetime, sae we’ll make it a grand one
-this time.”
-
-“Ye’ll spoil me, Robbie,” she answered, smiling happily.
-
-“Nay, ye’re too sweet and lovely to be spoiled.”
-
-“Well, ye ken,” she replied demurely, “sweet things spoil the quickest.”
-
-Before he could reply, the rattle of a carriage over the pavement sounded
-loudly through the room. As it stopped at the door, Mary gave a little
-sigh of regret. “It’s Mrs. Dunlop, returning for me at last,” she said.
-She secretly hoped the sharp old eyes would not miss the cloak.
-
-“Aye, like the good fairy godmother,” smiled Robert, as he led her out of
-the room and down the stairs.
-
-“I feel as if I were in a dream,” she murmured softly, picking up her
-train, and lovingly holding it over her arm, as she walked daintily
-across the sidewalk to the waiting carriage. “If I am, laddie,” she
-continued earnestly, “I hope I may never awake from it; I want to dream
-on forever.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-
-When Lady Glencairn, after her arrival at the Duke of Athol’s, found that
-Robert had not come—indeed she and Lord Glencairn and Sir William Creech,
-her uncle, had been the first to arrive—she decided recklessly to visit
-him at his chambers, so she had easily stolen away unnoticed by all save
-one, on her indiscreet journey. Sir William had seen her as she slipped
-guiltily out through the conservatory window and had followed her with
-growing suspicions to the door of Robert’s chamber, where he waited in
-impotent wrath for her to reappear, after having questioned the guidwife
-within the inn. And he was not deceived when she came out, wrapped in
-the disguising cloak and mask. He followed her like a grim servitor till
-she reached the castle, and as she was noiselessly reëntering by the
-conservatory window, he called to her to wait. With a startled gasp she
-turned, and as her eyes rested on her uncle’s accusing face, she gave a
-little laugh, half scornful, half defiant, and leisurely throwing off her
-cloak and mask, stood waiting for him to speak.
-
-“Ye foolish woman!” he told her angrily. “How could ye be so imprudent,
-reckless mad, as to visit a man’s chamber at night?”
-
-“Don’t preach to me, uncle,” she answered sullenly. “No one knows of my
-being there, not even Mr. Burns himself.”
-
-“But what were ye thinkin’ of to do such a reprehensible act?” he
-demanded sternly. She turned on him suddenly.
-
-“Because I love him!” she exclaimed passionately, casting prudence to the
-winds. “I went there to tell him of my love, to give myself to him, to
-beg him to take me away from here, to take me anywhere, only to let me be
-near him, to stay with him. But I was forced to come away without seeing
-him, thanks to you.”
-
-For a moment he regarded the reckless woman in silence, amazement, shame,
-and anger struggling for the mastery.
-
-“Alice, of what are you thinking?” he ejaculated finally, catching
-her roughly by the arm. “You must control yourself. I speak for your
-own good. Think no more of this idle poet, for only shame, ruin and
-unhappiness can come to ye and your husband, unless ye give up this
-unholy passion.”
-
-She laughed scornfully. “My husband!” she cried bitterly. “Don’t remind
-me of that fossil! You, and the rest of my family, are to blame for my
-being fettered, tied to a man I do not love. If it were not for that, I
-could find the happiness I crave.”
-
-“Sh! be calm!” he continued, looking anxiously around. “You may be
-overheard. Foolish woman! do you forget that Robert Burns, as well as
-yourself, is married.”
-
-“He is not!” she flashed impetuously. “That was no legal tie. Some
-foolish chit of a country lass flung herself at him, with the usual
-result. Any man would have done as he did, but unlike most men, he,
-out of pity and from a high sense of honor, married her; but it was an
-irregular marriage, which was speedily annulled by the girl’s father. He
-is free now, free as ever he was. The girl has given him up, poor fool. I
-only am the shackled one, a prisoner for life, unless——” An eager light
-flashed in her deepened eyes.
-
-“Unless Robert Burns elopes with ye!” he finished sarcastically. “I
-warn ye, Alice, not to play with edged tools;’tis o’er dangerous. Be
-more careful or others will suspect what I already know.” She smiled
-disdainfully and shrugged her shapely shoulders.
-
-“Do not force me to open your husband’s eyes!” he retorted, angered by
-her irritating indifference. She looked at him, her heart filled with
-sudden fury. How she would like to hit him in the face with her fan, how
-she hated him and his interference, his unwelcome advice. “Already,” he
-continued irritably, “you have given that scandalmonger, Eppy McKay,
-cause to suspect your too warm and ardent affection for Mr. Burns, by
-openly showing jealousy of Lady Nancy Gordon.”
-
-“I jealous of Nancy Gordon?” she repeated, with airy scorn, walking
-toward the door of the conservatory. “Huh, not I, uncle; I am not so
-unconscious of my own charms,” and she drew her magnificent figure
-up to its full height, then smiled insolently into his perturbed and
-nervous face. “I thank you for all your advice,” she murmured sweetly as
-they traversed the long hall, “but remember, hereafter, that I mean to
-steer my own canoe, whether it leads me into safe waters or through the
-rapids.” And with a radiant smile upon her sensuous lips she entered the
-drawing-room, leaning affectionately upon the arm of her outraged but
-speechless relative. Quietly she took her place by her waiting husband’s
-side, her dark eyes full of a bewitching and dangerous softness, for her
-thoughts were on the one guest whose very name had the power to move her
-so completely.
-
-Never had she appeared so dazzlingly beautiful, as she stood there
-meeting her friends and acquaintances with a deep ceremonious courtesy
-for the distinguished ones, a smile and a nod for her intimates, and an
-air of high-bred insolence and extreme self-satisfaction pervading her
-whole appearance.
-
-No one was ever bored at the Duchess of Athol’s brilliant “at homes.”
-One always felt sure of meeting at least three or four justly celebrated
-personages under her hospitable roof. And to-night society was a-gog,
-for it was to welcome the farmer-poet, Robert Burns, who had returned
-from his triumphant tour through the Highlands. Soon the capacious
-drawing-rooms were crowded. There was the rustle of silk and satin, rare
-and delicate perfumes shaken out of lace kerchiefs, while the heavy scent
-of the many bouquets oppressed the warm air to the point of suffocation.
-There was an interminably monotonous murmur of voices, only broken at
-rare intervals by a ripple of mild laughter. Over by the large windows
-that overlooked the terrace stood a group of people gazing earnestly out
-beyond the gardens at some object, which had arrested their attention,
-with various degrees of interest.
-
-“Whatever is happening below on Princes Street?” suddenly inquired one
-of the ladies, nervously clutching the arm of the man nearest her. Eppy
-McKay was an eccentric maiden lady of questionable age and taste. Of more
-than ordinary height naturally, she looked a giantess in her powdered
-wig, which towered fully a foot in the air, and which was decorated
-profusely with waving plumes, rosettes and jewels. Her lowcut gown of
-crimson satin, over a petticoat of quilted green silk, was cut extremely
-low, revealing a vision of skin and bones, powdered to a ghastly
-whiteness. Her affectations, her simperings, and her poses accorded
-society much amusement, of which fact she was blissfully unconscious.
-
-“There is a crowd gathered around a carriage, but farther than that I
-cannot make out,” replied Mr. Mackenzie, the famous author and publisher.
-
-A prolonged shout from below increased the restlessness of the timid
-Eppy. “Oh, dear!” she gasped. “If it should be an uprising of the
-Jacobites,” and she looked fearfully into the amused faces of her
-companions.
-
-With a disgusted grunt, Sir William Creech shook his arm free from her
-clawlike clutch. “Nonsense, woman, ye’re daft!” he answered impatiently.
-
-“Well, upon my word!” she murmured in injured surprise.
-
-“The mob is increasing—’tis coming nearer!” exclaimed Mr. Mackenzie,
-stepping out upon the wide balcony.
-
-“So it is,” affirmed Eppy, retreating behind the heavy curtains. “Lady
-Glencairn!” she called as her ladyship approached the window. “Listen to
-those murmurs! Oh, dear! it makes me so nervous.”
-
-Lady Glencairn stepped out upon the balcony, followed by the timid Eppy,
-and stood contemplating the scene in the brightly lighted street below
-them.
-
-“It sounds not ominous,” she said quietly, after a moment. “Lud, what
-a throng! They have unhitched the horses from a carriage, and are
-themselves drawing it hither.”
-
-“Who is in the carriage, can you see?” eagerly asked Eppy, straining her
-eyes.
-
-“A gentleman, who is evidently addressing the people,” answered Lady
-Glencairn slowly. She gazed intently at the figure silhouetted against
-the light of the street lamps. Surely she knew that form. At that moment
-he turned, and with a flush of surprise, a thrill of joy, she suddenly
-recognized him.
-
-“Upon my life,’tis Robert, Robert Burns!” she cried excitedly.
-
-“Aye, I recognize him now,” said Mr. Mackenzie.
-
-“And you say they are drawing him hither?” inquired Sir William
-incredulously, turning to his niece.
-
-“Aye, and why not?” she replied brightly, turning to the others. “They
-should carry him on their shoulders, for he deserves all homage.”
-
-“And ’tis said the Scots are not demonstrative,” ejaculated Mr.
-Mackenzie, as another burst of applause and cheers, followed by laughter,
-reached their ears.
-
-“You hear how demonstrative they can be when occasion demands
-enthusiasm,” replied Lady Glencairn stanchly, “when genius knocks at the
-door of their hearts. See how Edinburgh has utterly lost control of its
-conservative old self, and all over the poetic genius of Robert Burns.”
-
-“True, he has indeed stirred the hardest-hearted Scot by his fascinating
-poetry,” mused Mr. Mackenzie admiringly.
-
-“How I shall love him,” sighed Eppy dreamily. “In sooth I do now,” and
-she simpered and dropped her eyes like a love-sick school girl.
-
-“And she has never met the man yet!” cried Sir William in amazement. “The
-woman’s daft,” he muttered, turning away.
-
-“I do wish he would come,” sighed Eppy. “I want to tell him how much I
-admire him and his poetry. Oh, I have the dearest little speech, that
-Sibella, my sister, composed, all prepared to say when I am presented to
-him.” She rolled her eyes up ecstatically.
-
-“I shall also recite one of his odes to him,” she continued, in the tone
-of one who is about to confer a great favor. “I know ’twill please him
-greatly,” and she fanned herself languidly.
-
-“What have you selected?” inquired Lady Glencairn, laughing openly. The
-woman’s vanity amused her.
-
-“Such a sweet conceit,” simpered Eppy.
-
-“Is it ‘Tam O’Shanter’s Tale’?” inquired Mr. Mackenzie, interestedly.
-
-“No, oh, no!” she replied, shaking her head. “’Tis monstrous long to
-recite.”
-
-“An ode to a calf,” said Sir William grimly, “would be more appropriate.”
-
-“Perhaps ’tis the tale of ‘The Twa Dogs,’” hazarded Lady Glencairn. Eppy
-laughed gleefully and shook her head.
-
-“Tell us the name, madam; we’re no children!” roared Sir William, glaring
-at her like an angry bull.
-
-“You’re so gruff,” pouted Eppy reproachfully. “Do you all give it up?”
-They nodded. “Well, then, don’t be shocked,” and she shook her finger
-at them coquettishly; then leaning forward she whispered loudly, “’Tis
-entitled ‘To a Louse.’”
-
-“Heaven, preserve us!” ejaculated Mr. Mackenzie, laughing heartily.
-
-“She’s touched here!” cried Sir William commiseratingly, putting his
-finger to his head.
-
-“Why did you choose that?” gasped Lady Glencairn, in amazement.
-
-“Because ’tis a beautiful conceit,” answered Eppy soulfully. “I protest,
-I mean to recite it.”
-
-“I vow ’tis a most singular selection.”
-
-“I don’t see why,” snapped Eppy spitefully. “’Twas written round a fact.”
-
-“Really, I hadn’t heard of that,” answered her ladyship, coolly turning
-away.
-
-“I wonder at that,” cooed Eppy innocently, although a little malicious
-twinkle appeared in her eyes. “You of all people should know everything
-pertaining to Mr. Burns and his verses.” Lady Glencairn stiffened
-suddenly, and cast a quick look at the stern face of her uncle.
-
-“What do you mean by that?” inquired Sir William aggressively, turning to
-Eppy.
-
-“Oh, nothing, nothing!” she hastily replied, frightened by what she had
-said.
-
-“Everything concerning Mr. Burns, my husband’s protégé, and my friend,
-my dear friend, I may call him, does interest me mightily, Miss McKay.
-Pray tell me the story connected with the poem, if you care to!” and Lady
-Glencairn turned her glittering eyes, which were narrowed dangerously,
-upon the face of the crestfallen Eppy.
-
-Sir William gave a snort of anger. “Ye couldn’t stop her; she is dying to
-tell all she knows!” he said crustily.
-
-Eppy cleared her throat vigorously. “Well, it was this way,” she began
-confidentially. “Mr. Burns was sitting behind a lady in Kirk, one
-Sabbath, who had on a new bonnet, of which she seemed most proud. As he
-was admiring its beauty, his keen eyes detected this horrid little animal
-crawling over the gauze and lace.”
-
-“How fascinating,” murmured Mr. Mackenzie in mocking rapture.
-
-“And it immediately inspired his pen to write the verses which have
-made such a sensation in town,” concluded Eppy, looking eagerly at her
-listeners for some look or word of approval.
-
-“What a—a creepy story,” said Lady Glencairn, with a little shiver of
-repulsion.
-
-She turned to her quickly. “’Tis said, my dear, and I ask you not to
-repeat it, for I promised not to tell, that the lady in question was
-Agnes McLehose, the beautiful grass widow, who is such an ardent admirer
-of Mr. Burns, you know.”
-
-“Really!” murmured Lady Glencairn coldly.
-
-“And the airs she put on!” cried Eppy, with lofty indignation. “Why, do
-you know——”
-
-But Lady Glencairn interrupted her sharply. “I do not care to speak of
-Agnes McLehose,” she retorted frigidly, “and I never indulge in scandal,
-especially before my friends, so let us not disgust them with any woman’s
-gossip.”
-
-“You are quite right,” affirmed Eppy affably. “I do not believe in it
-myself; it always comes back to one.”
-
-“Who can understand a woman?” grunted Sir William aloud.
-
-“Well, it’s most easy to understand men,” retorted Eppy quickly.
-
-With a sigh of impatience, Lady Glencairn took Mr. Mackenzie’s arm and
-silently they reëntered the drawing-room. They wended their way through
-the groups of people standing about, for the largest and most brilliant
-portion of the assemblage were standing, the sofas, ottomans, and chairs
-being occupied by the puffy old dowagers, who were entertaining each
-other with choice bits of scandal; and, finally, came to a standstill
-beside the grand piano. For a moment they remained quiet, listening to
-the glorious voice of Madame Urbani, who from the great drawing-room
-above was trilling forth an aria from grand opera. From her position
-Lady Glencairn commanded a good view of the large arch through which the
-guests entered the drawing-rooms. Anxiously she watched for the handsome
-face and curly black hair of the poet above the crowd that surrounded
-her. “Why does he not come? what can be detaining him?” she asked herself
-for the hundredth time. Perhaps he was with Lady Nancy Gordon, she
-thought jealously, looking about the vast room. She was sure she had
-not yet been announced. It looked very suspicious that neither she, nor
-Robert, had arrived. And her heart was consumed with bitter jealousy,
-although her smiling face bore no traces of the raging fire within. How
-she hated that doll-faced beauty for being single and free! How she would
-delight in trampling her in the dust, she thought cruelly. Nearly a month
-had elapsed since Robert left Edinburgh, since she had seen him. A month
-filled with vain longing and unrest. And since his return, she could
-scarcely restrain her intense longing to see him. Day after day she would
-drive slowly past his lodgings, hoping to catch a glimpse of his glowing,
-dark face, which had such power to thrill her to the very depths of her
-intense and passionate nature. That longing had taken possession of her
-to-night, when she had slipped out and stolen away to his rooms, and she
-would have willingly given her body and soul to him, for the asking; but
-her good angel had protected her from her own indiscretion, and saved
-her unsuspecting victim from a great remorse. The gurgling voice of Eppy
-McKay broke in abruptly on her disturbing revery.
-
-“Oh, dear, I wish Mr. Burns would come,” she said plaintively.
-
-“He is usually very punctual,” answered Lady Glencairn, opening her large
-fan of ostrich plumes and fanning herself indolently.
-
-“Genius is never governed by any rules of punctuality or propriety,”
-observed Mr. Mackenzie.
-
-“Then he is exempt,” replied her ladyship, smiling brightly. “Ah! you
-truant. Where have you been?” she demanded of her husband, who joined
-them at that moment.
-
-“Incidentally getting a breath of fresh air, my dear,” replied Lord
-Glencairn, smiling lovingly into his wife’s face. “But in reality, I was
-listening to the ovation which Robert was receiving as he drove through
-Princes Street.” Her eyes suddenly brightened.
-
-“How I wish I could have heard his speech to the masses,” she cried
-enthusiastically. “For I must confess, James, that no man’s conversation
-ever carried me off my feet so completely as that of Robert Burns.”
-
-“Indeed, my lady!” he retorted in mock alarm. “Then it behooves me to
-keep my eye on you hereafter.”
-
-She joined in the laugh that followed, then remarked audaciously, “But, I
-vow, a little flirtation is really most exhilarating now and then.” She
-flashed her brilliant eyes mockingly upon the horror-struck countenance
-of Eppy McKay.
-
-“How indiscreet!” exclaimed Eppy in amazement, “and you are a married
-woman, too.”
-
-“’Tis perfectly shocking, isn’t it?” mimicked her ladyship insolently.
-
-Eppy pursed her thin lips, while a little spot of color dyed her
-parchment-like cheeks. “Well, I do not approve of married women
-flirting,” she replied primly, and as she caught the look of amusement
-which passed between her ladyship and Mr. Mackenzie, she added sourly,
-“Especially in public.”
-
-“Oh! Then you do approve of it in private,” replied her ladyship sweetly,
-innocently opening her eyes to their widest.
-
-Eppy gave a gasp of horror. “Mercy, no!” she cried indignantly, “I should
-say not.” And she tossed her head in virtuous anger.
-
-“Robert Burns!” announced the footman at this juncture.
-
-There was a sudden hush, a movement of excitement, and the group around
-the door fell back, and everybody made way for the most important guest
-of the evening, who for the last hour had been the all-absorbing topic
-of conversation. Lady Glencairn started violently, as she heard the name
-announced. For a brief instant she closed her eyes, feeling faint, and
-trembling in an ecstasy of joy. He was here at last! Her heart throbbed
-so violently it stifled her.
-
-“How noble he looks!” exclaimed Eppy in an awestruck tone, as she watched
-the tall figure in a polite but determined manner coolly elbowing a
-passage among the heaving bare shoulders, fat arms, the long trains, and
-bulging bustles and paniers that seriously obstructed his way. “And to
-think that man is but a lowly-bred peasant,” observed Mr. Mackenzie, as
-he watched him bending low over the hand of their hostess.
-
-“A man’s a man, for all that!” murmured her ladyship, worshipful pride
-in her voice and in her dazzling eyes, as she watched him approach,
-bowing right and left. She drew herself up with the conscious air of a
-beauty who knows she is nearly perfect, and with a smile she extended her
-jeweled hand. “I’m so glad to see you here to-night,” she says sweetly,
-although a glance like fire seen through smoke leaps from beneath her
-silky eyelashes, but Robert saw it not; he was bending low over her fair
-hand. “Welcome back to Edinburgh!” she continued, pressing his hand
-warmly.
-
-A bright smile lighted up his dark visage. “Thank ye,” he returned
-simply. Then he turned to Lord Glencairn with outstretched hand. “My
-lord!” he said warmly, “how glad, how delighted, I am to again press the
-hand of my patron, my friend.”
-
-“The pleasure is mutual, my lad!” he replied. A kindly smile lighted up
-his noble face, as he perceived the ruddy glow of health in the full
-cheeks, the flashing eyes of the young poet. “Ah, you return to us
-looking bonnier than ever,” he continued. “Your triumphant tour through
-the north with its Highland chieftains and lords at your feet, has not
-turned your head after all.”
-
-Robert laughed good-naturedly. “Not a bit of it,” he replied frankly.
-
-“Let me present Mr. Henry Mackenzie,” introduced Lady Glencairn at this
-juncture.
-
-Robert advanced eagerly to meet him, his hand extended, his eyes flashing
-with delight. “The author of the ‘Man of Feeling,’ the first book I loved
-and admired years ago!” he exclaimed in direct frankness. “It is an
-unexpected pleasure, sir.”
-
-“The pleasure is mutual,” replied Mr. Mackenzie, flushing at the
-compliment. “We witnessed your triumphant progress up Princes Street, and
-were delighted at the ovation you received.”
-
-Robert laughed happily. “Was it not wonderful?” he answered in his
-sonorous voice, which had such a thrilling richness in it. “I could
-scarcely realize it was the once poor, humble Robbie Burns they were
-cheering. I am indeed happy; my popularity has not begun to wane yet.” He
-regarded the great publisher with kindling eyes. “That I am so favorably
-known, is due to your kindly articles in your inestimable paper, _The
-Lounger_, and your unbiased criticism of my poems, which brought me
-before the public, and I thank you most heartily for that generous
-criticism which was so judicious withal.” A little murmur of approval
-from his listeners greeted his last words.
-
-“’Twas a pleasure, believe me, Mr. Burns,” he answered quietly, “to lend
-a helping hand to assist a struggling genius.”
-
-“Thank ye,” said Robert, simply.
-
-“I believe you have never met our esteemed contemporary, Mr. Sterne,
-author of ‘Tristam Shandy,’” observed Mr. Mackenzie, and he quickly made
-the introduction.
-
-Robert turned quickly to the grave and dignified scholar. “Little did I
-ever dream,” he said fervently, “that I would one day meet and converse
-with my two favorite authors.”
-
-A smile of gratified vanity overspread the rugged features of the
-scholar. “I am proud indeed,” he observed pompously, “if my book has
-found favor in your eyes, Mr. Burns.” And soon they had become engaged
-in an animated conversation, much to the chagrin of one of his admirers,
-who had been waiting patiently to be introduced. She had been mentally
-rehearsing her little speech for some time, and was now waiting for the
-opportunity to deliver it.
-
-“No one would ever take him for a farmer,” she thought in open-mouthed,
-worshipful adoration.
-
-“He looks quite like a gentleman,” said a haughty voice near her, in a
-tone of great surprise.
-
-“Huh! he makes love to every woman he meets!” replied Sir William
-spitefully.
-
-With a thrill of rapture at the thought, Eppy attracted the attention of
-Lady Glencairn, and whispered in that lady’s impatient ear, “Introduce
-me, please; I see Mr. Burns is regarding me very closely.”
-
-Presently a lull occurred in the discussion, and Lady Glencairn smilingly
-introduced the garrulous old lady to the poet, as a “warm admirer of his
-poems.” “And of you, too,” eagerly interrupted Eppy, clasping his hand in
-both of her own. “Oh! I have longed for this moment, that I might clasp
-the hand of Scotia’s Bard, and tell him how I love him,”—she broke off
-with a smothered giggle. “I mean his poems; oh, they are too heavenly
-for utterance,” and she rolled her little gray eyes till only the whites
-showed. “Sibella—she’s my sister, and a dear creature if I do say so—and
-I have had many a lovely cry over them,” she rattled on hardly pausing
-for breath. “Ah, they have made us so happy. You must come and see her,
-won’t you, she’s a writer also, and you can have a sweet talk over your
-art. We belong to a literary family, you know. Rob Don, the Gaelic poet,
-belonged to our clan. We take after him.” She smiled affectedly and
-batted her little eyes in what she fondly believed a very fetching manner.
-
-Robert had vainly tried to edge in a word, and now stood listening to the
-silly prattle, a smile of amusement playing round his mobile mouth.
-
-“A long way after,” observed Sir William dryly. Then he threw up his
-hands in dismay, for Eppy had started off again.
-
-“Here I am rattling off a lot of nonsense,” she gurgled, “but I do enjoy
-your talking so much, Mr. Burns. I vow I could listen to it all day. I
-shall always remember this happy occasion of our meeting.” She stopped,
-out of breath, panting but happy.
-
-Robert regarded her quizzically for a moment while an audible titter was
-heard throughout the rooms. “You quite overwhelm me, Miss McKay,” he
-drawled at last. “But I have nevertheless enjoyed conversing with you.
-Really, madam, I felt quite eloquent and did myself full justice,” and he
-bowed gravely.
-
-“Oh, you flatterer!” tittered Eppy, slapping his arm coquettishly with
-her fan. “But I am not madam yet.” She ventured a quick look at Sir
-William.
-
-“Robert, I have been requested to ask you to recite one of your favorite
-poems; will you honor us?” asked Lord Glencairn, coming forward.
-
-At once there was a chorus of inanely polite voices. “Oh, do recite, Mr.
-Burns!” “Please give us ‘Tam O’Shanter’s Ride,’” etc., etc.
-
-Robert slowly looked around him at the sea of faces, and suddenly a
-feeling of resentment filled his heart. Must he parade himself before
-these empty-headed noodles, who regarded him in the light of a curiosity,
-a plaything, to amuse them by his antics? Why didn’t they ask Mr.
-Mackenzie or Mr. Sterne or Dr. Blacklock, Mr. Ramsay, or any one of the
-others to read from their books?
-
-“I must ask ye to excuse me to-night,” he replied coldly. “I have been
-speaking in the open air and my voice is tired.”
-
-“Then I will recite in your stead,” cried Eppy, determined to make an
-impression on the romantic young farmer.
-
-They crowded around her, laughing and joking, for poor Eppy was the
-innocent, unsuspecting butt of society.
-
-“What is your selection?” someone asked seriously.
-
-“’Tis about the cunning little animal Mr. Burns saw on the lady’s
-bonnet,” replied Eppy. “The lady’s name was—er——” She paused and looked
-inquiringly into Robert’s grimly amused face.
-
-“Ye would be very much surprised, perhaps shocked and grieved, Miss
-McKay,” he answered, “were I to mention the lady’s name here, so I’ll
-spare your feelings. Please recite the poem.” Eppy made a deep courtesy,
-blissfully unconscious that the lady in question was none else than
-herself. And after arranging her dress to her satisfaction, cleared her
-throat affectedly and made several ineffectual attempts to begin the
-recitation. Gradually a look of comical despair puckered up her face, and
-turning to Robert with an embarrassed giggle, she exclaimed poutingly, “I
-cannot recall a single line. How provoking, and I protest. I knew every
-line by rote this morning. Please start me on the first verse, Mr. Burns.”
-
-The spectacle of this silly old woman making a fool of herself before
-that heartless crowd both annoyed and embarrassed Robert. “The last verse
-is my favorite,” he replied, frowning angrily at the amused titters which
-reached his ears from all sides, and quickly he read the verse through:
-
- “Oh wad some power the giftie gie us
- To see ourselves as others see us.
- It wad fra many a blunder free us, and foolish notion
- What airs in dress and gait wad leave us, and e’en devotion.”
-
-And none knew whether the shaft was pointed at them or at the object of
-their mirth, who stood before him with clasped hands and a smile meant to
-be winning on her weak face, listening with all her senses.
-
-“How true that is,” murmured Lady Glencairn.
-
-“Yes, indeed,” sighed Eppy soulfully. “What fools some people make of
-themselves, and they never know it, which is the funny part of it.” She
-darted a quick glance at Lady Glencairn, who returned the look calmly and
-evenly, although she was saying to herself, “Is she the fool she appears,
-or is she giving me a dig, I wonder?”
-
-She turned to Robert. “Mr. Burns, will you find me a chair, please; I am
-rather fatigued, standing so long.”
-
-He offered her his arm. “It will be rather a difficult matter,” he
-observed, looking about him vainly. “Still, I can try.” And he moved
-through the swaying crowd and out upon the balcony, with her little
-gloved hand resting lightly on his coat sleeve.
-
-“I saw you this morning, Mr. Burns, on Calton Hill,” she observed
-lightly, “but at a distance. Upon driving nearer I lost sight of you; you
-must have vanished into the air.”
-
-“Not at all,” replied Robert, sitting beside her on the low balustrade.
-“I found a beautiful solitude amongst a luxuriant growth of willows,
-which no doubt you overlooked.”
-
-“To be sure,” she returned. “Now I remember. A sad scene occurred there a
-few years ago; a lady from Loch Carron drowned herself in the little pond
-they hang over, because the man she loved despised her.” Her voice was
-soft and low. She drooped her eyes and sighed.
-
-“Poor unhappy woman,” sighed Robert sympathetically.
-
-She looked at him quickly, her face flushing, her eyes earnestly
-searching his face. “Then you would have pitied her?” she asked almost
-breathlessly.
-
-“He cannot be a man who would not pity a woman under such circumstances,”
-he replied simply and thoughtfully.
-
-“She loved him devotedly, recklessly,” she continued, her voice trembling
-with suppressed emotion; “but she had no moral right to do so,” she
-continued. “She was a wife, a miserable, unhappy wife; she deserved much
-pity, but he was pitiless and uncharitable. He despised her weakness,
-and so—she drowned herself.” Her voice sank into a strained, unnatural
-whisper.
-
-“Poor unhappy woman!” he repeated compassionately. “She was over-hasty, I
-fear.”
-
-“You would not have consigned her to such a fate, would you?” she
-faltered, laying her soft feverish hand on his.
-
-He started violently and was silent for a time. Then, slowly, sorrowfully
-he turned and looked into her tell-tale face; for a moment she gazed
-at him, her eyes glittering with an unholy light, her bosom heaving
-tumultuously. Then she slowly drooped her head.
-
-“’Twould be a heavy load to have on one’s conscience,” he replied
-constrainedly.
-
-He rose from his seat and stood looking thoughtfully across to where
-Edinburgh castle loomed up on the hill, so cold and gloomy, outlined
-against the blue sky.
-
-She glided swiftly to his side. “Robert, let me——” she began
-passionately, when the cold voice of Sir William Creech rooted her to
-the spot in terror. Out of the shadow walked her uncle, and ignoring her
-presence he addressed himself to Robert.
-
-“Well, Mr. Burns!” he said angrily, “perhaps ye’ll condescend to notice
-me now, your publisher, Sir William Creech.”
-
-“I hope ye’re well,” returned Robert indifferently.
-
-Sir William quivered with rage. “Ye’ve been in town a week, and yet ye
-have not called to notify me of your arrival,” he sputtered.
-
-“I quite forgot, Sir William,” answered Rob repentently; “you see I’m not
-a good business man. However, to-morrow I will call and we will arrange
-our much neglected business matters.”
-
-“And there is much to arrange. Why did ye refuse to write for my weekly?
-I offered to pay ye well for it,” he snarled.
-
-“Pay!” flashed Rob indignantly. “Do you think to buy the fruit of my
-brain like so much merchandise, at so much a line for a penny newspaper?
-I am not a penny journalist, I am a poet. Whenever I embark on any
-undertaking it is with honest enthusiasm, and to talk of money, wage, or
-fee would be a downright prostitution of the soul,” and his eyes flashed
-dangerously.
-
-“You do not despise money, Robert Burns?” retorted Sir William
-sarcastically.
-
-“Most certainly not!” replied Robert quickly. “’Tis a most necessary
-commodity, but extremely elusive, and to show you that money has no
-terrors for me, I shall expect a settlement to-morrow in full. Some £300
-are due me from the sale of the last edition of my songs.” He returned
-Sir William’s wrathful gaze, his eyes full of righteous anger and strong
-determination.
-
-“Just one word more, Mr. Burns!” he began belligerently, but Robert
-raised his hand with a stately gesture.
-
-“I’m in a sorry mood for business, Sir William Creech,” he warned him, a
-steely glitter in his eye.
-
-“Well, ye will hear what I’ve to say,” insisted Sir William doggedly. “Ye
-are under contract to me, sir; but instead of living up to the terms of
-that agreement, ye are scattering broadcast to every person that pleases
-your fancy, a song or an ode or a poem, which diminishes the worth and
-consequent sale of your collection.”
-
-“Lud, uncle,” interposed Lady Glencairn quickly, “I’ll warrant it makes
-not the slightest difference.”
-
-“’Tis not fair to me,” sputtered Sir William, “and I warn ye, Mr. Burns,
-ye must not do it again. I strictly forbid it.”
-
-“Uncle!” gasped Lady Glencairn in amazement.
-
-“Ye forbid?” repeated Robert in immeasurable scorn. “Ye nor any man
-living can dictate to Robert Burns. I shall write when an’ for whom I
-please. I will not barter an’ sell my soul like so much merchandise.
-You published my collection of songs an’ have made money out o’ the
-transaction, which is mair than I have done. I am sick of it all; I am
-done with your roguery, your deceit, now an’ forever.” And he waved his
-hand in angry dismissal.
-
-“But our contract,” gasped Sir William, taken aback.
-
-“’Tis ended now, canceled by your ain insult, an’ I shall take means to
-collect my just dues.”
-
-“Are you not hasty?” asked Lady Glencairn concernedly.
-
-“I told ye to call to-morrow,” snarled Sir William, “and I’ll pay ye,
-then ye can gang your own gait. I have sought to give you advice, but ye
-were too haughty and independent, and ye wouldn’t listen, but ye will yet
-see and realize the bitter truth of my words, so go on in your career
-of folly and its inevitable ruin, for ye’ll soon be at the end of your
-tether, and may the devil claim ye for his own.” He stalked angrily away,
-muttering to himself, “Ye upstart, ye low-born peasant, I’ll humble ye
-yet!”
-
-Robert turned to Lady Glencairn with a smile of apology on his lips. “I
-ask your pardon, Lady Glencairn,” he said humbly, “for being the cause
-of this unseemly scene in your presence, but my anger was aroused, an’
-I simply couldna’ help speaking my thoughts—I am always doing the wrong
-thing.”
-
-“Oh, nonsense!” she responded laughingly. “Let us forget it and join the
-others.” She took his arm and they slowly entered the ballroom, where
-they were speedily joined by Lord Glencairn and a party of friends, who
-immediately surrounded them.
-
-“My dear,” said Lord Glencairn, “do you know that you have left us an
-unconscionable time? Is there some witchery about yon balcony that I know
-not of?” and he smiled affectionately upon his wife, whose eyes were
-shining with happiness.
-
-“Your pardon, James, but I’m sure our absence was not noted in such a
-distinguished assemblage.” She glanced carelessly about the room at the
-groups of sedate-looking people gravely conversing with each other while
-they strolled slowly, aimlessly about with much dignity and ceremony,
-and an almost imperceptible sneer curled her full lips. “Oh, the stiff
-formality of some of these Calvinistic old fossils!” she remarked
-contemptuously to Robert.
-
-“From all such people, good Lord deliver us,” he replied in a low chant.
-
-“Amen!” cried Eppy, looking archly at Sir William. “Give me youth and
-gayety always.” Sir William looked his unspoken scorn.
-
-“You and I may well sigh for youth, Miss McKay,” quavered the venerable
-Dr. Blacklock. “Many moons have passed since he eluded our clutch and
-fled, never to return,” and he sighed dismally.
-
-“Speak for yourself, Doctor,” bridled Eppy. “I shall never let go my hold
-on youth,” and she tossed her head indignantly.
-
-“Speaking of fossils,” said Lady Glencairn pointedly, turning to Eppy, “I
-wonder what can have happened to Mrs. Dunlop?”
-
-“Oh, she is always late for effect,” she replied spitefully.
-
-“Mrs. Dunlop is a very dear friend of mine,” observed Robert quietly, but
-his eyes flashed with indignation.
-
-“I beg your pardon for my rudeness,” murmured Lady Glencairn sweetly.
-
-“I understand Mrs. Dunlop is chaperoning a new beauty,” said Lord
-Glencairn inquiringly to his wife.
-
-She gave him a side glance that was far from pleasant. New beauty,
-indeed! There was only one recognized beauty in Edinburgh and she would
-not yield the palm to anyone. “I really do not know to whom you allude,
-James,” she said coldly.
-
-The Duchess of Athol, who was standing near, smiled significantly. “Mrs.
-Dunlop asked permission to bring a young friend, who was visiting her
-from the Highlands,” she remarked pleasantly. “I do not know her in the
-least, and they may not come at all.”
-
-“Mrs. Dunlop and Miss Campbell!” announced the footman loudly. With a
-smile on his handsome face and a hurried word of apology, Robert rapidly
-walked to meet the approaching couple, who were the cynosure of all
-eyes. Mrs. Dunlop was recognized by all as a woman of much importance in
-Edinburgh society. She knew everybody and everybody knew her, for she was
-the lineal descendant of the immortal Wallace, a fact of which she was
-justly proud. She was a motherly looking woman, with a charming smile and
-a pleasant, taking manner.
-
-But the murmur of admiration throughout the room was not for her; it was
-for the slim little girl in white with the blue eyes and fair hair, which
-glittered like gold beneath the brilliant light of the chandeliers. “Who
-can she be?” they whispered to each other in wonder. “Evidently not a
-person of importance, else she would be dressed in the fashion of the day
-and have her hair powdered.”
-
-“At last, Mary, ye’re here!” cried Robert delightedly, placing her hand
-within his arm. She clung to it with a nervous clutch.
-
-“The child is frightened to death,” whispered Mrs. Dunlop, smiling
-indulgently.
-
-[Illustration: “‘Mrs. Dunlop and Miss Campbell,’ announced the footman
-loudly.”]
-
-Lady Glencairn turned very pale, as she recognized the girl she had
-met in Robert’s room. She trembled and could scarcely regain her usual
-composure as Robert with a proud tenderness lighting up the depths of
-his black eyes, led the vision of youth and perfect beauty up to the
-hostess, to whom he introduced Mary. Then he turned to Lady Glencairn.
-“Lady Glencairn, allow me to introduce to you Miss Campbell. You remember
-Highland Mary, do you not?”
-
-She gave a slight start and her muscles tightened. The dairymaid
-sweetheart here in Edinburgh? she thought in amazement. What could it
-mean?
-
-“Quite well,” she answered, extending her cold jeweled hand. “I little
-dreamed I should ever meet you here like this, but the unexpected always
-happens.”
-
-“Dinna’ ye mind, my lady,” replied Mary simply, “ye said ye would be glad
-to see me whenever I came to town.” She raised those marvelous, innocent
-eyes of hers and smiled. Why did Lady Glencairn shrink from that frank
-and childlike openness of regard? Why did she for one brief moment feel
-herself to be vile and beneath contempt? She turned to where Mrs. Dunlop
-was conversing animatedly with their hostess, a flush akin to shame
-mantling her haughty face.
-
-“My dear Duchess,” she was saying apologetically, “pray pardon our late
-arrival, but I assure you ’tis not made for effect; our carriage broke
-down on the way.”
-
-Eppy started in amazement; had she overheard her spiteful remark?
-
-The Duchess graciously inclined her stately head. “So glad you got here
-at all, Mrs. Dunlop,” she said.
-
-Robert turned laughingly to the group of eager people importuning him for
-an introduction to the beautiful débutante. “Time forbids my introducing
-ye individually to Miss Campbell,” he said good-naturedly, “therefore
-let me present ye collectively to Highland Mary, my future wife, whom ye
-have all read of an’ loved in my poems.” A ripple of applause greeted the
-news, and congratulations poured in upon them, both hearty and sincere.
-
-Lady Glencairn staggered slightly, her face paling, but she quickly
-recovered and stood haughtily erect, fanning herself a little more
-rapidly, her full red lips tightened to a thin malicious line.
-
-Eppy rushed up to Mary effusively. “May I kiss you, dear?” she asked
-gushingly, “you are so sweet and pretty, just like I was a few years
-ago,” and she kissed the blushing girl with a resounding smack. “You’ll
-be married in Edinburgh, I presume?” she continued volubly. “I must
-attend the wedding.”
-
-“The marriage will be most private, madam,” observed Robert coldly.
-
-“Do you stay long in Edinburgh, Miss Campbell?” asked Lady Glencairn
-abruptly, forcing a smile to her lips.
-
-“No, not long, your ladyship,” replied Mary timidly. The cold metallic
-tones of the haughty lady frightened her strangely. “I—I ne’er thought
-I’d e’er come to Edinburgh,” she said, “but——” She hesitated and looked
-shyly at Robert, and then looked modestly down at the bit of cobweb lace
-which she held in her hand and which did duty as a ’kerchief.
-
-“But I found the barrier between us was down, that I was free as ever to
-wed the sweetheart of my boyhood days,” he explained with simple dignity.
-
-“Aye, but you make a bonnie couple,” exclaimed Mrs. Dunlop admiringly.
-“Well, I don’t blame anyone for falling in love with you, Robert,”
-she declared frankly. “You’re a great man,” and she nodded her head
-vigorously. “And a handsome one, too.”
-
-Robert blushed and shook his finger in warning at his old friend,
-although a tender smile played around his eyes and mouth. “Mrs. Dunlop,
-men are said to flatter women because they are weak,” he said, “but if
-it is so, poets must be weaker still, for the artful compliments I have
-received from your sex have absolutely turned my head, an’ really I begin
-to look on myself as a person of no small importance,” and he roguishly
-winked his eye at his old friend.
-
-“I never knew a man yet who was averse to flattery,” retorted the old
-lady good-naturedly.
-
-In the brief lull that followed the general laugh, the voice of Lord
-Glencairn could be heard in conversation with Mary, who was earnestly
-gazing up into his face, all traces of timidity gone, for she felt
-singularly at her ease in the presence of the kindly old nobleman. “And
-so you mean to take Robert away from us for good, eh?” he was saying in
-his earnest, serious manner.
-
-“Ye ken he is fair anxious to get back to Mossgiel now,” replied Mary,
-blushing deeply.
-
-Lady Glencairn snapped her fan together convulsively. “You mean to leave
-Edinburgh for good?” she asked in faint, incredulous accents, turning to
-Robert.
-
-The people crowded around and a storm of protest arose. “What madness!”
-“Leave Edinburgh for the country!” “They couldn’t hear of such a thing.”
-“He owed a duty to them as Scotland’s Bard!” etc., etc.
-
-Robert turned to them and spoke lightly, although with an undercurrent
-of seriousness. “I ken I am but wasting my time, my energies, my talents
-here, amid the sensual delight which your city affords,” he said. “I am
-not formed for it. I am but a rustic at heart and in manners, and the
-country is my only vantageground.”
-
-Mary stole softly to his side and snuggled her hand in his. “Isn’t it
-sweet to be in love?” cried Eppy cooingly, to Sir William, in a sibilant
-aside. “Think what we are missing.”
-
-“We’re too old for such nonsense,” replied Sir William gruffly.
-
-“Oh, indeed!” flashed Eppy. “Huh, a woman’s never too old to love,” with
-an indignant toss of her head.
-
-“No, nor to make a fool of herself,” retorted Sir William, smiling grimly.
-
-“But we cannot give you up just yet,” declared Lord Glencairn
-emphatically, placing his hand affectionately on Robert’s shoulder.
-
-“I am sure, Mr. Burns,” said Mr. Mackenzie gravely, “that your friends
-and admirers would not advise such a move for you, especially as you are
-now riding high on the top wave of success.”
-
-“I have nothing to gain by staying here, Mr. Mackenzie,” replied
-Robert, turning to him and speaking slowly and thoughtfully, “for, as
-you observe, I am now firmly established as a poet. I fear I am not
-proof against the subtle temptations which constantly beset my path and
-which push aside all thoughts of poesy; so as discretion is the better
-part of valor,” he continued, looking lovingly at the girl clinging so
-confidingly to his arm, “I shall flee from it all to my farm, my plow,
-and there amid those innocent, wholesome surroundings pass my remaining
-days in peace wi’ my wife by my side.”
-
-Mrs. Dunlop sighed dismally and shook her white curls in decided
-disapproval. “Laddie, you will be taking a false step,” she declared
-emphatically; “your place is here before the public.”
-
-“Indeed it is!” gurgled Eppy soulfully. “I protest Edinburgh cannot
-spare its poet yet. Your old farm can wait for you yet a while.”
-
-Mary looked at his thoughtful face with anxious eyes. She prayed
-fervently that nothing would dissuade him from his purpose. For it had
-been at her earnest solicitation that he finally decided to give up the
-enervating pleasures of the Capital, and to retire to the country where
-he would be free from the contaminating influences which now surrounded
-him.
-
-He smiled reassuringly into her perturbed little face. No power on earth
-could tempt him to break the promise he had so willingly made her on that
-first day of her arrival in the gay metropolis, he thought fondly. He
-turned to his questioners, who were eagerly awaiting his answer, his face
-shining with fixed determination.
-
-“My friends,” he said quietly, “I am only a farmer born, a son of the
-soil. My one ambition now is to have my own roof-tree near the Doon,
-where amidst the beauties of harmonious nature the Goddess Muse will
-commune with me as of old, for ’twas there the greatest inspiration
-of my soul came to me, and I know if all else fails me an independent
-livelihood awaits me at the plowtail.”
-
-“Tut, tut, the plowtail, indeed!” sniffed Mrs. Dunlop indignantly.
-
-Lady Glencairn, who had been feverishly toying with her fan, turned
-suddenly to Mary, a sneering smile on her crimson lips, “And have you no
-higher ambition for your future husband, Miss Campbell?” she demanded,
-her voice strangely harsh and metallic. “Are you content to have him bury
-his talents in the country?”
-
-“Yes! Oh, yes!” answered Mary shyly, a happy smile dimpling her sweet
-face. Then she added naïvely, “Ye ken, I’ll hae him all to myself then.”
-Robert laughed merrily at this naïve confession.
-
-“Young man,” observed Mr. Sterne pompously, “take my word for it, you’ll
-repent it if you leave Edinburgh now.”
-
-“Robbie, what will everybody think?” cried Mrs. Dunlop tearfully. “You
-are daft to run away while the world is literally at your feet.”
-
-“For how long?” he asked laconically.
-
-“Until you tire of its homage, my lad,” replied Lord Glencairn stanchly.
-
-Robert shook his head with a doubting smile. “’Twill not be I who will
-tire first, my lord,” he returned quietly. “I know myself and the world
-so well. You see the novelty of a poet in my obscure situation, my
-imperfection of awkward rusticity has raised a partial tide of public
-notice which has borne me to a height where I am absolutely certain
-my abilities are inadequate to support me.” He looked around a trifle
-defiantly at the rows of serious faces, a little feeling of resentment
-welling up in his heart.
-
-“You are over-modest, my dear Burns,” observed Mr. Mackenzie with
-kindling eye.
-
-Robert shook his head with somber dignity. “Too surely do I see the time
-when the same tide will leave me and recede as far below the mark of
-truth.” He turned and faced the people suddenly, his hands outstretched,
-his eyes filled with melancholy enthusiasm. Raising his voice he
-proceeded prophetically, “My friends, you will all bear me witness, that
-when the bubble of fame was at its height I stood unintoxicated, with the
-inebriating cup in my hand, looking forward to the hastening time when
-the blow of calumny should dash it to the ground with all the eagerness
-of revengeful triumph.”
-
-“That time will never come, Robert,” cried Mary softly, “for we will
-leave this life behind us in a very short while noo.”
-
-Lord Glencairn slapped him on the back with playful earnestness. “Come,
-come, my lad!” he cried gayly, “this will never do; you are in the dumps;
-throw it off, lad, and be merry. Do not heed the idle gossip of your
-unsuccessful rivals and the scandal mongers. Rest assured your popularity
-and fame will never die whether you remain here or retire to the country.”
-
-“Would I could think so,” sighed Robert gloomily.
-
-Eppy suddenly gave a nervous little giggle. “I vow I feel like crying,”
-she observed hysterically, “I wish everybody wouldn’t look so mournful.”
-
-Mr. Mackenzie turned quickly to his hostess. “My dear Duchess,” he said
-courteously, “you were going to show us your new painting in which Mr.
-Burns is the central figure of the group.”
-
-At once the silent group became animated. “Oh, yes, do!” cried Eppy, with
-a yearning look at Robert. “I wonder if I could pick you from among the
-others?” she coyly observed.
-
-“I trust, madam, that my phiz will be recognizable,” he replied dryly.
-
-The Duchess turned to her husband. “Take Miss Campbell and lead the way
-to the gallery,” she said quickly.
-
-“Is Mr. Burns to take me?” inquired Eppy of her hostess, but she had
-followed her husband, leaning on the arm of Mr. Mackenzie.
-
-Lady Glencairn smiled sweetly, “So sorry, Miss McKay, but Sir William has
-asked for that pleasure.”
-
-“I?” gasped Sir William, with a comical look of dismay.
-
-She looked at him maliciously. “Yes, did you not?” she raised her
-eyebrows inquiringly, an innocent smile hovering about her mouth.
-
-For a moment he sputtered, then with a grim smile he snarled
-sarcastically, “’Twill afford me great pleasure.”
-
-With a wildly beating heart Lady Glencairn took Robert’s arm and started
-for the stairs, followed by the others.
-
-Eppy sniffed suspiciously. “Oh, I understand now,” she observed
-spitefully with a meaning smile.
-
-“I thought you would, dear,” flashed her ladyship mockingly, over her
-shoulder.
-
-“Are you coming, madam?” demanded Sir William testily, offering his arm.
-
-With an indignant clack of her tongue, Eppy haughtily brushed past him
-and swiftly mounted the stairs, leaving the disgruntled Sir William to
-follow at his leisure.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-
-Among those that crowded around the carriage of Robert Burns earlier in
-the evening, listening to his inspiring oration, stood a girl of twenty
-or thereabouts, whose pale, haggard face and tearful eyes attracted
-some passing attention from those near her. She was dressed in an ankle
-length skirt of gray, over which a red shawl had been tastefully draped.
-A black velvet bodice confined the loose white gimpe at the waist, while
-from her left shoulder a brilliant plaid hung gracefully to the bottom
-of her dress. Around her neck row upon row of different colored beads
-hung loosely to her waist. Upon the blue-black hair which fell around
-her face in waving masses, a wreath of white and pink heather was twined
-becomingly. Her unusual attire attracted much attention.
-
-“She must be a gypsy,” they told each other wonderingly. Finally, after
-many conjectures, someone in the crowd volunteered the information that
-she was a street singer who had been seen singing through the streets
-of the town for a day or so. Their curiosity appeased, they turned to
-their idol once more. Every now and then a convulsive sob shook the young
-girl’s slender, graceful figure. Like one who hungered for food and
-drink she watched the speaker, her heart in her eyes, her hands clasped
-tightly upon her breast. When the eager throng unhitched the horses from
-the open carriage she had breathlessly watched every movement, and when
-they, with wild bursts of applause and good-natured laughter, sped away
-up Princes Street, pulling the carriage behind them, she had swiftly
-followed, the center of a noisy gang of street urchins and idle brawlers.
-
-With a mighty cheer, which brought the watchmen running to the spot
-pell-mell, they finally stopped at Athol Castle and quickly lined
-themselves on each side of the striped awning avenue, from the curbing to
-the door, to watch the great man pass within.
-
-The gypsy frantically elbowed her way through the pompous coachmen and
-good-natured cabbies who had pressed forward to witness the new arrival,
-and reached the inner edge of the crowd. At that moment Robert stepped
-from his carriage and walked quickly up the avenue. With a little cry of
-joy she stretched out her hands to arrest his attention, but he passed
-inside without having once caught a glimpse of this strange follower.
-
-A derisive laugh went up from those who had curiously watched the
-peculiar actions of the gypsy. At the sound she dropped her arms
-hurriedly, the blood rushing to her pale cheeks. With one quick, startled
-glance at the mocking faces beside her, she turned quickly and threaded
-her way through the line of splendid equipages, with their prancing
-horses, till she reached a secluded part of the street, where she stopped
-and looked back at the brilliantly lighted castle, tears of bitter
-disappointment and despair slowly trickling down her wan cheeks. As she
-stood there in the bright moonlight, a prey to her bitter thoughts, a
-handsome equipage, drawn by a prancing pair of steeds, attracted her
-listless attention. As it slowly drove past the wretched girl a sweet
-young face crowned with golden hair appeared in the open window, followed
-by a white arm. Her little hand was noticeably bare of jewels. With a
-sweet word of pity the girl tossed a silver piece at the feet of her
-unfortunate sister. The gypsy indifferently watched the carriage out of
-sight. Then, after a moment’s hesitation, she stooped and picked up the
-coin, and without looking at it put it carelessly in her pocket, a flush
-of shame and mortification mantling her dark cheek. For a while she stood
-in moody silence, listening to the strains of music which came faintly
-to her from the castle. Suddenly she lifted her face to the heavens,
-her arms upraised, her lips moving in some prayer or incantation. For a
-moment she stood thus, then slowly her arms dropped to her side. There
-was a new calm look of determination in her face as she quickly traced
-her steps back to where the crowds still lingered about the closed doors
-of Athol Castle. She stood on the outskirts of the crowd unseen in the
-shadow, her restless eyes searching here and there, peering into the
-open windows, up and down the high stone wall which bordered the huge
-garden, then back again, finally resting upon the closed portals with
-a look of keen disappointment shining in their depths. What she sought
-was evidently not there. She stamped her foot in impotent despair, a
-muttered imprecation on her lips; she would search again. Gradually she
-made her way back unnoticed by the crowd, who were intent on listening
-to the music which floated out bewitchingly on the still air, till she
-reached the wall where it joined the corner of the castle. Motionless she
-stood under its shadow, her heart beating loudly as some idler drew near
-her place of concealment. Suddenly a form loomed up before her. With a
-startled cry she pressed close against the ivied wall in sudden terror.
-
-“She come this way,” a voice cried eagerly.
-
-“Aye, Sandy, she’s hidin’ among the ivy,” said another.
-
-She heard them beating noisily about the thick vines which hung in
-wild profusion over the walls, her heart in her mouth. Frantically
-she tore the vines apart until she reached the bare wall behind. Then
-with breathless eagerness she pulled them together again, effectually
-concealing her presence from her pursuers. She pressed closer and closer
-against the cold stones, shivering apprehensively as they approached
-her hiding place. Suddenly she felt her support give way with a dull,
-creaking noise, and before she could recover her equilibrium, she found
-herself in a heap on the ground. She looked up in time to see the door
-through which she had fallen swing quickly into place and realized that
-unwittingly she had found an old and evidently unused entrance through
-the wall. Quickly rising to her feet she looked about her, then she gave
-a little cry of joy as she caught sight of the splashing fountains in
-the moonlight, for she knew she was inside the gardens belonging to the
-Duke of Athol. Eagerly she gazed about her at the leafy shrubberies, the
-massive oaks and beeches, the rose garden with its wealth of scented
-flowers. And for a brief moment she gave herself up to the painful
-reveries the familiar sights recalled to memory, while the tears of
-self-pity and heart-longing welled up in her gloomy eyes and flowed
-unrestrainedly down her cheeks. Presently, with a mirthless laugh of
-impatience, she dashed the tears angrily away and walked quickly up the
-grassy terrace toward the brilliantly lighted castle. Through the large
-window which looked over the low balcony she watched the incessant stream
-of people coming and going, while others walked aimlessly about the
-rooms or chatted in groups. For some time she crouched beside the low
-silver spruce, her eyes fixed upon the moving scenes within. Then with a
-start she recognized the golden-haired young lady who had given her the
-silver piece, surrounded by a group of cavaliers. She saw, too, with a
-pang of jealousy, the tenderness with which the poet greeted her and led
-her up to the haughty lady in purple. For some time she watched them in
-melancholy silence, a prey to conflicting emotions. By and by a group of
-ladies drifted out on the balcony. They were discussing the golden-haired
-girl, who had been introduced into their midst that evening, and the
-announcement of her marriage to the poet, Robert Burns. The gypsy, as
-she heard those words, uttered a smothered cry of amazement and horror,
-then sank half fainting on the grassy lawn, moaning like one stricken
-unto death. How long she lay there with senses dulled by pain she never
-knew. Presently, bitter recollection returned and with it an agony of
-fear that blanched her lips and made her limbs to quake, while grief and
-despair, like two grim sentinels, stood eager watch beside her. Slowly
-she staggered to her feet and turned her weary eyes once more upon the
-balcony. There was no one there. Listlessly she watched the gay figures
-darting past the windows. Suddenly her muscles tightened like a hound’s
-on the scent. The golden-haired girl suddenly glided out on the balcony,
-a glorious vision of loveliness. Pensively she leaned over the railing
-watching the swans, which looked ghostly in the moonlight, swimming
-majestically round and round the small pond of water into which the
-spraying fountain was playing.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-
-Mary soon grew weary of looking at the many paintings which lined the
-walls of the galleries; she wished they would go back to the pretty rooms
-downstairs, where the music was playing and the young folks were dancing.
-She had enjoyed that. She tried to force a smile of interest to her lips
-as the old Duke described the subjects on the canvases before them.
-He soon perceived her weariness, however, and calling to Mrs. Dunlop,
-who was being bored beyond measure, as she told her friends wearily,
-he requested her to show Miss Campbell the gardens by moonlight, to
-which she gladly assented. Quickly they descended the broad staircase,
-and slowly wended their way across the large drawing-room. Mrs. Dunlop
-took her young charge to the large window and waved her fat hand toward
-the magnificent view which lay stretched before them. “Isn’t it grand,
-Mary?” she observed lightly. It was an old story to her. Spying an old
-friend across the room, she excused herself to Mary and told her to enjoy
-herself, then smilingly left her to her own devices. After admiring the
-somber beauty of Edinburgh Castle, Mary perceived the flowing fountain
-which splashed tunefully below her in the garden. She stepped out on the
-balcony, a smile of pleasure lighting up her sweet face. For a while she
-stood listening to the rhythmic fall of the water, blissfully unconscious
-of the presence of the unseen watcher. Suddenly before her startled
-vision there sprang the form of the gypsy. With a cry of alarm Mary
-stepped back and was about to enter the room, when a voice calling her by
-name arrested her wondering attention.
-
-“Wait, Mary Campbell!” hissed the voice of the gypsy.
-
-Mary turned and looked into the white face gazing up at her so
-defiantly, and she recognized the girl to whom she had tossed the money.
-Suddenly she gave a gasp of astonishment. “Jean Armour!” she exclaimed
-incredulously.
-
-“Aye, Jean Armour,” repeated the gypsy. “Come down to me; I must have a
-word with you alone,” she whispered sibilantly.
-
-Mary gave a quick look around. Mrs. Dunlop was still deep in her gossip,
-and Robert was nowhere to be seen. She walked to the end of the balcony
-and found the steps. Quickly she reached the bottom, and going to Jean
-took her two hands in hers and shook them warmly. She was so glad to see
-anyone from Mossgiel, friend or foe.
-
-Jean regarded her advance with sullen suspicion. “Two years ago I was an
-invited guest here at Athol Castle,” she sneered bitterly, “while you
-were a barefooted dairymaid in Mossgiel. Now look at us. You are the
-lady and I am an outcast, singing on the streets for my daily bread.”
-
-Mary looked at her in amazement. “But what has happened?” she asked
-wonderingly.
-
-“My father has turned me into the street,” answered Jean dully.
-
-“Had ye done wrong?” inquired Mary timidly.
-
-Jean laughed mirthlessly. “Wrong?” she repeated, “aye, if refusing to
-marry an old man I detested be wrong.”
-
-“An’ your father turned ye out for that?”
-
-“For that,” she replied stonily, “and because I refused to give up Robert
-Burns.”
-
-“But—but ye gave him up long ago, Jean, of your own free will,” faltered
-Mary, an awful fear clutching at her heart. “An’ your father wrote
-Robert,” she continued breathlessly, “that ye willingly, gladly renounced
-all claims on him, that ye even hated his name, an’ that ye hoped never
-to see or hear o’ him again.”
-
-A look of hatred spread over the face of the other. “My father lied
-when he wrote that,” she cried with bitter intensity, “for I told him
-I would never renounce my marriage to Robert, irregular though it was,
-and I never will. He is my husband,” and she glared defiantly at the
-shrinking girl, who was looking at her with searching, frightened eyes.
-For a moment the poor child stood there like a lifeless figure as the
-words stamped themselves one by one on her bewildered brain and sent it
-reeling into darkness and vacancy. She felt sick and dizzy. There was
-a rushing sound in her ears, the garden swung round dizzily before her
-eyes, yet she stood still, speaking no word, although a quiver of agony
-passed over her pallid face.
-
-“Oh, Robert, my love, have I lost ye again?” she thought dully. “I knew
-it was only a dream, too sweet to last.” There was a choking sensation
-in her throat, but she did not weep. As in a horrid dream she heard
-the sharp metallic voice hissing in her ear, “He is my husband, Mary
-Campbell. You must give him up to me.” She roused herself out of the
-lethargy into which she had fallen, and unclasping her hands, she wearily
-pushed back her curls from her brow and fixed her large pathetic eyes on
-Jean, who instinctively shrank back before the speechless despair of that
-helpless gaze. “But ye have no claim on Robbie noo, Jean,” she faltered
-slowly, “since your irregular marriage was publicly dissolved.” She
-paused and her pale lips quivered. “Why have ye come here noo to disturb
-him?” she asked with infinite pathos. “He is happy, so happy noo. Dinna
-destroy that happiness; go awa’; leave him to me. Ye took him from me
-once; dinna separate us again.” Her voice broke and a hard sob choked
-her utterance. A great pity welled up in Jean’s heart for the stricken
-child, but she steeled herself against it and remained sullenly quiet.
-Presently Mary spoke again. “I hae nothing in this world, Jean, and I
-love him so,” she said with dreamy wistfulness, “better than life itsel’.
-We have loved each ither for years, an’ that love has grown stronger an’
-stronger as each year passed by, till noo it’s part o’ my very being.”
-Her voice rose to passionate pleading. “Oh, what is your weak fancy
-compared to such a love, Jean Armour?” she asked piteously. “Oh, I tell
-you I canna give him up to you again.” She sank down convulsively on
-the high-backed bench under the balcony, her form quivering with low
-heart-breaking sobs. Tears of sympathy slowly filled Jean’s eyes as she
-watched the grief-stricken girl before her, but with an angry frown she
-hardened her heart and forced herself to think of her own wrongs and
-pitiable condition.
-
-“You must give him up!” she answered harshly, “and to-night.” She paused
-a moment to watch the brilliant crowd within the drawing-room, passing
-and repassing each other with slow, stately bearing as they walked with
-ease and grace through the dignified measures of the minuet. By and by
-she turned to the drooping form and spoke again. “My God, girl, don’t you
-suppose I too love him!” she exclaimed passionately. “Why have I tramped
-mile after mile, half starving, subjected to all kinds of insults,
-struggling to reach here to see him, if it were not for that love?”
-
-Mary slowly raised her head and looked at her in reproachful sadness.
-“Your love has only brought him, an’ all of us, sorrow and disgrace,” she
-said with pathetic simplicity. “He never loved ye, Jean Armour, ye ken
-that weel.”
-
-Jean winced at the blunt truth, and a quiver of anger passed over her
-defiant face. “I know that only too well,” she replied bitterly. Then
-she gave a little mocking laugh, which nevertheless held a suggestion of
-tears. “You may have his heart, Mary Campbell,” she continued, “but I am
-what you can never be, his wife and the mother of his bairns.”
-
-“The bairns,” repeated Mary blankly, “are they alive, Jean?”
-
-“Yes, they are alive, thank God!” murmured Jean softly, “that is why I am
-here, Mary, that is why I must demand my rights, for my bairns’ sake.”
-Then she continued quickly, feverishly, “Had it not been for them I would
-have done my father’s bidding, would have forgotten Robert, renounced him
-utterly, and married the man my father had chosen for me, but I wanted my
-little ones to have the protection of a father’s name, so I stubbornly
-refused his commands. After my father had driven me from his door with
-curses on his lips, I discovered too late that Robert had tried again
-and again to see me, had even begged my father to allow him to legalize
-our marriage, and that his overtures were met with scorn and abuse. Then
-I decided to come to Edinburgh myself to tell Robert the truth and to
-claim my rights.” She paused defiantly.
-
-Lady Glencairn upon her return to the drawing-room had missed Mary,
-and upon learning from Mrs. Dunlop that she was upon the balcony, she
-sauntered slowly in that direction. As she stepped through the window she
-heard the low murmur of voices, and looking down perceived with amazement
-the young girl seated below her in company with a fantastically-dressed
-gypsy. Suddenly, with a start, she recognized the voice of Jean Armour.
-Hastily concealing herself behind a large marble pillar she listened in
-growing wonder, her face becoming hard and repellent, to the direful
-confession of her god-daughter.
-
-“I arrived in Edinburgh after a month of hardships,” continued Jean with
-suppressed excitement, “and to-night I saw him in all his prosperity
-entering the castle like a king, looking so handsome, so contented, and
-so very happy.”
-
-“Yes, he is happy noo,” replied Mary softly. “Happier than he’ll e’er be
-on earth again, perhaps,” and she closed her eyes wearily.
-
-For a moment there was silence, broken only by the monotonous hum of
-voices and the faint twanging of the harp from within the drawing-room.
-Presently Mary opened her eyes and spoke again.
-
-“Ye maunna blame Robert for anything at a’, Jean,” she said loyally. “He
-thought the bairns were dead, an’ he believed your father’s words, but
-noo, when he kens a’, he will do his duty nobly for his bairns’ sake.”
-She smiled bravely into the eager face of the other. “Ye have the right
-to him, Jean, I see that noo,” she continued sadly, “an’—an’ forgive my
-rude and unkind words to ye just noo,” and gently she held out her little
-hand.
-
-Jean took it tenderly in her own. “What will you do now, where will you
-go?” she asked with a feeling of remorse.
-
-“I shall go back to Colonel Montgomery’s,” replied Mary, in a sad,
-spiritless voice, from which all the life seemed to have fled, “where I
-can see my friends sometimes. Mistress Burns loves me, an’ I—I may see
-Robbie, if only from the window as he passes. It willna harm anyone.”
-She looked at Jean in a pleading, timid manner, while her mouth quivered
-pathetically, but she forced a wan smile to her pale lips and then slowly
-turned and walked toward the stairway. As she mounted the bottom step
-Jean ran quickly to her side and clasped her hand impulsively.
-
-“Mary, I’m so sorry for you,” she said pityingly, “but I’m doing it for
-my bairns’ sake, ye ken that.”
-
-“I understand, Jean,” answered Mary simply, “I dinna blame ye.” She
-leaned back against the marble balustrade. “But, oh, it’s hard, bitter
-hard,” she murmured brokenly; “if I could only die here and noo.” She
-stretched out her hands with a sort of wild appeal. “Oh, Robbie, my
-darlin’,” she exclaimed in a sobbing whisper, “how can I tell ye, how can
-I break your heart? I thought ye had drunk your cup o’ misery empty, but
-the dregs are yet to be drained.”
-
-The sympathetic tears rolled down Jean’s face. “Will you tell him I’m
-here, Mary, and that I must see him at once?” she asked pleadingly. Mary
-slowly bowed her head in assent. “Oh, how I dread to meet him,” continued
-Jean in a frightened whisper, “to have him look at me with stern and
-angry eyes; to know that he longs to be free, and that he wishes me dead,
-perhaps.” She covered her face with her hands and shivered apprehensively.
-
-“Ye needna fear, Jean,” replied Mary, with reproachful pride. “Robert
-Burns is a mon of honor; ye should know that weel. I’ll go noo an’ tell
-him ye are here.” For a moment she swayed as if about to fall, but she
-recovered herself in an instant and slowly mounted the few remaining
-steps to the balcony. As she reached the top she pressed her hand against
-her heart as if that action would still its rapid beating. “Heaven give
-me the strength to tell him,” she breathed, and, with a little prayer
-on her lips, she slowly entered the drawing-room, where she found Mrs.
-Dunlop anxiously looking for her.
-
-Jean watched her for a few moments, then, with a sigh of nervous dread,
-she turned and paced restlessly up and down within the deep shadows
-beneath the overhanging trees. She had only taken one turn when she felt
-herself seized by the arm and drawn into the bright moonlight. Smothering
-the startled cry of alarm which rose to her lips she turned and faced her
-assailant. “Lady Glencairn!” she gasped, starting back in astonishment.
-
-“So, Jean Armour,” hissed her ladyship, “’tis you whose name has been
-coupled so disgracefully with that of Robert Burns.”
-
-Jean dropped her head quickly, flushing crimson before the scornful light
-in the other’s eyes, which flashed like stars in the pale moonlight that
-came streaming down upon them. “Then you have heard?” she faltered, after
-a little frightened pause.
-
-“Yes, I have heard everything,” her ladyship returned witheringly, “and
-my suspicions of you of two years ago have turned out to be right.”
-
-“Please say no more now, Lady Glencairn,” retorted Jean sullenly. “Let
-me go.” She tried to pass, but Lady Glencairn put a restraining hand
-upon her shoulder. “I will say no more, you foolish girl,” she replied
-angrily. “Why do you insist upon thrusting yourself upon Robert Burns,
-to-night? He utterly detests your memory. He has done with you forever.”
-
-Jean looked at her defiantly. “I am his wife. He must acknowledge me,”
-she declared firmly.
-
-Lady Glencairn laughed scornfully. “You foolish child, do you think
-he will ever forgive you for stepping in between him and Mary Campbell
-again?” she asked with studied indifference. “No, he would hate you; you
-know his erratic temper, my dear Jean; you would but ruin your chance for
-a reconciliation forever, if he sees you now, when his heart is torn by
-grief and sorrow at losing for the second time the one lass who is all
-the world to him.” She paused and watched narrowly the look of dread and
-doubt creep slowly over the downcast face before her.
-
-By and by Jean looked up, her eyes burning with unshed tears and shining
-feverishly. “What shall I do then, Lady Glencairn?” she asked helplessly,
-“where shall I go?”
-
-Lady Glencairn did not answer for a few moments. She was thinking with a
-thrill of joy that Jean’s coming would separate the two lovers forever.
-“More than likely Robert would now remain in Edinburgh,” she mused with
-wildly beating heart. “But, on the other hand, if he stayed he would
-quixotically marry Jean Armour, and publicly right her in the eyes of the
-world,” she thought jealously, “and then——” She broke off and stared at
-the girl intently. “If she were out of the way,” she thought maliciously,
-“might not his fickle fancy be caught in the rebound?” These thoughts
-flowed quickly through her brain, and her eyes half shut wickedly, her
-gleaming white bosom heaving from her hurried breathing, as she decided
-on her course. “You must leave here at once,” she said softly, taking
-Jean’s hand with an affectation of tenderness.
-
-“I cannot return to my father,” she replied dully. “I have nowhere to go
-now.”
-
-“Go to an inn for to-night,” said her ladyship hurriedly, “and I’ll come
-to you in the morning and advise you as to your future movements, and
-help you.”
-
-“But I must see Robert first.”
-
-Lady Glencairn frowned impatiently. “Foolish girl, take my advice and
-wait until to-morrow. You will lose nothing by it, for I will myself
-plead with Robert in your behalf.”
-
-Jean did not answer. She stood mute and undecided.
-
-“Surely, my dear Jean,” continued Lady Glencairn mockingly, “you don’t
-expect him to proclaim you as his dearly beloved wife before them all, do
-you?” She waved her hand carelessly toward the drawing-room.
-
-Jean flushed and looked away. “No, I didn’t come for that,” she muttered
-slowly.
-
-“Then why not do as I advise? I know that when the keen edge of his grief
-has worn off he will willingly take you to his heart and by a church
-marriage make you his lawful wife,” and she threw her warm arm over the
-shoulders of the yielding girl.
-
-Jean gave a nervous little laugh. “I vow, Lady Glencairn, I have not
-the courage to meet him now,” she said. “I—I thank you gratefully for
-your kindness. I—I know ’tis better to wait——” She paused and sighed
-dejectedly. “You’ll find me at the Star and Garter Inn in King’s Court,”
-she said quickly after a moment’s indecision. Then she drew her scarf
-hurriedly about her shoulders as if anxious to get away.
-
-At that instant a laughing group of people came out on the balcony. Lady
-Glencairn hastily drew her back in the shadows. “Go, go quickly!” she
-whispered, “before you are seen.” With a panting word of thanks Jean
-glided through the bushes, and, skirting the patches of light, she soon
-reached the secret door through which she had so unceremoniously entered
-and passed out to the street now deserted, save for the motionless
-coachmen asleep on their boxes. Lady Glencairn breathed a sigh of relief
-as she watched Jean fade out of sight, swallowed up in the darkness.
-“Both out of the way now,” she murmured, a triumphant smile on her full
-crimson lips. She walked quickly toward the balcony. “What a contemptible
-creature I have become,” she thought with careless unconcern. “And all
-for love of a low-born peasant,” and she laughed derisively, as she
-mounted the steps. She slowly entered the drawing-room, feeling strangely
-nervous and guilty, to find a great many people going to supper. Robert
-had grown tired of the heat and glare and noise, and seeing Mary sitting
-so weary and wan looking, surrounded by a crowd of admirers who worshiped
-at the shrine of youth and beauty, he crossed quickly and whispered his
-wishes to her. She rose gladly and both advanced to bid their hostess
-farewell.
-
-“Sorry you cannot remain longer,” said the Duchess with genuine
-cordiality. “You must bring Miss Campbell some afternoon to see me, Mr.
-Burns, when I am not receiving the public,” and with a pleasant smile she
-bade them good-night. Slowly they made their way through the crowd and
-met Lady Glencairn coming swiftly toward them.
-
-As her eyes rested upon his happy countenance she knew that he was
-still in ignorance of Jean’s arrival in Edinburgh. “Won’t you have some
-supper?” she inquired brightly. “Don’t go yet.”
-
-But Robert quietly insisted, as he perceived Mary’s increasing languor
-and pallor. So Lady Glencairn, with anger and disappointment gnawing at
-her heart, for she had hoped to show him the beauties of the garden by
-moonlight before he went, seeing that remonstrances were of no avail,
-bade them both an effusive good-night. “Don’t forget my garden party
-to-morrow,” she said with a patronizing smile, touching Mary’s cold hand
-lightly. “I shall expect you,” and she turned to greet her husband, who
-was approaching with Mr. Mackenzie.
-
-“Thank ye, your ladyship,” answered Mary simply, making a little
-courtesy.
-
-“Let me escort you to the carriage, Miss Campbell,” said Lord Glencairn,
-at once offering her his arm.
-
-“And allow me to follow,” added Mr. Mackenzie, slipping his arm through
-Robert’s, to whom he whispered, “How dare you, sir, how dare you be such
-a provokingly happy man in this miserable old world?” Robert laughed, and
-they all walked slowly down to the carriage, conversing gayly on their
-way.
-
-Suddenly Mary stopped with a little exclamation of dismay. “We’ve
-forgotten Mrs. Dunlop,” she said contritely.
-
-With a laugh Lord Glencairn dispatched a footman to find her, and the
-good lady soon appeared, flushed and panting from her hurried departure.
-With a last handshake all around Robert sprang in beside them and within
-a couple of minutes the carriage was out of sight.
-
-“Ye were the queen of the evening, Mary, just as I told ye ye’d be,” said
-Robert triumphantly. “Have ye enjoyed yoursel’?”
-
-“Ay, for a whiley,” answered Mary listlessly, leaning back against the
-heavy padding of the seat, with eyes heavy and sad. She had had no
-opportunity as yet to tell Robert the dread news, and her heart was
-filled with misgivings as she thought of Jean waiting patiently in the
-garden for him to come to her. She started up suddenly, resolved to tell
-him, but the sight of his happy face, and the presence of Mrs. Dunlop,
-cooled her courage, and she leaned back again silent and miserable.
-If she didn’t tell him to-night what would Jean do? With her usual
-unselfishness she gave no thought to self. She was miserably unhappy, but
-she would not allow herself to think of her own sufferings. Her whole
-thought was of him and the darkness into which he would soon be plunged,
-and of Jean and her bairns, Robert’s bairns. She sighed quiveringly, and
-a little pang of jealousy shot through her heart like a breath of fire,
-but it soon passed away and left only a dull ache that would always be
-there now, she thought wearily, as they rolled along toward home. She
-clasped her hands together feverishly. “Should she whisper to him now,
-tell him all and bid him drive back to Jean?” she asked herself in an
-agony of indecision. At that moment the carriage stopped at the door
-of Mrs. Dunlop’s mansion. It was too late now. She gave a little sigh
-of relief, though her heart was filled with grief and anxiety. Robert
-escorted her to the door, with loving pride in her daintiness, in her
-sweet air of refinement. She looked very frail and spirituelle, as she
-turned to him quietly and bade him good-night.
-
-“Has something gone wrong, Mary?” he inquired solicitously, noticing with
-alarm her wan face, her languid air of weariness.
-
-She shook her head slowly, not daring to trust her voice. Mrs. Dunlop
-put her arm about her fondly.
-
-“The lassie is tired, Robert,” she said in her motherly way, “and no
-wonder. She’ll be as bright as a lark in the morning.” Bidding them both
-a tender good-night, he turned and ran down the steps, jumped into the
-carriage, and drove off toward his chambers, whistling softly to himself
-the tune of “Mary of Argyle.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
-The next day a grand garden party was given at Glencairn Hall. All
-Edinburgh was invited, and they came eagerly to see the great poet, who
-was on the eve of leaving the social world to retire to his farm in
-Ayrshire, and to see Highland Mary, the dainty, flower-like sweetheart of
-their idol. The grounds looked very bright and gay. Refreshment booths
-of red and white canvas were dotted here and there on the smooth velvet
-lawns. Bright flags of all nations waved from different parts of the
-gardens—signals of putting, archery, and dancing—and the seductive music
-of the Queen’s theater orchestra rose up and joined the songs of birds
-and the tinkle of the fountains in full play. Girls in light summer
-costumes were grouped picturesquely beneath the stately oaks and beeches.
-Gay laughter echoed from the leafy shrubberies, and stray couples were
-seen sauntering carelessly through the rose gardens, too much absorbed in
-each other to notice what was going on around them.
-
-Presently out of the same rose garden a man walked hurriedly, followed
-by a woman, who quickly overtook him, to his perceptible annoyance. They
-were Sir William Creech and Eppy McKay. Eppy looked exceedingly ugly in
-the full glare of the bright sun. She was dressed in a brilliant plaid
-gown, the style of which seemed to accentuate her angularity; and a huge
-Gainsborough hat was perched jauntily upon her towering court wig. Her
-small green eyes looked coquettishly at her irate companion. He stopped
-and glared at her fiercely.
-
-“But I desire to take a smoke,” he said wrathfully.
-
-“I don’t object to smoke, Sir William,” she tittered coyly.
-
-He looked about him wildly as if seeking some means of escape from his
-admirer. “But I wish to be alone,” he cried almost pleadingly.
-
-She opened her eyes and regarded him reproachfully. “Oh, you are joking,
-Sir William, but you cannot scare me away.”
-
-With a groan of despair he continued his walk, hoping to escape from his
-persistent admirer. “Great heavens! I’ll go daft yet,” he muttered as he
-perceived her close at his elbow. For a few minutes he puffed furiously
-at his pipe, casting angry glances from time to time at his unwelcome
-companion, who trotted along so contentedly at his side. Finally Sir
-William concluded that he could not elude her attentions for the time
-being, so decided to make the best of the infliction. “Do I go too fast
-for you?” he asked maliciously, as he heard her puffing away vigorously
-beside him.
-
-“No, indeed,” she replied with a little breathless giggle. “You couldn’t
-go too fast for me, for I am as light and quick on my feet as ever I was.
-In faith, why shouldn’t I be?” she continued gayly. “I am only 32. You
-see I am so much younger than you.”
-
-He snorted angrily. “Well, you don’t look it,” he retorted. She stopped
-short and looked at him in amazed indignation.
-
-“What?” she quavered, a little out of breath, “I don’t look younger than
-you?”
-
-At the sign of approaching tears, Sir William frowned impatiently. “I
-mean you don’t look—32,” he said diplomatically.
-
-She simpered and thanked him for the compliment.
-
-He smiled grimly as he said to himself, “She’s over 60 if she’s a day.”
-
-“They all tell me I don’t look my age,” she said gushingly. “It’s my
-artistic soul that keeps me so young and fresh-looking.” They sat down
-on a bench, glad of the opportunity to cool themselves after their
-strenuous walk. “Do you know,” she said dreamily, fanning herself, “I am
-very different from most artistic people.” He looked at her. “Oh my, yes,
-indeed!” she affirmed convincingly. “I don’t live in the clouds, I am of
-the earth earthy,” and she gave him another languishing look.
-
-“Ye don’t tell me,” he retorted mockingly.
-
-“But I love art,” sighed Eppy ecstatically. “When I was young,” she went
-on reminiscently, “I mean when I was younger,” she corrected herself with
-a startled look at her silent companion, “I came near having a painting
-from my own hand hung in the National Gallery.”
-
-“You are a clever woman,” he remarked sarcastically.
-
-“It was this way,” she explained volubly. “I had painted a lovely marine.
-I do marines much better than anything else,” with a self-conscious
-smirk, “and upon showing it to Mr. William Nichol, a dear man, but one
-who drinks to excess, he promised to mention it to the Lord Mayor. Well,
-it made me exceedingly nervous, I vow. However, I bought a most lovely
-frame for it, Nile green in color, with sweet red plush ends.” She
-cleared her throat affectedly and continued with evident delight. “I do
-like things to match,” she explained, “and the green was the exact shade
-of the water. It was simply exquisite.” She clasped her hands together
-and rolled her eyes heavenward. “And the red ends exactly matched the
-cow, which was a lovely shade of——”
-
-“Cow?” echoed Sir William in amazement. “Did I hear you say cow?”
-
-Eppy looked at him pettishly. She didn’t like to be so violently
-interrupted. “Certainly a cow,” she returned frigidly. “Is there anything
-strange in a cow?” and she drew herself up with an injured air.
-
-“No, there’s nothing strange in a cow when it is by itself,” replied Sir
-William dryly, “but in a marine, well, it is a little hard on the cow.”
-
-“You don’t know what you are saying, Sir William,” flashed Eppy
-indignantly. “Please don’t interrupt me again. The cow I have reference
-to was in one corner drinking. I heard Lady Nancy Gordon telling Mrs.
-McLehose that the cow looked as if it were trying to drink the ocean dry;
-the idea!” and she clucked her tongue against her teeth in contemptuous
-scorn. “She’s a cat,” she continued spitefully; “I never could bear her.
-She was uncommon jealous of me, yes, indeed, but that’s another matter.”
-
-Sir William turned crimson, and seemed about to choke, as he tried to
-smother his laughter. “You were telling me about your marine,” he finally
-stuttered.
-
-“Don’t hurry me, Sir William,” said Eppy coquettishly. “Well, I took it
-to Lord Mundobbo. You know whom I mean; at that time he had something to
-do with the National Gallery; Mr. Nichol didn’t inform me as to his exact
-connection with it.” She paused and gazed soulfully into space. “Shall
-I ever forget the day? The sun was high in the heavens—but there,” she
-broke off with a deprecating smile. “I really must restrain my poetic
-impulse. But as I was saying,” she rambled on quickly, “the sky was
-overcast and threatening snow——”
-
-“I thought the sun was shining, Miss McKay,” interrupted Sir William
-gruffly.
-
-She was beginning to get on his nerves again. “I am a little mixed in
-my metaphors,” apologized Eppy condescendingly, “but you flustrate me
-so, Sir William,” and she tapped him playfully with her fan. “Well, I
-felt that victory was mine. I took off the paper—it was pink, tied with
-a yellow string—and laid it before him.” She paused impressively, then
-she continued in an elocutionary tone of voice. “He gazed at it long and
-silently. He was simply speechless. I knew he’d be. I said to him, ‘Lord
-Mundobbo, as much as it grieves me to part with my—ahem—masterpiece,
-for the sake of art I will permit you to add it to the collection
-of paintings in the National Gallery.’ Said he, ‘Miss McKay, really
-I appreciate this honor you do me and the National Gallery. It is a
-masterpiece of its kind, but I cannot accept it.’”
-
-“The brute!” exclaimed Sir William in mock anger. “Why not?”
-
-“He said if I would change the ocean into a fresh water pond and give the
-cow a chance, he might consider it,” and Eppy tearfully regarded her now
-laughing companion with an aggrieved air.
-
-“Did ye do it?” inquired Sir William, rising to his feet.
-
-“Did I do it!” repeated Eppy with horror expressed in every tone of
-her voice, every feature of her pointed face. “No, sir,” she replied
-emphatically. “Never would I willingly spoil a work of art. That was
-my first and only. I couldn’t improve on it. But my artistic soul was
-smothered, and now another, a poetic spirit has taken its place.” She
-smiled dreamily, a sigh of content escaping her parted lips.
-
-“A case of the survival of the fittest, eh?” he retorted brusquely.
-
-For a moment they walked on in silence, Sir William wondering how to
-get rid of the incubus, and Eppy happy over the impression she fondly
-imagined she had made upon Sir William. Just then a bend in the avenue
-brought them in full view of the broad terrace in front of the hall,
-where Robert’s handsome figure was outlined clearly against the dazzling
-blue of the sky. Several people were grouped near him. He seemed to be
-in animated conversation with some of them, and his face was radiant
-with smiles. With a cry of delight, Eppy hurried forward to greet him,
-forgetting Sir William utterly, much to his amazement. That she, or
-anyone, would dare leave him so unceremoniously to join Robert Burns
-angered him beyond measure. He followed her slowly at some little
-distance, with no very pleasant expression on his stern features.
-
-Later in the afternoon when it was close to sunset, and all other
-amusements had given way to the delight of dancing Sir Roger de Coverly
-on the springy green turf to the silvery music of the orchestra, Mary
-and Mrs. Dunlop put in their appearance. Mary was looking very beautiful
-in a clinging, old-fashioned white crepe de chene, another old relic of
-Mrs. Dunlop’s dead and gone slim youth. While they danced, she reclined
-languidly in a low chair, her sad eyes fixed mournfully upon Robert’s
-glowing face as he lay stretched in lazy length at her feet. The day had
-passed and still she had had no opportunity to tell him the dire news,
-for she had not seen him since the night before.
-
-While the dancing was in progress a liveried page walked noiselessly over
-the turf and stopping beside the recumbent figure of the poet, quietly
-handed him a note. He leisurely opened it and read it at a glance. “Say
-I’ll be right there,” he said to the waiting page after a moment’s
-meditation. He excused himself to Mary and the others and followed the
-man indoors, with a frown of impatient wonder clouding his brow.
-
-Under the shadow of a noble maple, Lady Glencairn was seated in earnest
-conversation with her uncle. Her ladyship was looking exceedingly
-beautiful in a pink-flowered summer silk, which puffed and billowed
-around her, with a bunch of white heather at her breast and a wreath
-of the same dainty flowers in her picturesque Leghorn hat. She held a
-pink-lined parasol over her head, and from under the protecting shadow
-her dark lustrous eyes flashed disdainfully as she regarded her scolding
-companion. Suddenly she gave a start and leaned forward to watch the
-group opposite. She had noticed the quiet entrance of the servant and
-the immediate departure of the poet, and idly wondered who it was that
-desired to see Robert on such urgent business that they must needs
-follow him here. The minutes passed and still he did not return. She
-was growing anxious. “Suppose”—and she started violently at the sudden
-thought—“suppose it was by some unfortunate chance Jean Armour herself?”
-She rose quickly to her feet, with a word of apology and after a quick
-look around, in which she noticed Mary’s pale face and restless manner,
-she walked leisurely toward the house. Once inside she rang for the page
-and upon questioning him learned that the young woman who had insisted
-on seeing Mr. Burns, and who was none other than Jean Armour, as she
-concluded from the man’s description, had just gone, and that Mr. Burns
-was now seated in the drawing-room alone. Hastily dismissing him, she
-stole softly into the parlors, and there beside the table, his face in
-his hands, sat Robert, his shoulders heaving convulsively. She looked
-at him a moment and the tears of pity came into her luminous eyes. Then
-softly she walked to his side and laid her cool hand upon his feverish
-head. “Robert, I am so sorry for you,” she said gently.
-
-He lifted his head with a start and rose quickly to his feet. It didn’t
-occur to him to ask what she meant or to inquire how she knew what had
-happened in that room, and she was secretly glad that he demanded no
-explanation. “Where is she?” he asked dully.
-
-“She has gone,” she answered quickly. “I—I met her at the door and
-offered to assist her, gave her money and advised her not to make any
-unnecessary scandal in town, but to return to her home at once. You know
-she is my godchild. So she promised to go, and I presume she is now on
-her way.” She looked him straight in the eyes as she glibly told this
-falsehood. She didn’t know what arrangements he had made with Jean, but
-she daringly made the lying explanation, confident that he would believe
-it, for he could have no possible reason for suspecting her motives, or
-any means of finding out at present that she had not indeed met Jean, who
-might have altered her plans at the last moment.
-
-A look of anger came over his face for a moment, then as quickly died
-away, and his eyes filled with a hopeless, despairing look. He walked
-slowly to the window, his hands clenched together behind him, and stood
-there, pale and miserable and wretched, gazing out upon the scene of
-happiness he had just left.
-
-Lady Glencairn watched him with eyes filled with passion, and her heart
-beat with painful thuds as she fought against the desperate longing
-to throw herself into his arms and comfort him. She glided quickly
-to his side and put her hand gently within his arm and stood there
-in sympathetic silence although she was consumed with jealousy as
-she watched his melancholy eyes riveted on the fair face of his lost
-sweetheart. For a while they stood there in gloomy quiet. Presently a
-deep, heartrending sigh, which was almost a sob, escaped his trembling
-lips.
-
-“An’ we were so happy a few minutes ago,” he murmured brokenly. “An’
-noo ’tis all over.” He paused and bit his lips convulsively. Presently
-he went on in a dull, low tone as if speaking to himself, “How true it
-is, there’s many a slip ’twixt cup and lip.” Lady Glencairn pressed his
-arm tenderly, but remained silent. “What have I to live for noo?” he
-continued with despairing mournfulness.
-
-“Everything, Robert,” murmured her ladyship tenderly, gazing up into his
-face with glittering eyes.
-
-He turned and looked at her in wonder. As he saw the feverish flush on
-her face, felt her hot breath on his cheek, he remembered with a start
-her peculiar words and meaning looks at Athol Castle the night before.
-Lady Glencairn noted with apprehension the look of stern coldness spread
-quickly over his face, and the nervous tears of disappointment and
-passionate longing welled up in her eyes. Then with reckless abandon
-she dropped her head against his shoulder and let the tears flow
-unrestrainedly. For a moment Robert stood there speechless with surprise
-and horror, for he knew at last that what he had vaguely feared was an
-indisputable fact; knew that his hostess, the wife of his dearest friend
-and counsellor, entertained a guilty passion for him. It filled him with
-righteous anger that she would willingly betray the love and confidence
-of the noblest gentleman in the kingdom. He placed the weeping woman in a
-chair and stood looking down upon her with a frown of displeasure. “Lady
-Glencairn,” he said coldly, “if these tears are for my unhappy fate, I
-thank ye for your sympathy.”
-
-She caught his hand and held it tightly within her arm. “Oh, no, no,
-Robert, ’tis not that,” she whispered passionately. “Do you not remember
-the Lady of the Lake I told you of last evening?” He made no reply. Then
-she continued slowly, her voice low and shaking, “Read my fate in that of
-hers.”
-
-Still he would not understand her. “I fear I do not understand your
-meaning, my lady,” he replied, trying to withdraw his hand from her
-grasp, but she held it firmly.
-
-“Cannot your heart understand mine?” she cried recklessly. “Does it not
-pity my wretchedness?”
-
-He was silent for a moment. He knew he could no longer parry with
-her, for her words and meaning were too plain to admit of any
-misunderstanding. He turned to her, his face set and firm. “Lady
-Glencairn,” he said sternly, “you dishonor yourself by such madness,
-and all for naught. My heart is noo numb with sorrow, it could feel no
-throb of yours, even were I vile enough to see no evil in usurping your
-husband’s rights.”
-
-“Do not remind me of my unhappiness!” she exclaimed impatiently. “I
-married him when I was a girl, before I knew what love was. Then you came
-into my life, and I knew that the fire of love was not dead within me.”
-Her rich seductive voice trembled with passion.
-
-“I pray you cease!” he entreated her, but she went on rapidly.
-
-“Let me speak, Robert!” she cried, clinging to him frantically. “I can no
-longer contain myself, for I love you better than my life, better than my
-honor, my good name; I care not for them now. Oh, pity me, pity me!” and
-she flung herself down on her knees before him and burst into a storm of
-irrepressible weeping.
-
-Robert looked around apprehensively. The thought that someone might
-suddenly enter the room filled him with alarmed dismay. With a quick
-movement he raised her to her feet, and his voice trembled with deep
-feeling when he next spoke. “I do pity you,” he said sorrowfully, “but
-I pity your husband more, when he learns of your faithlessness.” He
-paused and regarded her with reproachful sadness. “Oh, why have you
-severed forever the threads of our friendship by such imprudence, such
-rashness?” As he finished he bowed his head and walked slowly toward the
-door.
-
-“Do not leave me like this!” she panted desperately. “Can’t you see
-you are killing me by your coldness.” She held out her arms in piteous
-entreaty as she continued tenderly, “Tell me you didn’t mean it, Robert.
-Say you are but testing my love for you.”
-
-He turned on her quickly and at his look of contemptuous scorn she
-drooped her head and the hot blood rushed to her face. “Are you lost to
-all sense of prudence, honor and decency?” he cried in scathing accents.
-“Heaven knows I’m no moralist, no saint,” and he gave a mirthless little
-laugh as he thought of the opinion Edinburgh had formed concerning his
-morality—then he went on firmly, solemnly, “But I would sooner cut this
-erring heart of mine out of this body than fall so low as to betray the
-honor of my friend who trusts me.” She started to speak again, but he
-raised his hand quickly. “Say no more, Lady Glencairn,” he said with calm
-dignity, “an’ I’ll forget this distressing conversation, and continue
-thro’ life to respect equally with himself, the wife of my friend.”
-
-Slowly the warm color faded from her cheeks, leaving her ashy pale,
-while through her suddenly narrowed eyelids a vindictive light gleamed
-tigerishly.
-
-“You’ve said enough!” she hissed through her clenched teeth. “I have
-lowered myself to you as I would to no other man living, only to be
-scorned and humiliated. God!” she laughed wildly, hysterically, and threw
-herself face downward upon the ottoman. “Fool, fool!” she cried with
-bitter self-abasement. “How I hate and despise myself for what I have
-done; would I had died before I had uttered such damning words,” and she
-beat her jeweled hands frantically against the cushions.
-
-“I beseech you to be careful, Lady Glencairn,” cried Robert in amazed
-alarm, going to her.
-
-She turned on him fiercely. “You, of all men, posing as a model of virtue
-and goodness, prating of husband’s honor, wife’s duty.” She measured
-him with a scornful, sneering glance of fury. “You, who have the name
-of making love to every female in petticoats who crosses your path, you
-hypocrite!”
-
-Robert fixed his eyes upon her in silence and the utter scorn of the
-look stung her heart to its center. Presently he controlled his anger
-sufficiently to be able to speak, and still eying her with that straight,
-keen look of immeasurable disdain, he said in cold, deliberate accents,
-“Your ladyship has been misinformed as to my past conduct. I do not claim
-to be more than human, but I know my name is as yet clear from the taint
-of dishonor.”
-
-“You poor fool, you country yokel!” she stormed furiously, walking up and
-down between him and the door like a caged lioness. “Did you think you
-could scorn such a woman as I with impunity? Do you think I will stand
-the humiliation of being repulsed, despised, shamed? I tell you no, no,
-never; ’tis but a step from love to hate, you should know that.” She
-paused in her nervous walking and stood facing him, her eyes ablaze with
-the uttermost anger, her beautiful figure drawn rigidly erect. “You shall
-be made to feel the depth of my hatred before long, Robert Burns,” she
-threatened, and there came a dangerous gleam in the flashing, dark eyes.
-
-“I shall leave Edinburgh within the hour,” replied Robert quietly. Was
-there ever such another unfortunate being as himself? he thought grimly,
-and a wave of unutterable sadness rushed over him.
-
-“Aye, that you will,” retorted her ladyship with a sneering, bitter
-laugh. “But not as you anticipate, with the plaudits of the world ringing
-in your ears. Instead of that, only contemptuous silence will greet your
-departure as you leave here in shame and disgrace, and when you have
-sunk once more into poverty and oblivion, you will repent bitterly ever
-having made an enemy of Alice Glencairn.” As these words left her lips,
-she swept haughtily past him like an outraged queen and left the room,
-leaving him standing there like one in a trance.
-
-He brushed his hands across his eyes as if to assure himself that he
-was awake, that he wasn’t the subject of some hideous hallucination,
-but no, he was painfully conscious of the reality of it all. He heaved
-a deep sigh and sank wearily into a chair, his eyes riveted upon the
-floor in melancholy meditation. A little cry aroused him from the
-profound gloom into which his thoughts were plunged and looking fearfully
-up, dreading lest her ladyship had returned, his eyes rested upon the
-white, startled face of Highland Mary. She had watched him leave the
-grounds with listless curiosity, which changed to wonder and dismay when
-Lady Glencairn rose from her seat and sauntered toward the hall. For
-some minutes she nervously sat there wondering vaguely why he stayed
-so long and why her ladyship had followed him. Presently she rose and
-mechanically made her way over the springy sward toward the house. She
-couldn’t have told why she went or what she intended to do. She wondered
-in a vague way if Robert’s message could in any way concern Jean, but her
-thoughts dwelt longer upon the suspicions that had been raised in her
-innocent heart against her beautiful hostess, for she had recognized her
-as the bogus Lady Nancy in spite of the disguising mask, suspicions that
-filled her with uneasiness and alarm; and yet why should she be jealous?
-She told herself sadly she had renounced him forever, given him back to
-Jean, and in a few days she would pass out of his life forever. Oh, the
-agony that pierced her heart at the recollection of her past happiness!
-How fleeting it had been—scarcely a week. She had drawn near the window
-by this time quite unconsciously. Suddenly the sound of voices within the
-room made her pause. She had not thought to listen nor meant to, but when
-she heard the passionate pleading voice of her ladyship and the stern
-replies from Robert, a feeling of fascinated horror took possession of
-her, rooting her to the spot. Motionless she stood there and heard all
-that passed within the room. And when the voices stopped and all was
-deathly still, she peered through the window. At the sight of her dear
-one sitting there all alone, with that look of intense suffering on his
-face, her heart cried out to him in sympathy. Quickly she opened the high
-French window and noiselessly stepped into the room. For a moment she
-stood watching him, her eyes filled with patient sorrow, infinite pity,
-and a world of loving compassion. Involuntarily a deep sigh escaped her.
-As he raised his head she went quietly up to him and placed a tender hand
-upon his arm. After one quick, heart-broken look at her he buried his
-face in his hands again.
-
-“Dinna distress yoursel’, laddie; I have known since last night at Athol
-Castle that our happy dream was ended.” She felt him stiffen beneath
-her touch. “Jean came to me in the gardens,” she explained with patient
-resignation. “I should have told ye last night, for she was waiting for
-ye to come to her, but I—I hadna’ the courage.” There was silence for a
-moment, then he spoke in a low, spiritless tone.
-
-“Jean said that ye knew all,” he said without looking up. They remained
-quiet after that, plunged in bitter thought. There was nothing they could
-say to comfort each other, the wound was bleeding too freely as yet.
-Presently Robert raised his head, and with a despairing gesture pushed
-the heavy curls back from his fevered brow and rose unsteadily to his
-feet. They must get away at once, he thought feverishly. He took Mary by
-the hand and started for the door, when from the open window he heard
-his name called. Turning apprehensively he beheld Sir William Creech
-entering, followed by Lord Glencairn and several of his guests. In his
-hand Sir William held a newspaper, while a hard smile of triumph wrinkled
-his stem face.
-
-“I told ye, Robert Burns, ye would overreach yourself,” he cried
-jubilantly, shaking the newspaper at him.
-
-Robert looked at him apathetically. “Ye were ever a bird of ill omen,” he
-said quietly. “What have I done noo?”
-
-“You have seen fit to sign your name to an article in this paper, which
-has aroused the indignation of all Edinburgh,” replied Sir William
-without any preamble. “’Tis a most seditious article and shows that ye
-have embraced the doctrines of the French Revolution.”
-
-“A man has a perfect right to his opinion,” said Mrs. Dunlop decidedly,
-giving Sir William a scornful look.
-
-“Indeed he has,” echoed Eppy, nodding her head briskly. “I mean to stick
-to mine.”
-
-Lord Glencairn turned and looked searchingly at Robert’s pale, gloomy
-face. “Is that true, Robert?” he asked gently.
-
-Robert did not reply. He seemed not to hear, in fact.
-
-“’Tis a most serious charge, Mr. Burns,” remarked Mr. Sterne gravely.
-
-“If it be true,” retorted Mr. Mackenzie loyally.
-
-“Which is not at all likely,” flashed Eppy indignantly.
-
-She would believe nothing wrong of her hero, even if it were proven in
-black and white.
-
-“But listen!” continued Sir William eagerly. He scanned the article
-through quickly until he found what he sought. “Ah, here it is. It is
-stated here that Mr. Burns refused to stand up in the theater recently
-when ‘God save the King’ was being played,” and he glared about him
-indignantly.
-
-A quiet sneer curled Robert’s lips. “Anything else?” he asked
-sarcastically. “Out wi’ it or the venom of your spleen will poison ye,”
-and he fixed his eyes upon Sir William with disdainful indifference.
-
-“And there is more,” snarled Sir William. “’Tis known that ye have
-sent two cannon to the French Directorate with a complimentary letter,
-offering further assistance.”
-
-“Oh, no, no, impossible.” cried Lord Glencairn incredulously.
-
-“And,” continued Sir William vindictively, “there’s also a full account
-here which explains much of Mr. Burns’ reprehensible conduct here in
-town, as well as in Ayrshire, where it seems his amours were as numerous
-and questionable as they are at the present time.”
-
-“For shame, Creech!” cried Lord Glencairn with indignation.
-
-“How fascinating he must have been even when a farmer,” giggled Eppy
-aside to Mrs. Dunlop, who was casting indignant glances at Sir William.
-
-“’Tis a libelous article,” she flashed angrily, “and I for one do not
-believe a word of it. Robert,” she said, turning to the silent figure
-standing so pale and calm before his inquisitors, “deny this absurd
-charge before it is given further credence!”
-
-“He cannot deny it,” said Sir William. “His name is at the bottom of it,”
-and he held it up to their view.
-
-“And I’ll attempt no denial,” replied Robert in a full ringing voice,
-“for I know it would be useless. Know, then, that I do sympathize with
-the French people in their struggle for freedom, and I did help them all
-that lay in my power. I hope that France may gain the prize for which
-she is fighting, a free and independent republic, and that she may set
-up her standard of liberty and independence as did the United States of
-America, when they were delivered from the toils of the British.”
-
-There was an uncomfortable silence when he had finished his declaration.
-His amazed and incredulous listeners could hardly believe they had heard
-him aright. They looked aghast at each other, not knowing just how to
-take it. Their embarrassed silence was soon broken, however.
-
-“Ye hear those seditious sentiments,” cried Sir William in an
-I-told-you-so tone of voice.
-
-Lord Glencairn shook his head gravely. “’Tis dangerous to speak thus,
-Robert,” he said with solemn earnestness. “You should be careful——”
-
-“Careful of what?” interrupted Robert with impatient scorn. “Lest I
-offend people with my plain speaking of the truth?” He paused and looked
-around him with flashing eyes and dilated nostrils. “Who is careful of
-my feelings?” he demanded. “Not those who think themselves my superiors
-by accident of birth.” He turned to Sir William Creech and continued
-quickly, his voice vibrating with suppressed indignation. “I’ve never
-wronged ye, Sir William Creech, yet ye are miscreant enough to seek my
-ruin, for I’m fair sure ’twas ye yourself who inserted that scurrilous
-article in that paper ye hold in your hand, in which my faults, my past
-errors and follies are now being aired.”
-
-Sir William turned a sickly color. “Think what you like,” he muttered
-savagely. “’Tis time the people of Edinburgh knew the character of the
-man they are honoring.”
-
-“Sir William Creech, you are an old brute!” cried Eppy, her little gray
-eyes flashing fire, and going up to him she continued in haughty disdain,
-“Remember, sir, I will have naught to do with you in the future; I turn
-my back on you,” and she suited the action to the word.
-
-Meanwhile, Robert had spoken in an undertone to Mrs. Dunlop, and that
-good soul, putting an arm around Mary, who stood white and trembling
-like a frightened child, walked to the door, and Robert, after a formal
-inclination of his head, started quietly but proudly after them. They
-had reached the door, when it suddenly opened and Lady Glencairn stood
-upon the threshold, her head held haughtily erect, her lips curled in a
-disdainful sneer. She entered the room and closed the door behind her,
-then turned and faced the wondering group which was being augmented
-by the entrance, through the window, of a number of the guests whose
-curiosity had been aroused by the unusual scene to which they had been
-listening in speechless amazement.
-
-“Alice, what has happened?” cried Lord Glencairn in an alarmed voice.
-Her ladyship’s white, nervous face, the peculiar glitter in her eyes,
-startled him out of his usual calmness.
-
-“James, I am deeply sorry to wound you,” she began nervously, “but it’s
-best that you should know how grievously you have been betrayed by one
-of your honored guests here to-day,” and she fixed her narrowed eyes upon
-the startled face of Robert Burns.
-
-A great fear of impending danger came over him as he saw the revengeful
-look which she flashed at him, and he involuntarily straightened himself
-as if to receive a shock. There was a surprised movement among the crowd,
-and a low murmur of many voices broke the tense stillness which followed
-her accusation.
-
-“I—betrayed?” repeated Lord Glencairn, in astonishment. “What mean you,
-my dear?”
-
-“I mean,” she answered, and the lie rolled glibly off her crimson lips,
-“that your distinguished guest, Robert Burns, has to-day wantonly and
-without provocation grossly insulted the wife of his friend and host.”
-As the ignoble lie left her lips, there was an audible indrawn breath of
-startled surprise from the amazed listeners. Then they turned and fixed
-their wondering gaze upon the accused man, who, after an inarticulate
-exclamation of horror, stood as though carved out of stone.
-
-“I for one do not believe it,” cried Mrs. Dunlop indignantly, and she
-returned Lady Glencairn’s look of haughty displeasure with a withering
-glance of scornful disbelief.
-
-“Nor I,” echoed Eppy, with a youthful toss of her head.
-
-“What was the nature of the insult, Alice?” asked Lord Glencairn
-gravely. No doubt she had taken offense where no offense was intended, he
-thought indulgently.
-
-Before she could answer, Robert stepped quickly up to her with flashing
-eyes and lips trembling with anger. “Madam, that I have had the
-misfortune to offend ye, I am sorrowfully aware,” he said with bitter
-sarcasm, “but that I have been guilty of offering ye an insult, none
-knows better than yourself how little cause ye have to accuse me of
-such monstrous ingratitude, such a contemptible betrayal of the laws of
-hospitality. I am quite willing that you should repeat every word of the
-conversation that passed between us in the room a few minutes since, and
-if aught that I have said can be construed as an insult to your ladyship,
-then do I stand ready and whiling to abide by the consequence of such an
-indiscretion.” He looked her straight in the eyes, and with folded arms
-calmly waited for her to speak.
-
-Not long did she return the look, however, for the utter scorn of it
-stung her guilty heart to its core. Not that she felt any compunction
-for what she was doing—her whole soul was up in arms against him, and
-she would not stop until she had meted out her spiteful revenge upon him
-to the fullest extent. His evident contemptuous defiance irritated her
-beyond measure—she was angrier with him than ever—already she had a sort
-of strange feeling of triumph at the vengeance she had designed, for she
-knew that her word would be believed against his; even now she could read
-suspicion and conviction in many of the serious faces that surrounded
-her, much to her satisfaction. He had thrown down the challenge, had he?
-Well, she would take it up. No one knew what had passed between them save
-themselves, and no one would ever know the truth, and the truth would now
-be a very small factor in working out her present scheme of vengeance.
-All these thoughts flashed quickly through her mind, and her answer
-was ready on her lips almost soon as he had finished speaking. With
-well-simulated indignation she drew herself haughtily away from him, with
-a gesture of repulsion. “Dare you deny your protestations of love and
-devotion?” she replied. “Why, my lord,” she continued scornfully, turning
-to her husband, who was now regarding Robert with serious, thoughtful
-eyes, a look of wounded pride and deepening sorrow gradually shadowing
-his noble countenance, “before I could stop him he had fallen upon his
-knees and begged me to be false to you, and to give him my love, my
-favors.”
-
-“Great God!” cried Robert, staggering back, white and speechless, while
-a wave of the blackest despair engulfed him completely, for he knew that
-the outrageous lie had sealed his doom as utterly as though it had been
-the truth; knew that all denials from him would be useless in the face of
-that accusation. He sank back into a chair in helpless resignation, his
-independent spirit, his haughty pride wounded almost unto death.
-
-When Mary heard the lying accusation she started forward with a little
-cry on her lips. Freeing herself from Mrs. Dunlop’s restraining hand, she
-took a few steps toward Lord Glencairn, her face aglow with indignation,
-her timidity, her fear of the great ones surrounding her, forgotten for
-the moment, as she sought to defend the man she loved.
-
-“My lord!” she cried thrillingly, “’tis not true; Robbie did not insult
-her ladyship, for I——”
-
-But, with an angry flush, Lady Glencairn interrupted her. “I say he did,”
-she retorted harshly. Then, as Mrs. Dunlop drew the frightened girl away,
-she continued with insulting emphasis, “James, bid this man and his
-virtuous Highland Mary begone at once! Their presence here is an insult
-to respectable people,” and she flashed them a malicious look.
-
-“Alice, Alice!” exclaimed Lord Glencairn, in accents of deep reproach,
-“that is unworthy of you.”
-
-Robert felt as though he must choke with fury. He forgot the presence of
-Lord Glencairn. He forgot everything but his just indignation. “My God!”
-he cried passionately, striding up to the sneering woman, “you dare to
-speak so—you!”
-
-“Yes, I!” she returned coolly, eying him disdainfully up and down. “What
-have you to say against me?” She drew herself up imperiously.
-
-“Only this,” replied Robert in a low, tense voice, “ye may say what you
-will of me, but as ye value your happiness, do not breathe aught against
-the fair name of Mary Campbell.”
-
-She uttered an angry exclamation, but remained speechless and so pale
-that her lips were devoid of color. If he were dishonorable enough to
-tell everything, she thought, with a thrill of fear, it would make
-things decidedly embarrassing and humiliating for her, besides giving
-her enemies a choice bit of scandal, which they would use to excellent
-advantage.
-
-At this point a few of the guests, feeling decidedly uncomfortable and
-very much _de trop_, quietly left the room, but the others, and the room
-was filled, held their ground, shamelessly reveling in the extraordinary
-scene, the like of which had never before been seen in an Edinburgh
-drawing-room, which was being enacted before them.
-
-“Robert, lad,” whispered Mrs. Dunlop, in a loud aside, “ye must say
-something. Deny this charge. I know you are innocent of any wrong doing.
-Speak, tell his lordship so!” and she pointed to where he stood crushed
-and silent, in speechless sorrow.
-
-“What can I say, Mrs. Dunlop?” replied Robert, in an agony of indecision.
-“Would ye have me flatly contradict her ladyship and accuse her of
-lying?” He paused a moment with patient sadness. “Nay, nay, friend, there
-is nothing I can say noo that will smooth matters or clear me in the eyes
-of the world.”
-
-“But you must tell them the truth,” insisted Mary. “Dinna’ let them
-believe this monstrous thing of you.” She looked indignantly at the cold
-repellent face of her ladyship, and continued fearlessly, “She’s a bold,
-wicked woman, and she seeks your ruin!”
-
-“How dare you, you insolent creature!” hissed her ladyship furiously,
-while the amazed guests looked in open-mouthed amazement at the demure
-little dairymaid so suddenly transformed, standing with head thrown back
-and eyes flashing accusingly.
-
-But Robert remained rigidly silent. He would not be so base, so
-ungrateful as to shatter his benefactor’s belief in his wife’s honor, her
-veracity, he told himself in a spirit of self-sacrifice. He owed all he
-had in the world to him, and he would remain silent for his sake, and he
-kept his eyes fixed unresponsively on the rug at his feet, but the little
-drops of perspiration stood out on his brow, as he fought against the
-temptation to clear his good name from ignominy.
-
-Throwing open the door Lady Glencairn pointed to it dramatically,
-“There’s the door, Mr. Burns,” she said insolently; “do not compel me to
-call my servants.”
-
-“Jezebel!” muttered Mr. Mackenzie through his clenched teeth.
-
-“If he goes I go too,” flashed Mrs. Dunlop, casting an indignant look at
-her hostess.
-
-“So will I,” echoed Eppy.
-
-“Wait!” cried Mary vibrantly. Her silvery voice rang out above the
-confusion, as the guests moved about among themselves asking all sorts
-of inane questions, exploiting their views upon the subject—some loudly
-extolling Lady Glencairn’s attitude in the matter and others as stoutly
-defending the bard. Instantly there was an astonished hush.
-
-“My lords and ladies,” continued Mary thrillingly, “listen to me! I tell
-ye that Robert Burns is innocent o’ this contemptible charge laid against
-him. I know it, for I was outside the window yonder an’ heard all that
-passed between him and her ladyship.”
-
-“Spy!” hissed Lady Glencairn between her teeth, unheard in the hubbub of
-voices which had commenced again with Mary’s statement as the subject of
-comment, then she laughed mockingly. “How absurd,” she cried to those
-about her. “My dear James, let us end this scene. I will not stay here to
-be insulted. Come, my friends, let us retire,” and she took her husband’s
-arm.
-
-“Ye shall listen to the truth, all of ye!” cried Mary resolutely.
-Clasping and unclasping her little hands with nervous intensity, her
-eyes filled with determined purpose, she faced the fickle crowd that was
-regarding her with such open admiration for her stanchness, her bravery.
-“I heard her ladyship swear to ruin Robert because he spurned her
-unwomanly offers of love,” she declared, with convincing earnestness.
-
-A guilty flush reddened the creamy pallor of her ladyship’s face. “Oh,
-the shame of it, my lord, to be thus humiliated before my guests!” she
-cried, bursting into nervous tears. “Surely, my lord, you would not
-listen to such monstrous tales,” she pleaded.
-
-“Oh, believe me, I speak the truth,” exclaimed Mary, a great fear in her
-heart as she saw the tender look Lord Glencairn bestowed upon his weeping
-wife.
-
-He was torn and spent by conflicting emotions. He did not doubt his wife,
-yet the words of the young girl rang true, and there was only truth
-and nobility stamped upon the gloomy face of the poet. What was he to
-believe? How could he decide? His confidence in his wife had never yet
-been shaken—yet, stay—there was once when—but he would not think of that
-time, it was so long ago, yet think of it he did with uneasy misgivings.
-If she had deceived him once, might she not again? he asked himself
-fearfully.
-
-“Mr. Burns, will you assure me on your word of honor as a man that you
-are entirely innocent of any intentional insult to Lady Glencairn?” asked
-Mr. Mackenzie bluntly. He had taken his place beside Robert, along with
-Mrs. Dunlop and Mary and Eppy McKay, together with a few more of Robert’s
-sympathizers and stanch believers in his innocence. And now he asked the
-question in hope of eliciting some explanation, some excuse, anything,
-from the silent man.
-
-Robert raised his head and without looking at any one particular person,
-answered simply, indifferently, as many thought.
-
-“I have always held Lady Glencairn in the highest respect and
-admiration,” he said quietly. “She alone knows what is the end she aims
-at, by attributing feelings to me with regard to her which I have never
-conceived, and words which I have never uttered.” And he sank once more
-into his listless attitude.
-
-Lord Glencairn passed his hand over his brow in a bewildered manner. “You
-were ever truthful, Robert,” he muttered so low that none but his wife
-heard his implied doubt of her.
-
-She turned on him witheringly. “My lord, you insult me by lending an
-ear to aught he or his witness can say in his behalf,” she exclaimed
-frigidly. Then, turning to the onlookers, she continued with insolent
-innuendo in words and manner, “You all know the infatuated attachment of
-this maid for Mr. Burns, who has bewitched her until she is ready to
-sacrifice every consideration of truth, reason, or duty to shield her
-guilty lover.”
-
-“What a scandal this will cause throughout Edinburgh,” whispered Eppy to
-Mrs. Dunlop, who was almost beside herself with speechless indignation by
-this time. She had been listening with growing anger to Lady Glencairn’s
-insolent falsehoods, for she knew they were falsehoods, and she would
-never believe that Robbie would belittle himself by lying, for he was
-too brutally frank and truthful at times to be thoroughly an agreeable
-companion.
-
-Eppy’s inopportune remark was the straw that broke the camel’s back,
-and she turned on her hotly. “Hold your tongue, ye old busy body!” she
-exploded violently, nearly knocking the astonished Eppy down by the
-suddenness, the unexpectedness, of the retort.
-
-“I was never so insulted in my life,” Eppy gasped tearfully, making
-little dabs at her eyes with a dainty ’kerchief, and casting hurt,
-reproachful glances at the blunt old lady, who, after delivering her
-shaft at the unoffending Eppy, turned to Lord Glencairn, the fire still
-flashing in her determined eyes.
-
-“Lord Glencairn,” she said, with a touch of defiance, “you may forbid me
-your house hereafter, and indeed I hardly believe I will be welcome,”
-with a look at the scornful face of her hostess; “but I care not; I
-believe in Robert’s innocence, and that Mary Campbell has only spoken
-the truth.” A few nodded their heads to each other in approval. Lord
-Glencairn stood mute, a prey to the doubting fear which gripped his heart.
-
-Her ladyship, with one quick look around at the wavering faces of her
-friends, knew that she was losing ground, and the color faded from her
-cheeks. A look of nervous fear came into her steely eyes. She must
-restore their shaking confidence in her—but how? It gave her a strange
-feeling of satisfaction to know that whatever the outcome, she had ruined
-his popularity for the present, but she wanted to ruin him utterly—to
-turn every door in Edinburgh against him. If she could only get someone
-to speak in her behalf, she thought prayerfully, as she looked about her.
-Suddenly her eyes rested on the saturnine features of her uncle, who was
-regarding her with a malicious smile of triumph. An eager light came into
-her hard eyes. He hated Robert Burns; he would help her out if anyone
-would; she would risk it. His word coupled with hers would instantly turn
-the tide in her favor. And risking all upon the throw, she called out
-loud enough to be heard above the murmur of voices, “Uncle, it seems my
-word is not fully believed,” she said, with a little pitying, disdainful
-smile, which brought the flush of embarrassment to the cheeks of several,
-who happened to catch her eye; “so if you will oblige me by relating
-what you know of the unpleasant circumstances, perhaps your word will
-be accepted by our doubting friends.” Her lazy voice was replete with
-insulting sarcasm.
-
-All eyes turned to look at Sir William, who, after one quick, angry
-glance at the cool, smiling face of his strategic niece, cleared his
-throat with irritating precision, and, without glancing at the startled
-face of his victim, who had started to his feet upon hearing the amazing
-request of her ladyship, spoke quickly and harshly, a faint tinge of
-color dying his yellow skin as the dastardly lie left his lips.
-
-“I overheard Mr. Burns’ insults to my niece,” he said firmly. “I was
-standing behind the curtain there,” pointing to a large window, “where I
-had gone only a moment before Lady Glencairn entered the room, to glance
-out of the window, having heard a noise without, and before I could make
-my presence known, Mr. Burns had thrown himself upon his knees, and—and I
-did not disturb them,” he concluded lamely.
-
-“Ye perjurer!” cried Robert furiously. “By heaven, I could choke ye with
-your own lie!” and he turned white with passion. Sir William cowered
-back, a look of fear in his shifty eyes.
-
-“Oh, Robbie, take me hame, take me hame,” gasped Mary, with
-heart-breaking pathos, and she sank half fainting in the chair Robert had
-vacated.
-
-“Come, James, let us retire,” said Lady Glencairn sweetly, casting
-a look of grateful triumph at her uncle. “I am sorry you have lost
-a friend, but I could not shield him,” and she pressed his arm with
-affected tenderness. Slowly, sorrowfully he allowed himself to be drawn
-to the door.
-
-“My lord!” cried Robert hoarsely, “have ye no word to say to me? Ye have
-heard the proofs of my innocence; will ye not believe them?” and his
-whole soul was in his eyes as he eagerly searched the downcast face of
-his old benefactor.
-
-Lord Glencairn gave him one sad, reproachful look. “Oh, Robert,” he said
-brokenly, “and I trusted you so.”
-
-Robert dropped his hand, which he had extended pleadingly, and a flush
-mounted to the roots of his hair, which quickly faded, leaving him paler
-than before, while a look of wounded pride and unutterable bitterness
-flashed into his stern face.
-
-“I will attempt no further denial, my lord,” he said slowly, with quiet
-dignity. “Calumny has at last reared its vicious head to strike like some
-venomous serpent, seeking to crush me in its enveloping folds. The genius
-of the Bard is ignored, forgotten—only my obscure birth, my sins, my
-indiscretions, my faults are remembered now,” and he smiled with mournful
-bitterness.
-
-“Ye have been too puffed up with pride and vanity,” cried Sir William
-brutally. “Edinburgh has tired of you.”
-
-Robert gave a scornful little laugh. “Why,” he asked, looking around at
-those who had been only too glad to fawn upon him a few moments before,
-“because I am no longer a curiosity for the vulgar to gaze at?” He spoke
-with biting sarcasm. He paused a minute, then continued bitterly. “Oh,
-fool that I have been! At last my eyes are opened to my true position
-in your world of society. How I hate and despise the hypocrisy of you
-so-called some-bodies! How you fawn and smirk and bow down to wealth
-and position, while the man of genius, of avowed worth is disbelieved,
-dishonored, and insulted! God, the humiliation of it all!” His eyes
-flashed with righteous anger and the indignant scorn in his voice cut
-deeply through the thin skin of more than one of his listeners. “I have
-endured the insults heaped upon my head to-day in bitterness of spirit
-and in silent scorn,” he continued stormily, “but noo my outraged manhood
-at last rebels, and I throw down my gage of contemptuous defiance.”
-
-“Robert, calm yourself, laddie!” whispered Mrs. Dunlop apprehensively,
-laying a restraining hand upon his arm, which trembled with excitement.
-
-“Your friends will never believe aught against you, Mr. Burns,” exclaimed
-Mr. Mackenzie, with deep feeling in his voice.
-
-“My friends!” repeated Robert wildly. “I have none, I want none in this
-purse proud city. No longer will I submit to insulting condescension. No
-longer will I skulk into a corner of the street like the veriest nobody
-on earth, lest the rattling equipage of some gossiping titled blockhead
-mangle me in the mire.”
-
-“Robert, I have always loved you,” exclaimed Lord Glencairn, with
-rebuking reproachfulness.
-
-“But ye believe the worst of me noo,” replied Robert passionately. “It
-only needed this scene of scandal to show my friends in their true
-colors.”
-
-“Then go back to your low-born friends where ye belong,” snarled Sir
-William vindictively.
-
-“I mean to go back,” retorted Robert, his face flushing crimson, “and
-with gladness will I shake the dust of this unjust city off my feet.”
-A softer look came over his haggard face and his eyes filled with a
-yearning look of utter heart-weariness, a sudden longing for the blissful
-quiet of his country home. A tender sweetness came into his voice as he
-continued softly, “I will return from whence I came, to the plowtail,
-where the poetic genius of my country found me and threw her inspiring
-mantle over me.”
-
-Mary took his hand in hers, and with infinite tenderness murmured fondly,
-“An’ ye’ll find the banks an’ braes of bonnie Doon holding out their arms
-to welcome ye back to your native heath once more, laddie.”
-
-“Let us hope he’ll shine to better advantage there,” sneered Sir
-William. A nervous little titter broke the tense silence.
-
-Robert turned on him, goaded to sudden fury. “Ye bird o’ ill omen!” he
-panted hoarsely, “I have never injured ye; I have brought money into
-your empty pockets. But ye will repent bitterly for swearing away my
-life as ye have this day, for e’en though I leave Edinburgh in shame and
-disgrace, ’tis not for ay. Nay! I thank God my works will live after me,
-that my name will yet become immortal.” His words rang out wildly and
-with impassioned intensity.
-
-Lady Glencairn laughed mockingly, and, turning to some of her friends
-standing near, she made some low-toned remark, evidently a sarcastic
-witticism at the expense of the speaker, which elicited a burst of hollow
-laughter from her listeners, who, while they wished to remain in the
-favor of the leader of Edinburgh society, stood in wholesome awe of the
-blunt speech, the scornful wit of the brilliant poet on trial before them.
-
-“Ye vain boaster!” scoffed Sir William loudly, “you’ll be forgot within a
-week,” and he laughed derisively.
-
-“Ye may scoff, ye may laugh,” retorted Robert hotly. “Ye may call me
-egoist if ye like, but I know what I have done for my country—I have
-attuned my wild artless notes to sing her praises, joys, and sorrows,
-and I know those songs will live forever in the heart of every true
-Scotsman.” Suddenly, like a ray of sunshine which dispels the morning
-mist, his dark haughty face took upon itself a noble, thoughtful, rapt
-expression—his wildly flashing eyes softened—his furrowed brow smoothed,
-and, fixing his luminous eyes upon the disdainful face of his hostess, he
-continued with melancholy pathos and prophetic solemnity, “Ah, my lady,
-ye have trampled my good name low in the dust to-day, but my prophetic
-spirit tells me the day is coming, even though ye an’ all my traducers
-here be dead, rotted and forgot, when one name will be remembered,
-cherished and proclaimed above all others of Scotland, aye, the world,
-and that name, my lords and ladies, will not be of any rich titled
-somebody! Nay, ’twill be that of the plowman-poet of Ayrshire, Robert
-Burns.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-
-The situation in which Robert now found himself was calculated to awaken
-reflection. The time had come, so he gloomily told his friend, Will
-Nichol, the morning after the garden party at Lord Glencairn’s, for him
-to abandon the gayety and dissipation of which he had been too much
-enamored; and all that day he pondered seriously, if gloomily, on the
-past, and formed virtuous resolutions respecting the future. He had weeks
-ago made up his mind to settle himself for life in the occupation of
-agriculture, and now that Edinburgh had tired of his peculiarities, and
-the novelty of his appearance had become an old story for them, there
-was nothing left for him to do but to start in on his new life as soon
-as possible. To further that end he called upon Sir William that day and
-demanded a settlement. When he left the office he found himself master
-of nearly £500. With the money in his pocket he again called on Will
-Nichols and requested him to assist him in the selection of a farm. With
-his advice and assistance he soon decided to lease the farm of Ellisland,
-on the banks of the River Nith, just above Dumfries. When he had in this
-manner arranged his plans for the future his generous heart, which
-was sore and bleeding from the many wounds it had recently received,
-wounds which seemed to the suffering man that would never heal in this
-life, turned in pity and remorse to the mother of his child—a thrill of
-yearning stirred him strangely as he thought of the little one—his son—a
-warm feeling of love welled up in his heart as he softly repeated the
-words; and listening to no consideration but those of honor and duty, and
-a strange feeling of growing affection, which made him pause in wonder,
-he sought out Jean at the Inn, having learned that she was still in
-town, contrary to Lady Glencairn’s assertion, which he had believed; and
-there, with his friends surrounding them, they were joined in a public
-declaration of marriage, thus legalizing their union and rendering it
-permanent for life.
-
-Mrs. Dunlop and Mary had not been present at the ceremony. Mary was
-confined to her bed in a state of nervous collapse, and Mrs. Dunlop, much
-as she loved Robert, and honored him for the noble step he was taking,
-could not leave the stricken girl. It was her wish and determination to
-keep Mary with her as long as she could content herself there. Her kind,
-motherly heart ached in silent sympathy for the child who had received
-such a bitter disappointment, and who was bearing her sorrows with such
-patient fortitude. Before Robert left the city she wrote for him to come
-and see her, assuring him of her continued friendship, etc., etc. That
-evening found him seated beside his stanch friend in whom he confided
-his hopes and his fears for the future, and soon he had poured out
-the bitterness of his heart, the yearnings of his soul, all the cruel
-disappointments of his tempestuous life. She listened in sympathetic
-silence, a smile of encouragement, every now and then, lighting up her
-face. When he had finished, she told him how proud she was of him,
-how she gloried in his strength of purpose, his new-made resolutions,
-cautioned him not to forget the new vows he had so lately formed, warned
-him of the many vices, the back-sliding state into which one of his
-temperament was so apt to fall. Then with infinite tenderness she told
-him of the courage of the sweet maiden who now lay upon her bed of sorrow
-in the upper room, told him of her loyalty, her pride in his greatness,
-in his nobility, while he listened with the burning tears streaming
-unchecked down his quivering cheeks. After a pause she took him by the
-hand and led him softly to the door of Mary’s chamber. “For the last
-farewell,” she whispered sadly. Then she left him standing before the
-door, gazing at it as though it were the gates of Heaven which were about
-to open for him at his bidding. A sweet voice bade him enter, in answer
-to his timid knock, and softly opening the door, he stepped into the room.
-
-Mary opened her beautiful, tired blue eyes, thinking it was her dear
-benefactress, and then what a divine rapture—what a dazzling wonder and
-joy flashed into them, giving them back their old luster of sunlight
-sparkling on an azure sea. She sprang up in her bed and stretched out her
-arms.
-
-“Robert!” she cried sobbingly. “Oh, Robbie, my darling.”
-
-Mrs. Dunlop came back and softly closed the door on the sacred stillness
-that followed. Then she slowly wended her way down to her sitting-room
-and sat down with a deep sigh. “What a sad old world this is,” she
-thought. The time dragged along very slowly as she patiently waited for
-Robert to come down. Presently she heard the door above close ever so
-gently, and then his low footfall down the thick stair carpet. She rose
-and met him in the reception hall. He stood on the lowest step, his hand
-on the balustrade, his breast heaving with the strain of his emotions.
-Mrs. Dunlop took his hand tenderly and pressed it in loving sympathy.
-
-By and by he spoke, and the intense suffering in his voice touched her
-keenly. “As ye sow, so shall ye reap,” he muttered brokenly. She could
-only press his hand in silent sympathy. Gradually his grief became quiet
-and a look of melancholy resignation came over his expressive face.
-
-“When will you leave the city?” she asked quietly.
-
-He thought a moment. “My affairs will be settled by the week’s end,”
-he replied, “then I shall go straight to Ellisland. I——” He paused a
-moment, then straightened himself, and continued in a firm voice, “Jean
-has gone to Mauchline. She will remain there until the house at Ellisland
-is in condition to receive her.” He held out his hand. “And now, dear,
-good friend, good-by.”
-
-“No, not good-by, laddie,” she answered tearfully. “Just _au revoir_, for
-I mean to visit you some day,” and she smiled through her tears.
-
-With a last shake of the hand, he left her, while above stairs a sweet,
-wan, tear-stained face, pressed close against the pane, watched his bowed
-figure striding moodily toward his lodging, watched it as it faded,
-growing dimmer and dimmer, till it was lost to sight.
-
-[Illustration: Robert Burns]
-
-
-
-
-BOOK III
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
- Now spells of mightier power prepare,
- Bid brighter phantoms round him dance;
- Let flattery spread her viewless snare,
- And fame attract his vagrant glance;
- Let sprightly pleasure too advance,
- Unveiled her eyes, unclasped her zone;
- Till last in love’s delicious trance
- He scorns the joys his youth has known.
-
-
-When Robert reached Ellisland the evening sun was flaming over the
-distant western hills. Not a breath stirred the crimson opening blossom,
-or the verdant spreading leaf. It was a golden moment for a poet’s heart.
-He stopped his horse by the door of the cottage and stood silently
-regarding his future home. He had secured from Mr. Miller in Dumfries,
-the owner of the farm, the keys, and declining the company of several,
-who offered to show him the way to his new possession, he set out on his
-journey in gloomy solitude. For a few moments he listened to the birds
-pouring their harmony on every hand, as if to welcome the wanderer, then
-with a sigh he unlocked the door and went within. A few weeks passed
-uneventfully. Upon his arrival he had immediately begun to rebuild
-the dwelling house, which was inadequate to accommodate his family. It
-afforded his jaded senses much pleasure to survey the grounds he was
-about to cultivate, and in rearing a building that should give shelter
-to his wife and children (who were with Squire Armour in Mauchline, the
-stern old man having relented upon a bed of sickness), and, as he fondly
-hoped, to his own gray hairs; sentiments of independence buoyed up his
-mind; pictures of domestic content and peace rose in his imagination; and
-a few weeks passed away, the most tranquil, if not the happiest, which
-he had experienced for some time. His fame naturally drew upon him the
-attention of his neighbors in the district in which he lived, and he was
-received at the table of the gentlemen of Nithdale with welcome, with
-kindness and respect. It is to be lamented that at this critical period
-of his life he was without the restraining influences of the society of
-his wife, for a great change had taken place in his situation; his old
-habits were broken, and he brooded in melancholy abstraction upon his
-past glories in Edinburgh and his wrongs, while thoughts of Highland
-Mary constantly filled his waking hours, and caused him to forget the
-good resolutions he had formed, in his desire to drown recollections.
-The social parties to which he was invited too often seduced him
-from his rustic labor and his plain rustic food, and overthrew the
-unsteady fabric of his resolutions, inflaming those propensities which
-temperance might have weakened, and prudence finally suppressed. It was
-not long, therefore, before Robert began to view his farm with dislike
-and despondence, if not with disgust. Before his advent into Edinburgh
-society, and during his sojourn there, he had refrained from the habitual
-use of strong liquors. But in Dumfries the sins that so easily beset
-him continually presented themselves, and though he clearly foresaw the
-consequences of yielding to them, his appetite and sensations, which
-could not prevent the dictates of his judgment, finally triumphed over
-the power of his will.
-
-His great celebrity made him an object of interest and curiosity to
-strangers, and few persons of cultivated minds passed through Dumfries
-without attempting to see the poet, and to enjoy the pleasure of his
-conversation. As he could not receive them under his own humble roof
-these interviews passed at the inns of the towns, and often terminated
-in excesses, which Robert was seldom able to resist. Indeed, there were
-never wanting persons to share his social pleasures, to lead or accompany
-him to the tavern, to partake in the wildest sallies of his wit, or to
-witness the strength and degradation of his genius.
-
-Unfortunately he had for several years looked to an office in the excise
-as a certain means of livelihood, should his other expectations fail. He
-had been recommended to the Board of Excise before leaving Mossgiel,
-and had received the instructions necessary for such a situation. He
-now applied to be employed regularly, and was immediately appointed
-exciseman, or gauger, as it is vulgarly called, of the district in which
-he lived. His farm was after this, in a great measure, abandoned to
-servants, while he betook himself to the duties of his new appointment.
-To be sure he could still be seen at intervals directing his plow, a
-labor in which he excelled, but it was not at Ellisland that he was now
-in general to be found. Mounted on horseback, our hero was pursuing the
-defaulters of the revenue among the hills and vales of Nithdale, his
-roving eye wandering over the charms of nature, and muttering his wayward
-fancies as he moved along. Though by nature of an athletic form, Robert
-had in his constitution the peculiarities and delicacies that belong to
-the temperament of genius. Endowed by nature with great sensibility of
-nerves, he was in his corporeal, as well as in his mental system, liable
-to inordinate impressions, to fever of the body, as well as of mind.
-This predisposition to disease, which strict temperance in diet, regular
-exercise, and sound sleep might have subdued, habits of a very different
-nature, strengthened and inflamed.
-
-The following year Jean and her bairns came to live at Ellisland. He
-received them with quiet affection, and Jean, who had grown strangely
-humbled and passive, did her utmost to please him at all times, never
-referring to the past, and tactfully avoiding all irritating subjects,
-and by her soothing presence, her loving words of comfort and sympathy,
-soon made her presence indispensable to her moody husband. Another year
-passed by, a year of anxiety for Jean, who was compelled to witness her
-husband’s lapses from sobriety, which now came so often, and to watch his
-health decline slowly, but surely, in consequence. In the midst of all
-his wanderings Robert met nothing in his domestic circle but gentleness
-and forgiveness, except the gnawings of his own remorse. He acknowledged
-his transgressions to his patient wife, promised amendment, and again
-received pardon for his offenses. But as the strength of his body
-decayed, his resolution became feebler, and habit acquired predominating
-strength.
-
-All this time Robert had entertained hopes of promotion in the exercise,
-but circumstances occurred which retarded their fulfillment, and which in
-his own mind destroyed all expectation of their ever being fulfilled. His
-steady friend, Mr. Mackenzie, interposed his good offices in his behalf,
-however, and he was suffered to retain his situation, but given to
-understand that his promotion was deferred, and must depend on his future
-behavior. This circumstance made a deep impression on Robert. He fancied
-that everyone held him in contemptuous pity, as a man of some genius who
-had dwindled into a paltry exciseman, and who was slinking out the rest
-of his insignificant existence in the meanest of pursuits, and among the
-lowest of mankind; and for days he would sit quietly on the banks of the
-river plunged in the gloomiest meditation.
-
-About this time he received word of Lord Glencairn’s death. The news
-plunged him into another fit of melancholy gloom, lessened somewhat,
-however, by the assurance that his noble benefactor had died knowing the
-truth, believing in Robert’s innocence, and asking his forgiveness.
-
-As his health declined his thoughts became more and more fixed upon Mary,
-who was once more in Mossgiel at Colonel Montgomery’s. He yearned with
-bitter longing to gaze upon her sweet face again, to hear her dear voice
-speak his name. These thoughts he strove vainly to conquer, to banish
-from his mind, for Jean’s patience and goodness, her loving forbearance,
-filled him with shame at his own unworthiness. But she gave no sign
-of the bitter heartache she endured. She accepted it all in patient
-resignation, striving by uniform prudence and good management to relieve
-his distress of mind regarding the material welfare of his little flock.
-
-Toward the end of spring he contracted a severe cold while in reckless
-pursuit of an offender, in a driving rain storm, and, having caught the
-guilty one, he celebrated the event at the inn, in company with some
-congenial spirits, seated in his wet clothes, the result being an attack
-of rheumatism, which laid him upon a bed of sickness for some weeks. His
-salary was but a small one, hardly sufficient to keep his family from
-want, and though hitherto his farm had yielded him a comfortable living,
-for some months it had been left to run itself, with the inevitable
-results. Planting time had come and gone, and still his ground lay all
-untouched. His laborers had refused to work for him longer without pay,
-and Souter Johnny, who was now making his home at Ellisland, could only
-attend to the lighter chores about the farm. And now things began to
-take a serious outlook for our hero and his family. Though sick and
-discouraged, with want staring him in the face, he still sent glowing
-reports of his continued prosperity to his loved ones in Mossgiel,
-reports that filled their anxious hearts with false hopes and prayerful
-thankfulness.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-
-One day during Robert’s early convalescence, Souter, after having
-finished his chores, sauntered leisurely through the vegetable garden.
-It was a peaceful nook, and there were household odors of mint, and
-thyme, and boy’s love, which were pleasant to the soul of Souter Johnny,
-and reminded him of stewed rabbit, which he dearly loved, with all its
-attendant delicacies. He paced the path slowly, the light of the sinking
-sun blazing gloriously upon the brilliant gown of his companion, who was
-simpering along beside him, her little gray eyes looking down on him with
-flattering interest as she listened with apparent delight to his tales
-of daring adventure. Finally their conversation drifted to the sick man
-within.
-
-“Poor bonnie laddie,” sighed Eppy dolefully. “To think of him being so
-ill. We all loved him dearly in Edinburgh.”
-
-“He hasna’ been the same lad since he returned from there,” replied
-Souter. “He had many great disappointments in his young life, I tell
-ye,” and he shook his head dismally. “An’ noo everything has gone to the
-dogs wi’ him, ever since he has been in Ellisland. ’Twas a sorry day
-when he became an exciseman, say I.” He paused a moment reflectively,
-then continued earnestly, “But no matter what anybody says different, he
-has always done his duty faithfully, always on the tramp in all kinds
-of weather, till at last his robust constitution has given out, an’ he
-bowled over, so to speak.” He loyally refrained from mentioning that
-Robert’s illness was partly due to his imprudent way of living.
-
-Eppy sighed again. “And he the Bard of Scotland,” she returned
-commiseratingly. “How I pity him. Isn’t it sad Mr. MacDougall?”
-
-“Aye,” replied Souter, with a quick look from under his shaggy eyebrows.
-“Ye hae a kind heart in ye, Miss McKay,” he observed after a pause.
-
-“Do you really think so?” she simpered. “I fear you are a base flatterer,
-Mr. MacDougall. In Edinburgh there were so many who flattered me, who
-sought for my favors, that I became wearied of it all, and longed for
-a change. That is why I came here to Ayrshire and purchased the farm
-adjoining, that I might rest during the summer.”
-
-“And then ye’ll be leaving us?” asked Souter with a deep sigh.
-
-“Perhaps not,” and she looked at him coquettishly. “Would anyone care if
-I did return to town?” she insinuated slyly.
-
-“’Tis a wonder that such a bonnie lassie as ye should still be a maiden,”
-he observed abruptly with a sly look out of the corner of his eye.
-
-“Oh, I have had many offers,” she answered airily, though her heart
-fluttered with a newly-born hope.
-
-“Do ye ne’er get lonely, Miss McKay?”
-
-She sighed and cast down her eyes. “Yes, I do,” she declared plaintively,
-“and I’m lonely now in that great big house with only a servant for
-company.”
-
-“Souter Johnny,” said Souter to himself, “this is the chance of your
-lifetime; go in and win a home.” Having arrived at this resolution, he
-cleared his throat and pausing in his walk, faced the simpering old lady.
-“Mum, ye see before ye,” he remarked, not without some nervousness, “a
-single man, like yoursel’. Not from necessity, och nae; Souter Johnny,
-before he lost his handsome looks, could hae had his pick o’ any o’ the
-lassies, but I hae waited till noo——” he paused impressively.
-
-“Till now, Mr. MacDougall?” she repeated breathlessly, eager to have him
-continue.
-
-“Weel, noo I hae found her,” he answered, “an’ she’s what I hae been
-lookin’ for a’ my life.”
-
-“How romantic you are,” she cried soulfully, with an admiring look.
-
-“Aye, that I am, ’tis born in me,” he responded. “Do ye mind if I smoke,
-mum?” he asked carelessly. He took out of his waistcoat pocket his old
-black pipe and held it in his hand.
-
-“Oh, no,” she gushed. “I love to see you smoke, ’tis so manly.”
-
-Having lighted his pipe and got it drawing to his satisfaction, he turned
-to her once more, and remarked casually, “Would ye call me too old to get
-married? I’m askin’ your advice noo.” He looked at her quizzically.
-
-She shook her head vigorously in the negative. “Age does not matter at
-all,” she observed sagely. “The question is do you feel peart?” and she
-regarded him with anxious eyes.
-
-A grim smile played around Souter’s lips. Removing his pipe, he replied
-with convincing firmness, “Never was sick in my life, strong and healthy.
-Feel my muscle!” and he held out his doubled arm to the timid Eppy,
-who shrank away bashfully. “It willna’ hurt ye,” he declared. Thus
-encouraged, she gingerly touched it with one finger. “Fine, isn’t it?”
-he asked proudly. Before she could answer he continued, “I have a fine
-appetite, mum, an’ I dinna’ feel my age. Noo I ask ye, am I too ugly to
-be looked at, mum? Dinna’ be afraid to tell me the truth.” He held up his
-head, straightened his bent shoulders and stood awaiting her reply.
-
-She eyed him a moment in silence. “Well, Mr. MacDougall,” she said
-doubtfully, after a pause, “I must confess you’re no beauty.” A look
-of disappointment came over Souter’s face, seeing which she hastened
-to reassure him. “But I care not for looks, Mr. MacDougall,” she cried
-earnestly. “One could get used to you. I’ve heard it said that one can
-get used to anything in time,” and she smiled sweetly into his downcast
-face.
-
-He gave her a quick look.
-
-“Is it as bad as that?” he returned reflectively. “Weel, looks is all a
-matter of taste. And noo let’s get down to business.” Eppy gave a start
-and her hands fluttered about nervously, as she waited for his next
-words. “Do ye think, mum, this sweet, lovely lassie I hae in my mind
-would hae me for a husband?” he insinuated softly.
-
-She gave a little gasp. “This is so sudden,” she simpered, then broke off
-abruptly—he hadn’t asked her yet. “Er—why don’t you ask the beautiful
-lassie. She might think of it.” She coyly looked down upon him from under
-her big bonnet.
-
-Souter threw down his pipe in his earnestness. “I will,” he ejaculated
-quickly, his eyes sparkling with triumph. “’Tis your ain bright sel’ for
-whom my heart is yearnin’. Will ye hae me, Eppy?”
-
-Eppy closed her eyes in blissful content. “My first proposal,” she
-thought joyfully. Opening her eyes, she gazed at him fondly. “Oh, I don’t
-want to make a mistake now,” she cried, half frightened, but she had no
-intention of refusing him, however.
-
-“Dinna’ fear,” replied Souter eagerly. “I’ll attend to that; there’ll be
-no mistake made, I’ll warrant ye.”
-
-“You’re such a masterful man,” she exclaimed, with an admiring look,
-“and—well, there’s no gainsaying you. I must confess a real live man
-about the house would be most comforting—to my sister, Sibella—and—and
-me, so I—I’ll have you, Souter,” and she threw herself into his arms with
-a cry of joy and thankfulness.
-
-“Thank ye, thank ye, mum,” said Souter gratefully. “I feel as if I had
-won the prize ticket in a grand lottery.” He heaved a great sigh of
-blissful content as he thought of the big house across the way. “There
-noo, my pipe is out again,” he observed, after a little pause, and
-he calmly turned his back and proceeded to relight it, leaving Eppy
-regarding him with reproachful eyes and pouting lips.
-
-“Souter,” she finally faltered, “I—I thought you were more romantic. We
-haven’t sealed our engagement by a—a——”
-
-“A—what?” asked Souter concernedly. “Is there something mair to do?”
-
-She sidled up to him, giggling bashfully, and after turning to see if
-they were observed, she put her arm around his neck and said pensively:
-
- “Gin a body meet a body comin’ thro’ the rye,
- Gin a body kiss a body, need a body cry.”
-
-A comical look of comprehension dawned on Souter’s face. “O—oh! I see,
-’tis a kiss ye mean,” he answered lightly. “Weel, noo, I’ll na’ stop
-ye if ye want to kiss me. If you can stand it, I can,” and he held his
-face up to hers, for she towered a foot above him. With a sudden dart, a
-downward sweep of her head, she glued her lips to the little man’s, then
-with a resounding smack she released him, with a sigh of absolute content
-upon her homely face. “Weel, noo, that’s not half bad,” observed Souter,
-smacking his lips reflectively.
-
-“Now, Souter,” declared Eppy decidedly, after they had walked a few paces
-in quiet, “since you are a Highlander, you must wear the kilt, to please
-me; and it must be the tartan of our clan.”
-
-Souter threw up his hands in amazed horror. “Oh, dearie, dinna’ ask me to
-do that; I canna’ wear the kilt; I am na’ built that way,” and he looked
-down at his legs with whimsical seriousness.
-
-“Then I’ll not marry you,” she declared with apparent firmness.
-
-Souter hurriedly explained in trembling fear. “I’ll tell ye the truth,
-dearie: when I last wore the kilt the laddies laughed at my crooked legs
-an’ called me a scarecrow, an’ I swore then I’d ne’er show my bare legs
-to mortal man again. Would ye hae me expose my miserable defects, womman?”
-
-She stood off and let her eyes rove slowly down his nether extremities
-with the air of a connoisseur. “I protest they do not look so badly,” she
-observed encouragingly.
-
-[Illustration: “‘Keep on turning,’ she commanded.”]
-
-“Looks are deceivin’, lassie,” quickly replied Souter, who objected
-seriously to kilts. “My legs are na’ my beauty point, for a’ that; they
-are just twa wee bones, I tell ye, so be prepared for the worst,” and he
-shook his head dolefully.
-
-“Oh, well, as Mr. Burns says, ‘A man’s a man, for a’ that!’” she replied
-sweetly. Then after a moment’s reflection, she asked with tender
-solicitude, “Are they so very wee, Souter?”
-
-“Aye, ye should see them,” he replied eagerly, hoping to convince her as
-to his unfitness to wear the dress.
-
-Eppy held up her hands before her face in horror. “Whatever are you
-saying, Souter?”
-
-“Weel, my legs are a maist sensitive subject wi’ me, my dear,” he
-returned apologetically.
-
-“Turn around,” she commanded. He did so in wonder. “Keep on turning,”
-she commanded. “I think, mayhap, they’re not so bad,” she observed after
-a critical inspection. “However, after we are wed I can decide better
-whether ye can wear the kilt or not.”
-
-Souter regarded her in meek astonishment, then he humbly rejoined, “Weel,
-if ye can stand their looks, I’ll na’ complain, but it’s o’er chilly at
-times,” and he shivered apprehensively.
-
-She laughed gayly. “Now, Souter, I must go home. Come over soon, you
-masterful man!”
-
-“Aye, the first thing in the morning,” retorted Souter calmly, “an’ I’ll
-bring the minister wi’ me.”
-
-“The minister! Why bring him?” asked Eppy in amazement.
-
-“To marry us, my dear,” replied Souter quietly.
-
-“You must be daft man!” she cried in sudden alarm.
-
-Souter shook his head. “Ye’d better take no chances,” he retorted calmly.
-“I may change my mind,” and he carefully knocked the ashes out of his
-pipe and put it in his pocket.
-
-“You impatient man!” fluttered Eppy. “I—I—come over and we’ll talk about
-it. Good-by, laddie,” and she tripped daintily off down the path toward
-the gate.
-
-Then Souter sat down on the seat under the big tree beside the house.
-“Souter Johnny,” he said to himself, “ye’re a devil with the wimmen,
-mon,” and a smile of self-satisfaction stole over his wrinkled face.
-
-“Souter Johnny!” panted Eppy, running back to him breathlessly, “I’ve
-changed my mind.”
-
-Souter jumped to his feet in sudden terror. Had he lost her after all, or
-rather, had he lost the home across the way? “W—what, do you mean?” he
-stammered.
-
-“I mean—you—you—may bring the minister,” she gasped, and away she
-fluttered down the walk before he could recover from his astonishment.
-
-“Hurrah! your fortune is made, Souter Johnny!” he cried aloud, when the
-meaning of her words had dawned upon him, and he threw his bonnet high
-in the air. “Ye’ll nae hae to cobble shoes any mair, noo, for ye’ll be
-lord of the manor house, wi’ servants to wait on ye. Oh, the power of
-money! ye’ll ride out in your fine carriage, Souter, and as ye drive by,
-all the neighbors will be bowing and scraping to ye. I can see them noo.
-’Twill be ‘Mr. MacDougall, will ye do us the honor to call at the castle;
-her ladyship would be pleased to see you.’ Then I’ll say to them that
-snubbed me when I was poor, ‘Weel, noo, ’tis very busy I am, attending
-to my estates and other social duties. Tell her grace that Mr. and Mrs.
-MacDougall will be pleased to have her visit us at MacDougall House, if
-she cares to meet us.’” And he stalked along majestically to the house
-with his head held proudly erect. “Noo, I’ll find the minister and make
-sure of my bird.” Arriving at the door of the cottage, he stopped, and
-addressing an imaginary butler, said pompously, “James, open the door,
-your master wishes to enter! Thank ye! Noo take my hat! Noo ye may go!”
-With a chuckle of delight he quietly opened the door and composing his
-features into their natural expression, entered the cottage and made his
-way to the kitchen, where he found a bowl of porridge awaiting him, which
-he hungrily devoured.
-
-Meanwhile in the other room Robert lay tossing feverishly upon his bed.
-Jean sat beside him smoothing his pillow from time to time, and soothing
-his anguished mind with words of love and encouragement.
-
-“Blessings on your faithful head, Jean,” he murmured gratefully. “You’re
-the best, truest wife that erring mortal man ever had.” She flushed with
-pleasure at his words of praise. “Oh, this accursed rheumatism,” he
-groaned. “How it shackles one, making one as much a prisoner as though a
-ball and chain were attached to his ankle.”
-
-“But you are much better to-day,” said Jean brightly.
-
-“For a while only. I fear me this is my fatal illness,” he replied
-despondently.
-
-“Don’t say that, Robert; you’ll be on your feet in a few days now,” and
-she looked hopefully into his worn and haggard face.
-
-He pressed her hand gently. “I haven’t been the best of husbands, lass,”
-he said after a pause. “I have sore tried your patience and your love
-ofttimes, by my unfaithfulness, my unworthiness.”
-
-“I do not complain, Robert,” she answered quietly.
-
-“No, ye have never done that,” he said with a tender smile, “frequent
-though my lapses in sobriety and propriety have been.” He paused
-thoughtfully; presently he continued in mournful reflection, “But I was
-punished for those sins afterward, for then came remorse, shame, regret,
-the three hell hounds that ever dog my steps and bay at my heels.”
-
-“If it is God’s will——” began Jean, but he interrupted her.
-
-“Ah, no, Jean,” he replied bitterly. “’Tis not God’s will that I should
-be here, racked with pain and tortured by the sins that come staring me
-in the face, each one telling a more bitter tale than his fellow. ’Tis
-only the result of my own headstrong folly.” She wiped away the drops of
-perspiration from his brow with tender fingers, while he lay panting from
-the excitement that the recital of his sorrows had occasioned.
-
-“There, do not distress yourself with such bitter thoughts,” she told him
-gently. “What is done, is done, and all our sins will be blotted out in
-that other life.”
-
-“That other life,” he repeated dreamily. “Can it be possible that when I
-resign this feverish being I shall find myself in conscious existence,
-enjoying and enjoyed? Would to God I as firmly believed it as I ardently
-wish it. If there is another life,” he continued with a flash of his
-old whimsical brightness, “it must be for the just, the benevolent, the
-amiable only, and the good. I’m sore afraid Rob Burns will na’ be able to
-get even a peep through the Pearly Gates.”
-
-“Hush, dear,” replied Jean with tender reproach. “’Twill be open to all.
-‘Let whosoever will, come and have eternal life,’ the Master said.”
-
-He mused a while on that sweet thought. “Ah, weel, just noo,” he returned
-with a sigh, “this life is what we must face, and which I must cling to
-as long as I can for the sake of my little flock. Poverty and misfortune
-must be overcome, and at once. Our salvation now lies in my getting the
-supervisorship and increased salary; then we need have no fear of the
-future; we can laugh at fate.”
-
-“You sent your last poem, ‘Prettiest maid on Devon’s bank,’ to Mr.
-Thompson, didn’t ye, laddie?” asked Jean anxiously.
-
-“Aye,” he replied, closing his eyes wearily. “And I implored him for
-God’s sake to send me a few pounds to tide me over the present, till I
-got my promotion. I am not asking a loan, ’tis a business transaction,”
-he continued proudly, “and I ken he will send whatever he is able to
-spare. He is a good friend, and it grieves me bitterly to be obliged
-to ask help of him to keep us from starving. But,” and a note of
-independence crept into his voice, “my song is worth whatever he sends.”
-
-“Hunger and want can humble the most independent spirit,” returned Jean
-sadly. She rose and walked to the window and looked out into the twilight
-with searching, anxious eyes. “Posty should bring us an answer to-night,”
-she murmured.
-
-“An’ he will,” cried Robert hopefully, “for Thompson willna’ disappoint
-me, for he kens I am in sore straits.”
-
-“Heaven bless him!” cried Jean fervently.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-
-The next day our hero was in better health and spirits, and insisted upon
-being up and dressed. Jean, not without secret misgivings, got him into
-his clothes and helped him to the rocking-chair, which she had drawn up
-to the open window. For a while he sat there in silent content, bathed
-in the warm, golden light of the morning sun, whose genial beams seemed
-to infuse new vigor into his languid frame, while the gentle summer wind
-blew upon him with its exhilarating, refreshing warmth. After Jean had
-performed her household duties she returned to find him playing happily
-with their two boys, telling them tale after tale, while they sat perched
-on either arm of the big rocker, their eyes popping out of their round,
-healthy faces with excited interest. He looked up as she entered and
-smiled into her anxious face.
-
-“Do not tire yourself, Robert,” she cautioned him gently. “Come, lads,
-run out doors and play a wee, your father is tired.” But they clung to
-him affectionately.
-
-“One mair story,” they pleaded.
-
-“Tell us aboot Tam O’Shanter’s ride!” commanded Robert, Jr., gravely.
-Jean sat down while he recited the stirring tale, and watched her
-husband with eyes aglow with love and pity. How changed he was, she
-thought with a sigh. What havoc had been wrought in that sturdy frame,
-that fine constitution, in the once ringing tones of his musical voice.
-Alas, all had flown, but with God’s help she would win him back to health
-and strength once more, she told herself with resolute determination.
-As he finished he kissed the earnest faces held up to his with such
-worshipful affection, and with a serious “Thank ye, father,” they turned
-and marched quietly out of the room and into the open air, and soon their
-childish treble floated in through the open window, bringing a smile of
-amused affection to the faces of their parents.
-
-“Now, Robert, ye must be tired out,” remarked Jean presently. “Will ye
-not try and get a nappie?”
-
-“In a wee, Jean,” he answered, looking out of the window thoughtfully.
-
-“Then you must have a bittie of gruel now,” she said, rising and going
-toward the door.
-
-“Nay, nay, Jean, I thank ye, but I canna’ eat nor drink nor sleep just at
-present.”
-
-“Then try and take a nappie,” she insisted, smoothing the pillows and
-sheets in anxious preparation.
-
-“A little later, Jean,” he replied a trifle impatiently.
-
-She sighed patiently. “Then I’ll leave ye for a while,” and she walked
-toward the door. “Ye’re quite comfortable?” she asked. He nodded. Slowly
-she closed the door upon him and applied herself to the task of getting
-the midday meal.
-
-Presently, a knock on the door startled her, interrupting her meager
-preparations. Hastily wiping her hands on her apron, she opened it, and
-there on the threshold stood two richly dressed strangers. “From the
-city,” she mentally said, noticing the elegance of their attire.
-
-Courteously raising his high conical blue silk hat, the younger man
-addressed her. “Is not this Mistress Burns, whom I have the honor to
-address?” he asked.
-
-“I am Mistress Burns,” replied Jean with dignity.
-
-“We have come to see your husband. Will you inform him, my dear madam,
-that his friend Henry Mackenzie would be pleased to converse with him.”
-
-Jean opened wide the door, a look of pleasure on her face. “Please
-to enter,” she said quietly. They did so. She showed them into the
-living-room and bade them be seated. “Robert will be out directly,” she
-said, and hastily went to tell Robert of their arrival.
-
-“So this is where Scotland’s Bard lives,” remarked Mr. Mackenzie, looking
-about the room critically. “This cheerless hut, which bespeaks naught but
-poverty. Poor Burns, I pity him.”
-
-“’Tis all his own fault,” testily replied his companion.
-
-“I am not so sure of that, Sir William,” said Mr. Mackenzie with a swift
-look at him. “I have always believed and maintained that Burns was
-innocent of that monstrous charge my Lady Glencairn brought against him,
-even though you did confess to being an eye witness of the occurrence.
-However, she has received her just deserts. She is at last totally
-ostracized.”
-
-“Do ye mean to say——” sputtered Sir William.
-
-Mr. Mackenzie raised his hand in a stately gesture. “I really do not care
-to discuss it, Sir William. But at last Edinburgh is beginning to realize
-how cruelly they have misjudged him, and they would welcome him back
-again, but I fear his pride and independence will prevent his accepting
-any assistance whatever.”
-
-Sir William gave a snort of impatience. “I cannot waste my sympathy on
-him,” he said angrily. “I am dispatched here to do my duty, and I must do
-it,” and his mouth set in a straight, determined line.
-
-“’Tis a duty that for once is uncommon pleasant to you,” replied
-Mackenzie sarcastically. There was silence for a moment, then he
-continued, “I take it, the decision of the Board is final?” he asked.
-
-“Aye, ’tis irrevocable, sir,” replied Sir William gruffly.
-
-“And he must live on here as a poor exciseman,” murmured Mackenzie half
-to himself. “Live! In sooth ’tis but an existence,” and he strode to
-the window in sudden perturbation and gazed thoughtfully out upon the
-untilled land.
-
-The door of the chamber opened and Robert entered the room, a smile of
-pleasure lighting up his face. Mr. Mackenzie stepped eagerly forward and
-clasped his hand and shook it warmly.
-
-“I am uncommon glad to see ye beneath my humble roof,” said Rob
-earnestly, “and that ye havena’ forgotten poor, hopeless Robert Burns.”
-
-Mackenzie led him to a chair. “Indeed, I have not,” he replied brightly.
-“Believe me, Mr. Burns, when I say that I prize your friendship above
-that of all men I know.”
-
-Robert was about to reply, when he caught sight of Sir William Creech
-watching them impatiently. He gave a great start and rose to his feet.
-
-“Sir William Creech!” he said slowly and bitterly. “To what do I owe this
-visit?”
-
-“I come on a matter of business,” replied Sir William, a flush rising to
-his cheek.
-
-“What business can ye have with me noo?” asked Robert with rising anger.
-“Perjurer, have ye come to gloat over the man ye helped ruin by your
-iniquitous falsehood? It isna’ good news ye bring, I warrant ye, else ye
-would not be the bearer of it.” And he gave a scornful little laugh.
-
-“Insulting as ever, Robert Burns,” snarled Sir William, a red spot of
-anger on each cheek, his eyes flashing wickedly. “Well, I’ll state my
-business briefly. Ye wrote to the Board of Commissioners for the position
-of supervisor in the excise. Your request has been voted on and was
-refused.” He spat the words out with vindictive satisfaction.
-
-“Refused!” gasped Rob incredulously. He had felt so confident that the
-position would be given him. He sat down weakly in his chair, dazed for
-a moment. “But my name has been on the list of promotion for months,” he
-told them dully.
-
-“’Twas scratched off some weeks ago.”
-
-“Scratched off? and why?”
-
-“Because of your Jacobite tendencies,” replied Sir William coldly.
-“Many reports concerning your disloyal sentiments to your country have
-reached the Board, which utterly ruined any chance ye might have had of
-promotion.”
-
-Robert sat with bowed head, crushed by his disappointment. “Again must
-I drink deeply of the cup of humiliation and disappointment!” he cried
-bitterly. Presently he looked up at Mr. Mackenzie with a grim smile on
-his trembling face. “I am at last persuaded, Mr. Mackenzie, that it
-was of me the Hebrew sage prophesied when he foretold, ‘and behold, on
-whatsoever this man doth set his heart, it shall not prosper.’” His head
-dropped on his chest—his hands clenched the sides of the chair with
-despairing intensity. Suddenly he jumped to his feet, his face set and
-drawn, his eyes wild and flashing with bitter anger. “My curse on those
-damned informers, who have blasted my hopes,” he exclaimed hoarsely. “May
-the devil be let loose to torture them to madness.” Then he sank down in
-his chair exhausted by his passion, his face pale and quivering.
-
-Mr. Mackenzie hastened to his side, fearful of the consequences of the
-excitement on his frail constitution. Presently Robert spoke again, but
-in a weak, broken voice.
-
-“My last hope is torn from me,” he said despairingly. “What shall I do
-now? Ah, Mr. Mackenzie, I have felt all the sweetness of applause in my
-short life, but I am now experiencing the bitterness of the after-taste.”
-And the pitiful little smile, the pathetic catch in his voice, strangely
-moved the heart of his listener.
-
-“Pardon my question, Mr. Burns,” said he, “but surely the excise allows
-you a salary?”
-
-Rob laughed mirthlessly. “Aye,” he replied, “the munificent sum of thirty
-pounds a year.”
-
-“Thirty pounds a year!” repeated Mackenzie incredulously.
-
-“Aye, only half of which I am getting now,” explained Robert bitterly.
-“Ye see I am ill and off duty.”
-
-“And are there no royalties on your songs or published collection coming
-to you?”
-
-“Ask Sir William,” retorted Robert bitterly.
-
-“There is no demand for your poems since you left Edinburgh,” replied Sir
-William crustily. “The youth Walter Scott has taken your place in their
-regard. He shows a remarkable talent for rhyming.” And a malicious smile
-appeared on his crafty face as he noted the quick flush appear on the
-expressive countenance of the sick man.
-
-His quivering features betrayed how deeply the barbed dart had entered
-his heart. He turned to Mr. Mackenzie with a resigned little gesture. “Ye
-see, sir,” he faltered with a pathetic smile, “how soon I am forgot.” He
-paused, and the weak tears of sickness welled up into his eyes; then he
-resumed with a shade of bitterness, “Scott is sure to succeed, for he is
-of noble birth. He’ll not be patronized, at least.”
-
-Mr. Mackenzie had been thinking deeply, and now he turned to Robert with
-a resolute air. “Mr. Burns,” he said earnestly, “with your consent, I
-will go to the Board of Commissioners of Excise, of which the Duke of
-Gordon is the chairman, and move them to grant you full salary. They are
-well known to me and I am sure will not refuse my request.”
-
-A glad smile broke up Robert’s gloomy features. “Ye are a friend,
-indeed!” he cried fervently. “God grant they do not refuse you, for if
-they do, I must lay my account with an exit truly _en poète_, for if I
-die not with disease, I must perish with hunger.”
-
-“Your interference will do no good here, Mr. Mackenzie,” hotly declared
-Sir William, glaring at Robert hatefully.
-
-“I think it will,” returned Mr. Mackenzie coolly. “’Twould be Lord
-Glencairn’s wishes were he alive, and his wishes will be respected by
-the Board, mark well what I tell you,” and he flashed him a significant
-look of defiance. Then turning to Robert, he shook him by the hand and
-bade him adieu, saying that he must return at once to Edinburgh. “And
-rest assured,” he concluded, “I will inform you at once of the decision
-of the Board, which without doubt will be favorable. Cheer up, my man,
-Scotland will not allow her ablest son to die of want and neglect, if
-Henry Mackenzie can prevent it.”
-
-“Heaven bless ye!” responded Robert gratefully.
-
-“Mr. Burns, if you——” began Mr. Mackenzie, then he hesitated a moment,
-but finally after a moment’s thought continued his sentence—“if you will
-but accept a loan,” and his hand sought his pocket, but Robert shook his
-head decidedly.
-
-“No, no, Mr. Mackenzie,” he said proudly; “I canna’ accept it, thank ye.”
-
-Mackenzie sighed. “Oh, you sensitive people,” he remarked, “pride and
-poverty.”
-
-“Ye see,” explained Robert gratefully, “I expect a few pounds from the
-sale of a poem, which will relieve my temporary embarrassment, and if
-the commissioners grant me full salary, I can start for the seaside,
-where I may regain my lost health.” He passed his hand wearily over his
-brow, which began to pain him, for the excitement had worn him out. “But
-I fear that has flown from me forever, that the voice of the Bard will
-soon be heard among ye no mair.”
-
-“Nonsense!” replied Mackenzie brightly, putting his hand affectionately
-on Robert’s shoulder. “You will live for years yet, but you must take
-better care of this life which is so valuable to your family, to your
-friends and to the world.” There was deep concern in his pleasant voice
-and in his earnest eyes.
-
-At that moment the street door opened and Eppy appeared dressed
-youthfully in white, leading by the hand none other than Souter Johnny,
-who was looking decidedly crestfallen and sheepish, as he vainly tried
-to pull down his little short kilt over his thin, bony legs, for Souter
-was at last arrayed in full kilts, much to his evident sorrow. He looked
-exceedingly grotesque, squeezed into the suit, which was too small even
-for his undersized frame.
-
-“In the name of!—Souter Johnny, what means this?” gasped Robert in
-amazement.
-
-“Canna’ a man wear the kilts without being laughed at?” answered Souter
-ruefully, resenting the amused look on their faces.
-
-“Well, I must say ye look better in breeches,” observed Rob with a
-quizzical glance at Souter’s grotesquely thin crooked legs.
-
-“He wears them for my sake,” explained Eppy with a soulful look at the
-uncomfortable Souter; then she spied the visitors. “Why, Mr. Mackenzie,
-it is good to see you here!” she exclaimed effusively, and she made him a
-deep courtesy, purposely ignoring Sir William.
-
-“Daft as ever,” grunted Sir William audibly.
-
-She regarded him with a haughty look of disdain. “Daft!” she repeated.
-“Huh! you cannot insult me now with impunity!” she exclaimed in triumph.
-Turning to Souter, she called him to her side with a commanding gesture.
-
-“Noo, ye see, Robert, what has become of my breeches,” whispered Souter
-in Robert’s ear as he passed him. “She is wearing them,” and he winked
-his eye significantly.
-
-As he approached her, she reached out a long arm and drew him to her so
-suddenly that it took him off his feet. Finally he righted himself and
-stood close beside her, his little gray head, with the bonnet perched
-saucily on one side of it, scarcely reaching to her shoulder.
-
-“Friends,” she announced proudly, “this gentleman is my—my husband,” and
-she noticed with pleasure the look of consternation which appeared on all
-their faces.
-
-“What!” cried Robert aghast.
-
-“You’re married!” ejaculated Mr. Mackenzie incredulously.
-
-“Poor man,” sneered Sir William mockingly.
-
-Eppy tittered gleefully. “Yes, I was married to-day, and ’tis heavenly,”
-and she rolled her eyes in an ecstasy of joy.
-
-“Well, ’twas the best you could do, I suppose,” observed Sir William
-maliciously.
-
-“I wouldn’t take you as a gift,” she flashed. “And you tried hard enough
-to win me, dear knows,” she went on with total disregard for the truth.
-“He was forever running after me,” she explained deprecatingly to Souter.
-
-“You—you—you are not speaking the truth,” sputtered Sir William
-furiously. “If I was running it was to get away from you.”
-
-“Oh, of course you won’t admit it now,” she observed calmly. “But I am
-rejoicing that I didn’t marry you.” She looked Souter over critically.
-“Well, Souter may not be very handsome,” she remarked thoughtfully after
-a pause, “but he is a perfect picture in kilts,” and she gave a sigh of
-absolute content.
-
-“Women are queer creatures,” whispered Souter to Robert deprecatingly,
-“and my—my wife, ahem! weel, she’s the queerest of them a’.”
-
-“Well, my friends,” laughed Mr. Mackenzie, “I protest this time I must be
-off. Good-by, lad.”
-
-“May blessings attend your steps and affliction know ye not,” answered
-Robert fervently. “Ye might take Sir William along, for he looks maist
-uncomfortable amongst honest people!” he added dryly.
-
-Mackenzie laughed grimly and passed out, leaving Sir William to follow.
-
-“Ye insulting pauper!” fumed Sir William, starting angrily for the door.
-
-“Ye can go back to your Edinburgh friends,” cried Robert with flashing
-eyes, “an’ tell them that e’en though ye found me almost on the verge of
-despair, with oblivion hovering dark over my still independent head, that
-I yet live in the hope of seeing the prophecy I made to them all that
-night fulfilled, and that Sir William Creech, my worst traducer, will be
-the first one to again court my favor.”
-
-“I’ll hear no more such insulting language!” roared Sir William
-threateningly.
-
-“Ye’ll not hear it t’other side of the door,” replied Robert quietly.
-
-“Aye, but ye’ll get your fairin’ one of these days,” exclaimed Souter
-belligerently. “An’ ’twill be in hell, where they’ll roast ye like a
-herrin’,” he added grimly, much to Eppy’s horror.
-
-“Open the door for me, fellow!” shouted Sir William wrathfully.
-
-“Open it yoursel’,” replied Souter, “an’ I promise ye I’ll shut it behind
-your coattails mighty quick.”
-
-“Out of my way, idiot,” and with a shove he brushed the little man aside
-and swiftly joined his waiting companion outside the gate.
-
-“Did ye see that?” gasped Souter, his eyes flashing fire. “Did ye see
-that? Let me get after him,” and he started for the door, with blood
-in his eyes, but Eppy with a little shriek of alarm grabbed him by the
-plaidie and held on to him with all her strength, which was not slight.
-
-“Don’t, dearie, don’t, you might get hurt!” she cried tearfully.
-
-“Weel, if ye say not, why I’ll let him gae,” returned Souter submissively.
-
-“Come, Robert,” said Jean gently, “you must lie down for a wee bit now.”
-
-“By the way, Rob,” laughed Souter reminiscently, “do ye mind the day——”
-He stopped short as Jean shook her head disapprovingly.
-
-“He’s had a most exciting morning,” she exclaimed gently, “and needs rest
-now. He’ll be feeling more peart to-morrow,” and she held out her hand in
-dismissal.
-
-“Ye mean get out, eh, Mistress?” said Souter good-naturedly. “Weel, weel,
-Souter Johnny can take a hint.”
-
-“Come, Souter,” called Eppy from the open doorway, where she had been
-impatiently waiting for her bridegroom, “come with me to your—your new
-home,” and she bashfully held her fan over her face with a nervous little
-giggle.
-
-“Aye, that I will,” replied Souter, with alacrity. He turned to Robert
-with a new air of dignity which set comically upon his little figure.
-“If we can do anything for ye, Robert, dinna’ forget to send over to
-MacDougall House. Dinna’ forget my address. Mrs. MacDougall, my arm.” She
-grabbed it quickly and they walked to the door. “God-day all,” he called
-over his shoulder, and with a feeling of great contentment, that at last
-his troubles were over, and that he was entering upon a new life of ease
-and plenty, he closed the door behind them, and trotted along beside his
-wife, grinning like a schoolboy, across the fields to their new home.
-
-“Has the Posty come yet?” inquired Robert, after they had gone.
-
-“Yes, but he brought no letter for ye,” answered Jean sadly.
-
-The words of one of the verses of his “Ode to a Mouse,” came to him with
-gloomy presentiment.
-
- “But, mousie, thou art no thy lane,
- In proving foresight may be vain;
- The best-laid schemes o’ mice and men
- Gang aft agley;
- An’ lea’e us naught but grief an’ pain
- For promised joy;
- Still thou are blest compared wi’ me!
- The present only touchest thee;
- But och! I backward cast my e’e,
- On prospects drear’;
- An forward, tho’ I canna’ see,
- I guess and fear.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-
-Later that day two men might have been seen galloping their horses at
-full speed toward the little house on the hillside. They were determined,
-resolute looking men, evidently bent on serious purpose. Finally they
-reached the gate, and dismounting made their way to the door, the elder
-man insisting loudly upon accompanying the other, much to his visible
-annoyance.
-
-“There is no need for secrecy, Gilbert Burns,” said he grimly, and
-he followed him into the house and to the room where Robert sat with
-pencil in hand vainly courting his Muse. Jean, who was busily engaged in
-sewing, jumped to her feet with a little cry of amazement upon seeing her
-father before her. Robert held out his hand to his brother in delighted
-surprise, mixed with anxiety.
-
-“Brother!” he cried, “what brings ye to Ellisland in such haste? Is it
-bad news? Mother, our sisters, are they ill?”
-
-“Nay,” replied Gilbert constrainedly. “They are all well, Rob, and have
-sent their love to yourself and family.”
-
-“Thank God for that,” responded Robert thankfully. There was a little
-embarrassed silence, then Gilbert spoke again.
-
-“Robert, we—we are in sore trouble,” he confessed, his face anxious and
-troubled.
-
-“Trouble!” echoed Rob blankly. “What is wrong, brother?”
-
-“I cannot hold Mossgiel any longer,” he replied, dejectedly. “The farm is
-but a wretched lease, as ye know, an’ I canna’ weather out the remaining
-year. Without assistance, Robert, I canna’ hope to hold our little family
-together any longer.”
-
-Robert’s heart sank within him as he heard the direful news. He glanced
-at Squire Armour apprehensively. “And Squire Armour?” he interrogated
-with an angry glance at that gentleman, who stood with a sneering smile
-on his harsh face, taking in the evidences of poverty that surrounded
-them. And with never a word of love or pity, nor of greeting to his
-daughter who sat there with white face and longing eyes, waiting to hear
-some news from her stern, implacable father, of her loving mother at home.
-
-“I have bought the lease of Mossgiel,” he growled, “an’ if your brother
-canna’ pay up the back rent, which is long past due, I shall seize
-everything and turn the whole lot of them out, every one.”
-
-Robert looked at him a moment in scornful silence. Presently he spoke,
-and the cutting sarcasm of his voice caused the old Squire to wince and
-drop his eyes.
-
-“Ye are a most just, square, God-fearin’ man, Squire Armour,” he said.
-“The Kirk should be proud of ye.” Turning to Gilbert, he asked him the
-amount of his debt.
-
-“Only a matter of £4, brother,” he replied, “but ’tis a fortune to me at
-present.”
-
-“An’ I must have the money to-day or the farm, I care not which.”
-
-“Oh, father!” cried Jean, going to him, “do not be hard on him; he will
-pay you; only give him time.”
-
-“Jean!” flashed Robert angrily, “dinna’ stoop to ask mercy of that mon,
-even though he be your own father.” Jean turned away with a sigh.
-
-Squire Armour laughed derisively. “Ye’ll both be on your knees before
-long, I’ll warrant,” he cried harshly, “asking favors of me, especially
-when ye have naught to feed a starving family. Ye have made yoursel’ a
-fine, comfortable bed, my lassie, havena’ ye?” He sneered sarcastically,
-turning to his shrinking daughter. “But ’tis made, and ye can lie on it,
-ye ungrateful minx.”
-
-Robert rose quickly to his feet, his eyes flashing dangerously.
-
-“Stop! Squire Armour!” he commanded. “Dinna’ dare to use such language
-to my wife in my own house, or weak, sick, and crippled as I am, I will
-throw ye into the road like the cur that ye are.” He stopped, breathless
-with indignation. Presently he resumed with immeasurable scorn in his
-vibrating voice, “An’ they call such men as ye Christians! A sneaking,
-crawling, psalm-singing, canting hypocrite! Faugh! Were I the Lord, I
-would sicken at sight of ye.” He turned away and sat down beside his now
-weeping wife, and there was pity and compassion in the look he bestowed
-upon her.
-
-“I’ve had enough of your blasphemy, Robert Burns. If ye canna’ pay the
-rent for your brother, my business is elsewhere.”
-
-“I had no one else to turn to in this, my hour of trouble,” murmured
-Gilbert brokenly. “If ye can help me without impoverishing yoursel’, for
-God’s sake do it, or I shudder to think what will become of the dear ones
-at home.”
-
-Robert was silent. He thought with anxious loving concern of his own
-little flock, of the slender resources at his command, of the gravity of
-his own situation, sick as he was and with such gloomy prospects staring
-him in the face—and yet was he not better off after all than they at
-Mossgiel? Had he not his salary, small as it was, and the promise of the
-supervisorship, besides the money that Thompson would pay him for his
-poem? He had much to thank God for, he thought gratefully.
-
-“I see ’tis no use delaying longer,” said Armour, looking at the serious,
-downcast faces before him. “I have given ye fair warning, Gilbert Burns,
-an’ noo I’ll go.”
-
-He had reached the door, when Robert spoke quietly but firmly. “Wait!” he
-called. “Ye shall have the money, ye Shylock.”
-
-“Thank God!” cried Gilbert with a loving glance at his brother’s calm
-face.
-
-Jean looked at him in speechless amazement. What did he mean? How could
-he help others when they were in such dire need themselves? she asked
-herself apprehensively.
-
-“Robert,” she whispered anxiously, “ye dinna’ ken what ye say.”
-
-“My brother will meet ye at sundown, at the Inn,” continued Robert
-without heeding her warning, although his face took on a whiter hue. “He
-will bring ye every farthing of what is due ye. Noo go; there is the
-door; your business here is ended. Ye have brought naught but misery and
-trouble into my life by your unreasonable hatred o’ me, but the time
-will come, Squire Armour, when all the unhappiness and suffering ye have
-caused me and mine will rise up before ye like a hideous phantom, robbin’
-ye of all peace o’ mind on earth, and your hopes of salvation hereafter.”
-He drew nearer the gaping man, who was regarding him with angry, sullen
-eyes, and continued with a bitter, unforgiving intensity that filled his
-listeners with awe and horror, “An’ when ye feel the chill icy hand of
-grim death clutching at your heart, ye’ll cry out for the sympathy and
-love of those whom ye cast out of your life, but ye’ll cry in vain, an’
-ye’ll die as ye have lived, a miserable wretched ending to a miserable
-selfish life.”
-
-As he finished his grim prophecy, Squire Armour gave a cry of nervous
-fear, and with blanched face and wild eyes he strove to speak, but the
-words would not pass his white, trembling lips. Finally he gasped in a
-frightened whisper which gradually rose to angry defiance:
-
-“How dare ye! How dare ye say such things to me, Robert Burns? I willna’
-die like that and ye canna’ frighten me with your grim forebodings.” He
-paused and glanced at them all in turn, then hastily opened the door.
-Just as he was stepping out, he turned slowly and looked at the white,
-patient face of his daughter. For a moment he regarded her in silence,
-then with a visible effort he addressed her.
-
-“Jean,” he said, and his voice was noticeably softer, “ye are welcome to
-come back to your home.” He cast a quick look at the lowering face of his
-son-in-law and added vindictively—“alone.”
-
-“Nay, never alone, father,” replied Jean sadly, looking at her husband’s
-frowning face.
-
-The old man turned with sudden fury upon them. “I’ll wait till sundown
-for my money,” he shouted, “but not a minute longer!” and he closed the
-door behind him with a vicious slam.
-
-Gilbert was first to break the depressing silence that ensued. He felt
-vaguely that all was not so well with his brother as he had been led to
-believe.
-
-“Forgive me, brother,” he murmured contritely, “for bringing this trouble
-on ye.”
-
-“Never mind, Gilbert; it was to be, I ken,” answered Rob absently.
-
-Gilbert was silent a moment. “But the money, Robert, is it—are ye——” he
-stammered, then stopped in embarrassed confusion.
-
-“’Tis the sum I expect from the sale of a poem. Jean, see if there is
-aught of the Posty.” She rose and went to the window and peered anxiously
-down the dusty road.
-
-“I didna’ have the ready money with me,” went on Robert lightly, as if it
-were a matter of small importance, “or I would have fixed it up at once.
-But ye shall hae the money, laddie, when my letter comes,” and he smiled
-reassuringly into Gilbert’s anxious face.
-
-“God bless ye, Robert; ye have taken a great load off my heart.”
-
-Jean returned to her seat by the hearth, and listlessly took up her
-needlework. “I fear Posty has forgotten us to-day,” she said in answer to
-Robert’s questioning look.
-
-[Illustration: “‘I’ll wait till sundown for my money,’ he shouted.”]
-
-A great fear seized his heart. For nearly a week he had hopefully awaited
-some word from Thompson. What could be the matter? “O God!” he prayed
-silently, “let him not fail me noo.” With a bright smile that sadly
-belied his anxious heart, he rose and, taking Gilbert’s arm, said gayly,
-“Come, brother, and see the new bairn that has been added to the flock
-this last year.”
-
-As they left the room Jean dropped her work in her lap and gazed after
-them with eyes filled with helpless tears of anxiety, at the thought of
-the hardships and suffering that lay in wait for them all.
-
-After admiring the baby in the trundle bed the two brothers talked of
-the dear ones in Mossgiel, and the many changes time had wrought in the
-lives of them all; spoke with tenderness of the sister who had recently
-been married—and dwelt with anxious concern on the struggles of their
-younger brother, who had left home to branch out for himself. For a time
-they forgot their own troubles, and Robert plied his brother with many
-questions concerning the welfare of all his old friends and neighbors,
-while Gilbert told him all the gossip of the village, of the prosperity
-of some of the lads, and the unfortunate situations of many of the
-others, thus leading up to the recital of their own troubles since Robert
-had left his home. He listened sorrowfully to the tale of hardship and
-unceasing toil which brought such little recompense, but not by word
-or look did he betray his own blighted hopes and gloomy prospects.
-Finally they had exhausted every subject save one, and that one had been
-uppermost in the minds of both, but each had avoided the subject with a
-shrinking dread.
-
-No news of the little dairymaid had come to Robert for almost a year,
-and the thought that possibly she was ill or dead—or—and a hundred
-conjectures racked his brain and froze the eager questions that trembled
-on his lips. Gilbert must have read the longing in his brother’s heart,
-for, after a troubled glance at the dark yearning face gazing at him so
-beseechingly, he looked down at his toil-worn hands and awkwardly shifted
-one knee over the other. Presently he spoke.
-
-“Mary is still at Colonel Montgomery’s,” he observed, making an effort to
-speak lightly.
-
-“I heard she had left Mrs. Dunlop’s,” replied Robert feverishly,
-moistening his lips with the tip of his tongue.
-
-“Aye,” sighed Gilbert. “She grew tired o’ the city and longed for the
-stillness, the restfulness of country life once more, so she came back
-to us and took her old place in the dairy. Poor lass,” and he looked
-thoughtfully out of the window and sadly watched the glorious sunset
-tinting the distant hills in a blaze of golden light.
-
-“An’—an’ is she well—is she happy?” murmured Robert in a soft, hushed
-voice. Gilbert did not answer for a moment. Presently he roused himself
-and slowly let his gaze wander back till it rested on his brother’s
-wistful face.
-
-“Can ye bear a shock, brother?” he asked quietly.
-
-Robert suddenly stiffened and his eyes grew wide and staring. He
-gripped the sides of the chair as a wave of sudden dizziness dulled his
-understanding. Presently it passed away, and like one in a dream he
-whispered hoarsely, “Tell me the worst, Gilbert; is—is she dead?”
-
-He closed his eyes and waited with breathless stillness for the answer.
-
-“Thank God, not that!” replied Gilbert feelingly. Robert breathed a sigh
-of relief. “But she is very ill, an’ I ken she hasna’ long on earth noo.
-The doctors say there is no hope for her,” and he bit his lips to keep
-back the rising tears.
-
-Slowly, sorrowfully, Robert’s head drooped till it rested on his bosom.
-For a moment he sat like one on the verge of dissolution.
-
-“Oh, God!” he moaned bitterly, “that sweet young life crushed out in
-all its innocent purity, like a delicate flower, and through my sin, my
-reckless folly. Oh, how can I live and bear my punishment!” A convulsive
-sob racked his weakened frame. Gilbert bent over him with tears in his
-eyes, forgetting his own crushing sorrow in witnessing that of his
-brother.
-
-“Dinna’ greet so, Robert,” he cried. “’Twas not your fault, ye ken. It
-was to be.” His philosophical belief in fate helped him over many a hard
-and stony path, and enabled him to meet with calmness and fortitude the
-many heartaches and disappointments which befell him.
-
-Soon the convulsive shudders ceased, and leaning wearily back in his
-chair, Robert fixed his great mournful eyes upon his brother in sorrowful
-resignation.
-
-“How did she look when ye last saw her, Gilbert?” he asked faintly,
-pressing his hand tightly to his heart, for the old pain had come back
-with exhausting results.
-
-“Like an angel, lad,” replied Gilbert tenderly. “So sweet and pure, so
-patient and forgiving.”
-
-“Does she suffer much?”
-
-“Nay,” he answered reassuringly. Then he continued, his voice soft and
-low, his strong features quivering from the restraint he put upon his
-feelings, “Her life is just slowly slipping away from her; day by day
-she grows weaker and weaker, but ne’er a complaint is on her lips. She
-is always so cheerful an’ smilin’ that it fair makes ye weep to see her
-fadin’ awa’ so fast,” and his voice broke into a hard sob.
-
-“Oh, Mary, my Highland Mary!” murmured Robert brokenly.
-
-“Her last wish is to see the Highlands, to—to die there,” continued
-Gilbert, his lips contracting with a sudden, sharp pain at the thought.
-“So before she grows any weaker, Mrs. Dunlop, who has come from town to
-see her, and who is wi’ her noo, is goin’ to take her back to her old
-home in Argyleshire.”
-
-“Going home to die!” repeated Robert dreamily. “Oh, if I might be taken
-awa’ too, if my end would only hasten,” he muttered despairingly, with
-the weak selfishness of the sick and sorrowing. “Then might our departing
-souls be united as one, to be together for all eternity.”
-
-“Hush, Robert!” cautioned Gilbert, looking fearfully at the closed door.
-“Remember Jean and the bairns.”
-
-“Gilbert, I must see her before she goes!” he cried utterly distracted.
-“’Tis for the last time on earth, ye ken, lad,” and he jumped up,
-trembling with eager excitement.
-
-“Brother, would ye kill yoursel’?” cried Gilbert, seeking to restrain
-him. “’Tis madness for ye to go out in your weak condition.”
-
-“Dinna’ stop me, Gilbert!” he panted, and he flung open the door and
-rushed excitedly into the room where Jean sat in patient meditation.
-“Jean, get my bonnet and coat, quick, quick!” he commanded with his
-old-time vehemence. She jumped up pale and frightened and looked
-questioningly at Gilbert. Quickly he told her of Mary’s illness and
-Robert’s determination to go to her at once. When he had finished she
-went to her husband, the tears of ready sympathy in her eyes, for she was
-not jealous of his love for Mary. She had gotten over that long ago, and
-laying her hand gently on his arm, she tried to coax him to sit down and
-listen to them.
-
-“They’ll have to pass by here on their way to Greenock,” she told him
-tenderly. “And ye may be sure, Robert, that Mary will not leave Ayrshire
-without saying good-by to you.” And so she reasoned with him, while
-Gilbert joined her in assurances of Mrs. Dunlop’s intention of stopping
-to see him as she passed the farm. Gradually the wild light in his eyes
-died down, the tense figure relaxed, and with a sigh of exhaustion he
-allowed himself to be taken back to his room.
-
-“Ye’re sure she’ll not forget to stop here?” he asked with pathetic
-eagerness. Then he continued with wistful retrospection, “Two years have
-come and gone and not a word have we spoken to each other since that day
-we parted in Edinburgh! Oh, cruel, cruel fate!” He spoke so low that none
-heard him.
-
-“Noo, Robert,” said Jean brightly, “you must take your gruel, ’twill give
-ye strength.” But he made a gesture of repulsion.
-
-“Nay, Jean, I canna’ eat noo; ’twould choke me. I think I’ll lay me down
-to rest.” They soon prepared him for bed. Without a word, he turned his
-face to the wall and for the rest of the night he lay there with wide,
-staring, sleepless eyes, thinking, thinking, thinking.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-
-News of Robert’s illness soon reached Edinburgh, along with reports of
-his misconduct, profligacy, and intemperance, reports which were grossly
-exaggerated, together with many other slanderous falsehoods.
-
-And rumors of his poverty and the destitute condition of his family
-brought sorrow and anxiety to the hearts of many of his loyal friends,
-who were only too ready and willing to offer him all the help and
-assistance that would be needed, but they knew, too, his inflexible
-pride and independence, and realized how futile would be their offers of
-friendly assistance.
-
-For some days Lady Nancy Gordon had been anxiously puzzling her brain
-for some thought or scheme whereby she could help the unfortunate Bard
-who was plunged in such depths of poverty and misfortune. She was
-thinking of him now as she sat at the harpsichord, her fingers wandering
-idly over the keyboard in a running accompaniment to her thoughts. Her
-father softly entered the room at this juncture, but she did not turn
-her head nor intimate that she was aware of his presence. Presently
-her touch grew more and more tender. Anon she glided into one of those
-dreamily joyous, yet sorrowful, mazurkas, that remind one of gay wild
-flowers growing in rich profusion over silent and forgotten graves. Lady
-Nancy had reason to boast of herself, for she was a perfect mistress
-of the instrument—and as her fingers closed on the final chord, she
-wheeled round abruptly on the chair, and rising to her feet greeted her
-father with a tender smile. For a moment she regarded him in thoughtful
-silence, then as he laid down his paper, she walked up to him, a frown of
-displeasure wrinkling her smooth, white forehead.
-
-“I think, father,” she said deliberately, with a haughty uptilt of her
-pretty nose, “I think it is perfectly disgraceful the way that hackney
-scribbler who writes for yon journal,” indicating the paper on the table,
-“either through malice or ignorance affixes such degrading epithets to
-the name of the Bard of Scotland, for by no other name will I ever speak
-of Robert Burns,” and she flashed an angry glance at the offending paper.
-
-“Poor obstinate lad,” sighed the Duke thoughtfully. His mind went back
-to the day after the garden party at Glencairn Hall, when he had sent
-for Robert to honor them with his presence at Gordon House, and how the
-poet had taken offense at some thoughtless remark of his, given in kindly
-spirit; how with haughty pride, and wounded dignity, he had gotten up
-from the table and after thanking them for their hospitality, declared
-he had not come to be insultingly patronized and pitied, and refusing to
-listen to reason, or explanation, he had left in bitter resentment and
-blind misunderstanding. Lady Nancy too was thinking the same thoughts,
-and after a moment’s meditation she looked into her father’s kindly face
-and remarked earnestly:
-
-“Father, something must be done for him and his family at once.”
-
-“But, my dear,” he meekly replied, “our hands are tied by his own
-obstinacy.”
-
-“Can we not get up a subscription for him?” she asked. He shook his head
-slowly.
-
-“’Twould be to no purpose, Nancy,” he returned thoughtfully. “He
-would refuse all offers of pecuniary aid. I know well his independent
-principles, and so do you.”
-
-They talked over many plans and projects, but none seemed feasible,
-and they were about to give up in despair, when Henry Mackenzie was
-announced. He had just arrived from Ellisland, and immediately spoke of
-his visit to the poet, and under what painful conditions he had found
-him—told them of his promise to Burns to secure the office of supervisor
-for him, and had called to consult with his lordship concerning its
-bestowal.
-
-Nancy listened with bated breath and tear-dimmed eyes as he spoke of the
-change in Robert, his poverty, his indomitable courage and independence,
-in spite of the ravages of disease and the black, gloomy outlook for
-future prosperity.
-
-“Nancy and I were just discussing some means of alleviating his distress
-as you entered,” said the Duke as Mr. Mackenzie finished his recital.
-“And it affords me much gratification to be able to assist him to the
-office of supervisor of the excise and its attendant increase of salary.”
-
-“’Twill be a God-send to him, believe me, my lord,” returned Mr.
-Mackenzie feelingly.
-
-“The news will be dispatched to him at once!” cried Nancy with sparkling
-eyes. “’Twill relieve his present distress of mind.”
-
-With that assurance, Mr. Mackenzie rose, and thanking them for their
-kindness in behalf of the indigent poet, took his leave.
-
-Having finished luncheon, the old Duke excused himself, and going to his
-study, he made out the necessary papers of promotion for the struggling
-exciseman, with many a shake of his head and pitying sigh for the young
-genius who was reduced to such straits—driven to such a commonplace
-calling, through his headstrong recklessness, his foolish ideas of
-independence. Having signed them he sat back in thoughtful meditation.
-Suddenly the door opened, and his daughter asked permission to enter.
-Having gained it, she crossed to her father, and sinking down beside him,
-in an eager, impetuous manner quickly laid before him a project which
-had been formulating in her active brain while he was busy writing out
-the papers.
-
-He started back in amazement. “What!” he cried. “Are you out of your
-senses, Nancy?”
-
-“Now, papa, listen!” she exclaimed earnestly. “’Twill take but a day’s
-ride to reach Dumfries, and think how delighted he will be to receive the
-promotion from your hands,” and she slyly noted the effect of the bit of
-delicate flattery.
-
-He frowned and pursed his lips for a moment, and idly tapped the folded
-papers against his knee in thought. These signs boded success, as Nancy
-well knew, and springing to her feet she gave him a big hug that set him
-gasping.
-
-“Look here, Mistress Nancy!” he exclaimed as soon as he recovered his
-breath, “why do you want to take this wearisome journey at this season
-of the year, just to visit the home of this poor exciseman?” and he
-wonderingly regarded the face that had suddenly grown flushed and
-pensive, as she looked with worshipful eyes at the large engraving over
-the fireplace, which contained the figure of Burns in a characteristic
-attitude, reading one of his poems to the group of people that surrounded
-him.
-
-“I want to see him once more before the fire of his genius grows cold,”
-she answered dreamily. “I want to see him in his home with his—his
-wife and children around him.” She might have told him that she was
-heart-hungry for a sight of that dark, glowing face, the flashing black
-eyes that had thrilled her with such blissful pain, for the sound of
-that rich, majestic voice, that had so often stirred the uttermost
-depths of her heart. She felt that the yearning of her soul would not be
-satisfied till she had seen him again, spoken with him. She hoped, yet
-dreaded, that the sight of his changed face, his miserable surroundings,
-the commonplaceness of it all, of meeting the exciseman with his wife
-and children around him, rather than the idealized poet, would silence
-forever the strange unrest of her soul, banish all thoughts of sentiment
-from her mind, and destroy the spell of glamour which he had all
-unconsciously thrown about her. These thoughts flew through her mind
-with lightning speed while her father was making up his mind how best to
-dissuade her from her purpose.
-
-“I fear me, Nancy, ’twill give us both more pain than pleasure,” he said
-finally. “We may even lose our respect for him.”
-
-“Don’t say that, father!” she cried reproachfully. “No matter how low he
-may have fallen, and I protest that fame has exaggerated his misconduct
-woefully, we people of Scotland cannot forget nor overlook the priceless
-treasure he has put into our thankless hands, a treasure that will be
-handed down to posterity with ever increasing regard, admiration and
-love for its author,” and her flashing blue eyes, that had so often
-reminded Robert of Mary Campbell, and which had formed a closer tie of
-comradeship between them, again sought and lingered upon the engraved
-likeness of her hero. The singular beauty of Lady Nancy Gordon was
-illumined by that happy expression of countenance which results from the
-union of cultivated tastes and superior understanding with the finest
-affections of mind, and the influence of such attractions had been keenly
-felt by the ardent poet, who was not altogether unaware of the impression
-he had made upon her heart, which was as susceptible to the charms of
-wit and intellect as was his own. As she stood gazing up at the picture,
-she thought with an odd little smile how she had openly sought for his
-favors, delighted in his apparent preference for her society even while
-she told herself she knew he was only attracted by her brilliancy—that
-she appealed to his intellect—charmed him by her wit, her cleverness. No,
-she had never touched his heart, she thought with a sigh, and a look of
-sadness came into her thoughtful eyes.
-
-“I fear, Nancy, that Robert still harbors feelings of resentment against
-us,” protested the Duke after a pause. “I know he would rather not see
-us.”
-
-But Lady Nancy overruled his objection. “Then all the more reason for
-our assuring him of our friendship and asking his forgiveness for any
-offense we have unintentionally offered him.”
-
-Seeing all arguments were useless, the old Duke finally consented, and
-with a hug and a kiss, Nancy left him and proceeded to make arrangements
-for their speedy departure for Ayrshire.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-
-The next morning dawned bleak and dismal. A damp, penetrating mist hung
-over the farm like a pall, and the chill of the rain-laden air penetrated
-into the rooms and made itself felt even by the side of the brightest
-fires. It affected the inmates of Ellisland farm to an alarming extent.
-They sat gloomily around the hearth idly watching the smoldering peat
-fire, which failed to send out much warmth—as if it, too, felt the
-depressing influences which surrounded the little household and which had
-plunged them all into such a slough of despond.
-
-Robert had partaken of his bowl of porridge and now lay upon his bed,
-grateful for the added warmth of the woolen blankets which Jean had
-thrown over him with thoughtful solicitude. He appeared to the anxious
-watchers to be more like himself than he had been for some days, in spite
-of his restless, sleepless nights, as he lay there peacefully enjoying
-the antics of the children who were playing gleefully but quietly around
-the room their favorite game of “Blind man’s holiday.”
-
-At sundown the night before Gilbert had hastened to the Inn to meet
-Squire Armour and to plead for another day’s grace, but the implacable
-old man refused to listen to him when he found he had failed to bring
-the money, and stormily took his departure with threats of instant
-eviction, leaving Gilbert in a state of utter distraction. He watched the
-Squire ride furiously away in the direction of Mossgiel with a heavy,
-sinking fear at his heart, then slowly made his way, with pale face and
-clenched hands, back to his brother’s cottage, where he wrestled with the
-fears that assailed him in despairing silence. Several times during the
-night he was on the verge of saddling his horse and dashing home, but
-the hope that the morning would bring the long-expected letter to Robert
-checked the impulse, and so he sat the long night through anxiously
-waiting for the dawn, praying fervently that he might not be too late to
-save his dear ones from the vindictive anger, the unyielding resolution
-of their irate landlord.
-
-And now morning was here at last. Robert had fallen into a profound
-slumber of nervous exhaustion. Jean tucked him in carefully with the warm
-blankets, and taking the children with her, quietly closed the door upon
-the sleeping man with a prayer of thankfulness for his temporary respite
-from the troubles that surged about his head.
-
-When her duties were over and the children playing on the green, Jean
-took her sewing and joined Gilbert in the living room. He was walking
-restlessly up and down, with nervous, flashing eyes that eagerly
-searched the road, as he passed and repassed the small window. His
-restless pacing, his look of hopeful anxiety smote Jean to the heart,
-for she had been bitterly resentful, and was still in a measure, against
-Gilbert’s selfishness in thinking only of his own extremity. It didn’t
-seem right or just that he should be here with outstretched hands,
-waiting to take the money that meant so much to their own struggling
-family at the present time, and without which she could only foresee grim
-want staring them all in the face—and she had to struggle with the desire
-that rushed over her to rise up and tell him of their bitter plight, to
-bid him go elsewhere for assistance; but the fear of Robert’s anger kept
-her silent. Then, too, she suddenly remembered that they had both kept
-their poverty and Robert’s continued ill luck and failures from the home
-folk, and it was only to be expected that Gilbert would naturally turn
-to his prosperous brother for assistance. “Prosperous, indeed! If he but
-knew,” and she sighed deeply, for her mother’s heart felt sore depressed
-as she thought of her own loved ones. They did not talk much. Each was
-too busy with his own gloomy thoughts.
-
-In fancy, Gilbert could see Squire Armour at Mossgiel Farm, ordering
-out his mother and sister, watching them with sinister eyes as they got
-together their meager belongings, and then when they, with streaming
-eyes, had carried out the last piece of furniture and stood gazing at
-the home that was no longer theirs, the cruel landlord had heartlessly
-laughed at their sorrow and, locking the door, had ridden away with the
-keys in his pocket, leaving them standing there not knowing whither to go
-nor where to find food or shelter.
-
-“O God! Not that! Not that!” he cried aloud, pausing in his walk with
-clenched hands, pale and wild-eyed.
-
-Jean looked up from her work in startled alarm. “Gilbert!” she cried.
-“What is it?”
-
-With a little mirthless laugh, he told her of the vision he had had, told
-of his fears for the safety of his home and the welfare of his loved ones.
-
-She listened with a feeling of shame at her heart and a flush of angry
-humiliation mantling her pale cheek.
-
-“’Fore Heaven, it makes me feel like cursing even the memory of
-my father,” she exclaimed bitterly with a flash of her old-time
-imperiousness. “But be not alarmed, Gilbert,” she continued with an
-encouraging smile. “Your mother is a match even for my father, and I’ll
-warrant she’ll not let him set his foot inside the threshold till you
-return.” His face brightened.
-
-“I had indeed forgot my mother’s independent, courageous spirit,” he
-replied with a sigh of relief and hopefulness.
-
-The depressing gloom thus lifted, they soon drifted into a friendly,
-earnest conversation, and the minutes sped by without, however, the
-looked-for interruption of the overdue postman.
-
-Outside, the mist had long since been dispersed by the warm rays of the
-noonday sun, which was now shining brilliantly. A soft moisture glittered
-on every tiny leaf of the wild rose bushes which clustered beneath the
-window of the little cot, and on every blade of grass. The penetrating
-and delicious odor of sweet violets and blue-bells scented each puff of
-wind, and now and then the call of the meadow lark pierced the air with a
-subdued far-off shrillness. Suddenly the peaceful stillness was broken in
-upon by the sound of footsteps crunching slowly along the garden path on
-their way to the door of the cottage.
-
-The Duke of Gordon and his daughter had arrived in Dumfries the night
-before, and, after a night’s rest, they took the coach to Ellisland
-and put up at the little old Inn. There they made inquiries for the
-whereabouts of the home of the poet of the little old man who was
-boastfully describing the splendors of MacDougall House, none other than
-our old friend Souter, once more in his breeches, having asserted his
-authority, much to his wife’s secret satisfaction, for “she did so love a
-masterful man.” Whereupon Souter condescendingly offered to conduct them
-to the place they sought. And now, as they looked at the poor clay biggin
-and the evidences of poverty and neglect which surrounded them on all
-sides, their hearts sank within them.
-
-“I suppose we will find Mr. Burns greatly changed?” said Nancy
-interrogatively with a little shudder of dread.
-
-“Weel, mum,” replied Souter reflectively, “we all change in time, ye ken.
-Some for worse, like mysel’, and some for the better, like yoursel’,
-askin’ your pardon for my boldness. And ye ken Robbie’s life has been
-very hard these past few years.” He sighed and shook his head dolefully.
-“But I want to say right here,” and his heavy eyebrows drew together in
-a black scowl, “Robbie Burns’ sickness is na’ due to his drinkin’, as ye
-people of Edinburgh believe, and put in yer penny papers. Robbie is na
-drunkard. I hae known him from infancy, and I affirm that he has never
-been guilty of the gross enormities he has been charged with. He could
-always attend to his duties,” and he looked with aggressive suspicion
-into the downcast faces of his listeners for some sign of doubt of his
-assertion, which, though stanchly loyal, was not altogether true, as he
-knew only too well. “But there is nae use telling all ye know,” he told
-himself philosophically. “And what people don’t know about the food they
-eat, will no hurt their appetites.”
-
-“I am very glad to hear that,” ejaculated the Duke warmly.
-
-“An’ he is a fond father an’ a maist affectionate husband,” continued
-Souter stoutly. “I’ll go in noo and tell him ye’re here,” and he strode
-into the house, leaving the couple standing in the path much to their
-astonishment.
-
-“It doesn’t seem right, father,” said Lady Nancy sadly, “for such genius
-to dwell in that little hut, amid such surroundings. How I pity him.”
-
-There was a suggestion of tears in the sweet voice which her fond father
-noticed with sudden apprehension. He looked at her closely.
-
-“Who is to blame for his being here?” he retorted firmly. She remained
-discreetly silent. Then he continued in a softer voice, “But I mustn’t
-blame nor censure him, now that he is sick, and down at the bottom
-again. It is, indeed, a lasting pity that such genius should be allowed
-to smother here in poverty and among questionable companions, who, ’tis
-said, seek only to bring him to their level, and who, alas! are but
-too surely dragging him there, I fear, a weak, unresisting, but also a
-remorseful, repentant victim.”
-
-“And must he stay on here, father, to die a poor exciseman?” asked
-Nancy with a strangely beating heart. “Even the added salary of the
-Supervisorship cannot be sufficient to keep such a family.” At that
-moment Souter opened the door. They turned to him quietly.
-
-“Well, what says Mr. Burns?” asked the Duke impatiently.
-
-A little smile of amusement appeared on Souter’s face. “Mr. Burns begs
-you to enter and to be seated,” he replied.
-
-They complied with the injunction and were shown into the living-room,
-where they seated themselves.
-
-“I was also to tell ye,” continued Souter dryly, “that he will be with ye
-as soon as he can get into his damned rags.”
-
-“What!” exclaimed the Duke laughingly.
-
-“Excuse me, your ladyship,” answered Souter with a little nod to Lady
-Nancy, “but them’s his own words and I’m no the one to change the
-language o’ a Scottish poet.”
-
-“Has he only rags to wear?” asked Lady Nancy pitifully.
-
-“Hush!” cautioned her father, “he is here.”
-
-The door opened and Robert slowly entered the room. He had thrown his
-wide plaid around his shoulders, over his loose white shirt, and held
-it together with one hand that gleamed very white and thin against the
-bright colors. His black hair, now faintly streaked with gray and which
-had thinned considerably above his forehead, hung loosely about his neck,
-framing his gaunt face, and accentuating his pallor.
-
-For a moment they gazed upon the wreck of the once stalwart and ruggedly
-healthy youth, too shocked to utter a word. Robert was the first to break
-the silence.
-
-“My lord,” he exclaimed with something of his old brightness, “I am
-rejoiced, indeed, to see you at Ellisland. ’Tis a great surprise, but
-none the less a welcome one.” He shook the Duke’s outstretched hand with
-fervor.
-
-“The pleasure is mutual, my lad,” responded the Duke warmly. “’Tis a few
-years now since we parted, and in anger, too.”
-
-“I was in the wrong that night,” broke in Robert penitently, with a
-rueful shake of the head. “I sadly misjudged ye there, as I learned
-afterward, but my stubborn pride refused to accept the olive branch ye
-held out to me. Ye see,” he explained frankly, “’twas my unreasoning
-wounded pride and anger, and my disappointment which blinded me to all
-sense of right and justice. I realized after that ye were my friends and
-that ye resented the damning insult put upon me at Glencairn Hall.” He
-paused a moment, a frown of bitterness wrinkling his brow. Presently he
-looked up and holding out his hand again with one of the old magnetic
-smiles, said, “An’ ye have forgiven my ingratitude, an’ are come noo to
-see me! I thank ye.”
-
-“’Tis all forgot. I forgave you at the time,” responded the Duke
-cordially. “I could not hold resentment against you.” He turned to his
-daughter, who was partly concealed in the embrasure of the deep window.
-
-“Nancy, child, speak to Robert.” She came slowly forward with hand
-outstretched, a faint flush dyeing her creamy skin, or perhaps it was the
-reflection of the pink satin gown she was wearing beneath the long velvet
-cloak, which, becoming unhooked, had slipped down off her shoulders.
-
-Robert rose to his feet, and his black, gloomy eyes lighted up with
-pleasure as they rested upon the dainty vision of loveliness before him.
-Lady Nancy had always reminded him of Mary Campbell, and to-day the
-resemblance was more striking than ever. For beneath the large leghorn
-with its waving, black plumes, her golden hair so like Mary’s, for the
-once unpowdered, glittered in all its beauty. Perhaps my Lady Nancy had
-remembered the likeness and had purposely heightened it by forgetting to
-use the powder which had hitherto covered the golden curls at all times.
-As she stood there with a wistful look upon her face, it was easy to
-perceive the resemblance to the timid dairymaid who, in borrowed finery,
-had created such a sensation at the Duchess of Athol’s “at home” three
-years before.
-
-“Lady Nancy, forgive my rudeness in not greeting you sooner,” he
-exclaimed fervently.
-
-“I am so glad we are reconciled, friends, once more,” she exclaimed
-impulsively. “It did seem as if you would never relent, you stubborn
-man,” and she smiled archly into his embarrassed face.
-
-“You find me greatly changed, of course,” he remarked after they had
-discoursed a while upon their journey. She remained silent, but he read
-the sympathy shining in her blue eyes.
-
-“We read of your illness in town,” explained the Duke, “and believe me,
-Robert, we are deeply sorry for your affliction. But I trust the vigor of
-your constitution will soon set you on your feet again,” and he gave him
-a cheery smile of encouragement.
-
-Robert shook his head gloomily. “My health is, I think, flown from me
-forever,” he replied sadly, “altho’ I am beginning to crawl about the
-house, and once, indeed, have I been seen outside my cottage door.”
-
-“Why didn’t you let us know of your illness before?” exclaimed Lady Nancy
-reproachfully. “We are your friends.”
-
-Robert flushed painfully. “My miserable health was brought on and
-aggravated solely by my headstrong, thoughtless carelessness, and I felt
-so heartily ashamed of myself that I sought to conceal from all friends
-my real condition, but ’tis out at last. How long I will be confined to
-the house, God alone knows,” and he sighed deeply.
-
-“Do not give yourself up to despondency, my lad,” encouraged the Duke
-brightly, “nor speak the language of despair. You must get well.”
-
-“Indeed I must!” returned Robert grimly, “for I have three strong,
-healthy boys and if I am nipt off at the command of fate—gracious God!
-what would become of my little flock?” and a look of distraction swept
-over his face at the thought.
-
-“Don’t distress yourself needlessly, Robert!” exclaimed the Duke kindly.
-Then he continued earnestly, “If anything should happen to you, if you
-should be taken off before I am called, I promise that the children of
-Robert Burns shall never come to want.”
-
-“’Twould be a lasting disgrace to Scotland,” flashed Lady Nancy with
-kindling eyes.
-
-Robert grasped the Duke’s hand impulsively. “God bless ye for your noble
-assurance!” he cried. “Ye have lifted a heavy weight of care and anxiety
-off my mind.”
-
-“Why, father!” suddenly exclaimed Lady Nancy, “I vow if you are not
-forgetting your principal errand here.” He looked at her with a puzzled
-frown. “Mr. Burns’ promotion,” she reminded him laughingly.
-
-“Gad zooks!” he exclaimed in amazement, jumping to his feet. “What an
-old dolt I am, to be sure.” Hastily diving his hand in the inside pocket
-of his elaborate, black-flowered satin square-cut, he pulled out a long
-paper with a red seal attached and handed it to the now bewildered
-Robert, who, after a quick glance at their smiling faces, opened the
-paper and quickly read its contents. Then he gave a gasp, followed by an
-ejaculation of delighted surprise and gratification.
-
-“My lord,” he exclaimed, “this is indeed a gift to bring gladness to
-a man’s heart. I thank ye most gratefully for my promotion, and will
-endeavor to perform my duties to the best of my poor abilities as soon
-as my strength returns.” And the look of anxiety gave way to one of
-comparative contentment.
-
-“And your immediate recovery is of the first importance,” returned the
-Duke brightly. “You need a change.”
-
-“Why not come to town, where you can have the best of medical
-attendance?” asked Lady Nancy quietly, though her heart beat furiously as
-she offered the suggestion.
-
-“That is impossible,” replied Robert. “The medical folk tell me that my
-last and only chance is bathing and sea air and riding. With my promotion
-and the increase of salary it brings, I can now obey their mandates,” and
-he held the paper to his breast with a sigh of relief.
-
-“Then the sooner you start, the better,” remarked the Duke kindly.
-
-Lady Nancy rose to her feet with a wan smile on her lips. “And the sooner
-we start for Dumfries, father, the better,” she returned.
-
-“You’re right, child, we must hasten,” and he hastily arose and got his
-hat and cane together, then he turned once more to Robert. “Mr. Burns,
-pardon the suggestion, but is it not time to get out another volume of
-your poems?” he asked kindly.
-
-“I have not in my present state of mind much appetite for exertion in
-writing,” answered Robert slowly.
-
-“But they could be arranged for you by some literary friend,” quickly
-returned the Duke, “and advertised to be published by subscription.”
-
-Robert raised his head proudly. “Subscription!” he repeated. “No, no,
-that savors too much of charity,” and a look of obstinacy came into his
-darkened eyes.
-
-“Remember,” said Lady Nancy gently, “that Pope published his Iliad by
-subscription, Mr. Burns.”
-
-He remained silent a moment, then after a little struggle with his
-obstinate pride, he answered with a touch of bitterness in his voice, “I
-realize that I am in no position to despise any means to add to my income
-or to leave my family better provided for after I am gone. I will take
-your advice and will at once speak to my dear friend Aiken about it. He
-will aid me.”
-
-The door opened and Jean entered the room. She had heard all the good
-news, and having met both the Duke and Lady Nancy while sojourning at
-Glencairn Castle a few years before, she felt she ought to thank them for
-their good offices in Robert’s behalf.
-
-Lady Nancy and the Duke greeted her warmly, asked after the health of
-the children, expressed pleasure in seeing her again, and soon put her
-at her ease, for the sudden thought of her hasty marriage to Robert
-and the attendant slanderous gossip at first made her feel and appear
-self-conscious and restrained.
-
-“I was just telling Robert,” said the old Duke, “that he must go at once
-to the seashore.” She looked at her husband, and her wistful expression
-did not escape the keen eyes of Lady Nancy.
-
-“If he only could go at once,” faltered Jean, “I am sure the water would
-effect a cure, but——”
-
-Nancy gave her father a significant look, which clearly said, “They have
-no money, father.” At least, so he interpreted it, aided by his own
-shrewd guess at the state of affairs.
-
-“By the way, Robert,” he said jocularly, “can you swallow your pride
-sufficiently to accept a month’s salary in advance?” He pulled out a
-large, well-filled wallet and opened it.
-
-“We do not need it, my lord,” answered Robert firmly and a trifle coldly.
-“I am expecting——” Here Jean hurriedly interrupted him, knowing what he
-was about to say.
-
-“Oh, Robert!” she cried contritely, “I forget to tell you that the Posty
-left no letter.”
-
-“No letter!” he repeated dully, looking at her with wide-open, searching
-eyes. She sadly shook her head.
-
-“Here are £5, lad. Take the note and to-morrow set out for Brow,” and the
-Duke held out the note for his acceptance, but he sat with averted gaze
-in the proud silence of keen disappointment.
-
-“Do not refuse, Robert,” pleaded Jean softly. “’Tis only a loan.”
-
-Slowly he took the money and folded it between his fingers. “Thank ye, my
-lord,” he said quietly. “I will accept it, for I am in sore need of it at
-this moment.”
-
-“That’s right, my lad,” he said heartily. “What is a friend for if he
-cannot extend or receive a favor?” and he turned to help his daughter
-into her cloak.
-
-Quickly Robert pressed the money into Jean’s hand and whispered to her,
-“Take it at once to Gilbert and bid him hasten to Mossgiel before it is
-too late to save the roof over mother’s head.”
-
-“But, Robert——” she protested, but he would not listen to her.
-
-“Do ye not see ’tis near sundown of the second day?” he told her
-impatiently, “and Gilbert will have to ride fast if he would get to
-Mossgiel before night overtakes him; noo hasten, Jean.” Still she
-lingered, reluctant to go.
-
-“Oh, lad, this money is for you; it means your health, our happiness. It
-isn’t right to——”
-
-“We have got a roof over our head, Jean,” he interrupted sternly. “We
-maist keep one over my mother and sister as weel. We will nae starve.
-There are only £4 due your father. Keep out one for our present needs.
-Noo go, lass, go.”
-
-Thus commanded, she hurried to the chamber where Gilbert sat in
-despairing solitude, his head held wearily between his hands, and
-conveyed to him the glad intelligence. And soon he was speeding furiously
-over the dusty road toward home, his face aglow with joy and eagerness.
-
-When Jean returned to the room she found Souter and Eppy there gayly
-chatting with the Duke and Lady Nancy, who were evidently much surprised
-to find their old friend Eppy at last married.
-
-“I am so glad to see you here, Lady Nancy,” gushed Eppy effusively.
-“You must come and see us before you return to Edinburgh. I live on the
-estate adjoining this farm.” He drew the smiling girl to the window
-and pointed out the beauties of MacDougall House. “He is poor,” she
-whispered, “but he is of noble birth, a MacDougall of Lorne. Souter!” she
-called aloud to her husband, who was looking exceedingly important as he
-stood balancing himself on his toes, his hands behind his back, a look
-of supreme self-satisfaction on his face, and listening, with an air of
-blasé indifference, to the conversation between the old Duke and Robert.
-As he heard his name called he leisurely turned his head in his wife’s
-direction.
-
-“Souter,” she continued in a tone meant to be careless, but which
-expressed plainly her feeling of pride, “isn’t it the Marquis of Lorne
-who is your first cousin?”
-
-“What’s that, Souter?” asked Robert incredulously.
-
-Souter looked around him with a sickly smile. He had not thought to be
-cornered in this manner, when he had filled his wife’s mind with stories
-of past grandeur and noble connections, and it made him feel decidedly
-uncomfortable and embarrassed.
-
-“Er—didna’ ye ken that, Robbie?” he exclaimed with a look of feigned
-surprise on his reddened face. “Och, yes! By the by, Robbie,” he
-continued quickly, anxious to change the subject, “we came o’er to tell
-ye that we are gang to Brow on our honeymoon.” Here Eppy giggled and
-looked bashfully out of the window. “An’ my wife, Mrs. MacDougall,” with
-a flourish of the hand in her direction, which elicited another giggle
-from the lady in question, “has decided that we want ye to gang alang wi’
-us.”
-
-Robert looked at him, then at Eppy in speechless surprise. Jean gave a
-little gasp, and her hand sought her husband’s arm and pressed it with
-delight.
-
-“Souter,” faltered Robert, “ye’re both doing this out of the kindness of
-your hearts, but I canna——”
-
-“We’ll na take no for an answer. Ye may be stubborn wi’ your lofty
-independence, your pride, but I can be just as stubborn as ye, Rab Burns,
-and I say it is settled,” said Souter.
-
-“’Tis the hand of God,” whispered Jean softly.
-
-“God bless ye both,” faltered Robert, grasping Souter’s hand
-affectionately.
-
-“Come, father,” said Lady Nancy, who had witnessed this little scene with
-moist eyes, “I protest we must start on our journey.”
-
-“But first we must have a toast,” said Robert brightly. “’Tis most
-fitting. Jean, bring the punch bowl.” Quickly she brought from the closet
-the bowl of Inverary marble and placed it on the table, and into it she
-poured some hot water and sugar. “We have no wine to offer,” continued
-Robert, “nothing better than Highland whisky, but ye needna’ be afraid of
-becoming intoxicated, my lord,” and he smiled ruefully, “for I ken ’twill
-hardly be tolerable to your educated taste.” Jean had mixed the punch and
-now passed it around among the guests. “For auld lang syne!” cried Robert
-feelingly. “Is not that phrase most expressive? My lord, a toast,” and
-he raised his glass to the old Duke, who, after a moment’s hesitation,
-proposed “the health of Robert Burns, Scotland’s greatest Bard.”
-
-“We drink to that with pleasure,” exclaimed Lady Nancy.
-
-“Aye, that we do,” echoed Souter heartily. And while the toast was
-being drunk he slyly whispered, “Rob, dinna’ say aught to my wife
-about—er—the old Marquis, my—ahem—cousin. Ye understand,” and he nudged
-him significantly.
-
-Robert smiled and assured him of his secrecy.
-
-“And noo,” said Souter proudly, looking at Eppy’s simpering face,
-“here’s to the bride.” She made a deep courtesy and quaffed her glass
-with conscious dignity at her sudden importance. “May she always believe
-in her husband,” he added in an aside to Robert, much to the latter’s
-amusement.
-
-“Mrs. MacDougall, here’s to your enemies, your foes,” proposed Robert.
-
-“What?” she cried, opening her eyes in amazement.
-
-“May they have short shoes an’ corny toes,” he added with a merry twinkle
-in his eyes.
-
-“Duke, a toast!” said Souter importantly.
-
-The Duke thought a moment. “Well, I drink to Mrs. MacDougall. May she
-soon have a house full of bairns,” he thoughtlessly proposed.
-
-Eppy gasped and turned crimson, and Lady Nancy bit her lips to keep back
-the smile her father’s well-meant but tactless speech occasioned.
-
-“Do you mean to insult me, my lord?” flashed Eppy indignantly.
-
-“Bless my soul, no,” returned the Duke in astonishment, who could see no
-reason for offense in his kindly-meant remark.
-
-“The Duke meant well,” said Souter pacifically to his wife, whose eyes
-were flashing angrily. “An’—an’—stranger things might happen, ye ken,”
-and he rubbed his chin reflectively with a sly look out of the corner of
-his roguish eye at Robert. She tossed her head haughtily.
-
-“’Twould not be so monstrous strange, Mr. MacDougall, as you seem to
-think,” she retorted frigidly. Souter opened his eyes in speechless
-surprise. He was about to speak, but after one bewildered glance at the
-disdainful face of his bride, concluded that discretion was the better
-part of valor, and for the rest of that day he remained in thoughtful
-silence reflecting on the inconsistencies of woman kind in particular,
-and speculating upon the strange and mysterious workings of human nature
-in general.
-
-The Duke bade them all adieu and passed out into the garden, where its
-wild beauties attracted his eye. He wandered about, forgetting, in his
-admiration for the flowers, his daughter, who had lingered behind for one
-last farewell word—alone.
-
-“And so, Mr. Burns,” she said thoughtfully, looking after Jean’s
-retreating figure, “you have never regretted taking the step that bound
-your life to that of Jean Armour’s? Regretted doing your duty?” There was
-a note of regret in the vibrating voice.
-
-“Never, my lady,” he replied firmly. “It was the only really good thing
-I have ever done in my wretched life.”
-
-She looked at him a moment with hungry eyes. “Do you never think of the
-old days in town?” she asked suddenly, and she was greatly surprised to
-see his face turn pale, his eyes flash and deepen.
-
-“For God’s sake, madam, do not mention the past!” he said, turning away.
-“All that has passed out of my life forever,” he murmured after a pause,
-“never to return.”
-
-“And you wish it so?” she asked faintly. He bowed his head slowly. She
-moistened her lips feverishly and drew near to him, her eyes filled
-with a light that would have startled him had he seen it. “Say not so!
-Must I give up the friendship of the only man I esteem and hold dear?”
-she panted breathlessly. “Oh, will you not renew the broken thread of
-our correspondence [he had written her several times since coming to
-Ellisland, but before Jean’s advent] and enjoy the sweet intercourse
-of thought, which will bring such gladness into my own life, and will
-brighten the gloom of your own, and will take naught from your wife’s
-peace of mind?”
-
-He raised his head and regarded her thoughtfully. “How can ye ask me
-that, my lady,” he answered, “when ye declared to me in your last letter
-that you meant to preserve my epistles with a view, sooner or later, to
-expose them to the pillory of derision and the rocks of criticism?” And
-a look of resentment gleamed in his eyes.
-
-“I protest, Mr. Burns,” she cried reproachfully. “I have, indeed,
-preserved your letters, but they will never leave my possession; they are
-cherished as the dearest treasures of my life.”
-
-He sighed and remained silent for a space. From the kitchen came the
-sound of children’s voices. He listened to it a moment, then turned to
-Lady Nancy, a look of resolution in his face.
-
-“Lady Nancy,” he said firmly, “I canna’ write to ye in sincerity. I have
-a wife and family, an’ I have given my word to Jean, and while I dare to
-sin, I dare not to lie, else madam I could perhaps too truly join grief
-with grief, and echo sighs to thine. But with one foot in the grave, I
-have no desire to stir up the old ashes of—friendship to find a living
-ember. ’Twould be but a weak, fitful burning at best. Nay, ’tis too late
-noo. Believe me, ’tis best, dear lady.” He rose to his feet and held out
-his hand again. “An’ noo farewell, Lady Nancy, farewell.”
-
-She took his hand and looked into his set, unmoved face, and a sigh of
-utter disappointment, of patient longing, involuntarily escaped her
-trembling lips. “If it must be, then farewell,” she answered slowly, a
-slight tremor in her soft voice. She walked to the door, then turned and
-fixing her eyes on him, she continued mournfully, “Do not quite forget
-me, will you, Robert? Let the scenes of nature remind you of Nancy. In
-winter remember the dark shades of her life, for there are plenty; in
-summer, the warmth of her friendship; in autumn, her glowing wishes to
-bestow plenty on all, and let spring animate you with hopes that your
-absent friend may yet surmount the wintry blasts of life, and revive to
-taste a springtime of happiness.”
-
-He bowed his head gravely. “I shall remember ye, Lady Nancy—friend,” he
-returned feelingly.
-
-She gave him one long, lingering look. “Farewell, farewell!” she gasped,
-and when he raised his head she was gone.
-
-He sighed and walked thoughtfully to the window. “The past and all its
-pleasures will soon be but a dim memory,” he muttered grimly, “as one
-by one the connecting links which bound me to it are severed forever.”
-He paused and watched her as she joined her father in the garden, and
-a quizzical look flashed across his face. “Faith!” he muttered with a
-little smile, “who would believe the time would come when lovely women
-would plead in vain for the favors o’ Rob Burns. Och! Robbie, ye are
-indeed fit only for the grave,” and he turned away from the window in
-earthly meditation.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-
-The next few days Jean was very busy with her preparations for their
-sojourn at the seaside. The date of their departure was already fixed and
-it now lacked but a few days before they would bid farewell to Ellisland
-forever, for Robert had decided to take up his residence in Dumfries when
-his visit was ended, for the duties of his new office would necessitate
-his being there the quarter part of his time.
-
-As the day of their departure drew near, Robert grew more and more
-depressed, and day by day he sat in melancholy silence beside the window
-gazing with unseeing eyes upon the tangled yet graceful wilderness of
-flowers. Jean watched him in growing fear and anxiety as he sank deeper
-and deeper into those protracted fits of gloom and depression, and
-vainly sought to find some reason for the sudden change. He had been so
-elated at getting his promotion and at the many advantageous changes
-it would make in their condition—had dwelt with affectionate wonder on
-Eppy’s kindness in extending to them the invitation to accompany them to
-Brow, and had seemed to greatly improve in health and spirits for a few
-days. Then came Gilbert’s letter stating that he had arrived in time to
-prevent the eviction of the dear ones at home. The letter had plunged him
-into a state of feverish excitement and restless anxiety, and all day he
-would sit at the open window, watching with burning eyes the long narrow
-road that twisted and turned on its way to Mossgiel, straining his eyes
-eagerly at the approach of any casual traveler who might be passing,
-then with a look of patient despair, sink back in his chair, pale and
-listless, his unfocused eyes again gazing into space. One night after he
-had left his chair and had retired to his bed for the night, looking more
-haggard than usual, Jean spied on the floor a crumpled paper which had
-evidently dropped from his nerveless hand. Picking it up, she smoothed
-it out and found it to be Gilbert’s letter, which she had not seen, as
-Robert had read it to her and then put it carefully aside. Slowly her
-gaze wandered over it. Suddenly she gave a great start, for at the bottom
-of the page this sentence caught her eye: “Mary leaves to-morrow for the
-Highlands and will pass through Ellisland.” Thoughtfully she put the
-letter on the chair where he could find it in the morning, and sat down
-by the cradle of the bairn and gently rocked him till his fretful crying
-ceased; then she gave herself up to the heart-burning thoughts that
-filled her mind. She had tried so hard to be patient all these years, she
-had struggled and struggled to do her duty without a word of complaint,
-she thought, while bitter tears of patient grief and secret yearning
-for the love that she knew belonged to another rolled down her sorrowing
-cheek. She had no word of complaint to make against Robert though, for
-he had never sought to deceive her once, and there was no feeling of
-resentment in her heart against the little dairymaid. It was not the
-child’s fault. It was not the fault of either that they still loved each
-other. Only Robert might have shown her the letter, she thought with
-quivering lips; there was no need to keep it from her. She would know it
-when Mary came to the house, anyway. She might have guessed the reason
-for his sudden change, she thought, wiping away her tears, only her mind
-had been so filled with the household preparations for moving that Mary
-had been quite forgotten. For a while she gently rocked the sleeping
-child, watching its sweet, flushed face, listening to its soft breathing,
-and soon all disturbing thoughts slipped away from her troubled mind,
-and a peaceful, holy calm entered her patient heart and shone through
-her love-lit eyes. Covering its little form carefully, she carried the
-cradle into her chamber and placed it within reach of her bed. Then as
-she disrobed for the night in dreary silence, her eyes fixed on the pale
-face of her husband, who was tossing and muttering in his sleep, a tender
-wave of pity swept over her at the thought of the sweet lass who would
-shortly pass out of their lives forever, leaving only a sweet, haunting
-memory behind to remind them of her pathetic young life. Quickly she
-slipped into bed beside her restless husband, upon whose feverish cheek
-she pressed a tender kiss, and closing her tired eyes, fancied she
-slept, though her sleep was but a waking dream of love for her husband
-and children, in which all bright hopes and vague longings reached their
-utmost fulfillment, and yet were in some strange way crossed with shadows
-of sorrow and grief, which she had no power to disperse.
-
-On the following morning the heat was intense. No breath of air stirred
-a ripple on the sluggishly-flowing Nith, and there was a heaviness in
-the atmosphere which made the very brightness of the sky oppressive.
-Such hot weather was unusual for that part of Scotland, and, according
-to Souter Johnny, betokened some change. The sun was dazzling, yet there
-was a mist in the air as though the heavens were full of unshed tears.
-A bank of nearly motionless clouds hung behind the dark, sharp peaks of
-the distant mountains which lay beyond Mossgiel, for there was no wind
-stirring, and Robert, seated in his chair by the window, found himself
-too warm with his thick plaid wrapped closely around him, and throwing
-it back he let the sunshine bathe him in its golden glow and play on the
-uncovered ebony of his hair. He no longer watched the road with such
-eager intensity. Rarely this morning had his gaze wandered beyond the
-bush beneath the window, with its one snowy-white rose, the last rose
-of summer, nestling among the faded, worm-eaten leaves, looking so
-pure, so fragrant, so delicately white against the background of rusty,
-dead-looking foliage. It had blossomed in the night, and in the morning
-when he had approached the lattice from force of habit, although he had
-given up all hope of seeing Mary before she left Ayrshire, he had spied
-it in all its delicate beauty. Each morning for six days now he had gone
-to that window, expecting before the day drew to its close to see the
-beloved form of his Mary approach, only to go to his bed at night in
-bitter disappointment. Gilbert’s letter stated she would start that day,
-and now the sixth day had come and yet there was no sign of her. He had
-told himself he would not watch the road this morning; there was no use,
-she had gone; she had not wanted to see him; she felt too bitter against
-him—it was only natural she should. These bitter thoughts had filled
-his mind with misery and wretchedness as he drew near the open window.
-Suddenly his eyes had rested on the spot of white nestling on the top of
-the bush. With a strange thrill at his heart, he had knelt down beside
-the latticed window, and folding his arms on the sill, gazed at the
-message from heaven, sent to bring peace and hope to his aching heart, so
-he fondly believed, while bright tears filled his eyes and brimmed over,
-falling warmly on his folded hands.
-
-“Oh, Mary, my love, my love!” he whispered brokenly. “Come to me before
-ye die.” And all that morning he had watched it expand and stretch
-out its petals to its utmost, wafting its perfume up into his grateful
-nostrils, till a peace such as had not visited his heart for many years,
-smoothed out the lines of suffering from his brow and softened the hard
-light in his deepened eyes. A verse of a poem he had written a few years
-before flashed across his memory:
-
- “Oft hae I roved by bonnie Doon,
- To see the rose and woodbine twine;
- And like a bird sang o’ its luve,
- And fondly sae did I o’ mine;
- Wi’ lightsome heart I pu’d a rose,
- Fu’ sweet upon its thorny tree;
- But my fausse luver stole my rose,
- But ah! he left the thorn wi’ me.”
-
-Jean, coming into the room a little later, found him there, his head
-resting on his hands, a smile of contented calm upon his face, which
-now seemed like the face of the youth she had known in Mauchline, and
-the sight thrilled her strangely and brought a spasm of pain to her
-overcharged heart.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-
-That morning, when Robert first caught sight of the rose, he had
-experienced a sort of mental obsession in which his brain was mastered
-by the thought—an absurd idea perhaps, and one which his reason and his
-will both might easily have repelled, only he clung fondly to the belief,
-letting it fasten itself upon his mind and grow and grow—that Mary had
-passed away in the night, and that her spirit had found a temporary
-resting place in the heart of the white rose that had blossomed forth
-so unexpectedly, so unseasonably. He had watched the nodding flower on
-its long, slender stem of green, waving gracefully in the light breeze
-that had sprung up, and in his state of dreaming consciousness fancied
-he could see the wistful face of Highland Mary peeping out from among
-the snowy petals. As the feeling grew upon him that she had come to
-him in spirit, a great content settled down and around him, a mighty
-calm that seemed to still the troubled waters of his soul, and all the
-bitter discontent, the yearnings of his heart, the cravings, the unrest,
-faded away like a mist dissolved by the warm splendor of the sun. For a
-while he had sat there in blissful peace, a smile of ineffable rapture
-on his face, gazing with rapt adoring eyes at the dancing rose, which
-seductively blew nearer and nearer to him with each gust of the swiftly
-rising wind, then as he would lovingly stretch out his hand to touch
-it, to caress it, away it would go, eluding him like a dancing sunbeam,
-to the farthest side of the bush, bending its saucy head lower and
-lower till it was lost to sight for an instant, then up it would bound,
-gayly nodding, and then for a moment would pause in its restless elfin
-dance, quivering on its stem as though tired with its sportive play, its
-coquetry. The sky had grown gradually darker, and little waves disturbed
-the smooth surface of the greenish gray grass that swayed and undulated
-in running billows, as the wind rose. But the kneeling man was all
-unconscious of the gloom that had settled over the landscape, shutting
-out the glorious sunshine, stilling the song of the birds, and bringing
-in its train a damp chill that presaged a storm. The wind tossed the
-curls madly about the face of the poet, but still he did not move; only
-as the chill air struck through his thin shirt, he mechanically pulled
-his plaid about his shoulders, and dreamed on happily, of the old days,
-when the heart was young, before sorrow had embittered his life, dreamed
-of a life of love with Mary by his side, dreamed and dreamed far into
-the morning, and so Jean had found him and left him to his slumbers.
-Suddenly his eyes opened, but he did not move. He sat there feeling a
-little cramped and stiff, until hazy recollections dawned slowly upon his
-mind, then he raised himself from his crouching position, and leaning
-out of the window gazed with eyes that were wonderfully luminous at the
-blossom which was just beyond his eager reach. He inhaled deep breaths
-of its fragrant perfume, a smile of loving tenderness on his lips. All
-at once a feeling of sudden depression tightened around his heart as he
-noticed for the first time the deepening gloom without, felt the lowering
-temperature of the atmosphere, which chilled and depressed him so
-strangely. He looked again at the swiftly dancing flower, and his heart
-stopped beating for an instant, while a look of pain, of heart-breaking
-sorrow, darkened his face—the white petals were dropping one by one, and
-were being whirled and tossed madly through the air like flakes of snow.
-He watched in silence, as the wind, with reckless abandon, tore them out
-and scattered them here and there, some sailing merrily out of sight—one
-dashing through the open window and against the white, agonized face of
-the suffering man, clinging to it for a moment, in a sweet caress, a last
-embrace, then slipping down—down, till it found rest on the floor, where
-soon it was dead and forgotten. As the last snowy petal left its stem,
-leaving it looking so bare and pitiful nestling in among the leaves as
-though ashamed of its nakedness, a hard sob of anguish escaped his lips,
-for it seemed as if each petal contained a part of the soul of his loved
-one, and leaning his face against the sash, he gave himself up to the
-crushing sorrow that submerged his soul and plunged him once more into
-black despair. It seemed as if the last link that had bound her to earth,
-and to him, was at last broken and she had passed on out of his life
-forever; not even the rose was left to preserve as a sacred memory to
-look at occasionally, to bring her presence nearer. And now no more such
-roses would bloom for him, not in this life anyway, and so he drearily
-mused in hopeless sorrow.
-
-All at once a vague feeling of uneasiness stole over him, a curious
-feeling that he was not alone; and yet he did not look around, for
-somehow it seemed that it was the spirit of his Mary still hovering in
-the air, seeking to comfort his grieving heart; and yet the strange
-feeling of her nearness was different from that emotion he had
-experienced when he in fancy had looked at her wistful face in the heart
-of the nodding rose. And suddenly he held his breath as the consciousness
-of her physical presence grew stronger and stronger upon him; his
-startled eyes fixed themselves upon the naked stem, swaying gently on the
-bush—he strained his ears to hear—he knew not what—he could not tell—a
-trembling seized his limbs—and when he heard a sweet, low voice call
-“Robert,” not from the slender stalk, but somewhere behind him, he gave
-no start of surprise. He told himself it—it—was only imagination—the
-great longing within him had—but there it was again—it could not be
-fancy—it—it must be—he turned slowly in the direction of the voice as if
-afraid to find naught but the empty room to mock him, for he had heard no
-sound to indicate a presence within the room. As his eyes grew accustomed
-to the gloom and his dulled vision cleared, he saw just inside the door,
-standing with hands outstretched to him—a flesh and blood reality, but
-oh! so pitifully changed. He gave a gasping cry and sprang to clasp the
-swaying form close to his throbbing breast.
-
-Ah! the rapture of that meeting, the blissful joy which filled his aching
-heart and crowded out stern recollections from his memory, while all
-thoughts of the grim present, its bitter facts which faced him, the vain
-regrets, all—all were now forgotten. The lines of pain in his haggard
-face were smoothed out gently and deep peace settled upon their troubled
-souls.
-
-“Ah, Mary!” he breathed softly, breaking the sacred stillness. “Ye have
-come at last. Oh, it has been so long, dearie, so long, and I have
-wanted ye so much,” and he held her to his heart in a strong, jealous,
-passionate embrace, as if he could never part with her again on earth,
-but would shield her from even the shadow of death, that he saw stamped
-on her pale, pinched features, and which glowed in the haunting depths of
-her tired blue eyes. A smile of sadness passed quickly over her face like
-the sun that peeps through the sudden rift of a cloud.
-
-“Ye knew, laddie, I couldna’ go awa’ without seeing ye just once mair,”
-she whispered tenderly. A fit of coughing suddenly racked her slender
-frame. He led her weak and trembling to a chair and gently wiped away the
-beads of perspiration from her forehead, and for a moment she leaned up
-against him in utter exhaustion. Presently she smiled up in his anxious
-face and faintly thanked him. “Dinna’ be alarmed, dearie,” she faltered.
-“I’m aright noo,” and she bravely straightened up in her seat, but he
-would not release her altogether.
-
-And so they sat, sad and silent, knowing the parting, the sad, final
-parting would come in a few quickly-fleeing moments.
-
-Outside the clouds had been gathering thickly over the sky, and now and
-then a few shafts of sunlight still forced a passage through them with
-steady persistency, although storm hovered over all, waiting the signal
-to burst forth. Suddenly a silver glare of lightning sprang out from
-beneath the black-winged cloud hanging low in the horizon, and a few
-large drops of rain began to fall. Mary nestled closer to him as she saw
-the brilliant flash, and shivered apprehensively. They both were thinking
-of that other storm, when he had bidden farewell to Ayrshire in poverty
-and despair, to take his place in Edinburgh among the high and mighty,
-to claim the reward of genius—honor, fame and renown. And now the time
-had come for her to say farewell, only there was a difference, and such
-a difference! She was bidding good-by to life, to love, to everything. A
-happy smile broke over her wistful face as she thought of her reward; it
-would not be such a fleeting thing as riches, honor and fame. Thank God,
-it was more than those; it was an eternity of happiness. No more sorrow,
-no more suffering, only peace, divine peace, such as the world knoweth
-not, such as she had never known in her short, eventful life.
-
-“And so, Mary,” murmured Robert brokenly, “the end of our life’s romance
-has come at last.”
-
-She put her little hand in his and pressed it warmly.
-
-“Yes, ’tis the end, Robin Adair. The end of all, but it had to come some
-time; we were but wearing our hearts out in vain longings, in bitter
-regrets, ye ken that, dear.” She paused and idly watched the rain, which
-was now coming down fiercely. “It will be better for—for us—all when I am
-gone,” she murmured presently, with a far-away look in her eyes.
-
-A sob of anguish caused her to turn quickly to the sorrowing man by
-her side. Putting her hand on his head, she continued in pathetic
-resignation, “I will be spared much pain and sorrow, ye ken, so dinna
-greet for me, laddie. I—I am content, nay glad to go, for I—I am so
-tired—so very tired of this—long, unhappy struggle.” Her voice trembled
-and the tears rolled slowly down her sad cheeks.
-
-“If I, too, could only end it all,” he moaned.
-
-“Sh! laddie!” she answered in gentle reproach. “Ye mustna’ wish for
-death; ye have those dependent on ye, whom ye maun think of noo, Jean and
-the bairns.” Her voice grew very sweet and caressing. “I saw them as I
-came in. Oh, they are such bonnie little lads, dearie. So like ye, too.
-Gilbert is o’er fond of them; he is playing wi’ them noo.”
-
-Mrs. Dunlop had been taken ill at the last moment and had commissioned
-Gilbert to take her place. She had supplied him plentifully with money
-for the journey and had then sorrowfully taken her departure for
-Edinburgh, her kind old heart sad and heavy.
-
-“Robbie lad,” continued Mary earnestly, “ye—ye maun take Jean close to
-your heart. Ye maun love her fondly for the bairns’ sake and—for her own,
-too, for she is a good, kind wife to ye, and ye’ll all—be very happy yet,
-I ken weel.”
-
-He slipped down from his chair to his knees and buried his tear-stained
-face in her lap. “When ye go, Mary,” he murmured brokenly, “I’ll never
-know peace and happiness again.” She let him weep on in silence.
-Presently he raised his head and looked at her. “Ye dinna’ ken, lassie,
-how I have hungered for a sight of your dear face—a word from your sweet
-lips, this last year.” He clung to her passionately. “An’ noo in a few
-minutes,” he continued in anguish, “ye will pass out o’ my life forever
-and I maun live on here—desolate—and heart-broken.”
-
-“Nay, nay!” she cried reproachfully. “Dinna’ say that, laddie, not alone,
-not alone,” and she looked compassionately at the door of the kitchen
-where Jean sat in patient misery holding her bairn to her aching heart.
-At that moment Gilbert softly opened the door and told them that they
-would have to start at once, that the storm would not let up and that
-they must catch the boat at Greenock that night.
-
-“Ye had better say good-by, noo,” and he closed the door quietly behind
-him.
-
-They looked at each other, too dazed for words. Then she started to rise
-to her feet, but he clasped her hands tightly, though she did not feel
-the pain, and pressed her into the seat again.
-
-“Not yet, not yet, Mary!” he gasped. “I canna’ let ye go just yet. ’Tis
-like tearing my heart out by its roots.”
-
-“Ye mustna’ greet so, laddie,” said Mary, frightened by the vehemence of
-his sorrow.
-
-“’Tis all my fault,” he moaned, “all thro’ my sinful weakness that ye are
-made to suffer noo, all my fault.”
-
-She put her fingers on his lips. “Sh! dearie!” she remonstrated softly.
-“Dinna’ blame yoursel’. If we suffer noo, we must na’ forget how happy
-we have been, and we were happy, weren’t we, laddie?” and she smiled
-in fond reminiscence, then continued a trifle unsteadily, “An—an hour’s
-happiness is worth a year of pain, for when we get sad an’ lonely, we can
-live it all over again, canna’ we?” She paused and sighed pathetically.
-“Only it—it isna’ real, is it, laddie?” A sudden break in her voice
-caused her to put her hand to her throat and look away with quivering
-lips. Then she went on in plaintive, pleading gentleness, “Ye will
-sometimes think of me—way up—in the Highlands, won’t ye, dearie? It
-willna’ wrong—Jean, for—soon your Mary will be—in Heaven, in her castle
-grand.”
-
-The thunder rolled along the sky in angry reverberating echoes, stilling
-the low voice, while frequent flashes of lightning leaped out like knives
-suddenly drawn from dark sheaths—yet toward the north over Greenock the
-sky was clearing, and streaks and beams of gold fell from the hidden
-sun, with a soothing promise of a clear and radiant sunset. Mary’s face
-brightened as she watched the sunbeams struggling through the lightened
-clouds, and she went on dreamily, in the prolonged lull of the storm:
-
-“My home there will be so fine, much finer than the castle in Edinburgh.”
-She smiled tenderly and let her hand slip down from his head to his
-heaving shoulder, where it rested in loving quiet. “How happy I was that
-night,” she mused; “an’ the sweet gown was so pretty I—hated to take it
-off, but it wasna’ mine.” She paused with quivering lips. “But—but—I
-was going to buy one the next day for my own, wasna’ I? A white one—all
-smooth and soft and shiny—for—for my wedding gown.” Her voice died away
-in a hushed, mournful quaver.
-
-“Don’t, don’t, Mary!” sobbed Robert unrestrainedly. “I canna’ bear to
-think of that noo, noo when I maun give ye up forever.” He stroked her
-face and covered her pale, thin, toil-worn hands with heart-breaking
-kisses. Presently he grew calmer. “I shall never forget that night, Mary,
-that night with its pleasures and pain,” he went on with dreamy pathos.
-“It is ever in my thoughts; e’en in my dreams your dear bonnie face
-haunts me with its sweet, pathetic smile, and your tender lips seem to
-say, ‘laddie, ye were not true to your vows, ye have broken my heart.’”
-She gave a little cry of pain.
-
-“No, no, laddie, I never thought that,” she cried, and she looked at him
-with gentle, pitying eyes.
-
-“I wad try to speak, to implore your forgiveness for the misery I had
-caused ye,” continued Robert, his husky voice heard faintly above the
-wail of the wind, which shook the lattice with a sort of stealthy
-clatter, like a midnight prowler striving to creep in to steal and
-plunder. “And in my dumb despair and anguish I would clutch at your
-floating garments only to have them vanish into air, and I would awake to
-find myself—alone—with my bitter remorse and sorrow.” A low, choked sob
-broke from his hollow breast—he covered his face with his hands. “Can ye
-ever forgive me?” he murmured.
-
-Mary regarded him with infinite compassion, a heroic smile on her tired,
-quivering lips. “Freely do I forgive everything, laddie,” she replied,
-“an’ when I am gone I want ye to remember always that Mary Campbell had
-only love, pity and forgiveness in her heart for ye.” She raised her
-trembling hands solemnly. “May God bring peace to your troubled heart,
-laddie, and may your future dreams be filled with joy and happiness, of
-love and prosperity.”
-
-[Illustration: “The door opened and Jean quietly entered the room.”]
-
-The door opened and Jean quietly entered the room, her tense, white face
-full of patient sorrow. She had sat in the kitchen for an eternity it
-seemed to the waiting woman, while Mary was taking her farewell of her
-husband. She had tried to talk to Gilbert, to interest herself in the
-news of home, but the words simply refused to leave her lips, and so she
-had sat there, listlessly watching the children playing around their
-uncle’s knee, her ears straining to hear some sound from the other room.
-No one knew how she suffered, to step aside, to welcome to her home his
-former sweetheart, to know they were there clasped in each other’s arms;
-and yet she did not feel bitter toward Mary somehow, strange as it might
-seem. She pitied her, she pitied them both, and it filled her with a
-strange feeling of surprise that she could feel so. Still loving Robert
-as fondly as she did, she could not help the feeling of despair which
-crept over her at times, to know, to fully realize, that she held only a
-secondary place in his affections, to hear him calling for another, for
-Mary. Sometimes in thought she caught herself bitterly arraigning him for
-his thoughtlessness, his apparent heartlessness; then the thought of his
-weak condition, his ill health, his distracted state of mind, these past
-months, tempered her judgment. He was hardly responsible for his actions,
-and if he were conscious of his own selfishness he had lost the power,
-the strength of will, to restrain his feverish impulses. She wondered
-vaguely if it would be different when—when she had passed away forever—if
-her memory would still come between them. She hoped not—she prayed that
-it might not be so.
-
-Gilbert had left her to her silent musings, and had gone out to harness
-the horses. Returning, he told her that they must start at once, so she
-had opened the door to tell them, and as her eyes took in the misery
-which was reflected in their white, drawn faces she was moved to intense
-pity, and the tears rained slowly down her cheeks.
-
-“Come, Mary, Gilbert says ’tis time to start,” she faltered. They both
-looked up slowly at the sound of her voice, then gazed dully into each
-other’s eyes. Presently Mary rose from her chair and stood up unsteadily,
-stretching out her little, cold, white hands to Robert, who clutched
-them in his own feverish palms as a drowning man clutches a straw.
-
-“The time has come to part, laddie,” she said bravely, a wan little smile
-on her bluish lips.
-
-A violent shuddering seized him, he did not move for a moment. Finally
-he staggered to his feet, and a quiver of agony passed over his face. He
-looked at her with dulled, glazed eyes and his face assumed a ghastly hue.
-
-“’Tis so hard, so cruel, to say good-by forever,” he breathed huskily,
-for his throat was dry and parched. His swaying figure tottered a moment,
-then he drew her slowly into his arms and pressed his lips to her
-forehead. “’Tis the last time on earth, Mary,” he whispered brokenly. Her
-lips trembled, but she would not give way to the feeling of dizziness
-that threatened to rob her of her consciousness. She must leave him with
-a smile, she told herself; she must not make it harder for him. “Yes, for
-the last time, Robert,” she repeated slowly. “May God bless and watch
-over ye, Robin Adair—till—we—meet in Heaven. Good-by.” Her voice died
-away inarticulately, and she sank forward into his arms, where she lay
-motionless with closed eyes, utterly spent in body and spirit, and save
-for a shivering sob that now and then escaped her, she seemed almost
-insensible. Jean rushed quickly forward and drew her into a chair, while
-Gilbert fetched a glass of water, which he held to her white lips.
-
-The wind shook the doors and whistled shrilly through the crevices, then
-as though tired of its own wrath, surged away in hoarse murmurs, through
-the branches of the creaking old beech, toward the Loch, and there was a
-short, tense silence while they waited to see signs of life appear in the
-face of the stricken girl. Presently she opened those azure blue eyes and
-smiled up in their anxious faces; then she struggled to her feet, but she
-put her hand quickly to her heart and tottered.
-
-“Oh, my—poor—weak heart,” she gasped faintly. Jean caught her quickly
-in her strong arms and stroked her soft cheek with a curious yearning
-sensation of love tugging at her heartstrings.
-
-“Poor dear,” she said compassionately, “you’re too weak to stand so much
-excitement,” and she put her back firmly in the chair. Mary attempted to
-rise again, but Jean would not permit her. “Gilbert shall carry you to
-the carriage,” she told her. Gilbert stepped to her side.
-
-“I will be a light burden noo, Gilbert,” she faltered, smiling
-pathetically into his strong, rugged face, which bore traces of his deep,
-bitter grief. Jean gently put her arms about her and in silence implanted
-a kiss on her pure, sweet face; then she turned away and covered her face
-with her hands. Gilbert bent over and picked up the frail body, and in
-spite of his efforts to restrain his emotion, a sigh that was almost a
-groan escaped him, for she was no heavier than a child of a few summers.
-He carried her past his brother, who was sitting with head bowed upon his
-breast in an attitude of absolute despair.
-
-“Greet not for me, dearie,” whispered Mary faintly, stretching out her
-hand and letting it rest tenderly on his head. “God’s—will—be—done,” and
-her dry, burning eyes took their last look, and said their last farewell
-as Gilbert slowly carried her from the room and closed the door, shutting
-Robert out from her lingering gaze.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-
- Then whilst his throbbing veins beat high
- With every impulse of delight,
- Dash from his lips the cup of joy,
- And shroud the scene in shades of night;
- And let despair, with wizard light,
- Disclose the yawning gulf below,
- And pour incessant on his sight,
- Her spectred ills and shapes of woe.
-
-
-For some moments Robert sat there, apparently dead to his surroundings.
-He had not looked up or moved as the door closed upon the retreating
-figures. He seemed to be in a state of complete exhaustion of mind and
-body. Presently the sound of the carriage rolling over the swishing,
-muddy driveway roused him from his lethargy. Raising his head he looked
-wildly around the room—then paused and listened—he was as one in a dream,
-realizing nothing plainly. He could hardly remember what had taken place
-during the past few minutes; he could grasp nothing tangible in thought
-or memory, till with a wild start he seemed to awake, as the rattle of
-the passing wheels brought back recollection. He staggered to the window
-and, throwing back the lattice, gazed out at the rapidly retreating
-blur of moving wheels and horses and shapeless figures, and watched it
-till it was lost to sight. As he stood there a soft change, a delicate
-transparency, swept over the dark bosom of the sky. Pale pink streaks
-glittered on the dusky horizon—darts of light began to climb upward into
-the clouds, and to plunge downward upon the waving field of hay; the
-radiance spread swiftly, till suddenly the whole heavens were bathed in
-the glorious light, and the last cloud, fading into nothingness, revealed
-the sun in all its matchless glory, hanging low in the sky just above
-the hills, behind which it would soon drop in stately splendor. Slowly
-the watcher sank down to his knees and leaned his tired head against the
-sash, his eyes closed and sunken.
-
-“She is gone, gone,” he murmured brokenly, “an’ I am left all alone noo,
-all alone.” Jean bent over him with pathetic tenderness, and taking his
-limp hand in her own warm palm, she said with timid reproach:
-
-“Not alone, Robert, while you have your—bairns—and me.” She feared to
-call his attention to herself in the midst of his grief, lest he might
-revile her for standing between him and happiness; but he did not hear.
-
-“Oh, Jean, how can I take up the burden of life again?” he cried
-weakly, clinging to her hand with despairing strength. It thrilled her
-strangely to feel the grasp of his hand, to feel his weakness, his sudden
-dependence, the appeal in his dark, mournful eyes raised to hers so
-pitifully; she knelt beside him and drew his head down on her heaving
-bosom.
-
-“Ye must be brave,” she told him, her voice trembling with a new-found
-happiness, a sudden joy. He needed her now, needed her love and care more
-than ever. Then she continued softly, her voice vibrating with thrilling
-intensity, “Ye have much to live for yet, lad. Ye must be strong, ye must
-be brave. Pluck up your courage! I’ll help ye.”
-
-He looked at her wonderingly, then he slowly bowed his head. “Yes, Jean,”
-he said humbly, “I will be strong; I’ll try to be brave.”
-
-She helped him to his chamber, and placed him beside the window, where he
-could no longer watch the road, and left him. For a while he gazed out
-over the fields in apathetic calm, his mind a blank. Across the field he
-could see Souter Johnny at work in his garden. Suddenly he straightened
-up and listened. Souter was singing.
-
- “O where, an’ O where is my Highland laddie gone?”
-
-came the old cracked voice. He closed his eyes wearily, but he could not
-shut out the sound.
-
-“Oh, Mary, my lost Highland Mary,” he whispered under his breath.
-
-
-THE END
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Highland Mary, by Clayton Mackenzie Legge
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
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-
-Title: Highland Mary
- The Romance of a Poet
-
-Author: Clayton Mackenzie Legge
-
-Illustrator: William Kirkpatrick
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2019 [EBook #60455]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HIGHLAND MARY ***
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-
-
-<p class="titlepage larger">HIGHLAND MARY</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="500" height="750" alt="Cover image" />
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<img src="images/illus1.jpg" width="475" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Highland Mary.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="bbox">
-
-<p class="center larger"><span class="larger">HIGHLAND<br />
-MARY</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger">The Romance of a Poet</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">A<br />
-NOVEL</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">By</span><br />
-CLAYTON MACKENZIE LEGGE</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">Illustrated by</span><br />
-WILLIAM KIRKPATRICK</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter titlepage" style="width: 200px;">
-<img src="images/cmc.jpg" width="200" height="180" alt="Logo of C. M. Clark Publishing Co." />
-</div>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">1906</span><br />
-C. M. CLARK PUBLISHING CO.<br />
-<span class="smaller">BOSTON</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller">Copyright, 1906.<br />
-THE C. M. CLARK PUBLISHING CO.,<br />
-Boston, Mass.</p>
-
-<p class="center smaller">Entered at<br />
-Stationer’s Hall, London.</p>
-
-<p class="center smaller">Dramatic and all other<br />
-<span class="smcap">Rights Reserved</span>.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="dedication">TO<br />
-<br />
-<span class="smcap larger">The Rev. Dr. Donald Sage Mackay, D.D.</span>,<br />
-<i>Pastor of the Collegiate Church</i>,<br />
-<span class="smcap">New York City</span>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="smaller">I RESPECTFULLY DEDICATE THIS BOOK</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>FOREWORD</h2>
-
-<p>With apologies to Dame History for having taken liberties
-with some of her famous characters, I would ask the Reader to
-remember that this story is fiction and not history.</p>
-
-<p>I have made use of some of the most romantic episodes in the
-life of Robert Burns, such as his courtship of Mary Campbell and
-his love affair with Jean Armour, “the Belle of Mauchline,” and
-many of the historical references and details are authentic.</p>
-
-<p>But my chief purpose in using these incidents was to make
-“Highland Mary” as picturesque, lovable and interesting a character
-in Fiction as she has always been in the History of Scotland.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Clayton Mackenzie Legge.</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1>HIGHLAND MARY</h1>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
-
-<p>In the “but” or living-room (as it was termed in
-Scotland) of a little whitewashed thatched cottage
-near Auld Ayr in the land of the Doon, sat a quiet,
-sedate trio of persons consisting of two men and a
-woman. She who sat at the wheel busily engaged in
-spinning was the mistress of the cot, a matronly,
-middle-aged woman in peasant’s cap and ’kerchief.</p>
-
-<p>The other two occupants of the room for years
-had been inseparable companions and cronies, and
-when not at the village inn could be found sitting
-by the fireside of one of their neighbors, smoking
-their pipes in blissful laziness. And all Ayrshire
-tolerated and even welcomed Tam O’Shanter and his
-cronie, “Souter Johnny.”</p>
-
-<p>Tam was an Ayrshire farmer, considered fairly
-well-to-do in the neighborhood, while Souter (shoemaker)
-Johnny was the village cobbler, who seldom,
-if ever, worked at his trade nowadays. All the
-afternoon had they sat by the open fireplace, with its
-roomy, projecting chimney, watching the peat burn,
-seldom speaking, smoking their old smelly pipes, and
-sighing contentedly as the warmth penetrated their
-old bones.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Burns glanced at her uninvited guests occasionally
-with no approving eye. If they must inflict
-their presence on her, why couldn’t they talk, say
-something, tell her some of the news, the gossip of
-the village? she thought angrily; their everlasting
-silence had grown very monotonous to the good
-dame. She wished they would go. It was nearing
-supper time, and Gilbert would soon be in from the
-field, and she knew that he did not approve of the
-two old cronies hanging around monopolizing the
-fireplace to the exclusion of everyone else, and she did
-not want any hard words between them and Gilbert.
-Suddenly with a final whirl she fastened the end of
-the yarn she was spinning, and getting up from
-her seat set the wheel back against the whitewashed
-wall.</p>
-
-<p>Then going to the old deal dresser, she took from
-one of the drawers a white cloth and spread it
-smoothly over the table, then from the rack, which
-hung above it, she took the old blue dishes and quickly
-set the table for their evening meal. At these preparations
-for supper the old cronies looked eagerly
-expectant, for none knew better than they the excellence
-of the Widow Burns’ cooking, and a look of
-pleasant anticipation stole over their sober faces as
-they perceived the platter of scones on the table ready
-to be placed on the hot slab of stone in the fireplace.</p>
-
-<p>Knocking the ashes from his pipe, Tam rose
-unsteadily to his feet, and standing with his back<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-to the fire, he admiringly watched the widow as she
-bustled to and fro from table to dresser. “Ah, Mistress
-Burns, ye’re a fine housekeeper,” he remarked
-admiringly. “An’ ye’re a fine cook.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Burns turned on him sharply. “So is your
-guidwife,” she said shortly, glancing out through the
-low, deep, square window to where her second son
-could be seen crossing the field to the house. She
-hoped he would take the hint and go.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, Mistress, I ken ye’re recht,” replied Tam,
-meekly, with a dismal sigh. “But it’s a sorry bet o’
-supper I’ll be gang hame to this night, an’ ye ken
-it’s a long journey, too, Mistress Burns,” he insinuated
-slyly.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure it’s a lang, weary journey, Tam,” said Souter
-Johnny, commiseratingly. “But think o’ the
-warm welcome ye’ll be haein’ when ye meet your guidwife
-at the door,” and a malicious twinkle gleamed in
-his kindly but keen old eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“How is your guidwife, Tam O’Shanter?” inquired
-Mistress Burns, as she placed some scones on
-the hot hearthstone to bake.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s a maist unco woman, Mistress,” replied
-Tam sorrowfully. “There’s no livin’ wi’ her o’
-late. She’s no a help or comfort to a mon at a’!” he
-whined. Here Tam got a delicious whiff of the baking
-scones, and his mouth as well as his eyes watered
-as he continued pathetically, “If she could only
-cook like ye, Mistress. Oh, ’twas a sorry day for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-Tam O’Shanter when he took such a scoldin’ beldame
-for wife,” and Tam sat down, the picture of abject
-distress.</p>
-
-<p>Souter regarded his cronie with a grim smile. He
-had no pity for Tam, nor for any man, in fact, who
-would not or could not rule his own household.
-(Souter, by the by, had remained a bachelor.) However,
-he did his best to console Tam whenever his
-marital troubles were discussed.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind, Tam,” he said sympathetically,
-helping himself to a scone while Mistress Burns’ back
-was turned. “Ye ken where ye can find all the comfort
-and consolation ye can hold, if ye hae the tippence.”</p>
-
-<p>Tam wiped away a tear (tears came easily to
-the old tyke in his constant state of semi-intoxication)
-and gave a deep, prolonged sigh. “Aye, Souter, an’
-I feel mair at home in the Inn than I do with my guidwife,”
-he answered mournfully. “I dinna mind telling
-ye, she’s driven me to the Deil himsel’, by her daur
-looks an’ ways. The only friend I hae left is Old
-John Barleycorn,” and he wailed in maudlin despair.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s your best enemy, ye mean,” retorted Souter
-dryly, relighting his pipe, after having demolished,
-with evident relish, the last of his stolen scone.</p>
-
-<p>“Waesucks, mon,” he continued, assuming the
-tone of Dominie Daddy Auld, who had tried in vain
-to convert the two old sinners, much to their amusement
-and inward elation. “Your guidwife told ye<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-weel. Ye’re a skellum, Tam, a blethering, blustering,
-drunken blellum,” and the old rogue looked slyly at
-Mistress Burns to note the effect of his harangue.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, ye’re right, Souter Johnny,” said the good
-dame, nodding approval to him, and going up to
-Tam, who was still sitting groaning by the fireside,
-she shook him vigorously by the shoulder. “Stop
-your groaning and grunting, ye old tyke, and listen
-to me,” she said sharply. “Take your friend’s advice
-and gi’ old John Barleycorn a wide berth.”
-Here her voice dropped to a whisper, “or some day
-ye’ll be catched wi’ warlocks in the mire, Tam
-O’Shanter.” He stopped his noise and straightened
-up in his chair.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, and ghosties and witches will come yelpin’
-after ye as ye pass the auld haunted kirk at Alloway,”
-added Souter sepulchrally, leaning over Tam
-with fixed eyes and hand outstretched, clutching spasmodically
-at imaginary objects floating before Tam’s
-suspicious, angry eyes. Tam, however, was not to
-be so easily frightened, and brushing Souter aside, he
-jumped to his feet. “Souter Johnny, dinna ye
-preach to me, mon,” he roared menacingly. “Ye
-hae no reght. Let Daddy Auld do that! I dinna
-fear the witches or ghosties, not I.” He staggered
-to the window and pointed to an old white horse
-standing meekly by the roadside.</p>
-
-<p>“Do ye see any auld faithful Maggie standin’ out
-there?” he cried triumphantly. Not waiting for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-their answer, he continued proudly, “Nae witches can
-catch Tam O’Shanter when he’s astride his auld
-mare’s back, whether he is drunk or sober,” and he
-glared defiantly at his listeners. At that moment
-the door from the “ben” opened, and Gilbert Burns
-entered the room. An angry frown wrinkled his
-forehead as his gaze fell upon the two old cronies. A
-hard worker himself, he could not abide laziness or
-shiftlessness in another. He strode swiftly up to Tam,
-who had suddenly lost his defiant attitude, but before
-he could speak the bitter, impatient words which
-rushed to his lips, his mother, knowing his uncertain
-temper, shook her head at him remonstratingly. “Ah,
-lad, I’m fair ye hae come in to rest a while, an’ to hae
-a bit o’ supper,” she hurriedly said. “Set ye doon.
-I hae some scones for ye, an’ Mollie has some rabbit
-stew. Noo gie me your bonnet and coat, laddie,” and
-taking them from him she hung them on the peg
-behind the door, while Gilbert with a look of disgust
-at the two old cronies sat down and proceeded
-to butter his scones in moody silence. Tam and Souter,
-however, did not appear in any wise abashed, and
-perceiving they were not to be invited to eat with
-Gilbert, they resumed their seats each side of the
-fireplace and heaved a disconsolate sigh.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Burns, who had left the room for a moment,
-now entered bearing a large bowl of the steaming
-stew, which she set before her son, while directly after
-her appeared old Mollie Dunn, the half-witted household<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-drudge. The time was when Mollie had been
-the swiftest mail carrier between Dumfries and
-Mauchline, but she was now content to have a home
-with the Burns family, where, if the twinges of rheumatism
-assailed her, she could rest her bones until
-relief came. She now stood, a pleased grin on her
-ugly face, watching Gilbert as he helped himself to a
-generous portion of the stew which she had proudly
-prepared for the evening meal.</p>
-
-<p>“Molly,” said her mistress sharply, “dinna ye
-stand there idle; fetch me some hot water frae the
-pot.”</p>
-
-<p>Molly got a pan from the rack and hurried to the
-fireplace, where Tam was relighting his pipe with
-a blazing ember, for the dozenth time. Molly
-had no love for Tam, and finding him in her way,
-she calmly gave a quick pull to his plaidie, and Tam,
-who was in a crouching position, fell backward,
-sprawling on the hearth in a decidedly undignified attitude.
-With the roar of a wounded lion, he scrambled
-to his feet, with the assistance of Souter, and shaking
-his fist at the laughing Molly, he sputtered indignantly,
-“Is the Deil himsel’ in ye, Molly Dunn?
-Ye’re an impudent hussy, that’s what ye are.” Molly
-glared at him defiantly for a moment, then calmly proceeded
-to fill her pan with hot water, while the old
-man, bursting with indignation, staggered over to the
-dresser where Mistress Burns was brewing some
-tea.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Mistress Burns,” he remonstrated almost tearfully,
-“ye should teach your servants better manners.
-Molly Dunn is a——” but he never finished his
-sentence, for Molly, hurrying back with the hot
-water, ran into him and, whether by design or accident
-it was never known, spilled the hot contents of the pan
-over Tam’s shins, whereupon he gave what resembled
-a burlesque imitation of a Highland fling to the
-accompaniment of roars of pain and anger from
-himself and guffaws of laughter from Souter and
-Molly. Even Mrs. Burns and Gilbert could not
-resist a smile at the antics of the old tyke.</p>
-
-<p>“Toots, mon,” said Molly, not at all abashed at
-the mischief she had done, “ye’re no hurt; ye’ll get
-mair than that at hame, I’m tellin’ ye,” and she nodded
-her head sagely.</p>
-
-<p>“Molly, hold your tongue,” said Mistress Burns
-reprovingly, then she turned to Tam. “I hope ye’re
-nae burnt bad.” But Tam was very angry, and turning
-to Souter he cried wrathfully, “I’m gang
-hame, Souter Johnny. I’ll no stay here to be insulted;
-I’m gang hame.” And he started for the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>“Dinna mind Molly; she’s daft like,” replied Souter
-in a soothing voice. “Come and sit doon,” and
-he tried to pull him toward the fireplace, but Tam
-was not to be pacified. His dignity had been outraged.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, nay, Souter, I thank ye!” he said firmly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-“An’ ye, too, Mistress Burns, for your kind invitation
-to stay langer,” she looked at him quickly,
-then gave a little sniff, “but I ken when I’m insulted,”
-and disengaging himself from Souter’s restraining
-hand, he started for the door once more.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ where will ye be gang at this hour, Tam?”
-insinuated Souter slyly. “Ye ken your guidwife’s
-temper.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m gang over to the Inn,” replied Tam defiantly,
-with his hand on the open door. “Will ye
-gang alang wi’ me, Souter? A wee droppie will cheer
-us both,” he continued persuasively.</p>
-
-<p>Souter looked anxiously at Gilbert’s stern, frowning
-face, then back to Tam. “I’d like to amazin’
-weel, Tam,” he replied in a plaintive tone, “but ye
-see——”</p>
-
-<p>“Johnny has promised me he’ll keep sober till
-plantin’ is over,” interrupted Gilbert firmly; “after
-that he can do as he likes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye should both be ashamed o’ yoursel’s drinkin’
-that vile whisky,” said Mrs. Burns angrily, and she
-clacked her lips in disgust. “It is your worst enemy,
-I’m tellin’ ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye mind, Mistress Burns,” replied Souter, winking
-his left eye at Tam, “ye mind the Scriptures
-say, ‘Love your enemies.’ Weel, we’re just tryin’ to
-obey the Scriptures, eh, Tam?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, Souter,” answered Tam with drunken gravity,
-“I always obey the Scriptures.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Here, mon, drink a cup of tea before ye gang
-awa’,” said Mrs. Burns, and she took him a brimming
-cup of the delicious beverage, thinking it might
-assuage his thirst for something stronger. Tam
-majestically waved it away.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, I thank ye, Mistress Burns, I’ll no’ deprive
-ye of it,” he answered with extreme condescension.
-“Tea doesno’ agree with Tam O’Shanter.” He
-pushed open the door. “I’m off to the Inn, where
-the <i>tea</i> is more to my likin’. Guid-day to ye all,” and,
-slamming the door behind him, he called Maggie to
-his side, and jumping astride her old back galloped
-speedily toward the village Inn. The last heard of
-him that day was his voice lustily singing “The
-Campbells Are Coming.”</p>
-
-<p>After he left the room Mistress Burns handed
-Souter the cup of tea she had poured for Tam, and
-soon the silence was unbroken save by an occasional
-sigh from the old tyke as he sipped his tea.</p>
-
-<p>Presently Gilbert set down his empty cup, rose
-and donned his coat. “Here we are drinking tea,
-afternoon tea, as if we were of the quality,” he observed
-sarcastically, “instead of being out in the fields
-plowing the soil; there’s much to be done ere sundown.”</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, this suits me fine,” murmured Souter
-contentedly, draining his cup. “I ken I was born
-to be one o’ the quality; work doesno’ agree wi’ me,
-o’er weel,” and he snuggled closer in his chair.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Ye’re very much like my fine brother Robert in
-that respect,” answered Gilbert bitterly, his face
-growing stern and cold. “But we want no laggards
-here on Mossgiel. Farmers must work, an’ work
-hard, if they would live.” He walked to the window
-and looked out over the untilled ground with hard,
-angry eyes, and his heart filled with bitterness as he
-thought of his elder brother. It had always fallen to
-him to finish the many tasks his dreaming, thoughtless,
-erratic brother had left unfinished, while the latter
-sought some sequestered spot where, with pencil
-and paper in hand, he would idle away his time writing
-verses. And for a year now Robert had been in
-Irvine, no doubt enjoying himself to the full, while
-he, Gilbert, toiled and slaved at home to keep the poor
-shelter over his dear ones. It was neither right nor
-just, he thought, with an aching heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye ken, Gilbert,” said Souter Johnny, breaking
-in on his reverie, “Robert wasna’ born to be a
-farmer. He always cared more, even when a wee
-laddie, for writin’ poetry and dreamin’ o’ the lasses
-than toilin’ in the fields, more’s the pity.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Burns turned on him quickly. “Souter
-Johnny, dinna ye dare say a word against Robert,”
-she flashed indignantly. “He could turn the best
-furrough o’ any lad in these parts, ye ken that
-weel,” and Souter was completely annihilated by the
-angry flash that gleamed in the mother’s eye, and it
-was a very humble Souter that hesitatingly held out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-his cup to her, hoping to change the subject. “Hae
-ye a wee droppie mair tea there, Mistress Burns?”
-he meekly asked.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Burns was not to be mollified, however.
-“Aye, but not for ye, ye skellum,” she answered
-shortly, taking the cup from him and putting it in
-the dishpan.</p>
-
-<p>“Come along, Souter,” said Gilbert, going to the
-door. “We hae much to do ere sundown and hae
-idled too long, noo. Come.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’re workin’ me too hard, Gilbert,” groaned
-Souter despairingly. “My back is nigh broken;
-bide a wee, mon!”</p>
-
-<p>A sharp whistle from without checked Gilbert as
-he was about to reply. “The Posty has stopped at
-the gate,” exclaimed Mistress Burns excitedly, rushing
-to the window in time to see old Molly receive
-a letter from that worthy, and then come running
-back to the house. Hurrying to the door, she
-snatched it from the old servant’s hands and eagerly
-held it to the light. Molly peered anxiously over her
-shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s frae Robbie,” she exclaimed delightedly.
-“Keep quiet, noo, till I read it to the end.” As she
-finished, the tears of gladness rolled down her smooth
-cheek. “Oh, Gilbert,” she said, a little catch in her
-voice, “Robert is comin’ back to us. He’ll be here
-this day. Read it, lad, read for yoursel’.” He took
-the letter and walked to the fireplace. After a slight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-pause he read it. As she watched him she noticed
-with sudden apprehension the look of anger that
-darkened his face. She had forgotten the misunderstanding
-which had existed between the brothers since
-their coming to Mossgiel to live, and suddenly her
-heart misgave her.</p>
-
-<p>“Gilbert lad,” she hesitatingly said as he finished
-the letter, “dinna say aught to Robert when he
-comes hame about his rhyming, will ye, laddie?”
-She paused and looked anxiously into his sullen face.
-“He canna bear to be discouraged, ye ken,” and she
-took the letter from him and put it in her bosom.
-Gilbert remained silent and moody, a heavy frown
-wrinkling his brow.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps all thoughts of poesy has left him
-since he has been among strangers,” continued the
-mother thoughtfully. “Ye ken he has been doin’
-right weel in Irvine; and it’s only because the flax
-dresser’s shop has burned to the ground, and he
-canna work any more, that he decides to come hame
-to help us noo. Ye ken that, Gilbert.” She laid her
-hand in tender pleading on his sunburnt arm.</p>
-
-<p>“He always shirked his work before,” replied
-Gilbert bitterly, “and nae doot he will again. But
-he maun work, an’ work hard, if he wants to stay
-at Mossgiel. Nae more lyin’ around, scribblin’ on
-every piece of paper he finds, a lot of nonsense,
-which willna’ put food in his mouth, nor clothe his
-back.” Mrs. Burns sighed deeply and sank into the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-low stool beside her spinning wheel, he hands folded
-for once idly in her lap, and gave herself up to her
-disquieting thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye can talk all ye like,” exclaimed Souter,
-who was ever ready with his advice, “but Robert
-is too smart a lad to stay here for lang. He was
-never cut out for a farmer nae mair was I.”</p>
-
-<p>“A farmer,” repeated Mrs. Burns, with a mirthless
-little laugh. “An’ what is there in a farmer’s
-life to pay for all the hardships he endures?” she
-asked bitterly. “The constant grindin’ an’ endless
-toil crushes all the life out o’ one in the struggle
-for existence. Remember your father, Gilbert,”
-and her voice broke at the flood of bitter recollection
-which crowded her thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>“I have na forgotten him, mither,” replied Gilbert
-quietly. “Nor am I likely to, for my ain lot in
-life is nae better.” And pulling his cap down over
-his eyes, he went back to the window and gazed moodily
-out over the bare, rocky, profitless farm which
-must be made to yield them a living. There was silence
-for a time, broken only by the regular monotonous
-ticking of the old clock. After a time Mrs.
-Burns quietly left the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, laddie,” whispered Souter as the door closed
-behind her, coming up beside Gilbert, “did ye hear
-the news that Tam O’Shanter brought frae Mauchline?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean about Robert an’ some lassie<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-there?” inquired Gilbert indifferently, after a brief
-pause.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye!” returned Souter impressively, “but she’s
-nae common lass, Gilbert. She’s Squire Armour’s
-daughter Jean, called the Belle of Mauchline.”</p>
-
-<p>“I ken it’s no serious,” replied Gilbert sarcastically,
-“for ye ken Robert’s heart is like a tinder
-box, that flares up at the first whisper of passion,”
-and he turned away from the window and started for
-the door.</p>
-
-<p>“I canna’ understand,” reflected Souter, “how
-the lad could forget his sweetheart, Highland Mary,
-long enough to take up wi any ither lassie. They
-were mighty fond o’ each ither before he went awa’ a
-year ago. I can swear to that,” and he smiled
-reminiscently.</p>
-
-<p>A look of despair swept over Gilbert’s face at the
-idle words of the garrulous old man. He leaned
-heavily against the door, for there was a dull, aching
-pain at his heart of which he was physically conscious.
-For a few moments he stood there with white drawn
-face, trying hard to realize the bitter truth, that at
-last the day had come, as he had feared it must come,
-when he must step aside for the prodigal brother who
-would now claim his sweetheart. And she would go to
-him so gladly, he knew, without a single thought
-of his loneliness or his sorrow. But she was not to
-blame. It was only right that she should now be
-with her sweetheart, that he must say farewell to those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-blissful walks along the banks of the Doon which for
-almost a year he had enjoyed with Mary by his side.
-His stern, tense lips relaxed, and a faint smile softened
-his rugged features. How happy he had been
-in his fool’s paradise. But he loved her so dearly
-that he had been content just to be with her, to listen
-to the sweetness of her voice as she prattled
-innocently and lovingly of her absent sweetheart.
-A snore from Souter, who had fallen asleep in his
-chair, roused him from the fond reverie into which he
-had fallen, and brought him back to earth with a start.
-With a bitter smile he told himself he had no right
-to complain. If he had allowed himself to fall in
-love with his brother’s betrothed, he alone was to
-blame, and he must suffer the consequence. Suddenly
-a wild thought entered his brain. Suppose—and his
-heart almost stopped beating at the thought—suppose
-Robert had grown to love someone else, while
-away, even better than he did Mary? He had heard
-rumors of Robert’s many amourous escapades in
-Mauchline; then perhaps Mary would again turn to
-him for comfort. His eyes shone with renewed hope
-and his heart was several degrees lighter as he left
-the house. Going to the high knoll back of the cottage,
-he gazed eagerly, longingly, across the moor
-to where, in the hazy distance, the lofty turrets of
-Castle Montgomery, the home of the winsome dairymaid,
-Mary Campbell, reared their heads toward the
-blue heavens.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER II</h3>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Ye banks and braes and streams around</div>
-<div class="verse">The Castle of Montgomery,</div>
-<div class="verse">Green be your woods and fair your flowers,</div>
-<div class="verse">Your waters never drumlie,</div>
-<div class="verse">There summer first unfolds her robes,</div>
-<div class="verse">And there the langest tarry,</div>
-<div class="verse">For there I took the last farewell</div>
-<div class="verse">O’ my sweet Highland Mary.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>At the foot of the hill on which stood Castle Montgomery
-flowed the River Doon, winding and twisting
-itself through richly wooded scenery on its way
-to Ayr Bay. On the hillside of the stream stood the
-old stone dairy, covered with ivy and shaded by overhanging
-willows. Within its cool, shady walls the
-merry lassies sang at their duties, with hearts as
-light and carefree as the birds that flew about the
-open door. Their duties over for the day, they had
-returned to their quarters in the long, low wing of
-the castle, and silence reigned supreme over the
-place, save for the trickling of the Doon splashing
-over the stones as it wended its tuneful way to join
-the waters of the Ayr.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the silence was broken; borne on the
-evening breeze came the sound of a sweet, high
-voice singing:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Oh where and oh where is my Highland laddie gone,”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">sang the sweet singer, plaintively from the hilltop.
-Nearer and nearer it approached as the owner followed
-the winding path down to the river’s bank.
-Suddenly the drooping willows were parted, and there
-looked out the fairest face surely that mortal eyes
-had ever seen.</p>
-
-<p>About sixteen years of age, with ringlets of flaxen
-hair flowing unconfined to her waist, laughing blue
-eyes, bewitchingly overarched by dark eyebrows, a
-rosebud mouth, now parted in song, between two
-rounded dimpled cheeks, such was the bonnie face
-of Mary Campbell, known to all around as “Highland
-Mary.” Removing her plaidie, which hung
-gracefully from one shoulder, she spread it on the
-mossy bank, and, casting herself down full length
-upon it, her head pillowed in her hand, she finished
-her song, lazily, dreamily, letting it die out, slowly,
-softly floating into nothingness. Then for a moment
-she gave herself up to the mere joy of living,
-watching the leaves as they fell noiselessly into the
-stream and were carried away, away until they were
-lost to vision. Gradually her thoughts became more
-centered. That particular spot was full of sweet
-memories to her. It was here, she mused dreamily,
-that she and Robert had parted a year ago. It was
-here on the banks of the Doon they so often had
-met and courted and loved, and here it was they had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-stood hand in hand and plighted their troth, while
-the murmuring stream seemed to whisper softly,
-“For eternity, for all eternity.” And here in this
-sequestered spot, on that second Sunday of May,
-they had spent the day in taking a last farewell.
-Would she ever forget it? Oh, the pain of that
-parting! Her eyes filled with tears at the recollection
-of her past misery. But she brushed them quickly
-away with a corner of her scarf. He had promised to
-send for her when he was getting along well, and she
-had been waiting day after day for that summons,
-full of faith in his word. For had he not said as he
-pressed her to his heart:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“I hae sworn by the heavens to my Mary,</div>
-<div class="verse">I hae sworn by the heavens to be true.</div>
-<div class="verse">And so may the heavens forget me,</div>
-<div class="verse">When I forget my vow.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>A whole year had passed. She had saved all
-her little earnings, and now her box was nearly filled
-with the linen which she had spun and woven with
-her own fair hands, for she did not mean to come dowerless
-to her husband. In a few months, so he had
-written in his last letter, he would send for her to
-come to him, and they would start for the new
-country, America, where gold could be picked up in
-the streets (so she had heard it said). They could
-not help but prosper, and so the child mused on happily.
-The sudden blast of a horn interrupted her
-sweet day dreams, and, hastily jumping to her feet,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-with a little ejaculation of dismay she tossed her
-plaidie over her back, and, filling her pail from the
-brook, swung it lightly to her strong young shoulder.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“An’ it’s o’ in my heart, I wish him safe at home,”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">she trilled longingly, as she retraced her steps up the
-winding path, over the hill, and back to the kitchen,
-where, after giving the pail into the hand of Bess, the
-good-natured cook, she leaned against the lintel of the
-door, her hands shading her wistful eyes, and gazed
-long and earnestly off to where the sun was sinking
-behind the horizon in far-off Irvine. So wrapped was
-she in her thoughts she failed to hear the whistle of
-Rory Cam, the Posty, and the bustle and confusion
-which his coming had created within the kitchen. The
-sharp little shrieks and ejaculations of surprise and
-delight, however, caused her to turn her head inquiringly.
-Looking through the open door, she saw Bess
-in the center of a gaping crowd of servants, reading a
-letter, the contents of which had evoked the delight of
-her listeners. “An’ he’ll be here this day,” cried Bess
-loudly, folding her letter. “Where’s Mary Campbell?”
-she demanded, looking around the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Here I am, Bess,” said Mary, standing shyly at
-the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Hae ye heard the news, then, lassie?” asked Bess,
-grinning broadly.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay; what news?” inquired Mary, wondering
-why they all looked at her so knowingly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I’ve just had word frae my sister in Irvine, an’
-she said——” Here Bess paused impressively.
-“She said that Rob Burns was burnt out o’ his place,
-an’ that he would be comin’ hame to-day.” Bess, who
-had good-naturedly wished to surprise Mary, was
-quite startled to see her turn as white as a lily and
-stagger back against the door with a little gasp
-of startled surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Are ye sure, Bess?” she faltered, her voice shaking
-with eagerness.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s true as Gospel, lassie; I’ll read ye the
-letter,” and Bess started to take it out, but with
-a cry of joy Mary rushed through the door like a
-startled fawn, and before the astonished maids could
-catch their breath she had lightly vaulted over the
-hedge and was flying down the hill and over the moor
-toward Mossgiel farm with the speed of a swallow,
-her golden hair floating behind her like a cloud of
-glorious sunshine. On, on she sped, swift as the
-wind, and soon Mossgiel loomed up in the near distance.
-Not stopping for breath, she soon reached
-the door, and without pausing to knock burst into the
-room.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Burns had put the house in order and, with a
-clean ’kerchief and cap on, sat patiently at her wheel,
-waiting for Robert to come home, while Souter quietly
-sat in the corner winding a ball of yarn from the
-skein which hung over the back of the chair, and
-looking decidedly sheepish. When Mary burst in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-the door so unceremoniously they both jumped
-expectantly to their feet, thinking surely it was
-Robert.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Mary lass, is it ye?” said Mrs. Burns in
-surprise. “Whatever brings ye over the day? not
-but we are glad to have ye,” she added hospitably.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is he, Mistress Burns, where’s Robbie?”
-she panted excitedly, her heart in her voice.</p>
-
-<p>“He isna’ here yet, lassie,” replied Mrs. Burns,
-with a sigh. “But sit ye doon. Take off your
-plaidie and wait for him. There’s a girlie,” and she
-pushed the unresisting girl into a chair.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’re sure he isna’ here, Mistress Burns?” asked
-Mary wistfully, looking around the room with eager,
-searching eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, lassie,” she replied, smiling; “if he were
-he wouldna’ be hidin’ from ye, dearie, and after
-a year of absence, too. But I ken he will be here
-soon noo.” And she went to the window and looked
-anxiously out across the moor.</p>
-
-<p>“It seems so lang since he left Mossgiel, doesna’
-it, Mistress Burns?” said Mary with a deep sigh of
-disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ weel ye might say that,” replied Mrs. Burns.
-“For who doesna’ miss my laddie,” and she tossed
-her head proudly. “There isna’ another like Robbie
-in all Ayrshire. A bright, honest, upright, pure-minded
-lad, whom any mither might be proud of.
-I hope he’ll return to us the same laddie he was when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-he went awa’.” The anxious look returned to her
-comely face.</p>
-
-<p>An odd little smile appeared about the corners
-of Souter’s mouth as he resumed his work.</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, noo, Mistress Burns,” he asked dryly,
-“do ye expect a healthy lad to be out in this sinful
-world an’ not learn a few things he didna ken
-before? ’Tis only human nature,” continued the
-old rogue, “an’ ye can learn a deal in a year, mind
-that, an’ that reminds me o’ a good joke. Sandy
-MacPherson——”</p>
-
-<p>“Souter Johnny, ye keep your stories to yoursel’,”
-interrupted Mrs. Burns with a frown. Souter’s
-stories were not always discreet.</p>
-
-<p>“Irvine and Mauchline are very gay towns,” continued
-Souter reminiscently. “They say some of
-the prettiest gurls of Scotlan’ live there, an’ I hear
-they all love Robbie Burns, too,” he added slyly,
-looking at Mary out of the corner of his eye.</p>
-
-<p>“They couldna help it,” replied Mary sweetly.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ ye’re nae jealous, Mary?” he inquired in a
-surprised tone, turning to look into the flushed, shy
-face beside him.</p>
-
-<p>“Jealous of Robert?” echoed Mary, opening her
-innocent eyes to their widest. “Nay! for I ken he
-loves me better than any other lassie in the world.”
-And she added naïvely, “He has told me so ofttimes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye needna fear, Mary,” replied Mrs. Burns,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-resuming her place at the wheel. “I’ll hae no ither
-lass but ye for my daughter, depend on’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank ye, Mistress Burns,” said Mary brightly.
-“I ken I’m only a simple country lass, but I mean
-to learn all I can, so that when he becomes a great
-man he’ll no be ashamed of me, for I ken he will be
-great some day,” she continued, her eyes flashing,
-the color coming and going in her cheek as she predicted
-the future of the lad she loved. “He’s a
-born poet, Mistress Burns, and some day ye’ll be
-proud of your lad, for genius such as Rabbie’s
-canna always be hid.” Mrs. Burns gazed at the
-young girl in wonder.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, if someone would only encourage him,” continued
-Mary earnestly, “for I’m fair sure his heart
-is set on rhyming.”</p>
-
-<p>“I ne’er heard of a body ever makin’ money writin’
-verses,” interposed Souter, rubbing his chin reflectively
-with the ball of soft yarn.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, me,” sighed Mrs. Burns, her hands idle for
-a moment, “I fear the lad does but waste his time
-in such scribbling. Who is to hear it? Only his
-friends, who are partial to him, of course, but who,
-alas, are as puir as we are, and canna assist him in
-bringin’ them before the public. The fire burns out
-for lack of fuel,” she continued slowly, watching the
-flickering sparks die one by one in the fireplace. “So
-will his love of writin’ when he sees how hopeless it
-all is.” She paused and sighed deeply. “He maun<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-do mair than write verses to keep a wife and family
-from want,” she continued earnestly, and she looked
-sadly at Mary’s downcast face. “And, Mary, ye
-too will hae to work, harder than ye hae ever known,
-even as I have; so hard, dearie, that the heart grows
-sick and weary and faint in the struggle to keep the
-walf awa’.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am no afraid of hard work,” answered Mary
-bravely, swallowing the sympathetic tears which rose
-to her eyes. “If poverty is to be his portion I shall
-na shrink from sharin’ it wi’ him,” and her eyes
-shone with love and devotion.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Burns rose and put her arms lovingly about
-her. “God bless ye, dearie,” she said softly, smoothing
-the tangled curls away from the broad low brow
-with tender, caressing fingers.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen!” cried Mary, as the wail of the bagpipes
-was heard in the distance. “’Tis old blind
-Donald,” and running to the window she threw back
-the sash with a cry of delight. “Oh, how I love the
-music of the pipes!” she murmured passionately, and
-her sweet voice vibrated with feeling, for she thought
-of her home so far away in the Highlands and the
-dear ones she had not seen for so long.</p>
-
-<p>“Isna he the merry one this day,” chuckled
-Souter, keeping time with his feet and hands, not
-heeding the yarn, which had slipped from the chair,
-and which was fast becoming entangled about his
-feet.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“It’s fair inspirin’!” cried Mary, clapping her
-hands ecstatically. “Doesna it take ye back to the
-Highlands, Souter?” she asked happily.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, lassie,” replied Souter. “But it’s there
-among the hills and glens that the music of the
-pipes is most entrancin’,” he added loyally, for he
-was a true Highlander. The strains of the “Cock
-of the North” grew louder and louder as old Donald
-drew near the farm, and Mary, who could no
-longer restrain her joyous impulse, with a little excited
-laugh, her face flushing rosily, ran to the
-center of the room, where, one hand on her hip, her
-head tossed back, she began to dance. Her motion
-was harmony itself as she gracefully swayed to and
-fro, darting here and there like some elfin sprite,
-her bare feet twinkling like will-o’-the-wisps, so
-quickly did they dart in and out from beneath her
-short plaid skirt. With words of praise they both
-encouraged her to do her best.</p>
-
-<p>Louder and louder the old piper blew, quicker and
-quicker the feet of the dancer sped, till, with a gasp
-of exhaustion, Mary sank panting into the big armchair,
-feeling very warm and very tired, but very
-happy.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye dance bonnie, dearie, bonnie,” exclaimed Mrs.
-Burns delightedly, pouring her a cup of tea, which
-Mary drank gratefully.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dearie me,” Mary said apologetically, putting
-down her empty cup, “whatever came o’er me?
-I’m a gaucie wild thing this day, for true, but I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-canna held dancin’ when I hear the pipes,” and she
-smiled bashfully into the kind face bent over her.</p>
-
-<p>“Music affects me likewise,” replied Souter, trying
-to untangle the yarn from around his feet, but
-only succeeding in making a bad matter worse.
-“Music always goes to my feet like whusky, only
-whusky touches me here first,” and he tapped his head
-humorously with his forefinger.</p>
-
-<p>“Souter Johnny, ye skellum!” cried Mrs. Burns,
-noticing for the first time the mischief he had
-wrought. “Ye’re not worth your salt, ye ne’er-do-weel.
-Ye’ve spoiled my yarn,” and she glared at the
-crestfallen Souter with fire in her usually calm eye.</p>
-
-<p>“It was an accident, Mistress Burns,” stammered
-Souter, awkwardly shifting his weight from one foot
-to the other in his efforts to free himself from the persistent
-embrace of the clinging yarn.</p>
-
-<p>With no gentle hand Mrs. Burns shoved him into a
-chair and proceeded to extricate his feet from the
-tangled web which held him prisoner. Soon she freed
-the offending members and rose to her feet. “Noo
-gang awa’,” she sputtered. “Ye’ve vexed me sair.
-Gang out and help Gilbert. I canna bide ye round.”
-Souter took his Tam O’Shanter, which hung over the
-fireplace, and ambled to the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Very weel,” he said meekly, “I’ll go. Souter
-Johnny can take a hint as weel as the next mon,”
-and he closed the door gently behind him and slowly
-wended his way across the field to where Gilbert was
-sitting, dreamily looking across the moor.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER III</h3>
-
-<p>“Why doesna he come, Mistress Burns?” said Mary
-pathetically. They had come down to the field where
-Gilbert was now at work the better to watch for their
-loved one’s approach. “Twilight is comin’ on an’
-’tis a lang walk to Castle Montgomery at night. I
-canna wait much langer noo.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never ye mind, lassie; ye shall stay the night
-with me,” replied Mrs. Burns soothingly, “if Robert
-doesna come.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll take ye back, Mary,” said Gilbert eagerly,
-going up to her. Perhaps Robert was not coming
-after all, he thought with wildly beating heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank ye, Gilbert, but I’ll wait a wee bit longer,”
-answered Mary hopefully; “perhaps he’ll be here
-soon,” and she dejectedly dug her bare toes into the
-damp earth.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, lassie, I canna waste any mair time,”
-said Mrs. Burns energetically. “Ye can stay
-here with Gilbert, while I return to my spinning.
-Come, Souter, there’s some firewood to be split,”
-and she quickly walked to the house, followed more
-slowly by the reluctant Souter.</p>
-
-<p>Gilbert, with his soul in his eyes, feasted on the
-pathetic loveliness of the sweet face beside him, gazing
-wistfully toward Mauchline, and his aching heart<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-yearned to clasp her to his breast, to tell her of his
-love, to plead for her pity, her love, herself, for he
-felt he would rather die than give her up to another.
-He drew closer to her.</p>
-
-<p>“What is the matter, Gilbert?” asked Mary anxiously,
-noting his pale face. “Are ye in pain?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, Mary, in pain,” he answered passionately.
-“Such pain I’ll hope ye’ll never know.” He bowed
-his head.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m so sorry, lad,” she replied innocently. “I
-wish I could help ye,” and she looked compassionately
-at the suffering man.</p>
-
-<p>He raised his head suddenly and looked into her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Are ye goin’ to marry Robert this summer, when
-he returns?” he asked abruptly, his voice husky with
-emotion.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, if he wishes it,” answered Mary simply,
-wondering why he looked so strangely white.</p>
-
-<p>“He has been gone a year, ye ken,” continued
-Gilbert hoarsely. “Suppose he has changed and no
-langer loves ye?” She looked at him with big, frightened
-eyes. She had never thought of that possibility
-before. What if he did no longer love her? she
-thought fearfully. She looked about her helplessly.
-She felt bewildered, dazed; slowly she sank down on
-the rocky earth, her trembling limbs refusing to support
-her. Her fair head drooped pathetically, like
-a lily bent and bruised by the storm.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“If Robert doesna want me any more,” she murmured
-after a pause, a pathetic little catch in her
-voice, “if he loves someone else better than he does
-his Highland Mary, then I—I——”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’ll soon forget him, Mary,” interrupted Gilbert
-eagerly, his heart throbbing with hope. She
-raised her eyes from which all the light had flown
-and looked at him sadly, reproachfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, lad, I wouldna care to live any longer,”
-she said quietly. “My heart would just break,”
-and she smiled a pitiful little smile which smote him
-like a knife thrust. He caught her two hands in
-his passionately and pressed them to his heart with
-a cry of pain.</p>
-
-<p>“Dinna mind what I said, lass,” he cried, conscience
-stricken; “dinna look like that. I dinna
-mean to grieve ye, Mary, I love ye too well.” And
-almost before he realized it he had recklessly, passionately,
-incoherently told her of his love for her, his
-jealousy of his brother, his grief and pain at losing
-her. Mary gazed at him in wonder, scarcely understanding
-his wild words, his excited manner.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m fair pleased that ye love me, Gilbert,” she
-answered him in her innocence. “Ye ken I love ye
-too, for ye’ve been so kind and good to me ever
-since Robert has been awa’,” and she pressed his
-hand affectionately. With a groan of despair he
-released her and turned away without another word.
-Suddenly she understood, and a great wave of sympathy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-welled up in her heart. “Oh, Gilbert,” she
-cried sorrowfully, a world of compassion in her
-voice. “I understand ye noo, laddie, an’ I’m so
-sorry, so sorry.” He bit his lips till the blood came.
-Finally he spoke in a tone of quiet bitterness.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been living in a fool’s paradise this past
-year,” he said, “but ’tis all ended noo. Why, ever
-since he went awa’ I have wished, hoped, and even
-prayed that Rob would never return to Mossgiel,
-that ye might forget him and his accursed poetry,
-and in time would become my wife.” He threw out
-his hands with a despairing gesture as he finished.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Gilbert,” she faltered, with tears in her
-eyes, “I never dreamed ye thought of me in that
-way. Had I only known, I——” she broke off
-abruptly and looked away toward the cottage.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye see what a villain I have been,” he continued
-with a bitter smile. “But ye have nothin’
-to blame yoursel’ for, Mary. I had no right to
-think of ye ither than as Robert’s betrothed wife.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m so sorry, lad,” repeated Mary compassionately.
-Then her downcast face brightened. “Let
-us both forget what has passed this day, and be
-the same good friends as ever, wi’na we, Gilbert?”
-And she held out her hand to him with her old winning
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>“God bless ye, lassie,” he replied brokenly. Quietly
-they stood there for a few minutes, then with a sudden
-start they realized that deep twilight had fallen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-upon them. Silently, stealthily it had descended,
-like a quickly drawn curtain. Slowly they wended
-their way back to the cottage. When they reached
-the door Mary suddenly turned and peered into the
-deepening twilight.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen!” she said breathlessly. “Dinna ye hear
-a voice, Gilbert?” He listened for a minute.
-Faintly there came on the still air the distant murmur
-of many voices.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis only the lads on their way to the village,”
-he replied quietly. With a little shiver, Mary drew
-her plaidie closely about her, for the air had grown
-cool.</p>
-
-<p>“I think I’ll hae to be goin’ noo,” she said dejectedly.
-“He willna be here this night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” answered Gilbert. “I’ll saddle the
-mare and take ye back. Bide here a wee,” and he
-left her. She could hardly restrain the disappointed
-tears, which rose to her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Why didn’t Robert come? What could keep him
-so late? She so longed to see her laddie once more.
-She idly wondered why the lads, whose voices she now
-heard quite plainly, were coming toward Mossgiel.
-There was no inn hereabouts. By the light of the
-rising moon she saw them on the moor, ever drawing
-nearer and nearer, but they had no interest for her.
-Nothing interested her now. She leaned back against
-the wall of the cottage and patiently awaited Gilbert’s
-return.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“He’s comin’! he’s comin’!” suddenly exclaimed
-the voice of Mrs. Burns from within the cottage.
-“My lad is comin’! Out of my way, ye skellum!”
-and out she ran, her face aglow with love and excitement,
-followed by Souter, who was shouting gleefully,
-“He’s comin’! he’s comin’! Robbie’s comin’!”
-and off he sped in her footsteps, to meet the returned
-wanderer.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Robbie! it’s Robbie!” cried Mary joyously,
-her nerves a-quiver, as she heard the vociferous outburst
-of welcome from the lads, who were bringing
-him in triumph to his very door.</p>
-
-<p>“Welcome hame, laddie!” shouted the crowd, as
-they came across the field, singing, laughing and
-joking like schoolboys on a frolic.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I canna’, I darena’ meet him before them a’,”
-she exclaimed aloud, blushing rosily, frightened at the
-thought of meeting him before the good-natured
-country folk.</p>
-
-<p>She would wait till they all went away, and, turning,
-she ran into the house like a timid child. Quickly
-she hid behind the old fireplace, listening shyly, as
-she heard them approach the open door.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank ye, lads, for your kind welcome,” said
-Robert as he reached the threshold, one arm around
-his mother. “I didna’ ken I had left so many friends
-in Mossgiel,” and he looked around gratefully at the
-rugged faces that were grinning broadly into his.</p>
-
-<p>“Come doon to the Inn and hae a wee nippie for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-auld lang syne,” sang out Sandy MacPherson, with
-an inviting wave of the hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, an’ he’ll not gang a step, Sandy MacPherson,”
-cried Mrs. Burns indignantly, clinging
-closely to her son.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, I thank ye, Sandy,” laughingly replied
-Robert. “Ye must excuse me to-night. I’ll see ye
-all later, and we’ll have a lang chat o’er auld times.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come awa’ noo, Robert,” said Mrs. Burns lovingly,
-“an’ I’ll get ye a bite and a sup,” and she
-drew him into the house.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-night, lads; I’ll see ye to-morrow,” he
-called back to them cheerily.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-night,” they answered in a chorus, and
-with “three cheers for Robbie Burns” that made the
-welkin ring, they departed into the night, merrily
-singing “Should auld acquaintance be forgot?” a
-song Robert himself had written before leaving
-Mossgiel.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER IV</h3>
-
-<p>“Ah, Souter Johnny, how are ye, mon?” cried Robert
-heartily, as his eyes rested on the beaming face of
-the old man. “Faith, an’ I thought I’d find ye here
-as of old. ’Tis almost a fixture ye are.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, weel,” replied Souter nonchalantly, as he
-shook Robert’s outstretched hand, “ye ken the
-Scripture says, ‘an’ the poor ye have always wi’
-ye.’” Robert laughed merrily at the old man’s
-sally.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank goodness, they’ve gone at last,” said Mrs.
-Burns with a sigh of relief, as she entered the room.
-“Why, laddie, ye had half the ne’er-do-weels of Mossgiel
-a-following ye. They are only a lot of leeches
-and idle brawlers, that’s a’,” and her dark eyes
-flashed her disapproval.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure they have kind hearts, mither, for a’
-that,” replied Robert reproachfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’re so popular wi’ them a’, Robbie,” cried
-Souter proudly.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, when he has a shillin’ to spend on them,”
-added Mrs. Burns dryly. “But sit doon, laddie;
-ye maun be tired wi’ your lang walk,” and she gently
-pushed him into a chair beside the table.</p>
-
-<p>“I am a wee bittie tired,” sighed Robert gratefully
-as he leaned back in the chair.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I’ll soon hae something to eat before ye,” replied
-his mother briskly.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m nae hungry, mother,” answered Robert.
-“Indeed, I couldna’ eat a thing,” he remonstrated
-as she piled the food before him.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis in love ye are,” insinuated Souter with a
-knowing look. “I ken the symptoms weel; ye canna’
-eat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’re wrong there,” replied Robert with a bright
-smile. “Love but increases my appetite.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, for love,” added Souter <i>sotto voce</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, mother dear, how guid it seems to be at hame
-again, under the old familiar roof-tree,” said Robert
-a little later, as he leaned back contentedly in his
-chair and gazed about the room with eager, alert
-glances. As he sits there with his arms folded let
-us take a look at our hero. Of more than medium
-height, his form suggested agility as well as strength.
-His high forehead, shaded with black curling hair
-tied at the neck, indicated extensive capacity. His
-eyes were large, dark, and full of fire and intelligence.
-His face was well formed and uncommonly interesting
-and expressive, although at the first glance his
-features had a certain air of coarseness, mingled with
-an expression of calm thoughtfulness, approaching
-melancholy. He was dressed carelessly in a blue
-homespun long coat, belted at the waist, over a buff-colored
-vest; short blue pantaloons, tucked into long
-gray home-knit stockings, which came up above his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-knee, and broad low brogans, made by Souter’s hands.
-He wore a handsome plaid of small white and black
-checks over one shoulder, the ends being brought
-together under the opposite arm and tied loosely
-behind.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis a fine hame-comin’ ye’ve had, laddie,” cried
-old Souter proudly. “Faith, it’s just like they
-give the heir of grand estates. We should hae had
-a big bonfire burnin’ outside our—ahem—palace
-gates,” and he waved his hand grandiloquently.</p>
-
-<p>“Dinna’ ye make fun of our poor clay biggin’,
-Souter Johnny,” cried Mrs. Burns rebukingly. “Be
-it ever so poor, ’tis our hame.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, ’tis our hame, mother,” repeated Robert
-lovingly. “An’ e’en tho’ I have been roaming in
-other parts, still this humble cottage is the dearest
-spot on earth to me. I love it all, every stick and
-stone, each blade of grass, every familiar object that
-greeted my eager gaze as I crossed the moor to this
-haven of rest, my hame. And my love for it this
-moment is the strongest feeling within me.”</p>
-
-<p>His roving eyes tenderly sought out one by one
-the familiar bits of furniture around the room, and
-lingered for a moment lovingly on the old fireplace.
-It was there he had first seen Mary Campbell. She
-had come to the cottage on an errand, and as she
-stood leaning against the mantel, the sunlight gleaming
-through the window upon her golden hair, he
-had entered the room. It was plainly love at first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-sight, and so he had told her that same day, as he
-walked back to Castle Montgomery with the winsome
-dairymaid. The course of their love had flowed
-smoothly and uneventfully; he loved her with all the
-depth of his passionate emotional nature, and yet
-his love was more spiritual than physical. She was
-an endless source of inspiration, as many a little song
-and ode which had appeared in the Tarbolton weekly
-from time to time could testify. How long the
-year had been away from her, he mused dreamily.
-To-morrow, bright and early, he would hurry over
-to Castle Montgomery and surprise her at her
-duties.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<img src="images/illus2.jpg" width="475" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Gazed straight into the startled eyes of Robert.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mary, from her hiding place, had watched all that
-happened since Robert had come into the room.
-She had not expected to remain so long hidden, she
-thought wistfully. She had hoped that Mrs. Burns
-would miss her, and that she, or Robert, or someone
-would look for her, but they had not even
-thought of her, and her lips trembled piteously at
-their neglect. And so she had stayed on, peeping out
-at them, whenever their backs were turned, feeling
-very lonely, and very miserable, in spite of the pride
-that thrilled her, as she watched her lover sitting
-there so handsome in the full strength of his young
-manhood. Perhaps they didn’t want her here to-night.
-Perhaps it was true, as Gilbert said, “that
-Robert didn’t love her any more.” The tears could
-no longer be restrained. If she could only slip out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-unobserved she would go home. She wasn’t afraid,
-she thought miserably. She wondered what they
-were doing now, they were so quiet? Peering shyly
-around the mantel, she gazed straight into the
-startled eyes of Robert, who with a surprised ejaculation
-started back in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Mary Campbell!” cried his mother remorsefully,
-as she caught sight of Mary’s face, “I
-declare I clear forgot ye, lass.” With a glad cry
-Robert sprang toward her and grasped her two hands
-in his own, his eyes shining with love and happiness.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary, lass, were ye hidin’ awa’ from me?” he
-asked in tender reproach. She dropped her head
-bashfully without a word. “’Tis o’er sweet in ye,
-dear, to come over to welcome me hame,” he continued
-radiantly. “Come an’ let me look at ye,” and
-he drew her gently to where the candle light could
-fall on her shy, flushed face. “Oh, ’tis bonnie ye’re
-looking, lassie,” he cried proudly. He raised her
-drooping head, so that his hungry eyes could
-feast on her beauty. She stood speechless, like a
-frightened child, not daring to raise her eyes to his.
-“Haven’t ye a word of welcome for me, sweetheart?”
-he whispered tenderly, drawing her to him
-caressingly.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m—I’m very glad to hae ye back again,” she
-faltered softly, her sweet voice scarcely audible.</p>
-
-<p>“Go an’ kiss him, Mary; dinna’ mind us,” cried
-Souter impatiently. “I can see ye’re both asking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-for it wi’ your eyes,” he insinuated. And he drew
-near them expectantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Hauld your whist, ye old tyke,” flashed Mrs.
-Burns indignantly. “Robbie Burns doesna’ need ye
-to tell him how to act wi’ the lassies.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll not dispute ye there,” replied Souter dryly,
-winking his eye at Robert knowingly.</p>
-
-<p>Robert laughed merrily as he answered, “Ye ken
-we’re both o’er bashful before ye a’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, ye’re a fine pair of lovers, ye are,” retorted
-Souter disgustedly, turning away.</p>
-
-<p>“So the neighbors say, Souter,” responded Robert
-gayly, giving Mary a loving little squeeze.</p>
-
-<p>And surely there never was a handsomer couple,
-thought Mistress Burns proudly, as they stood there
-together. One so dark, so big and strong, the other
-so fair, so fragile and winsome. And so thought
-Gilbert Burns jealously, as he came quietly into the
-room. Robert went to him quickly, a smile lighting
-up his dark face, his hand outstretched in
-greeting.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m o’er glad to see ye again, Gilbert,” he cried
-impulsively, shaking his brother’s limp hand.</p>
-
-<p>“So ye’ve come back again,” said Gilbert, coldly.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, like a bad penny,” laughingly responded
-Robert. “Noo that I am burned out of my situation,
-I’ve come hame to help ye in the labors of the
-farm,” and he pressed his brother’s hand warmly.</p>
-
-<p>“I fear your thoughts willna’ lang be on farming,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-observed Gilbert sarcastically, going to the
-fireplace and deliberately turning his back to Robert.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll struggle hard to keep them there, brother,”
-replied Robert simply. His brother’s coldness had
-chilled his extraordinarily sensitive nature. He
-walked slowly back to his seat.</p>
-
-<p>“I ken ye’d rather be writin’ love verses than
-farmin’, eh, Robert?” chimed in Souter thoughtlessly.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis only a waste of time writin’ poetry, my lad,”
-sighed Mrs. Burns, shaking her head disapprovingly.</p>
-
-<p>“I canna’ help writin’, mother,” answered the lad
-firmly, a trifle defiantly. “For the love of poesy
-was born in me, and that love was fostered at your
-ain knee ever since my childhood days.”</p>
-
-<p>She sighed regretfully. “I didna’ ken what seed
-I was sowing then, laddie,” she answered thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Dinna’ be discouraged,” cried Mary eagerly,
-going to him. “I’ve faith in ye, laddie, and in
-your poetry, too.” She put her hand on his shoulder
-lovingly, as he sat beside the table, looking
-gloomy and dejected. “Some day,” she continued,
-a thrill of pride in her voice, “ye’ll wake to find
-your name on everybody’s lips. You’ll be rich and
-famous, mayhap. Who kens, ye may even become
-the Bard o’ Scotland,” she concluded in an awestruck
-tone.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, Mary, I do not hope for that,” replied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-Robert, his dark countenance relaxing into a smile
-of tenderness at her wild prophecy, although in his
-own heart he felt conscious of superior talents.</p>
-
-<p>“Waesucks,” chuckled Souter reminiscently. “Do
-you mind, Robbie, how, a year ago, ye riled up the
-community, an’ the kirk especially, over your verses
-called ‘Holy Willie’s Prayer’? Aye, lad, it was an
-able keen satire, and auld Squire Armour recognized
-the truth of it, for he threatened to hae ye arrested
-for blaspheming the kirk and the auld licht religion.
-He’ll ne’er forgive ye for that,” and he shook his
-head with conviction.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s an auld Calvinistic hypocrite,” replied Robert
-carelessly, “and he deserved to be satirized alang
-wi’ the rest of the Elders. Let us hope the verses
-may do them and the kirk some good. They are
-sadly in need of reform.” Then with a gay laugh
-he told them a funny anecdote concerning one of
-the Elders, and for over an hour they listened to
-the rich tones of his voice as he entertained them
-with jest and song and story, passing quickly from
-one to the other, as the various emotions succeeded
-each other in his mind, assuming with equal ease the
-expression of the broadest mirth, the deepest melancholy
-or the most sublime emotion. They sat around
-him spellbound. Never had they seen him in such
-a changeable mood as to-night.</p>
-
-<p>“And noo, laddie, tell us about your life in Irvine
-and Mauchline,” said Mrs. Burns.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Robert had finished his last story, and sat in meditative
-silence, watching the smoldering peat in the
-fireplace.</p>
-
-<p>He hesitated for a moment. “There is little to
-tell, mother,” he answered, not looking up, “and that
-little is na worth tellin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“I ken ye’ve come back no richer in pocket than
-when ye left,” remarked Gilbert questioningly. As
-his brother made no answer, he continued with sarcastic
-irony, “But perhaps there wasna’ enough
-work for ye there.” He watched his brother’s face
-narrowly.</p>
-
-<p>“There was work enough for a’,” replied Robert
-in a low tone, an agony of remorse in his voice. “An’
-I tried to fulfill faithfully the uncongenial tasks set
-before me, but I would sink into dreams, forgetting
-my surroundings, my duties, and would set me doon
-to put on paper the thoughts and fancies which came
-rushing through my brain, raging like so many devils,
-till they found vent in rhyme; then the conning o’er
-my verses like a spell soothed all into quiet again.”
-A far away rapt expression came over his countenance
-as he finished, and his dark glowing eyes
-gazed dreamily into space, as if communing with
-the Muses. Mrs. Burns and Mary both watched him
-with moist, adoring eyes, hardly breathing lest they
-should disturb his reverie. Gilbert stirred in his
-chair restlessly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye will never prosper unless ye give up this day<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-dreaming,” he exclaimed impatiently, rising from his
-chair and pacing the floor.</p>
-
-<p>Robert looked up, the fire fading from his eyes,
-his face growing dark and forbidding. “I ken that
-weel, Gilbert,” he answered bitterly. “An’ I despair
-of ever makin’ anything of mysel’ in this world,
-not e’en a poor farmer. I am not formed for the
-bustle of the busy nor the flutter of the gay. I’m
-but an idle rhymster, a ne’er-do-weel.” He walked
-quickly to the window and stood dejectedly looking
-out into the night.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, ye’re a genius, lad,” declared old Souter
-emphatically, patting him affectionately on the
-shoulder. “I havena’ watched your erratic ways for
-nothin’, an’ I say ye’re a genius. It’s a sad thing to
-be a genius, Robert, an’ I sympathize wi’ ye,” and the
-old hypocrite shook his head dolefully as he took his
-seat at the fireplace.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m a failure, I ken that weel. I’m a failure,”
-muttered Robert despairingly, his heart heavy and
-sad.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, laddie, ye mustna’ talk like that,’tis not
-right,” cried Mary, bravely keeping back the sympathetic
-tears from her eyes and forcing a little
-smile to her lips. “Ye are only twenty-five,” she
-continued earnestly. “An’ all your life is stretchin’
-out before ye. Why, ye mustna ever think o’
-failure. Ye must think only of bright, happy things,
-and ye’ll see how everythin’ will come out all right.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-Noo mind that. So cheer thee, laddie, or ye’ll make
-us all sad on this your hame-comin’. Come, noo,
-look pleasant,” and she gave his arm a loving little
-shake. As his stern face melted into a sad smile,
-she laughed happily. “That’s right, laddie.” With
-a little encouraging nod she left him, and running
-to Mrs. Burns, she gave her a hug and a kiss, until
-the old lady’s grim features relaxed. Then like a
-bird she flitted to the other side of the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Souter Johnny,” she saucily cried, “how dare
-ye look so mournful like. Hae ye a fit o’ the gloom,
-man?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit o’ it,” retorted Souter energetically,
-jumping lightly to his feet. “Will I stand on my
-head for ye, Mary, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>Mary laughed merrily as Mrs. Burns replied in
-scathing tones, “Your brains are in your boots, noo,
-Souter Johnny.”</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, wherever they are,” responded Souter with
-a quizzical smile, “they dinna’ trouble me o’er much.
-Weel, I think I’ll be turnin’ in noo,” he continued,
-stretching himself lazily. “Good-night to ye all,”
-and taking a candle from the dresser, he slowly left
-the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, lads,’tis bedtime,” admonished Mrs.
-Burns, glancing at the old high clock that stood in
-the corner. “Mary, ye shall sleep with me, and,
-Robert, ye know where to find your bed. It hasna’
-been slept in since ye left. Dinna’ forget your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-candle, Gilbert,” she called out as he started for the
-door. He silently took it from her hand. “Dinna’
-forget your promise,” she whispered anxiously to him
-as he left the room in gloomy silence.</p>
-
-<p>The look on his face frightened her. There was
-bitterness and despair in the quick glance he gave
-the happy lovers, who were standing in the shadow
-of the deep window. “The lad looked fair heart-broken,”
-she mused sorrowfully. For a moment she
-looked after him, a puzzled frown on her brow.
-Then suddenly the truth dawned on her. How blind
-she had been, why hadn’t she thought of that before?
-The lad was in love. In love with Mary Campbell,
-that was the cause of his bitterness toward his
-brother. “Both in love with the same lass,” she
-murmured apprehensively, and visions of petty meannesses,
-bitter discords, between the two brothers,
-jealous quarrels, resulting in bloody strife, perhaps;
-and she shuddered at the mental picture her uneasy
-mind had conjured up. The sooner Robert and
-Mary were married the sooner peace would be
-restored, she thought resolutely. They could start
-out for themselves, go to Auld Ayr or to Dumfries.
-They couldn’t be much worse off there than here.
-And determined to set her mind easy before she retired,
-she walked briskly toward the couple, who now
-sat hand in hand, oblivious to earthly surroundings,
-the soft moonlight streaming full upon their happy
-upturned faces. She watched them a moment in silence,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-loath to break in upon their sweet communion.
-Presently she spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Robert,” she called softly, “ye’d better gang to
-your bed noo, lad.”</p>
-
-<p>With a start he came back to earth, and jumping
-up boyishly, replied with a happy laugh, “I forgot,
-mother, that I was keeping ye and Mary from your
-rest.” He glanced toward the recessed bed in the
-wall where his mother was wont to sleep. “Good-night,
-mither, good-night, Mary,” he said lovingly.
-Then taking his candle, he started for the door, but
-turned as his mother called his name and looked at
-her questioningly.</p>
-
-<p>“Laddie, dinna’ think I’m meddling in your affairs,”
-she said hesitatingly, “but I’m fair curious
-to know when ye an’ Mary will be wed.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert looked inquiringly at Mary, who blushed
-and dropped her head. “Before harvest begins,
-mither,” he answered hopefully, “if Mary will be
-ready and willing. Will that suit ye, lassie?” And
-he looked tenderly at the drooping head, covered with
-its wealth of soft, glittering curls.</p>
-
-<p>“I hae all my linen spun and woven,” she faltered,
-after a nervous silence, not daring to look at him.
-“Ye ken the lassies often came a rockin’ and so helped
-me get it done.” She raised her head and looked in
-his glowing face. “’Tis a very small dowry I’ll be
-bringin’ ye, laddie,” she added in pathetic earnestness.</p>
-
-<p>He gave a little contented laugh. “Ye’re bringin’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-me yoursel’, dearie,” he murmured tenderly.
-“What mair could any lad want. I ken I do not
-deserve such a bonnie sweet sonsie lassie for my wife.”
-He looked away thoughtfully for a moment. Then
-he continued with glowing eyes, “But ye mind the
-verse o’ the song I gave ye before I went awa’?”
-he said lovingly, taking her hand in his. His voice
-trembled with feeling as he fervently recited the
-lines:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“We have plighted our troth, my Mary,</div>
-<div class="verse">In mutual affection to join,</div>
-<div class="verse">And cursed be the cause that shall part us,</div>
-<div class="verse">The hour and moment o’ time.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>She smiled confidingly up into his radiant face,
-then laid her little head against his breast like a
-tired child. “Always remember, sweetheart,” he
-continued softly, as if in answer to that look, “that
-Robbie Burns’ love for his Highland Mary will remain
-forever the tenderest, truest passion of his unworthy
-life.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER V</h3>
-
-<p>Life at Mossgiel passed uneventfully and monotonously.
-Robert had settled down with every appearance
-of contentment to the homely duties of
-the farmer, and Gilbert could find no fault with
-the amount of labor done. Morning till night he
-plowed and harrowed the rocky soil, without a
-word of complaint, although the work was very hard
-and laborious. Planting had now begun and his
-tasks were materially lightened. He had ample
-leisure to indulge in his favorite pastime; and that
-he failed to take advantage of his opportunities for
-rhyming was a mystery to Gilbert, and a source of
-endless regret to Mary. But his mother could tell of
-the many nights she had seen the candle light gleaming
-far into the night; and her heart was sore
-troubled when in the morning she would see the evidence
-of his midnight toil, scraps of closely written
-paper scattered in wild disorder over his small table,
-but she held her peace. The lad loved to do it, she
-mused tenderly, and so long as he was not shirking his
-work, why disturb his tranquillity?</p>
-
-<p>A few weeks after the return of our hero Mary
-and Mrs. Burns were seated in the living-room,
-Mrs. Burns as usual busy at her wheel, while Mary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-sat sewing at the window, where she could look out
-across the fields and see her sweetheart, who, with
-a white sheet containing his seed corn slung across
-his shoulder, was scattering the grain in the earth.
-She sang dreamily as she sewed, her sweet face beaming
-with love and happiness. No presentiment
-warned her of the approaching tragedy that was
-soon to cast its blighting shadow over that happy
-household—a tragedy that was inevitable. The
-guilty one had sown to the flesh, he must reap corruption.
-The seed had been sown carelessly, recklessly,
-and now the harvest time had come, and such a harvest!
-The pity of it was that the grim reaper must
-with his devouring sickle ruthlessly cut down such a
-tender, sweet, and innocent flower as she who sat
-there so happy and so blissfully unconscious of her
-impending doom.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, with an exclamation of astonishment, she
-jumped excitedly to her feet. “Mistress Burns,”
-she cried breathlessly, “here are grand lookin’
-strangers comin’ up the path. City folk, too, I
-ken. Look.”</p>
-
-<p>Hastily the good dame ran to the window. “Sure
-as death, Mary; they’re comin’ here,” she cried in
-amazement. “Oh, lack a day, an’ I’m na dressed
-to receive the gentry.” A look of comical dismay
-clouded her anxious face as she hurriedly adjusted
-her cap and smoothed out her apron. “Is my cap
-on straight, Mary?” she nervously inquired. Mary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-nodded her head reassuringly. “Oh, dear, whatever
-can they want?” Steps sounded without. “Ye
-open the door, Mary,” she whispered sibilantly as
-the peremptory knock sounded loudly through the
-room. Timidly Mary approached the door. “Hist,
-wait,” called Mrs. Burns in sudden alarm. “My ’kerchief
-isna’ pinned.” Hastily she pinned the loose end
-in place, then folding her hands, she said firmly, “Noo
-let them enter.” Mary slowly opened the door, which,
-swinging inward, concealed her from the three
-strangers, who entered with ill-concealed impatience
-on the part of the two ladies who were being laughingly
-chided by their handsome escort. With a
-wondering look of admiration at the richly dressed
-visitors, Mary quietly stole out and softly shut the
-door behind her.</p>
-
-<p>With a murmur of disgust the younger of the two
-ladies, who was about nineteen, walked to the fireplace,
-and raising her quilted blue petticoat, which
-showed beneath the pale pink overdress with its Watteau
-plait, she daintily held her foot to the blaze.
-A disfiguring frown marred the dark beauty of
-her face as her bold black eyes gazed about her
-impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a monstrous shame,” she flashed angrily,
-“to have an accident happen within a few miles of
-home. Will it delay us long, think you?” she
-inquired anxiously, addressing her companion.</p>
-
-<p>“It depends on the skill of the driver to repair<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-the injury,” replied the other lady indifferently.
-She appeared the elder of the two by some few years,
-and was evidently a lady of rank and fashion. She
-looked distinctly regal and commanding in her large
-Gainsborough hat tilted on one side of her elaborately
-dressed court wig. A look of amused curiosity
-came over her patrician face as she calmly surveyed
-the interior of the cottage. She inclined her head
-graciously to Mrs. Burns, who with a deep courtesy
-stood waiting their pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>“We have just met with an accident, guidwife,”
-laughingly said the gentleman, who stood in the
-doorway brushing the dust from his long black
-cloak. He was a scholarly looking man of middle
-age, dressed in the height of taste and fashion.
-“While crossing the old bridge yonder,” he continued,
-smiling courteously at Mrs. Burns, “our
-coach had the misfortune to cast a wheel, spilling us
-all willy-nilly, on the ground, and we must crave
-your hospitality, guidwife.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye are a’ welcome,” quickly answered Mrs.
-Burns with another courtesy. “Sit doon, please,”
-and she placed a chair for the lady, who languidly
-seated herself thereon with a low murmur of thanks.</p>
-
-<p>“Allow me to introduce myself,” continued the
-gentleman, coming into the room, his cloak over
-his arm. “I am Lord Glencairn of Edinburgh.
-This is Lady Glencairn, and yonder lady is Mistress
-Jean Armour of Mauchline.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The young lady in question, who was still standing
-by the fireplace, flashed him a look of decided
-annoyance. She seemed greatly perturbed at the
-enforced delay of the journey. She started violently
-as she heard Mrs. Burns say, “And I am
-Mrs. Burns, your lordship.” Then she hurried to
-the old lady’s side, a startled look in her flashing eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Mistress Burns of Mossgiel Farm?” she inquired
-in a trembling voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, my lady,” replied Mrs. Burns. The young
-lady’s face went white as she walked nervously back
-to the fireplace.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Jean, whatever is the matter?” asked
-Lady Glencairn lazily, as she noticed Jean’s perturbation.
-“Is there anything in the name of Burns to
-frighten you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, your ladyship,” replied Jean falteringly,
-turning her face away so that her large Gainsborough
-hat completely shielded her quivering features.
-“I—I am still a trifle nervous from the
-upset, that is all.” She seemed strangely agitated.</p>
-
-<p>“Was it not unlucky?” replied Lady Glencairn
-in her rich vibrating contralto. “’Twill be a most
-wearisome wait, I fear, but we simply must endure it
-with the best possible grace,” and she unfastened her
-long cloak of black velvet and threw it off her
-shoulders, revealing her matchless form in its tightly
-fitting gown of amber satin, with all its alluring
-lines and sinuous curves, to the utmost advantage.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“It willna’ be long noo, your ladyship,” replied
-Mrs. Burns, smiling complacently. She had quietly
-left the room while the two were talking, and seeing
-Souter hovering anxiously around, trying to
-summon up courage to enter, she had commanded
-him to go to the fields and tell the lads of the accident,
-which he had reluctantly done.</p>
-
-<p>“My lads will soon fix it for ye,” she continued
-proudly. “Robert is a very handy lad, ye ken. He
-is my eldest son, who has just returned from Mauchline,”
-she explained loquaciously in answer to Lord
-Glencairn’s questioning look.</p>
-
-<p>Jean nervously clutched at the neck of her gown,
-her face alternately flushing and paling. “Your
-son is here now?” she asked eagerly, turning to Mrs.
-Burns.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, he’s out yonder in the fields,” she answered
-simply.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, then you know the young man?” interrogated
-Lady Glencairn, glancing sharply at Jean.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know him,” she answered with averted
-gaze. “We met occasionally in Mauchline at dancing
-school, where we fell acquainted.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glencairn looked at her with half-closed eyes
-for a moment, then she smilingly said, “And I’ll
-wager your love for coquetting prompted you
-to make a conquest of the innocent rustic, eh,
-Jean?”</p>
-
-<p>Jean tossed her head angrily and walked to the
-window.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Lady Glencairn, you are pleased to jest,” she retorted
-haughtily.</p>
-
-<p>“There, there, Jean, you’re over prudish. I vow
-’twould be no crime,” her ladyship calmly returned.
-“I’ll wager this young farmer was a gay Lothario
-while in Mauchline,” she continued mockingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, your ladyship,” interrupted Mrs. Burns
-simply. “He was a flax dresser.”</p>
-
-<p>“Truly a more respectable occupation, madame,”
-gravely responded Lord Glencairn with a suspicious
-twinkle in his eye.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank ye, my lord,” answered Mrs. Burns with
-a deep courtesy. “My lad is a good lad, if I do say
-so, and he has returned to us as pure minded as when
-he went awa’ a year ago.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glencairn raised her delicately arched eyebrows
-in amused surprise. Turning to Jean, she
-murmured drily, “And away from home a year, too!
-He must be a model of virtue, truly.”</p>
-
-<p>Jean gazed at her with startled eyes. “Can she
-suspect aught?” she asked herself fearfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Could I be getting ye a cup of milk?” asked Mrs.
-Burns hospitably. “’Tis a’ I have to offer, but
-’tis cool and refreshing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fresh milk,” repeated Lady Glencairn, rising
-with delight. “I vow it would be most welcome, guidwife.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed it would,” responded her husband. And
-Mrs. Burns with a gratified smile hurried from the
-room.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“My dear, don’t look so tragic,” drawled Lady
-Glencairn carelessly, as she noticed Jean’s pale face
-and frightened eyes. “We’ll soon be in Mauchline.
-Although why you are in such a monstrous
-hurry to reach that lonesome village after your delightful
-sojourn in the capital, is more than I can
-conjecture,” and her keen eyes noted with wonder
-the flush mount quickly to the girl’s cheek.</p>
-
-<p>“It is two months since I left my home, your ladyship,”
-faltered Jean hesitatingly. “It’s only natural
-I should be anxious to see my dear parents
-again.” She dropped her eyes quickly before her
-ladyship’s penetrating gaze.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear parents, indeed,” sniffed Lady Glencairn to
-herself suspiciously as she followed their hostess to
-the door of the “ben.”</p>
-
-<p>With a nervous little laugh Jean rose quickly from
-her chair by the window and walked toward the door
-through which they had entered. “The accident has
-quite upset me, Lady Glencairn,” she said constrainedly.
-“Would you mind if I stroll about the fields
-until my nerves are settled?” she asked with a forced
-laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“No, child, go by all means,” replied her ladyship
-indolently. “The air will do you good, no
-doubt.”</p>
-
-<p>“I warn you not to wander too far from the
-house,” interposed Lord Glencairn with a kindly
-smile. “We will not be detained much longer.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-With a smile of thanks she hastily left the room just
-as Mrs. Burns entered from the “ben” bearing a
-large blue pitcher filled with foaming milk, which she
-placed on the table before her smiling visitors.</p>
-
-<p>Jean breathed a sigh of relief as she closed the
-door behind her. She felt in another moment she
-would have screamed aloud in her nervousness. That
-fate should have brought her to the very home of
-the man she had thought still in Mauchline, and to
-see whom she had hurriedly left Edinburgh, filled
-her with wonder and dread. “I must see him before
-we leave,” she said nervously, clasping and unclasping
-her hands. But where should she find him? She
-walked quickly down the path and gazed across the
-fields, where in the distance she could see several men
-at work, repairing the disabled coach. Anxiously
-she strained her eyes to see if the one she sought
-was among them, but he was not there. Quickly she
-retraced her steps. “I must find him. I must speak
-with him this day,” she said determinedly. As she
-neared the cottage she turned aside and walked toward
-the high stone fence which enclosed the house
-and yard. Swiftly mounting the old stile, she looked
-about her. Suddenly she gave a sharp little exclamation,
-and her heart bounded violently, for there before
-her, coming across the field, was the man she sought,
-his hands clasped behind him, his head bent low in the
-deepest meditation. With a sigh of relief she sank
-down on the step and calmly awaited his approach.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER VI</h3>
-
-<p>Robert flung the last of his seed corn into the earth
-with a sigh of thankfulness, for though he gave the
-powers of his body to the labors of the farm, he refused
-to bestow on them his thoughts or his cares.
-He longed to seek the quiet of his attic room, for his
-soul was bursting with song and his nervous fingers
-fairly itched to grasp his pencil and catch and hold
-forever the pearls dropped from the lap of the Goddess
-Muse into his worshipful soul, ere they faded and
-dissolved into lusterless fragments. Mechanically he
-turned his footsteps toward the cottage, plunged in
-deep reverie. As he walked slowly along his mind suddenly
-reverted to the year he had spent in Mauchline.
-It had been his first taste of town life. Blessed with
-a strong appetite for sociability, although constitutionally
-melancholy, and a hair-brained imagination,
-he had become an immediate favorite and welcome
-guest wherever he visited. <i>Vive l’amour</i> and <i>vive la
-bagatelle</i> had soon become his sole principle of action.
-His heart, which was completely tinder, was
-eternally lighted up by some goddess or other, and it
-was not long before he regarded illicit love with levity,
-which two months previously he had thought of
-with horror. Poesy was still a darling walk for his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-mind, but it was only indulged in according to the
-humor of the hour. Having no aim in life he had been
-easily led from the paths of virtue into many forms
-of dissipation, which, when indulged in, afterwards
-plunged him into the deepest melancholy. A few
-months after his advent into the village he had met
-Jean Armour, the daughter of a master builder.
-She was one of the belles of Mauchline, a wild,
-willful, imprudent lass, whose sensual charms soon
-ensnared the susceptible heart of the unsophisticated
-farmer lad. The fatal defect of his character
-was the comparative weakness of his volition,
-and his passions, once lighted up, soon carried him
-down the stream of error and swept him over the
-precipice he saw directly in his course.</p>
-
-<p>Such being their temperaments, it was not to be
-wondered at when their procedure soon became decidedly
-irregular, their intimacy becoming the common
-talk and gossip of Mauchline.</p>
-
-<p>A few months before Robert returned to Mossgiel
-farm Jean had received an invitation from her
-god-parents, Lord and Lady Glencairn, to visit Edinburgh,
-which she had accepted with eagerness, for she
-was becoming tired of her latest conquest and longed
-for the gay life of the capital.</p>
-
-<p>Robert saw her leave Mauchline with no pangs of
-regret at her inconstancy and caprice. He was in
-a state of profound melancholy at the time, the
-thoughts of how he had fallen from the paths of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-truth and virtue, the thoughts of the pure love of
-his sweetheart at home, filling his heart with grief
-and remorse. He was thinking of all this as he
-approached the stile. How wretchedly weak and
-sinful he had been to forget his sworn vows to Mary,
-he thought remorsefully. “May no harping voice
-from that past ever come to disturb her peace of
-mind,” he prayed fervently.</p>
-
-<p>Jean watched him, drawing ever nearer, with eyes
-filled with sudden shame and dread at what she had to
-tell him. Why had her brief infatuation for the poverty-stricken
-farmer led her into such depths of imprudence
-and recklessness? she thought angrily. As
-he reached the bottom of the stile she softly spoke
-his name, and noted with chagrin his startled look of
-surprise and annoyance as he raised his eyes to hers.</p>
-
-<p>“Jean Armour?” he cried in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t you glad to see me?” she asked coquettishly,
-his presence exercising its old fascination for
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“What has brought ye to Mossgiel?” he asked
-abruptly, ignoring her outstretched hand.</p>
-
-<p>“An accident,” she replied flippantly. “I was
-on my way home and would have been there ere this
-had it not been for a fortunate mishap.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fortunate mishap?” he repeated questioningly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” she retorted amiably, “otherwise I should
-have missed seeing you,” and she smiled down into
-his pale startled face.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I dinna understand why ye left Edinburgh,” he
-began, when she interrupted him.</p>
-
-<p>“Because I thought you were still in Mauchline,”
-she explained quickly. He look at her questioningly.
-“I left Edinburgh for the sole purpose of seeing you,
-Robert,” she announced quietly, making room for him
-to sit beside her, but he did not accept the invitation.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, noo, that was very kind of ye, Jean,” he
-replied a little uneasily. “But I’m not so conceited
-as to believe that. I ken the charms o’ Edinburgh
-town, with its handsome officers, soon made ye forget
-the quiet country village, and a’ your old flames,
-including your bashful humble servant,” and he
-made her a mocking bow.</p>
-
-<p>His tone of satirical raillery made her wince.
-“Forget?” she cried passionately, jumping to her
-feet. “I wish to heaven I might forget everything,
-but I cannot—I cannot.” The sudden thought of
-her predicament caused her haughty, rebellious spirit
-to quail, and covering her face with her hands, she
-burst into a paroxysm of tears and sank heavily down
-upon the step.</p>
-
-<p>He regarded the weeping woman silently. Was
-her attachment for him stronger than he had believed?
-Could it be possible she still entertained a passion for
-him? he asked himself anxiously. But no, that couldn’t
-be; she had left him two months ago with a careless
-word of farewell on her laughing lips. Yet why
-these tears, these wild words she had just uttered?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-A wave of pity for her swept over him as he realized,
-if such were the case, that he must repulse her
-advances gently but none the less firmly. He had
-done with her forever when he said his last farewell.
-There could be no raking over of the dead ashes.</p>
-
-<p>Jean angrily wiped away her tears. She must not
-give way to such weakness. She had an errand to
-perform which would need all her courage. He was
-evidently waiting for some explanation of her strange
-behavior, she told herself with a vain effort to steel
-her heart. Now was the time to tell him all, she
-thought fearfully, peeking out from behind her small
-linen ’kerchief, with which she was dabbing her eyes,
-at his cold, wondering face. The sooner it was done
-the sooner she would know what to expect at his
-hands. How should she begin? After a long, nervous
-pause she faltered out, “Have you forgotten
-the past, Robert, and all that we were to each other?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, Jean, I remember everything,” he answered
-remorsefully. “But let us not speak of that noo,
-please. Ye ken that is all ended between us forever.”
-He turned away pale and trembling, for her presence,
-her looks and words recalled many things he wanted
-to forget, that shamed him to remember.</p>
-
-<p>“Ended?” she repeated, an angry flush rising to
-the roots of her black hair. She looked at him in
-amazement. He, the poverty-stricken farmer, had
-repulsed her, the belle of Mauchline? Could she have
-heard aright? He who had always been at her beck<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-and call, two months ago her willing slave, could
-it be that he was over his infatuation for her? She
-had not thought of that possibility. She had expected
-him to be humble, gratefully flattered by her
-condescension in seeking him out. If he should
-refuse the proposal she had come so far to make! she
-thought in trepidation. “He must not refuse, he
-shall not refuse,” and her face grew hard and set.
-But perhaps he was piqued because she had left him
-so unceremoniously two months ago, because she had
-not written him. Her tense lips relaxed into a smile.
-Oh, well, she would be nice to him now; she would
-make him think she was breaking her heart for him,
-work on his sympathy, then perhaps it would not be
-necessary to confess her humiliating plight. No
-farmer doomed to lifelong poverty would be averse
-to winning the hand of the daughter of the rich
-Squire Armour. These thoughts, running through
-her mind, decided her next move, and with a fluttering
-sigh she rose from her seat and descended the step.
-She drew close to him and looking languishingly up
-into his face, murmured, “Why should it be ended,
-Robert? I love you just the same as I did in the
-past,” and she threw her arms about his neck, clinging
-to him passionately. “You do love me a little,
-tell me you do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Jean, ye must be daft,” he panted, vainly trying
-to disengage himself from her embrace.</p>
-
-<p>But she continued softly, alluringly, “Think of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-the old days, when I lay in your arms like this, Robbie.
-Think of those happy hours we spent together
-on the banks of the Doon. You were not cold to me
-then. Oh, let us live them all over again. How
-happy we will be. Kiss me, Rob,” and she lifted
-her flushed, piquant face, her crimson lips pursed
-temptingly, close to his. The warmth of her seductive
-body, the white bare arms in their short sleeves,
-which embraced his neck, the half-closed passionate
-eyes gazing invitingly, languorously into his own,
-fired his naturally ardent blood, making his senses to
-reel from the contact. Slowly his arms, which had
-been restraining her amorous embrace, tightened
-their hold on her, drawing her closer and closer,
-while the drops of sweat poured down his white,
-yielding face, as with wild bloodshot eyes he battled
-with the temptations which beset him so wantonly,
-so dangerously. With a thrill of elation not unmixed
-with desire she felt him yielding to her
-embrace, and knew that she had won him again.
-With a cooing cry of delight she was about to press
-her warm lips to his, when suddenly a bird-like voice
-singing in the distance arrested her impulse.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Oh where and oh where is my Highland laddie gone?”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">rang out the voice of the singer plaintively. With a
-cry of brief and horror Robert tore the clinging arms
-from about his neck and threw her madly from him.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-“What is the matter, Robert?” she cried fearfully,
-looking at him in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“I think ye had better go noo, Jean,” he answered
-harshly, not looking at her. “’Twill be best for us
-both. Oh, how I despise my weakness, I had no
-right, no right noo.” And there was an agony of
-shame and remorse in his voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean,” she asked white with rage.
-“That you are not free to do as you like?” He remained
-silent a moment.</p>
-
-<p>Then his face grew calm and peaceful. “The lass
-whom ye hear singing is Mary Campbell, my betrothed
-wife,” he answered simply. “We are to be
-married when the plantin’ is done. We have been
-sweethearts for years, and if I have in my weakness
-forgotten my sworn vows to her, by God’s help I’ll
-strive to be more faithful in the future.” His voice
-vibrated with intense feeling as he made the resolution.
-Then he continued softly and tenderly, “And
-the love I bear my faithful Mary will never cease as
-long as this crimson current flows within me.” A
-mocking laugh greeted his words as he finished.</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you, Robert Burns,” cried Jean threateningly,
-“she shall never be your wife, for I
-will——” But the angry words died suddenly on
-her lips at an unlooked-for interruption.</p>
-
-<p>“Jean, Jean,” called a lazy voice. Turning
-quickly she saw with apprehension Lady Glencairn
-standing in the open doorway of the cottage, beckoning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-leisurely to her. Had she heard her imprudent
-words? she asked herself in terror. But no, that were
-not possible. She had not raised her voice. For a
-moment she hesitated, not knowing what to do.
-Should she tell him the truth now? It would only
-mean a hurriedly whispered word or two, but as she
-looked at him standing there so proudly erect, the
-angry, puzzled flush which her last hasty words had
-occasioned still mantling his swarthy face, she felt
-her courage slipping away from her. Why not wait
-and write him? she temporized; that would be much
-better than creating a scene now, with the sharp eye
-of Lady Glencairn fastened upon them. Yes, she
-would do that, she decided hastily. She turned calmly
-and mounted the stile and without one backward
-glance descended to the other side. “Are you coming?”
-she asked indifferently over her shoulder, and
-without waiting for his answer walked quickly toward
-the house. Robert after a moment’s indecision
-gravely followed her, the look of puzzled concern
-still wrinkling his forehead.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I beg your pardon; I didn’t know you were
-indulging in a tête-à-tête,” said Lady Glencairn
-frigidly as they reached the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Lady Glencairn, this is Mr. Robert Burns,” stammered
-Jean nervously, with a flush of embarrassment
-at her ladyship’s sarcastic smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, indeed, delighted I’m sure,” said her ladyship,
-with a careless nod, which changed to surprised<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-interest as Robert with simple, manly dignity removed
-his Tam O’Shanter and bowed low before the
-haughty beauty. “What an air for a peasant,” she
-mused. “What dignity,” and she surveyed him
-critically from the top of his head, with its black
-clustering locks which gleamed purple in the sunshine,
-to the tip of his rough leather brogans;
-noting with admiration his stalwart frame, the well-shaped
-head and massive neck, the strength suggested
-in the broad shoulders, the deep chest, the
-herculean limbs with the swelling muscles displayed
-to such advantage within the tightly fitting breeches
-of doe skin. “What a handsome creature,” she
-thought with a thrill of admiration, as she took the
-mental inventory of his good points. “And decidedly
-interesting, I’ll wager, if not dangerous,” she
-added, smiling contemplatively as she caught the look
-of respectful admiration which gleamed in his wonderfully
-magnetic eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, James,” she called languidly reëntering the
-room, “here is the young man who has so kindly
-assisted in repairing the coach—the young man who
-has just returned from Mauchline,” she added significantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, your ladyship, ’tis my brother Gilbert you
-must thank for his assistance, not me,” replied Robert,
-flushing. As the deep tones of his sonorous voice
-fell on her ear she felt an indefinable thrill of emotion
-steal over her that startled her. She looked at him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-wonderingly. What peculiar magnetism was there in
-this farmer’s voice that could so easily move her, who
-had always prided herself on her coldness, her indifference
-to all men, including her husband, who was
-blissfully unconscious of his beautiful wife’s sentiments
-regarding him?</p>
-
-<p>“Your brother had no easy task, I fear, Mr.
-Burns,” remarked Lord Glencairn genially. Then he
-turned smilingly to Jean, who was standing impatiently
-in the doorway. “What have you been doing
-all this time, my dear Jean?” he asked lightly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ask Mr. Burns,” insinuated Lady Glencairn
-with an odd little smile at Jean’s embarrassed
-countenance. He looked inquiringly at the surprised
-face of the young farmer.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Armour has done me the honor of listening
-to some of my rhyming,” quietly replied Robert with
-a quick glance at Jean, his ready wit coming to her
-rescue.</p>
-
-<p>“So then you are a poet,” murmured Lady Glencairn,
-with a smile. “Do you write love sonnets to
-your sweethearts, or does the muse incline at this season
-to songs of springtime?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, my lady, he has the gift indeed,” spoke up
-Mrs. Burns deprecatingly. “But I dinna’ ken if
-it amounts to aught.”</p>
-
-<p>“My mother doesna’ care for my poetry,” said
-Robert simply, turning to her ladyship.</p>
-
-<p>“Dinna’ say that, laddie,” replied his mother<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-earnestly. “Ye ken I’m o’er fond of those verses
-to Highland Mary, but——”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Highland Mary’? what a dear name,” interrupted
-Lady Glencairn sweetly, smiling at Robert.
-“Who is she, may I ask?” and she leaned forward
-questioningly in her chair.</p>
-
-<p>“She is a—a friend,” he replied, flushing to the
-roots of his hair. Then he continued, softly, his eyes
-lighting up with love and devotion, “An’ she is as
-sweet and fragrant as a sprig of pure white heather
-plucked from her native Highlands.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, and she’ll make a fine wife for Robert,”
-added Mrs. Burns complacently.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, finer than I deserve, mither,” he replied,
-looking uneasily at Jean, who had started violently,
-then quickly leaned back against the door post, pale
-and trembling.</p>
-
-<p>“Marry her? Never! He cannot, he must not,”
-she muttered to herself, frantically.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Jean!” cried Lady Glencairn, going to her
-in sudden alarm. “What ails you, why do you look
-so wild?”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I’m—a pain gripped my heart most suddenly,”
-she faltered. “I find it over warm here,”
-she gasped. “I’ll await you without,” and she left
-the room, a strange, frightened look on her pale
-face.</p>
-
-<p>With a puzzled frown Lady Glencairn turned and
-sank thoughtfully into a chair. Looking up suddenly,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-she caught Robert’s eye fastened upon her
-face in eager scrutiny. “Let me see, what were we
-speaking about?” she inquired indifferently.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye were kind enough to ask me about my
-poetry,” answered Rob quietly. Jean’s queer behavior
-troubled him. What did it all mean? He
-feared she had aroused suspicion in her ladyship’s
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, to be sure, and I vow I’m curious,” she replied
-brightly. “I should like to read one of your
-poems, Mr. Burns, if you have one at hand.”</p>
-
-<p>“He has bushels of them in the attic, your ladyship,”
-eagerly spoke Mrs. Burns.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, mother,” laughed Robert, “all waiting for
-the publisher. Here is one I but this day scribbled
-off, if—if ye really care to read it,” he added
-bashfully, taking a scrap of paper from the pocket
-of his loose shirt and handing it to Lady Glencairn.</p>
-
-<p>She took it with a smile of amused indifference.
-A farmer and a poet! the idea was absurd. With an
-almost imperceptibly sarcastic lifting of her delicate
-eyebrows she read the title, “‘Flow gently, sweet
-Afton, among thy green braes.’” Then she read the
-verse in growing wonder and astonishment. She had
-thought to please him with a word of praise, even if
-they were laughably commonplace and prosaic; but it
-was with genuine enthusiasm that she heartily cried,
-“Really, ’tis a gem, Mr. Burns, so charming withal,
-such beautiful sentiment, and writ in most excellent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-style. Read it, James,” and she handed it to Lord
-Glencairn, who carefully perused it with apparent
-delight in its rhythmic beauty of composition.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank ye, my lady,” replied Robert, flushing.
-“Your praise is o’er sweet to my hungry ear.” She
-gazed at him in open admiration.</p>
-
-<p>“Here, Robert, are some more,” cried Mrs. Burns,
-entering the room with a box, which she placed
-before her son. “Show his lordship these, laddie,”
-and she hovered nervously around, her face flushed
-with excitement, watching anxiously every look and
-expression that passed over the faces of their guests.</p>
-
-<p>Robert opened the box and selected a few of the
-poems at random, which he handed to Lord Glencairn
-without a word.</p>
-
-<p>“‘A man’s a man for a’ that,’ ‘Willie brewed
-a peck of malt,’ ‘Holy Willie’s Prayer,’ ‘The Lass
-of Balbehmyle,’” read Lord Glencairn slowly,
-glancing over their titles. Then he read them
-through earnestly, his noble face expressing the interest
-he felt; then with a sigh of pleasure he passed
-them to Lady Glencairn, who devoured the written
-pages eagerly, her face flushed and radiant. When
-she had finished, she leaned back in her chair and fixed
-her luminous eyes upon her husband’s beaming face.</p>
-
-<p>“James,” said she decidedly, “you will please me
-well if you will influence some publisher to accept this
-young man’s poems and place them before the public.
-I’m sure he is most deserving, and—he interests me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-greatly.” There was a peculiar glitter in her half-closed
-eyes as she gazed intently at Robert with an
-enigmatic smile parting her red lips. The gracious
-lady with her high-bred air, her alluring smile, her
-extreme condescension, was a revelation to the country-bred
-lad, who was brought in close contact for the
-first time with one so far above his station in life.
-He felt his awkwardness more than he had ever
-thought possible as he felt her critical eyes fastened
-upon him and heard her honeyed words of praise and
-encouragement.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Burns,” said his lordship earnestly,
-“your poems interest me greatly, and I declare such
-genius as you display should be given an opportunity
-to develop. It will afford me much pleasure to take
-these verses, with your permission, back with me to
-Edinburgh and submit them to Sir William Creech,
-who is the largest publisher there, and a personal
-friend of mine, and if he accepts these poems as a
-criterion of your artistic ability, without the least
-doubt your success will be at once assured.” He put
-them carefully in the large wallet he had taken from
-an inside pocket while he was talking, and replaced it
-within his coat.</p>
-
-<p>Robert looked at him, hardly daring to believe his
-ears. “I—I canna find words to express my unbounded
-gratitude to you, my lord,” he faltered, his
-voice low and shaking.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d advise you to make a collection of your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-poems, my lad,” continued Lord Glencairn quietly,
-touched by the sight of Robert’s expressive features,
-which he was vainly trying to control. “Chiefly
-those in the Scottish dialect; they are new and will
-create a sensation. Have them ready to forward
-to town when sent for.” There was a tense silence
-for a moment when he had finished.</p>
-
-<p>Robert dared not trust his voice to speak, to
-utter his thanks. Finally he burst out. “My
-lord, how can I ever thank ye for this unlooked-for
-generosity to an absolute stranger!” he cried
-brokenly. “For years I have been praying for a
-publisher to edit my songs, but I could see no silver
-lining to the dark clouds of obscurity hanging over
-my unhappy, friendless head, clouds which threatened
-to engulf me in their maddening embrace.
-But now,” he continued eloquently, his voice ringing
-with gladness, “the bright sunlight is peeping
-around the fast disappearing cloud, warming my
-very soul with its joyous rays. Oh, my lord, if
-ever the name of Robert Burns should e’en become
-familiar to his countrymen,’twill be through your
-graciousness, your benevolence, to a poor unknown,
-humble plowman,” and his eyes filled with tears of
-love and gratitude for his noble benefactor.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Glencairn took a pinch of snuff from the
-small oblong box he held in his hand, and used his
-handkerchief vigorously to conceal the tears of sympathy
-which had welled up in his eyes as he listened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-to the recital of Robert’s ambitions, his hopes and
-fears.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear lad,” he said, trying to speak lightly,
-“I have done nothing as yet to deserve such fulsome
-words of thanks. ’Tis but a trifling thing I
-propose doing, and it pleases me, else perhaps I
-might not trouble myself to speak in your behalf.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, noo, sir,” cried Mrs. Burns, wiping away
-the tears of joy, “’tis your big, noble heart which
-prompts ye to assist a struggling genius to something
-better, higher, and nobler in this life. God
-bless ye for it.”</p>
-
-<p>The door opened, and Gilbert Burns quietly
-entered the room. Removing his Tam O’Shanter, he
-bowed respectfully to Lord Glencairn and said
-briefly, “Your Lordship’s coach is repaired.”</p>
-
-<p>With a word of thanks Lord Glencairn rose and
-assisted his wife into her cloak.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank goodness we can proceed on our journey
-while it is yet light,” she said animatedly, going to
-the door.</p>
-
-<p>“I assure you, Mistress Burns, we have enjoyed
-your hospitality amazing well,” said Lord Glencairn,
-turning to their hostess. “Believe me, we’ll not forget
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>They left the house, followed by their admiring
-hosts. Suddenly Lady Glencairn gave a little cry
-of delighted surprise as her eyes rested on the drooping
-figure of Highland Mary, sitting disconsolately<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-on a large rock beside the old well. “What a sweet,
-pretty flower of a lass!” she cried enthusiastically.
-“Come here, child,” she called aloud. Mary looked
-up quickly with a little gasp of surprise, for she had
-not noticed them come out. She rose bashfully to her
-feet and stood hesitating, her eyes timidly fixed on a
-piece of heather she was holding in her hand.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glencairn laughed amusedly. “I vow ’tis
-an uncommon modest shy wildflower truly,” she said
-to her husband. “Come here, child, I’ll not bite you,”
-and she held out her hands toward the wondering
-girl.</p>
-
-<p>With a little silvery, timid laugh Mary walked
-quickly toward her. “I’m no afraid, my lady,” she
-replied quietly, but her heart was beating very fast,
-nevertheless, as she stood before the great lady, who
-was watching the flower-like face, with the delicate
-pink color coming and going, with such apparent
-admiration.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s our Highland Mary,” triumphantly
-cried Souter, who had just come upon the scene.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, indeed,” replied her ladyship brightly. “So
-you are Highland Mary.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, my lady,” answered Mary with a quaint
-little courtesy.</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t she a dear,” said Lady Glencairn aloud to
-her husband.</p>
-
-<p>She turned to Robert, who was proudly watching
-Mary, with eyes aglow with love and happiness. “No<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-wonder, Mr. Burns,” she said, a sigh involuntarily
-escaping her as she noted his rapt gaze, “that you
-have sought to portray in song and verse the sweet
-loveliness of this fair maiden.” Then she turned
-suddenly to Mary.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a very pretty child,” she said carelessly.
-“But I suppose you know that well ere this.” She
-laughed cynically and turned away.</p>
-
-<p>“She isna used to such compliments, your ladyship,”
-said Robert, noticing the embarrassed blush
-that mounted to Mary’s cheek. “She’s o’er shy, ye
-ken.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the kind we raise in the Highlands,”
-declared Souter with a satisfied air.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, James, it grows late,” wearily said Lady
-Glencairn, taking her husband’s arm. “And here is
-the coach.” As the vehicle with its prancing black
-horses champing restlessly at their bits drew up to
-the gate, she turned to Mary and said condescendingly,
-“Good-by, child; I suppose some day, when Mr.
-Burns is the Bard of Scotland, we’ll see you in town
-with him. Be sure to come and see me at Glencairn
-Hall.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank ye, my lady,” replied Mary, courtesying
-deeply, fortunately not discerning the sarcasm in the
-tired tones of the great lady’s voice.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Glencairn helped her into the coach, and
-then turned to Robert with outstretched hand. “My
-lad,” he said cordially, “you may expect to hear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-from me or Sir William Creech very shortly.
-Good-by.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good-by, sir,” replied Robert, “and may Heaven
-bless you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lud,” cried Lady Glencairn as they were
-about to start, “we’re forgetting Jean.”</p>
-
-<p>“The young lady strolled alang,” answered Gilbert
-quietly. “She said you would overtake her on
-the road.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glencairn thanked him with a careless nod,
-and then leaned far out of the door to Robert. “Remember,
-Mr. Burns,” she said softly, pressing his
-hand, “I expect to see you in Edinburgh very soon,
-don’t forget,” and with another lingering look, full
-of meaning, she withdrew into the coach, and soon
-they were gone in a cloud of dust, while he stood there
-gazing after them like one in a dream with the last
-rays of the setting sun lighting up his dark, passionate
-face.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurra! ’tis luck ye’re in, laddie,” shouted
-Souter in his ear. “The gentry have noticed ye.
-Ye should be dancing for joy, mon. I’m off to tell
-the lads of your good fortune,” and away he sped
-to the village, eager as any old gossip to spread the
-glorious news.</p>
-
-<p>“Isna it all like a dream, Mary?” sighed Mrs.
-Burns rapturously, leading the way into the house,
-followed by the two lovers, who entered hand in hand
-and seated themselves in blissful silence on the high-backed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-settle under the window, their favorite seat.
-For a few moments they sat motionless, regarding
-each other with moist eyes. It almost seemed too
-good to be true. In a few weeks perhaps Robert
-would be a great man, thought Mary proudly.
-“Weel, I always did have faith in Robert’s poetry,”
-suddenly declared Mrs. Burns with conviction.</p>
-
-<p>Robert smiled at his mother’s words. “They
-would all say that now,” he thought, but without
-bitterness, for it was only the way of the world after
-all.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’ll soon hae riches noo,” said Mary happily.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, then ye shall hae a fine new gown, and—and
-we will be married noo, instead of waiting,” answered
-Robert, taking her tenderly in his arms.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis a bonnie, bonnie pair ye make,” said Mrs.
-Burns lovingly. “May God bless ye,” and she softly
-stole away, leaving them to their feast of love.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<img src="images/illus3.jpg" width="475" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Slipped quickly behind an old beech tree.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER VII</h3>
-
-<p>Jean left the house filled with terrified dismay. Robert
-going to marry another? then what would
-become of her? She would be disgraced and ruined.
-The thought drove her frantic. “He shall not marry
-her; he shall give me the protection of his name, for
-the time being at least,” she said to herself angrily.
-Afterward, the marriage could be easily annulled; she
-did not want him. She did not want to be tied for life
-to any farmer, not she. She would then return to
-Edinburgh. But suppose he would not consent to
-such an arrangement? Well she would scare him into
-it. He was as much to blame as she was anyway.
-She would not wait to write him after all; she would
-tell him now. There was nothing to fear. She would
-wait until the others had started, then come back and
-force her claim. If they went on without her, it
-did not matter much; it was not far to the Inn, she
-mused determinedly. She stopped in her rapid walk
-and retraced her steps. As she neared the cottage
-the door opened and her god-parents came out, and
-with them were Robert and the others. Before they
-could perceive her, however, she slipped quickly behind
-an old beech tree back of the well and nearest
-the house. Breathlessly, impatiently, she waited while<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-they talked, and talked, till she thought they would
-never go. Then when the coach came and the attendant
-excitement of its departure, like a guilty
-creature she stole noiselessly across the intervening
-space to the cottage, slipped through the open door,
-and hid herself behind the fireplace, where Mary had
-concealed herself some weeks before.</p>
-
-<p>After Mrs. Burns left the room Jean came boldly
-out from her hiding place and stood before the
-startled couple, who gazed at her in amazement. She
-looked at them insolently, a sneer on her full lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry to disturb you, Mr. Burns,” she interrupted
-sarcastically. The color slowly faded from
-his ruddy face. Was she going to expose that
-shameful page in his past history to this innocent
-child? Would she dare, could she be so reckless, so
-shameless? he asked himself fearfully.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought ye had gone,” he said, dangerously
-calm, stepping up to her.</p>
-
-<p>“I could not go till I had delivered a message,”
-she explained, dropping her eyes before the determined
-light in his.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” he asked, puzzled by her tone and
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>“It is of great importance and for your ears
-alone,” she replied glibly. “I’m sure this lady—Miss
-Campbell, is it not?—will not mind leaving us
-for a moment,” and she smiled amiably into Mary’s
-innocent inquiring face.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He led Mary gently to the door. “It’ll be only
-for a moment, Mary,” he said quietly.</p>
-
-<p>“I dinna’ mind,” she answered brightly. “’Tis
-near time for me to be going hame, ye ken,” and with
-a smile she left them together.</p>
-
-<p>“Noo, then, what is your message?” he said with
-calm abruptness, as the door closed.</p>
-
-<p>“This!” and she threw back her head defiantly.
-“You must give up this Mary Campbell.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her in amazement. “What do ye
-mean?” he gasped, opening his eyes in bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p>“I mean you must make me your wife.” Her pale
-and agitated face made him wonder if she had gone
-quite daft. Before he could answer she continued
-stridently, “You must marry me now, before it is
-too late, too late to save my name from dishonor and
-disgrace. Now do you understand?”</p>
-
-<p>A look of incredulous horror slowly blanched his
-face to ashy whiteness. Had he heard aright? Surely
-she was jesting; it could not be possible—and yet,
-why not? His haggard eyes searched her colorless
-face as though he would read her very soul. Calmly
-she bore the scrutiny and then, with a groan of
-anguish, he sank into a chair, weak and trembling.
-“I canna, I willna, believe,” he muttered hoarsely.
-“It’s a lie, it’s a lie, Jean Armour!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the truth, I tell you,” she cried passionately,
-wringing her hands. “What else think you would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-force me, the rich Belle of Mauchline, to humble my
-pride and stoop to plead to a poverty-stricken farmer
-to wed me?” She laughed wildly.</p>
-
-<p>“Can it be true, can it be true?” he whispered to
-himself dully. He felt dazed by the suddenness, the
-total unexpectedness, of the blow. He closed his eyes
-wearily. What was it she wanted him to do, he
-could not think. He sat dumbly waiting for her to
-speak again.</p>
-
-<p>“You must write out an acknowledgment and
-sign your name to it,” she continued, her voice low
-and insistent. “It is an irregular marriage I know,
-but it will save me from my father’s wrath, when I
-can keep my plight from him no longer.” He still remained
-silent, his face hidden in his hands. “Will
-you do this?” she demanded anxiously, “or,” and
-her voice grew hard and threatening, “or shall I
-appeal to the Parish officers to help me save my good
-name from disgrace?” Quickly he raised his head.
-At his look of indignant scorn she winced and
-turned away, flushing angrily.</p>
-
-<p>With a mirthless little laugh he retorted with
-bitter emphasis, “Your good name, indeed!”</p>
-
-<p>She turned on him defiantly. “I was no worse
-than other girls,” she flippantly retorted. “Only
-more unfortunate. Will you do what I ask? Quick,
-tell me, someone is coming!” She nervously caught
-his hand. He did not speak. His face grew haggard
-and old-looking as he stood motionless, forming<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-his resolution. It seemed to her an eternity before
-he answered her.</p>
-
-<p>“So be it,” he answered hoarsely, drawing his hand
-away from hers and moving slowly to the door. “I’ll
-send ye the lines by the posty to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>With a cry of delight she gratefully held out
-her hand to him. But he quietly opened the door,
-and, without a word or look at her, stood silently
-holding it back, his head bowed low on his bosom, his
-face cold and repellent. Slowly Jean walked past
-him out into the deepening twilight. She felt a
-dawning pity in her heart for the wretched lad. She
-could not quite forget those old, happy days, those
-stolen walks and trysts along the banks of the Ayr.
-No one could make love so ardently as he, she
-thought with a sigh. Of all her lovers he had been
-the favorite, he was so ingenuous, so trustful and confiding,
-and yet so reckless, so imprudent and weak.
-She knew well he had never really loved her, and the
-thought had made her strive all the harder to win him.
-He was flattered by her open preference for him, and
-soon became an easy victim, a slave, to her seductive
-charms and sophisticated fascinations, for he was only
-human. And now the heart of that little dairymaid
-would be broken. A quick pang of shame and regret
-stole over her, but she instantly stifled it. She must
-think of self first, she told herself uneasily. Anyway
-she only wanted the marriage lines in case people
-should point an accusing finger at her. Later—well,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-the marriage could be annulled privately, and no one
-be the wiser, for marriages were easily annulled in
-Scotland. She walked briskly to where the coach was
-standing, for they were waiting for her, determined
-to cast all gloomy, depressing thoughts from her for
-the time at least.</p>
-
-<p>Robert mechanically closed the door behind her
-and walked slowly to the dresser. Taking from it a
-bottle of ink and a quill, he carried them to the table,
-and placing them upon it, sank heavily in a chair.
-Long he sat there, pen in hand, the victim of the
-profoundest melancholy, the deepest despair. The
-thought that it was his own fault, his indifference to
-consequences, his recklessness, his weak, sinful folly,
-that had plunged himself and others into the awful
-abyss of grief and sorrow, was like the bitterness of
-death to him. As he sat there with drawn and haggard
-face, while bitter regret gnawed deeply at his
-conscience, the plaintive tones of Mary’s voice came
-through the window, singing softly:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Ye banks and braes of bonnie Doon,</div>
-<div class="verse">How can ye bloom sae fresh and fair?”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>A groan of agony escaped the grief-stricken
-man at the sound of the voice, which was sweeter than
-all else in the world to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary, my lost Highland Mary!” he cried aloud,
-“how can I give ye up forever?” and throwing himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-across the table he wept bitter tears of anguish
-and remorse.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“How can ye chant, ye little birds,</div>
-<div class="verse">An’ I sae weary, fu’ o’ care?”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">continued the sweet voice in mournful cadence.
-Softly the words floated to the ears of the sorrowing
-man, like the echo of his own harrowing thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>As Mary reached the open window she paused
-and gazed into the room eagerly. As she sees her
-lover sitting there so silent and alone, her smile is
-very sweet and tender.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear laddie; asleep,” she whispers softly. “He
-must be o’er tired after his hard day’s work. God
-bless my laddie,” and with a smile of ineffable sweetness,
-she wafted a kiss to the bowed head and quickly
-passed on, wending her lonely way back to Castle
-Montgomery, while the man sitting there in agonized
-silence, with clenched teeth and tense muscles,
-slowly raised his head to listen, in heart-broken silence,
-to her sweet voice floating back to him in silvery
-melody, as she took up the broken thread of her
-song:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Thou’lt break my heart, thou warbling bird,</div>
-<div class="verse">That wantons thro’ the flow’ring thorn.</div>
-<div class="verse">Thou minds me o’ departed joys,</div>
-<div class="verse">Departed, never to return.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The song died away in the distance.</p>
-
-<p>“God pity her, God pity me,” he murmured
-brokenly.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER VIII</h3>
-
-<p>From the huge, low ceilinged kitchen of Castle
-Montgomery, which was ablaze with light, came the
-gladsome sound of mirth and revelry, for</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Some merry countre folks togither did convene,</div>
-<div class="verse">To burn their nits and pou’ their stocks, and hold their hallowe’en,</div>
-<div class="verse">For blythe that night.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>For miles around the annual invitations had been
-sent broadcast, and to-night the capacious kitchen
-was taxed to its utmost. It was, however, a singularly
-good-natured, if over-hilarious, gathering that had
-assembled to do justice to old Bess’s cooking, and to
-test their fate through the medium of the many
-charms so well known to all the peasantry.</p>
-
-<p>There was Poosie Nancy in her stiffly-starched
-frilled cap and her new kirtle, complacently nodding
-here and there to all of her acquaintances as
-they flocked about her. Poosie Nancy was a merry
-old soul. For years she had been the mistress of the
-Arms Inn, the public house on the high road, where
-Souter and Tam O’Shanter were wont to idle away
-their time and, incidentally, their “siller.” Standing
-on one foot behind her was Molly Dunn. Molly was
-consciously resplendent in a new plaid frock, made by
-her own unskilled hands, and while it was certainly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-not a thing of beauty, it surely was a joy forever, to
-the lassies, who laughingly twitted her about her
-handiwork. But she heeded not their good-natured
-jibes. She was admiringly watching Daddy Auld,
-the little old minister, who sat in the midst of an
-admiring group of his parishioners at the other side
-of the room, who evidently stood in no awe of him,
-judging from the bursts of laughter which greeted his
-frequent attempts at jocularity.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is Tam O’Shanter, Souter Johnny?” suddenly
-asked old Bess, who was proudly doing the
-honors as mistress of ceremonies. Souter was
-assiduously paying court to the comely Poosie Nancy
-in the opposite corner with an eye to future possibilities.</p>
-
-<p>“He willna be here till late,” he replied impatiently,
-addressing the crowd. “I left him at the Arms Inn,
-an’ if he drinks much mair whisky, he will na’ be here
-at all, I’m thinkin’,” and he turned eagerly to his
-inamorata, who was fanning herself indifferently with
-a plantain leaf.</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll fall into the Doon some night an’ be
-drowned, sure as fate,” said she, carelessly dismissing
-the subject.</p>
-
-<p>“Take your partners for the reel!” shouted big
-Malcolm Macræ stentoriously, at this juncture. Old
-Donald tuned up his fiddle with gleeful alacrity.</p>
-
-<p>Souter ceremoniously offered Poosie his arm,
-which she condescendingly accepted, and majestically<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-they walked to the middle of the floor. With
-much laughing and joking and good-natured rivalry,
-they were all quickly paired off, and soon the
-rafters rang with the happy voices of the hilarious
-dancers as they merrily sang to the tune that blind
-Donald was scratching out on his old and faithful,
-though unmelodious, fiddle.</p>
-
-<p>Mary had taken no part in the merrymaking, for
-she felt heavy and sad at heart. From her seat in
-the corner, where the light was the dimmest, she had
-watched the door with patient anxiety, hoping
-against hope that Robert would come, but she had
-waited in vain, and now the evening was nearly spent
-and soon they would be going home, happy and tired
-after their sport and entertainment, while she would
-steal away to her quarters over the kitchen and cry
-herself to sleep, as she had done for many nights
-past. Souter Johnny, who was in his element and the
-merriest of them all, had tried vainly to induce her to
-join the revelers in their sport, and many an honest
-laddie had sought her hand in the dance, only to
-be shyly refused. So gradually she was left in peace,
-and soon forgotten amid the excitement of their diversions.
-They had tried some of the famous charms,
-which decided the destinies of many of the lads and
-lassies that night, and now old Bess brought forth
-her long-hoarded bag of nuts, which she divided
-among them. Amid shouts of mirth and laughter,
-they proceeded to test the most famous of all the
-charms. As they rushed pell-mell to the fireplace<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-and laid each particular nut in the fire, for which
-they had named the lad or lassie of their choice,
-and stood there eagerly watching, open-mouthed, to
-see how they would burn, Mary, with a quickly beating
-heart, stole unperceived close to the front row of
-watchers, and with a little prayer, quietly threw her
-pair into the fire. For a moment they burned slowly
-side by side, then with a hop and a jump they popped
-madly about, and finally at opposite sides of the
-fireplace they glowed redly for a time, then expired
-altogether. With a little, suppressed sob, unheeded
-in the general excitement, she hurried back to her
-seat, pale and trembling. It was as she had feared:
-the course of their love was never again to run
-smoothly, the charm had spoken. It had never been
-known to predict wrongly. Why had she sought to
-find out her fate? she asked herself pathetically.
-Unheeding the merry songs and dances going on
-around her, of which they never seemed to weary, and
-the unco tales and funny jokes, she sat there thinking
-her sweet, sad thoughts, and patiently waiting till
-they should depart for their homes, that she might
-seek the quiet of her bed, where her aching heart
-might find relief in the tears which nowadays were
-so hard to control. Suddenly the laughter subsided,
-and Mary with a start raised her head to see all eyes
-turned on her.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary, come here, lass,” called Souter Johnny,
-who was fanning himself vigorously.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s your turn noo, Mary,” they cried boisterously.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-“So gie us a dance or a song,” and they
-all pressed around her with good-natured suggestions.</p>
-
-<p>Old Bess took the shrinking girl by the hand, and
-leading her forward, with a deep courtesy announced,
-“Hieland Mary will favor us wi’ a song,”
-then she left Mary standing in the center of the room
-suffering agonies of dread as she raised her frightened
-eyes to the group of laughing, good-natured,
-gaping faces about her.</p>
-
-<p>“I canna’ sing, I canna’ sing, Souter,” she faltered,
-turning to him beseechingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, ye can, dearie, just a—a verse, there’s a
-girlie,” he answered encouragingly. “Come and
-stand beside me, if that’s any inspiration to ye,” he
-added, smiling good-humoredly.</p>
-
-<p>She ran to his side, and clutching him by the arm,
-tried to muster up her courage, for the good-natured
-audience were clamorously demanding a song. With
-a frightened little gasp she began to sing the first
-thing that came to her mind. “Oh, where, and oh,
-where is my Highland laddie gone?” she faltered
-out. A little titter passed through the crowd, for
-they knew that “Rab Burns was nae longer sweet
-on Mary Campbell,” as they told each other in loud
-whispers. At the cruel sound Mary, whose lips had
-trembled ominously as she thought of her recreant
-lover, with an indignant look at the thoughtless ones,
-burst into a flood of tears. Quickly Souter led her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-sobbing to a seat, while the others anxiously crowded
-round, conscience-stricken at their thoughtless levity.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s happent? what’s happent? Has she
-fainted?” they asked in helpless confusion, gazing
-from one to the other.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s only a wee bittie tired,” answered old
-Souter, tenderly smoothing the hair of the sorrowing
-lass. “Let her alone an’ she’ll be all right.
-Donald,” he called, “start your fiddle; we’re gang
-to hae anither dance.”</p>
-
-<p>The blind old patriarch smiled serenely, and raising
-his fiddle to his chin began to play, and soon the
-mirth and fun grew fast and furious as the dancers
-reeled and set, and crosst and cleekit.</p>
-
-<p>While old Donald was playing, and the dance was
-well started, Souter quietly led Mary out in the open
-air, and sitting down on the doorstep, he drew her
-gently beside him. “Noo, Mary, what is the matter?”
-he inquired kindly. “Winna ye tell old Souter
-Johnny your trouble?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye ken why I am unhappy, Souter Johnny,”
-answered Mary apathetically. He sighed and remained
-silent.</p>
-
-<p>“Have ye an’ Robert quarreled?” he asked
-presently.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” she answered sadly.</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, come tell old Souter; it may ease your
-mind, lassie,” and he drew her plaid about her
-shoulders, for the night air was keen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, ye ken, Souter,” she faltered, a pitiful
-little break in her voice, “Robbie an’ I were to be
-married after the plantin’ was o’er, and ’tis noo
-harvest time, but ne’er a word has he spoke of our
-marriage since that day. He is so changed, Souter,
-I—I canna understand him at all,” and she leaned
-wearily against his shoulder like a tired child.</p>
-
-<p>“That Armour lass is at the bottom of it all, I
-ken,” thought Souter angrily, drawing her close to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps,” continued Mary sadly, “perhaps he
-has grown tired of his Highland Mary.” She plucked
-idly at the fringe of her plaid, a look of resignation
-on her sweet face.</p>
-
-<p>“Tired o’ ye?” repeated Souter incredulously.
-“A man would be a most fearful fool to gie up such
-a bonnie, sweet lassie as ye are. Noo, if I were only
-younger, Robbie Burns wouldna hae things all his
-own way, I tell ye,” and he nodded his head vigorously.</p>
-
-<p>“I ken he has some trouble,” said Mary, not heeding
-his jocular efforts to cheer her, “that makes
-him so unhappy like; if he would only let me share
-that trouble wi’ him, whate’er it is, how gladly I
-would do it.”</p>
-
-<p>Souter rubbed his bearded chin reflectively.</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, Mary, ye ken Robert’s a genius,” he
-answered soberly. “An’ ye can ne’er tell how a
-genius is gang to act, therefore ye must ne’er be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-surprised, Mary, at whate’er he does, for genius is
-but anither name for eccentricity an’—an’ perverseness,”
-and he sighed deeply, his kind old face wrinkled
-with perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>“I feel, Souter,” she continued, pathetically calm,
-“that I am slowly, but surely, drifting out o’ his
-life forever.” She gazed suddenly into the face bending
-over her solicitously.</p>
-
-<p>“Dinna ye know the cause, Souter?” she asked
-beseechingly.</p>
-
-<p>He brushed his hand across his eyes and slowly
-shook his head. She sighed patiently and turned
-away her head and gazed listlessly into space. For a
-few moments there was deep silence, broken only
-by the bursts of laughter which came to them at
-intervals from within.</p>
-
-<p>“Lassie, listen to me,” finally said the old man,
-his voice cheery and hopeful once more. “Ye
-mustna be so down-hearted; there is a cause for
-everything in this world, an’ I ken Robert loves ye
-wi’ all his heart, just the same as ever. Why, ye
-can see the glimmer o’ love in his e’e whene’er he
-looks at ye.” He smiled approvingly as Mary’s face
-brightened, then continued decidedly, “Robert is well-nigh
-daft that he hasna heard frae Lord Glencairn
-all this time; that is why he is sae worrid an’ nervous,
-sae moody an’ neglectful; noo cheer thee, lassie, it’ll
-all come right in time,” and he patted her shoulder
-lovingly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I feel sae much better, Souter,” she murmured,
-pressing his hand gratefully. “An’ noo I’ll
-na borrow trouble any mair, thinkin’ Robert doesna’
-love me.” She smiled happily and jumped lightly to
-her feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Whist, Mary, why dinna ye make sure o’ that?”
-whispered Souter, looking around him mysteriously.
-She looked at him wonderingly. “’Tis Hallowe’en,
-ye ken, an’ a’ the witches an’ fairies are about this
-night an’ will grant any wish made. Try a charm,
-lassie.”</p>
-
-<p>“I did try one,” replied Mary with a sigh. “I
-burned the nuts, but it didna’ come out right; that’s
-what made me sad.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, weel, try anither; go pull a stock.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, nay, I’m afraid to go out in the field at
-night,” she replied timidly, drawing back. “But
-I’ll go if ye’ll come wi’ me.” She held out her hand
-to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, thank ye, Mary,” he said grimly. “I
-dinna’ care to see the face o’ my future wife just
-yet; I fear I couldna’ stand the shock.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I darena’ go alone,” answered Mary decidedly,
-her hand on the latch. “Think of anither
-charm, one I can do indoors.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ do ye think the fairies will come around
-where ’tis light?” he cried in amazement. “Och,
-no, ye must go to the darkest place ye can find.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-His little round eyes gazed into hers with solemn
-earnestness.</p>
-
-<p>Mary shivered with apprehension and peered into
-the darkness. “Oh, Souter, think o’ the witches,”
-she said nervously.</p>
-
-<p>“They willna’ hurt ye,” he answered a little impatiently.
-“Ye maun sow a handful of hempseed
-an’ harrow it o’er wi’ anything ye can draw after
-ye, an’ repeat o’er and o’er,” assuming a guttural
-monotone:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Hempseed, I sow thee; hempseed, I sow thee,</div>
-<div class="verse">And him that is to be my true love,</div>
-<div class="verse">Come after me and draw thee.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“And will I see him then?” whispered Mary
-eagerly, drawing near to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye,” returned Souter hoarsely. “Look over
-your left shoulder an’ ye’ll see your future husband
-pullin’ hemp. Noo, off wi’ ye; ye’ll find some
-seed in the barn.” Mary tried to summon up her
-courage, for she was highly superstitious, like all the
-peasantry, and was anxious to test the potency of
-the charm, and finally succeeded in taking a few
-faltering footsteps in the direction of the barn,
-when suddenly the door behind them opened, and
-Molly Dunn appeared in the doorway. She held in
-one hand a lighted candle, while in the other she carried
-a broken piece of looking-glass, into which she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-was gazing intently, her eyes fixed and staring.
-Behind her, crowding through the doorway, followed
-the now noiseless revelers, who were stifling their
-laughter to breathlessly watch the outcome of the
-well-known charm, whose power Molly had decided
-to put to a test, though believing staunchly in its
-potency. Molly majestically walked down the steps
-and across to the well, where, depositing her mirror
-on the curbing, she took from the pocket of her
-skirt a round, red apple, from which she bit a
-goodly piece and began vigorously to chew upon it,
-the while holding her candle above her head and anxiously
-watching her reflection in the mirror.</p>
-
-<p>“Molly’s eatin’ the apple at the glass,” chuckled
-Souter to Mary softly. “She’s lookin’ for the face
-o’ her future husband. Let’s hae some fun wi’ her.”
-He motioned to them all to keep silent, and stealing
-softly over to the unconscious Molly, intoned in a
-deep sepulchral voice, “Molly Dunn, if ye would see
-your future husband, dinna’ ye dare turn your head
-this way.”</p>
-
-<p>Molly gave a shriek of terror, thereby choking
-herself with the piece of apple she was industriously
-eating, and falling on her knees, her teeth
-chattering in fear, she cried frantically, “The
-witches! the witches!”</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, I’m the Deil himsel’,” answered Souter in
-awe-inspiring accents. Molly groaned aloud, in mortal
-terror, not daring to turn around. “An’ I’ve<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-come for ye, Molly Dunn,” slowly continued her
-tormentor.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, nay!” cried Molly, her eyes staring wildly
-in front of her. “I want naught to do wi’ ye; gang
-awa’, gang awa’!” and she wildly waved her hands
-behind her.</p>
-
-<p>“Not till ye’ve seen the face o’ the man ye’ll
-wed,” replied the voice. “Beauteous fairy of Hallowe’en,
-come forth,” he commanded majestically,
-beckoning to Mary to come nearer. She did so.
-“Speak, kind fairy.” He whispered to her what to
-say to the awestruck Molly.</p>
-
-<p>Thus admonished, Mary, who was once more her
-old light-hearted winsome self, raised her sweet voice
-and spoke in a high falsetto, “Gaze in the looking-glass,
-Molly Dunn; eat o’ the apple, think o’ the one
-ye desire to see, an’ his face will appear beside
-yours.”</p>
-
-<p>“Behold, I pass the magic wand o’er your head,
-ye faithless woman,” added Souter threateningly.</p>
-
-<p>Hurriedly Molly complied with the injunctions,
-and patiently she knelt there, apple in hand, the
-candle light glaring full on her eager, ugly face, and
-the wisp of faded hair tied tightly on top of her head,
-which was waving wildly about, while she waited for
-the face to appear beside her own reflection in the
-glass.</p>
-
-<p>“Do ye see him yet?” asked Mary eagerly,
-forgetting her rôle of “The Fairy of Hallowe’en,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-and speaking in her natural tone, while the group
-at the doorway drew closer to the kneeling woman in
-their excited curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, not yet,” replied Molly in an awestruck
-whisper.</p>
-
-<p>“Hold the candle higher,” admonished Souter,
-“an’ eat quicker.” Molly did so. “Noo do you
-see your handsome lover?” He crept up slyly behind
-Molly, and bending over her shoulder, peered
-into the glass, where he beheld the shadowy reflection
-of his own face looming up beside that of the wondering
-Molly. With a gasp of pleasure not unmixed
-with fear, she dropped the glass, and turning quickly
-grabbed the surprised Souter and held him close. As
-she raised her candle to see whom the fairies had sent
-to her, she recognized her tormentor, and with a
-shriek of rage, she clouted the laughing Souter over
-the head with her candlestick, amid peals of laughter
-from the delighted spectators, until he called for
-mercy.</p>
-
-<p>“Dinna I suit ye, Molly?” he asked in an injured
-tone, nursing his sorely punished head.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye skelpie limmer’s face, ye, how dare ye try
-sich sportin’ wi’ me?” she cried angrily.</p>
-
-<p>“The glass canna’ lie,” called out old Bess with
-a shake of her frilled cap.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ ye seen Souter’s face there, Molly,” laughed
-Poosie Nancy loudly. “There’s no gainsaying
-that.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I want a braw mon, a handsome mon,” whimpered
-Molly. “Ye’re no a mon at all, ye wee skelpie
-limmer.” The burst of laughter which greeted this
-sally was very disconcerting to Souter, whose height,
-five feet two inches, was distinctly a sore subject.</p>
-
-<p>“Try anither charm, Molly,” said Mary, feeling
-sorry for the poor innocent.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, I will,” replied Molly eagerly, drying her
-tears with the back of her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Then come alang,” said Souter, ready to make
-amends. “Come an’ pull a stock. Gie me your
-hand.” She did so eagerly. “Noo shut your eyes
-tight; that’s it; come along noo.” But Molly braced
-herself and refused to move.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afeered o’ the dark an’ the witches,” she faltered,
-her teeth chattering, her eyes so tightly closed
-that her face was drawn into a mass of deep wrinkles.</p>
-
-<p>They all crowded round the couple with words of
-praise and encouragement, and presently Molly was
-persuaded to take a step forward and then another,
-and finally the two moved slowly away and were
-swallowed up in the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the rest of the revelers, after a whispered
-consultation, hurried to the outhouse, amid
-smothered shrieks of laughter.</p>
-
-<p>Molly and Souter walked slowly and timidly toward
-the field of corn, which looked unreal and shadowy
-in the pale moonlight. Molly’s few remaining teeth
-were now chattering so loudly that Souter began<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-to grow nervous. He jerked her arm impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>“Be a mon, Molly,” he hoarsely whispered, his
-voice a little shaky.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afeered to,” she answered, opening her eyes
-and looking fearfully around. They took a few
-more stumbling step, then stopped.</p>
-
-<p>“Och, get off my foot, ye towsie tyke!” cried
-Souter. Molly hastily removed the offending member
-and on they went again. Suddenly they stopped,
-rooted to the spot in terror. A low, blood-curdling
-moan had rent the stillness. Again it came, chilling
-the very blood in their veins by its awful weirdness.</p>
-
-<p>“The witches! the witches!” gasped Molly in
-abject fear.</p>
-
-<p>Turning, they beheld a sight that caused their
-hair to stand on end, “the marrow to congeal
-in their bones,” as Souter afterward explained the
-sensation which came over him. Coming toward
-them was a score or more of hideous apparitions with
-fire blazing from their eyes and their horribly grinning
-mouths, and groaning and moaning like lost
-souls. With a mortal cry of terror, the frightened
-couple sped on wings of fear back to the friendly
-light of the kitchen, the ghostly figures darting after
-them with diabolical bursts of laughter. As they
-slammed the door of the house behind them their pursuers
-stopped and quickly blew out their Jack-o’-Lanterns
-and then threw them to one side.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I didna ken mortal mon could e’er run so fast,”
-snickered Poosie Nancy to the others as they noiselessly
-entered the kitchen in time to hear the wonderful
-tale of Souter’s hairbreadth escape from the
-witches.</p>
-
-<p>Another hour of mirth and jollity, of dance and
-song soon sped around. Souter and Molly were still
-the center of an admiring group, for they had seen
-the witches with their own eyes, and that distinction
-was theirs alone that night. Suddenly the old clock
-struck twelve, then began a merry scrambling for
-bonnets and plaids. Having donned them, they
-noisily crowded around their hostesses, who were
-lined up against the wall, waiting ceremoniously to
-be thanked for their hospitality and to bid their parting
-guests godspeed. As the darts of homely wit
-and repartee flew back and forth among them, causing
-the lads to burst into uproarious laughter or
-to grin in awkward bashfulness, and the lassies to
-turn their heads away blushingly or to toss their
-curls coquettishly, the door burst in suddenly, and
-Tam O’Shanter staggered to the center of the floor,
-pale, wild-eyed, and disheveled.</p>
-
-<p>“Tam O’Shanter!” they cried, gazing at him in
-startled amazement. Souter quickly reached his old
-cronie’s side.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter, mon? hae ye seen a ghost?”
-he asked concernedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, worse than that, much worse,” hoarsely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-replied Tam, wiping the sweat from off his forehead
-with a trembling hand.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s happened?” cried old Bess fearfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Calm yoursel’ an’ tell us, Tam,” said Souter
-soothingly. They brought him a chair, for he trembled
-like an aspen leaf. Throwing himself into it,
-he gazed about him fearfully, the while struggling
-to regain his breath.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,’tis this way, Souter,” he began presently
-in a husky whisper. “I left the Arms Inn about an
-hour ago or thereabouts an’ started for hame, for
-’tis a long ride to Carrick, ye ken, an’ a most uncanny
-ride e’en in the daylight.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s true,” affirmed Poosie Nancy with a nod
-of conviction to the others.</p>
-
-<p>“Weel,” continued Tam impressively, “a few
-miles beyond the Maypole road ye have to pass a
-dark, uncanny spot, the cairn where the hunters
-found the murdered bairn. Ye ken the spot, Souter?”
-turning to him for confirmation.</p>
-
-<p>Souter nodded his head quickly. “Aye, Tam, I
-ken it weel, for ’twas near there old Mingo’s mother
-hanged hersel’.” Old Bess looked over her shoulder
-nervously.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye,” eagerly assented Tam, then he continued,
-“Weel, a weird sight awaited me there; my blood
-runs cold noo. Suddenly I heard a sound o’ music
-and revelry, and Maggie stopped still, frightened
-stiff. I looked up, and glimmering thro’ the trees<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-was auld Kirk Alloway all a blaze o’ light.” He
-paused to note the effect of his astounding statement.</p>
-
-<p>They looked at each other disbelievingly. Some
-turned angrily away, muttering to themselves. Was
-old Tam making sport of them?</p>
-
-<p>“Go alang, mon,” cried Poosie Nancy with an
-incredulous sniff of her pug nose. “’Tis naught but
-an old tumbled down ruin.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m telling ye gospel truth,” replied Tam earnestly.
-They crowded around again, ready to be
-convinced, though still eying him distrustfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I was nae afraid,” continued Tam bashfully,
-“for I was inspired by bold John Barleycorn,
-so I rode Maggie close to the wall an’ there thro’
-the openin’, I saw inside, and wow! I saw an unco
-sight!” Tam was becoming warmed up with his
-recital. The eager, excited faces crowding around
-him had restored his courage and flattered his vanity.
-He paused impressively, his eyes fixed and
-staring, gazing straight past the faces of his
-listeners as though he saw the unco sight again. He
-noted with pleasure the frightened glances they gave
-over their shoulders. Then he proceeded slowly in a
-sibilant whisper, “There were warlocks and witches
-dancin’ hornpipes and jigs around the Kirk, dressed
-only in their sarks. There were open coffins standin’
-around like clothespresses, an’ in each coffin stood a
-corpse holdin’ in its cauld hand a burnin’ light. An’
-by that light I saw two span-lang wee unchristened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-bairns, white and cold upon the holy table.” Tam
-wiped the sweat off his brow and moistened his dry
-lips; then he proceeded with his harrowing tale.
-“Beside the bairns lay a bloody knife wi’ gray hairs
-still sticking to the heft an’——”</p>
-
-<p>But with a shudder of fear, their faces blanched
-and drawn, they exclaimed in doubting horror,
-“Nay!” “Stop!” “Out on ye, mon!” “It’s nae
-true!” etc. Tam was not to be cut off in the midst
-of his tale so unceremoniously.</p>
-
-<p>He rose excitedly from his seat and continued
-rapidly. “The dancers were twisting and turning
-like snakes, and there in a winnock-bunker sat Auld
-Nick himsel’, in the shape of a beast, playing the
-pipes. Och, friends, it was an inspirin’ sight, and in
-my excitement I yelled out——”</p>
-
-<p>“What?” cried the lads in unison.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well done, Cutty Sark!’” shouted Tam,
-proudly, well pleased at his own temerity.</p>
-
-<p>They boisterously applauded him for his courage,
-but the lassies still clung to each other nervously.</p>
-
-<p>“Then what happened, Tam?” asked Souter quizzingly.
-He could not quite bring himself to believe
-Tam’s improbable tale, he knew the old sinner so
-well.</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, the lights went out in an instant,” continued
-Tam dramatically. “I had no sooner turned
-Maggie’s head than out poured those unco witches
-like bees buzzin’ in anger. I didna’ stop to meet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-them, for Maggie, knowing her danger, bounded off
-like a terrified deer and plunged off desperately
-through the trees toward the brig with all these
-witches followin’ wi’ eldritch screeches, close to her
-heels till I could feel their breath on my clammy neck.
-Oh, what an awful moment for me! but I knew if I
-could but reach the keystone of the auld brig I
-would be safe, for witches darena cross a running
-stream, ye ken. Mag did her speedy utmost, but old
-Nannie pursued close behind and flew at me with tooth
-and nail, but she didna’ know my Maggie’s mettle,”
-Tam laughed gleefully, “for with one grand leap
-she reached the brig and saved her master’s life,
-just as that Carline Nannie caught her by the
-rump, an’ my poor Maggie left behind her old gray
-tail.”</p>
-
-<p>As he finished his recital he gazed around him
-triumphantly. There was an audible sigh of relief
-from all.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a burning shame,” said old Bess sympathetically,
-alluding to the loss of Maggie’s tail.</p>
-
-<p>“What a wonderful experience ye had, Tam,”
-cried Poosie Nancy admiringly. They all congratulated
-him on his narrow escape and pressed food and
-drink on him, showered him with words of praise, and
-in short made him out a daring hero, much to Souter’s
-disgust. He sat apart from the rest in dignified
-silence, his heart wounded and sore, for was not his
-late ghostly exploit completely ignored and forgotten?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-“Le Roi est mort, vive le Roi,” he might have
-said to himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen,” cried Tam, jumping to his feet, his face
-tense with eagerness. Faintly the patter, patter of
-a horse’s hoofs was heard drawing nearer and
-nearer.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis only someone comin’ alang the highway,”
-said Souter carelessly.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis my Maggie,” cried Tam almost tearfully.
-“She’s comin’ back for her master,” and with a
-bound he reached the open doorway. A few steps
-took him to the stone wall along the other side of
-which ran the King’s Highway. “She’s comin’, she’s
-comin’, my faithful Maggie is comin’,” he cried joyfully.</p>
-
-<p>“She must be an unco sight wi’out a tail, Tam,”
-sneered Souter. A roar of laughter greeted this
-sarcastic retort.</p>
-
-<p>“Dinna’ ye dare laugh,” cried Tam, turning on
-them furiously. The hoofbeats stopped suddenly.
-In the misty moonlight they caught a glimpse of
-a huge white creature, looking very spectral and
-ghost-like, impatiently tossing its head from side to
-side as if in search of something or someone. With
-a glad cry Tam vaulted the fence, old as he was,
-and dashed down the road, calling lovingly, “I’m
-comin’, Maggie, I’m comin’ to ye.” A whinny of
-delight, a snort of pleasure, greeted him as he reached
-his old mare’s side. Then like a phantom, the old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-gray mare and her rider sped swiftly past them on
-into the night and away toward Carrick.</p>
-
-<p>Silently they watched them, while the hoofbeats
-grew fainter and fainter and then were lost to sound.
-Such was Tam O’Shanter’s tale, the fame of which
-soon spread throughout all Ayrshire.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER IX</h3>
-
-<p>In a sequestered spot beside the brook which runs
-through the lower end of the big field at Mossgiel
-farm, Robert sat dreamily watching the shallow brook
-at his feet slowly trickle along over the stones. He
-had left the field, his heart filled with anger against
-his brother, who had been reproving him for his
-thoughtlessness, his absent-mindedness; but gradually
-his temper had melted, and removing his bonnet from
-his fevered brow, he had given himself up to his
-reveries. A little later Gilbert found him there, his
-loose unbleached linen shirt open at the neck,
-eagerly writing on a scrap of paper he held in his
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>The last few weeks Gilbert had thrown off his
-cloak of habitual reserve, and had treated his brother
-with less harshness, less severity. He had watched
-the slowly drifting apart of the lovers with wonder
-and delight. Could it be that they were tiring of each
-other? he asked himself over and over again. If
-that were so then perhaps some day—but he would
-not permit himself to think of the future. He would
-be happy in the present. For he was comparatively
-happy now, happier than he had ever expected to be.
-Since Robert’s avoidance of her, Mary had again<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-turned to him for sympathy, and once more they were
-on their old friendly footing. True she was a sad,
-despondent companion, but he was blissfully happy
-just to walk beside her from kirk, to listen to the
-sound of her sweet voice, even though his brother was
-the only topic of conversation, to feel the touch of
-her little hand as he helped her over the stile. He
-thought of all this now as he regarded his brother in
-thoughtful silence. Presently he called his name.
-Receiving no answer, he strode through the overhanging
-willows and touched him quietly on the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>With a start Robert looked up into his brother’s
-face, then he turned slowly away. “What is wrong
-noo, Gilbert?” he asked bitterly. “It seems I will
-be doing nothing right o’ late.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’ is wrong, lad,” replied Gilbert, his face
-reddening. “I—I only came to tell ye I am sorry I
-spoke sae harshly to ye just noo.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say no more, brother,” replied Robert quickly,
-rising with outstretched hand, his face bright and
-smiling. So ready was he to forgive any unkindness
-when his pardon was sought. “’Tis all forgot. I
-ken I do try your patience sore wi’ my forgetfulness
-and carelessness, but I couldna’ help it. The voice of
-the Goddess Muse, whom I adore, suddenly whispered
-in my ear and I forgot my work, my surroundings,
-and stood enraptured, entranced behind my patient
-steed, catchin’ the thoughts and fancies that were
-tumblin’, burstin’ from my brain, eager to be let<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-loose, and this is the fruit o’ my inspiration almost
-perfected.” He handed his brother the paper on
-which he had been writing.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it a song of harvesting?” asked Gilbert sarcastically
-without glancing at it.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay,” replied Robert softly. “’Tis called the
-‘Cotter’s Saturday Night,’ an’ ye will recognize, no
-doubt, the character and the theme, for ’tis partly
-of our own and of our father’s life I have written.
-’Tis my best work, Gilbert, I ken truly.” He eagerly
-watched his brother’s face as he slowly read the verses
-through.</p>
-
-<p>“May the light of success shine on it,” he said
-kindly, when he had finished. “But it seems o’er
-doubtful noo that the world will e’er see this, or any
-of your verses, for not a word hae ye heard from
-Edinburgh since ye sent Sir William Creech your
-collection of poems.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert raised his head and regarded his brother
-in despairing hopelessness. “I ken it weel, brother,”
-he replied. “And my heart grows sick and weary,
-waitin’, waitin’, for tidings, be they good or bad.
-Two lang months have passed since I sent him my
-collection, an’ still not a word, not a sign. Nae doubt
-they were thrown in a corner, overlooked an’ neglected.”
-For a moment he stood there gazing across
-the fields, his vision blurred by the tears of disappointment
-which filled his eyes. “Oh, why did Lord
-Glencairn raise my hopes so high?” he cried passionately,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-“only to have them dashed to the ground
-again.” Gilbert remained silent, his eyes cast down.
-The sight of his brother’s misery touched him keenly.
-But there was nothing he could say. “I believed him
-and trusted to his honor, his promise,” continued
-Robert dejectedly, “an’ for what?” He put on his
-bonnet and clasping his hands behind him in his
-characteristic attitude, slowly walked toward the cottage,
-a prey to his gloomy thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>“Be patient, Rob, yet a while,” said Gilbert
-encouragingly, as he walked along beside him.
-“Who kens what the morrow will bring forth?”</p>
-
-<p>“The morrow?” repeated Robert grimly. “Methinks
-I’ll ne’er know peace an’ tranquillity again
-on this earth.”</p>
-
-<p>They strode on in silence. As they neared the
-cottage Gilbert laid his hand on his brother’s shoulder,
-bringing him to a standstill. “Robert,”
-he said quietly and firmly, “I want to speak to ye
-about Mary.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert turned his head away abruptly. “What
-of her?” he asked in a low voice.</p>
-
-<p>“What are your intentions toward her?” demanded
-Gilbert earnestly. “Do ye intend to marry
-her, or are ye but triflin’ idly wi’ her affections?”</p>
-
-<p>Robert turned on him quickly. “Triflin’?” he
-repeated indignantly. “Nay, Gilbert, ye wrong me
-deeply.”</p>
-
-<p>“Forgive me, but ye ken Mary is not like other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-lassies to think lightly o’,” said Gilbert, his eye
-searching his brother’s face keenly.</p>
-
-<p>“Heaven forbid,” ejaculated Robert in a low,
-tense voice.</p>
-
-<p>“I canna’ understand your conduct o’ late,” continued
-Gilbert earnestly. “I fear your stay in
-Mauchline is responsible for the great change in ye,
-for ye are not the same lad ye were when ye left
-hame. I fear ye have sadly departed from those
-strict rules of virtue and moderation ye were taught
-by your parents, Robert.”</p>
-
-<p>“What mean ye, Gilbert?” inquired Robert,
-startled.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Rob,” responded Gilbert, shaking his head
-sadly, “I ken mair than ye think; reports travel e’en
-in the country.”</p>
-
-<p>The thought that his wild escapades were known
-to his narrow-minded though upright brother, and
-perhaps to others, filled Robert with sudden shame.
-“Weel, Gilbert,” he replied, trying to speak lightly,
-“Ye ken that I have been fallin’ in love and out
-again wi’ a’ the lassies ever since I was fifteen, but
-nae thought of evil ever entered my mind, ye ken that
-weel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, I ken that,” answered Gilbert quickly,
-“until ye went to Mauchline. And noo ye have
-come back a changed lad, your vows to Mary forgotten.
-If I thought ye would try to wrong
-her——” he stopped abruptly, for Robert had faced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-him, white and trembling, his eyes flashing indignantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop, Gilbert!” he commanded, intensely calm.
-“Mary Campbell’s purity is as sacred to me as an
-angel’s in heaven. I would sooner cut my tongue
-out by the roots than to willingly say aught to cause
-her a moment’s misery or sorrow. Ye cruelly misjudge
-me, Gilbert.” He turned away, feeling hurt
-and angry that he should be so misunderstood by his
-brother, and yet was he misjudging him, was he not
-indeed causing her much sorrow? he asked himself
-bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>Soon the whole guilty truth must be disclosed,
-his faithlessness, his unworthiness. If she suffered
-now, what would be her misery when she learned
-that an insurmountable barrier had arisen between
-them, cruelly separating them forever. The thought
-filled him with unspeakable anguish.</p>
-
-<p>“Forgive me, Rob, for my hasty words,” said
-Gilbert remorsefully. “But ye ken Mary is very
-dear to—to us all; that is why I spoke so plainly.”</p>
-
-<p>At that moment the door of the cottage opened and
-the object of their discussion stepped into view. The
-poor little moth could not help fluttering around the
-candle, and so she was to be found at Mossgiel whenever
-her duties would permit her to steal away.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, here ye are, lads,” she called out to them,
-her face brightening. “Will ye be comin’ in to tea
-noo?” They did not answer. “My, what long<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-faces ye both have,” she continued, smiling. “This
-isna’ the Sabbath Day, so there’s no need of such
-sorrowful faces.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didna’ ken ye were here,” answered Gilbert,
-going toward her.</p>
-
-<p>Robert sat down by the well, the look of pain on
-his melancholy face deepening as he listened to her
-gentle voice. He closed his eyes wearily and leaned
-back against the curbing, the paper held loosely in
-his hand. It was so hard to realize that never again
-would he press that form to his aching heart, that he
-must renounce her utterly. Oh, if he could only die
-now, how much better it would be for them all, he
-weakly told himself.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to stay here to tea wi’ ye this night,”
-said Mary wistfully. Why didn’t Robert speak to
-her just one word of greeting? she thought sadly.
-“Your mother bade me tell ye supper is waiting
-whenever ye are ready.” She took a few halting
-steps toward the well. “Are ye comin’ in, Robert?”
-she inquired timidly.</p>
-
-<p>“In a wee,” he answered quietly, without looking
-at her. “After I have finished my poem.” Mary
-turned back, crushed to the heart by his apparent
-coldness.</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, lads,” cried Mrs. Burns brightly, stepping
-out on the low, broad stoop followed by Souter, who
-held a cup of steaming tea in one hand and some oatcakes
-in the other, on which he nibbled with evident<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-relish. “I heard your voices and couldna’ stay
-within,” and she beamed on them lovingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’re at it again, I see, Robert,” observed Souter
-tactlessly. Robert flushed angrily. He was
-easily irritated in his present state of mind. “Ye’ll
-write yoursel’ into the grave, mon; ye’re not lookin’
-very peart the noo.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Burns regarded her eldest son with anxious
-eyes. “Aye, I fear, laddie, ye are too intent on your
-rhymin’,” she said solicitously. His abstracted moods,
-his melancholy moroseness had filled her loving heart
-with gloomy forebodings. “Sae much livin’ in the
-clouds, my son, is unhealthful, an’ does but make ye
-moody an’ uncertain in temper. Is it worth while
-to wreck body, mind an’ soul to gain a little fame
-an’ fortune, which, alas, seem so very far off?” she
-asked, putting her hand lovingly on his bowed head.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye dinna’ understand, mither,” he replied sadly.
-“I love to write. ’Tis my very life; thought flows
-unbidden from my brain.” He rose to his feet and
-pointing to the stream, which could be faintly seen
-at the foot of the hill, continued with mournful finality,
-“Why, mother, I might as well try to stop the
-waters of yonder rushin’ brook as to attempt to
-smother the poetic fancies that cry for utterance.
-Nay, ’tis too late noo to dissuade me from my purpose,”
-and he turned and watched the setting sun
-slowly sink behind the distant hills in a flood of golden
-splendor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Souter noticed with uneasiness the gloom which
-had settled upon them all as the result of his careless
-words. Why was he such a thoughtless fool?
-Ah, well, he would make them forget their troubles.</p>
-
-<p>“Och, Mistress Burns,” he cried, smacking his
-lips with apparent relish, “’tis a mighty fine cup
-of tea, a perfectly grand cup. It fair cheers the
-heart of mon,” and he drained it to the bottom.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ where do ye think the oatcakes were made,
-Souter?” asked Mary brightly.</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, I’m no’ a good hand at guessin’,” he answered,
-thoughtfully scratching his head; “but by
-their taste an’ sweetness, I should say that Mistress
-Burns made them hersel’.”</p>
-
-<p>The good dame regarded him witheringly. “I
-didna’ ken that oatcakes were sweet, Souter,” she
-retorted.</p>
-
-<p>Mary laughed softly at his discomfiture. “Weel,
-they come frae my sister in Applecross.”</p>
-
-<p>“Applecross!” he repeated, his face lighting up
-with pleasure. “Noo I mind they did have the Highland
-flavor, for true.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, an’ ye finished the last one for that reason,
-no doubt,” replied Mrs. Burns wrathfully. “Ye’re
-a pig, mon. Come awa’, lads, your supper will be
-gettin’ cold,” and she led the way inside, followed
-meekly by Souter. Gilbert waited for Mary to
-enter, but she stood wistfully gazing at Robert.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-With a sigh he left them together, and Robert entered
-the cottage.</p>
-
-<p>Mary slowly approached Robert as he stood looking
-across to the distant hills, and patiently waited
-for him to speak to her, but he stood there in tense
-silence, not daring to trust himself to even look
-at the pure flower-like face held up to his so pleadingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Robbie,” she said timidly after a pause, which
-seemed interminable to them both, “willna’ ye let
-the sunlight enter your heart an’ be your old bonnie
-sel’ once mair? It will make us all sae happy.”
-She put her hand on his arm lovingly. “Why are
-ye sae changed, laddie? Dinna’ ye want me to love
-ye any mair?”</p>
-
-<p>At the gentle touch of her fingers an uncontrollable
-wave of passionate love and longing came over
-him, sweeping away all resolutions resistlessly.
-“Oh, my Mary, my Mary,” he cried hoarsely. “I
-do want your love, I do want it noo an’ forever,”
-and he clasped her lovingly to his aching heart.
-Blissfully she lay in his strong arms while he showered
-her flushed and happy face with the hungry,
-fervent, loving kisses which he had denied
-himself so long, and murmured little caressing words
-of endearment which filled her soul with rapture and
-happiness. “How I love ye, Mary,” he breathed in
-her ear again and again as he held her close.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“An’ how happy ye make me once mair, laddie,”
-she answered, nestling against him lovingly.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ how happy we will——,” he began, then
-stopped pale and trembling, for grim recollection
-had suddenly loomed up before him with all its train
-of bitter, ugly facts; and conscience began to drum
-insistently into his dulled ear. “Tell her the truth
-now, the whole truth,” it said. But the voice of the
-tempter whispered persuasively, saying, “Why tell
-her now? wait, let her be happy while she may, put
-it off as long as possible.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, Robbie?” cried Mary fearfully.
-“Tell me what is troublin’ ye; dinna’ be afraid.”
-His bowed head bent lower and lower.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Mary, I’m sae unworthy, sae unworthy of all
-your pure thoughts, your tender love,” he faltered
-despairingly, resolved to tell her all. “Ye dinna’ ken
-all my weakness, my deception, and into what depths
-of sin I have fallen.” She sought to interrupt him,
-but he continued rapidly, his voice harsh with the
-nervous tension, his face pallid from the stress of
-his emotions. “I have a confession to make ye——”</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, nay, laddie,” cried Mary, putting her hand
-over his trembling lips. “Dinna’ tell me anything.
-I want nae confession from ye, except that o’ your
-love,” and she smoothed his cheek tenderly. “Ye
-ken that is music to my ears at all times, but if ye
-are deceivin’ me, if ye have na always been true
-to me, an’ your vows, why, laddie, keep the knowledge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-to yourself’. I am content noo, and ye ken
-happiness is such a fleetin’ thing that I mean to cling
-to it as long as I can.” She took his hands in both
-her own and held them close to her heart. “Ye ken,
-Robbie, ill news travels apace and ’twill reach my
-ears soon enough,” she continued with a mournful
-little quaver in her voice. “But no matter what
-comes, what ye may do, my love for ye will overlook
-it all; I will see only your virtues, my love, not your
-vices.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert bowed his head in heart-broken silence.
-Grief, shame, and remorse like tongues of fiery flames
-were scorching and burning into his very soul.
-Quietly they sat there engrossed in their thoughts,
-till the voice of Mrs. Burns calling to them from the
-cottage to come to supper roused them from their
-lethargy.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re comin’ right awa’,” answered Mary
-brightly. “Come, laddie, we mustna’ keep the folks
-waitin’.”</p>
-
-<p>She took his listless hand and drew him gently to
-the door and into the cottage.</p>
-
-<p>Silently they took their places at the table, around
-which the others were already seated.</p>
-
-<p>“By the way,” said old blind Donald, the fiddler,
-who had dropped in on his way to Mauchline for a
-bite and a cup, “Poosie Nancy told me to tell ye,
-Mistress Burns, that she wa drop in to see ye this
-night.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“We’ll be glad to see her,” replied Mrs. Burns
-hospitably.</p>
-
-<p>“And Daddy Auld says he’ll be along, too,” continued
-Donald, grinning broadly. “That is, if he
-isna’ too busy convertin’ souls.”</p>
-
-<p>“Convertin’ souls,” sneered Souter incredulously.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, ye should see the Jolly Beggars he was
-haranguin’. They were jumpin’, an’ rantin’, an’
-singin’ like daft Methodists.”</p>
-
-<p>“The auld hypocrites!” cried Mrs. Burns, buttering
-a scone which she placed in the old man’s tremulous
-hand. “They didna’ go to the manse for conversion;
-’tis a square meal they are after. They ken
-the kind old heart o’ Daddy Auld.”</p>
-
-<p>Souter leaned back in his chair and smiled reminiscently.
-“That reminds me o’ a guid story,” he began,
-chuckling.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind that story noo,” remonstrated Mrs.
-Burns, who was in constant dread of Souter’s risque
-stories. “That’ll keep.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never <i>can</i> tell that damn story,” ejaculated Souter
-wrathfully.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER X</h3>
-
-<p>They had finished their meager supper, and now
-sat comfortably around the fire, Mrs. Burns and
-Mary busy with their knitting, the men contentedly
-smoking, while old Donald discordantly tuned up his
-fiddle.</p>
-
-<p>“Noo, Donald,” said Souter briskly, “play us
-something lively.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, I’ll play ye the Highland Fling, Souter
-Johnny, an’ ye can dance. Come alang noo,” and
-he started to play vigorously, keeping time with his
-foot.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, get out on the floor, Souter,” said Gilbert,
-pulling him out of his chair.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, nay, lad,” expostulated Souter fretfully,
-“I be too old to fling the toe noo.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go alang wi’ ye, mon,” retorted Mrs. Burns
-encouragingly; “a Scotsman, and a Highlander besides,
-is ne’er too old to——”</p>
-
-<p>“To learn,” interrupted Gilbert brightly, swinging
-the old man to the middle of the floor. “Let her
-go.”</p>
-
-<p>“I havena danced for years,” said Souter apologetically.
-Carefully knocking the ashes out of his
-pipe he deposited it in the pocket of his capacious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-waistcoat and proceeded to divest himself of his coat.
-“Ye ken I was the champion dancer of my clan, Clan
-McDougal, when I was a young lad,” he announced
-boastingly. “An’ mony a time I have cheered an’
-amused the lads, while tentin’ on the fields of Culloden,
-before the big battle. An’ that reminds me o’
-a guid——”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind the story,” said Gilbert impatiently.
-“Gie us a dance.”</p>
-
-<p>After a few preliminary movements Souter caught
-the swinging measure of the dance, and once started
-he limbered up surprisingly. On he danced nimbly,
-and untiringly, soon ably proving to his delighted audience
-that he had not forgotten his old-time accomplishment.
-“I’ll show these Lowlanders what a
-Highlander can do,” thought the old man proudly.
-Panting with excitement and eagerness he failed to
-hear the metallic patter of horses’ hoofs drawing
-near the cottage. Nearer and nearer they came
-unheeded by all save one.</p>
-
-<p>From his seat by the fireplace, where he sat in
-melancholy silence, Robert heard the sound, but gave
-it no heed. Suddenly it ceased. He raised his head
-to listen. Someone had surely stopped at the gate,
-he thought, straining his ears eagerly, but the noise
-of the fiddle and the dancing drowned all sound
-from without. He glanced quickly at the smiling
-faces of the others as they good-naturally watched
-the dancer. “I must hae been mistaken,” he muttered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-uneasily. Suddenly he leaned forward, grasping
-his chair hard; surely he had heard his name
-faintly called. He listened intently. Yes, there it
-was again; this time the voice was nearer. A woman’s
-voice, too. What could it mean? He rose to his
-feet, his heart thumping fiercely, his muscles alert
-and tense, his eyes fixed on the door, his mind filled
-with gloomy presentiment.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment an imperative knock sounded
-loudly through the room, and almost at the same time
-the door flew open violently, and Jean Armour impetuously
-dashed in. Closing the door quickly behind
-her she leaned back against it, pale and
-exhausted. Her riding habit of green and gold was
-splashed and discolored with mud. The large hat
-with its gleaming white plume hung limply over her
-shoulder, while her black disheveled hair streamed
-over her face and down her back in bewildering confusion.
-She had evidently ridden fast and furious,
-for she stood there with her eyes closed, her hand on
-her heart, gasping for breath.</p>
-
-<p>Quickly Mrs. Burns led the exhausted girl to a
-seat. In a few moments she raised her drooping head
-and with wild frightened eyes searched the room till
-her gaze fell on Robert, who was leaning white and
-speechless against the fireplace, a great fear in his
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>She rose quickly and going to him said in a tense,
-rapid whisper, “Robert, my father knows all, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-through no fault of mine. Some idle gossip reached
-his ear to-day, and when he returned home and learned
-my condition his rage was terrible. He cursed you
-like a madman, and would have done me bodily harm
-had I remained within sight. But I feared for my
-life, and fled before I had explained the truth to him.
-I have come to you to protect me.”</p>
-
-<p>He listened to her in stony silence. The blow had
-fallen so suddenly, so unexpectedly, it found him
-totally unprepared to ward off its paralyzing effects.
-He tried to speak, but the words refused to leave his
-parched tongue. He felt benumbed and cold, all the
-blood in his body seeming to have suddenly congealed.
-As he stood there with the eyes of all riveted upon
-him he felt like the veriest criminal that walked the
-earth.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment there was a tense silence. Jean
-stood there anxiously gazing into Robert’s stricken
-face, as he vainly strove to utter a sound. Mary
-had watched the little scene before her in growing
-wonder and alarm and now leaned back against the
-wall, her heart beating with some unknown, nameless
-fear. What did this highborn lady want with her
-laddie? she asked herself jealously.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<img src="images/illus4.jpg" width="475" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“‘She is my wife, mither.’”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mrs. Burns stood grimly waiting for some explanation
-of the scene she had just witnessed, but
-had not heard nor understood. “Robert, my son,”
-she said finally, her voice cold and firm, “what
-does Squire Armour’s daughter want of ye?” There<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-was no answer. “What is she to ye, Robert?”
-she sternly insisted. Slowly he raised his head. As
-she saw his wild and haggard face, from which all
-the life and youth had fled, she started back in
-horror, a startled exclamation on her lips.</p>
-
-<p>With a despairing, heart-broken look at Mary’s
-wondering face, he bowed his head and falteringly
-uttered the fatal words, “She is my wife, mither.”</p>
-
-<p>Had a thunderbolt from a clear sky unroofed
-the humble cot, it would not have created the consternation,
-the terror which those few words struck
-to those loving hearts.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Burns was the first to rally from the shock.
-“Your wife?” she repeated incredulously, looking
-from one to the other.</p>
-
-<p>With a cry of grief and pain Mary sank weak
-and trembling into a chair, like a deer wounded unto
-death. She gazed at them heart-brokenly, while her
-little hands nervously fluttered about her face. No,
-no, he could not mean it. They were only joking,
-surely. “Not that, Robbie, ye dinna mean that,
-dearie?” she gasped piteously, holding out a beseeching
-hand to him. His bowed head bent lower.</p>
-
-<p>“Do ye mean ye have legally married this lass?”
-asked Gilbert eagerly. Mary would be free then,
-he thought wildly. Free to be wooed and won.</p>
-
-<p>“We were married a few weeks ago,” answered
-Robert dully. “I had not the courage to tell ye
-before.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Besides,” interposed Jean, arranging her disordered
-toilet, “I wished to keep the marriage from my
-father for a—a time.” She blushed crimson.</p>
-
-<p>“I willna believe my son ever married ye of his
-own free will,” cried Mrs. Burns bitterly, “fine
-rich lady that ye are. He loves only that sweet
-lass, Mary Campbell.” Quickly she reached Mary’s
-side, and, raising the stricken child in her motherly
-arms, she kissed her tenderly and pressed the golden
-head gently against her loving heart.</p>
-
-<p>Jean looked at them, a look of resentment in her
-flashing eyes. “I know that full well,” she answered
-sullenly. “I know Robert hasn’t married me because
-he wanted to, but because——” she looked down
-shame-faced. “Because there was no alternative.
-Now you know the truth,” she concluded bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye shameless creature!” cried Mrs. Burns, her
-eyes blazing with indignation. “Ye have trapped
-him into this marriage, but ye shall na stay beneath
-this roof, ye limmer,” and she glared at the flushed
-defiant girl in righteous anger.</p>
-
-<p>“Mither, mither!” cried Robert distractedly,
-“dinna, for God’s sake; she is my wife in truth, an’
-she must stay wi’ me noo till I can prepare anither
-hame for her. Dinna make it harder for me.” He
-gazed pleadingly in his mother’s stern and angry
-face.</p>
-
-<p>Mary pressed her lips to the quivering cheek.
-“Mistress Burns,” she said softly, “what is to be,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-will be. I forgive them both wi’ all my heart.” She
-paused and sighed with gentle resignation. Then she
-continued, “An’—an’ I hope they will both find peace
-in their new life.” She turned quietly to Jean, who
-was nervously tapping her whip against her skirt.
-“I ken ye’ll make Robert a good wife,” she said
-earnestly. “So dinna let any thought o’ me sadden
-your heart, or—or yours, Robert.” She turned and
-looked at him tenderly. “I—I forgive ye,” she
-whispered. Turning to Mrs. Burns again, she continued
-pleadingly, “Ye must welcome Robert’s wife
-to her new hame, Mistress Burns. We all maun make
-this a merry hame-comin’ for—the—bride.” Her
-plaintive voice broke abruptly, and the burning tears
-welled up to her eyes, but she dashed them quickly
-away and continued bravely, a pathetic little smile
-hovering about her trembling lips, “I’ll go out noo
-an’ make some fresh tea for ye, and ye’ll all stay
-right here, till I come back, an’ Donald shall play
-for ye again—an’ we’ll—all—be—sae merry—won’t
-w-we? I’ll bring it w-when—it’s quite—ready.”
-She smiled at them through her tears. Then she took
-the teapot from the dresser and softly left the room.</p>
-
-<p>“God bless her brave and noble heart,” breathed
-Robert brokenly.</p>
-
-<p>As she left the room Mrs. Burns drew herself
-sternly erect, and after a moment’s hesitation turned
-slowly to Jean. “I bid ye welcome to Mossgiel
-Farm,” she said coldly. “I am sorry I spoke so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-bitterly to ye just noo. I—I will try to love ye as
-Robert’s wife, but noo I—I can only think o’ Mary
-an’ her sorrow. I’ll leave ye for a bit; Mary may need
-me.” Her voice faltered and broke, and with a sob
-of grief she hurriedly left the room.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XI</h3>
-
-<p>Ever since the morning she had received her marriage
-lines Jean had been trying to summon up
-sufficient courage to tell her father the whole truth
-about her secret marriage to Robert, to throw herself
-upon his mercy, but each time when she had
-approached him in fear and trembling, her courage
-had ignominiously failed her. She knew only too
-well her father’s irascible temper and uncertain
-moods. And so days passed into weeks and still
-she procrastinated, but she knew she could not conceal
-from his observing eyes her condition much
-longer. But whether to confess all and run the
-risk of being thrown from her father’s door like
-some abandoned outcast, or to contrive some excuse
-to leave home to pay a visit to some friend, and
-then, when it was all over, to return, that was the
-question which disturbed her waking thoughts. If
-she did the latter, she thought, she could easily have
-her marriage annulled and no one would be the wiser.
-But did she really want to have her marriage annulled?
-she asked herself thoughtfully. She didn’t understand
-herself at all these days. He had strangely
-stirred her heart at their last meeting, to its very
-depths. She knew he did not love her, that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-loved the little dairymaid, but almost imperceptibly
-a great change was taking place in her feelings toward
-him. At times a great longing came over her
-to go to him, throw herself at his feet and beg to
-share his hardships, his poverty, with him. But she
-had not the courage, and so she battled with the conflicting
-emotions that constantly beset her day and
-night. Her temper soon became moody and uncertain,
-she was in constant fear of her mother’s anxious,
-watchful eyes, and yet she felt she would go daft if
-she remained alone in her chamber with her disturbing
-thoughts. So day after day she could be found in
-her saddle madly galloping over the country, trying
-to get away, far away, from her trouble. But all in
-vain; it was always before her; there was no escaping
-it. But at last the day came when she knew she
-must make her decision, and almost in desperation
-she decided on her course of procedure. Hastily
-galloping home, she left her horse at the door, and
-going to her room, scribbled a short note to her father
-and left it on the table in his study. Then she had
-slipped guiltily past the room where her mother sat
-peacefully sewing, and sped swiftly along the hall to
-the door. As she reached it, it burst inward and she
-staggered back half fainting, for there on the threshold
-stood her father, his face white with rage, his
-jaw set and determined. He seized her roughly by
-the arm, and thrusting her back into the house, had
-taken one understanding look at her figure in its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-tight-fitting habit, then with an outburst of bitter
-anger and shame he cursed her and the author
-of her disgrace, cursed her like a madman, cursed
-her till he was spent with the force of his passion.
-She tried to explain, to tell him the truth, that she
-was a wife, but the words froze on her lips. His
-words and manner struck terror to her very soul;
-she feared for her very life’s safety. With all her
-despairing strength she freed herself from his
-clutch and stood cowering, panting, her hands raised
-to shield herself from the blow she expected every
-moment to fall on her defenseless body from the
-insane man. As he approached her with hand upraised,
-she gave one quick shriek, one wild look
-around and darting under his arm reached the door.
-Quickly she opened it and sped like a swallow to the
-side of her waiting horse. With one bound she was
-on his back, and away she galloped like the wind,
-leaving her astonished father standing in the doorway
-shaking his fist after her in impotent anger.</p>
-
-<p>She had given rein to her horse, not heeding or
-caring where he took her. Her one and only thought
-was to get away, far away; so she rode on and
-on, over brook and brush, through bog and mire
-till gradually her fear had subsided, and, reining
-in her horse, she looked around, and with a thrill
-of joy and wonder she saw Mossgiel Farm in the
-distance. Surely fate had guided her horse’s footsteps
-in this direction, she thought eagerly. Her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-course was clear now, she would go to him, to her
-husband, he would protect her. So she had continued
-her journey to the cottage, where she brought naught
-but misery and sorrow to its inmates.</p>
-
-<p>As Mrs. Burns left the room Jean gazed after her
-in bitter silence. She wished she had not come. She
-knew she was not welcome. Far better to have faced
-her father’s anger. “But the die is cast. I have
-made my bed,” she told herself wearily. She realized
-how futile it was to repine over the past, and she felt
-too exhausted, too miserably unhappy to think of the
-future. She would stay here perhaps a night, then
-she didn’t know, couldn’t think what would happen.
-At all events she could never return to her father’s
-home now. He had spurned her from him, and she
-was not wanted here. Nobody wanted her now. Her
-lips quivered convulsively and big tears of self-pity
-rolled quietly down her pale cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>Gilbert looked uneasily from his brother’s grief-stricken
-face to the weary, wan face of the bride.
-How long were they going to sit there side by side
-without a word to each other? he thought uneasily.
-He felt a great wave of pity well up in his heart for
-the unwelcome, unloved addition to their family.
-True she was mostly to blame for her present misfortune.
-Her imprudence, her misconduct had been
-well known to many, before his brother had gone to
-Mauchline to live. He felt sorry for Robert, too,
-even while he bitterly reproached him for being the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-author of Mary’s unhappiness. They must make the
-best of things now, he thought philosophically. “Ye
-had better take off your bonnet, lassie,” he said
-kindly, breaking the oppressive silence. “Ye’ll be
-staying here the night.” She raised her head and
-looked at him with flashing eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Full well I know that all here hate and despise
-me,” she burst forth bitterly, not heeding his request.</p>
-
-<p>Robert slowly raised his head and looked at her.
-There was sorrow and compassion in his dark melancholy
-eyes. “Jean,” he said quietly, “our lives
-have been linked togither by a stern, inexorable fate.
-We have both been guilty of a grievous sin, and noo
-we must face the results bravely.” He rose and
-walked to her and stood humbly by her side. “I
-hope ye’ll forgive me, Jean, for wreckin’ your life
-and plungin’ ye into sae much misery.”</p>
-
-<p>Slowly Jean bowed her head, her face flushing
-guiltily. Surely she had the more need to ask his
-forgiveness. She had not expected to find such nobility
-of character, and it moved her deeply.</p>
-
-<p>“There is naught to forgive,” she cried in a low
-stifled voice. “I alone am to blame. I am unfit,
-unworthy to be your wife. Oh, I’m so miserable, so
-unhappy,” and she burst into tears.</p>
-
-<p>Souter led old Donald silently out of the room.
-There was nothing either one could say to the
-wretched couple, so they sat outside and talked it
-all over in the way old men have. They had not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-been seated long, however, when they espied coming
-toward them, at a furious gallop, a horse and rider.
-As they drew near Souter perceived with sudden
-apprehension that it was none other than Squire
-Armour. He rose anxiously to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Do ye ken wha’ it is, Souter?” inquired Donald
-in a quavering voice.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Squire Armour himsel’,” whispered Souter
-cautiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Ma certie!” ejaculated Donald, shaking his
-white locks in mild alarm.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d better warn the lass,” said Souter hastily,
-as the Squire drew up to the gate. Going to the
-door he quickly told them of the newcomer, then
-turned to intercept the irate visitor, who was coming
-swiftly up the walk.</p>
-
-<p>“Heavens, my father here!” cried Jean in a
-frightened whisper. “Oh, I dare not face his wrath.
-Protect me, Robert,” and she clung to him fearfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Out o’ my way, mon!” they heard the harsh
-voice of Squire Armour shouting. “Out o’ my
-way,” and pushing aside the courageous little man he
-strode wrathfully into the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, I’ll stay and see the fun through,” said
-Souter to himself grimly.</p>
-
-<p>“So, my lass,” cried the old Squire triumphantly,
-“I’ve found ye just where I expected ye’d be, in the
-arms o’ your dissolute lover. Come awa’, ye shameless
-bairn.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He started toward her, but Robert passed
-her quickly behind him.</p>
-
-<p>“Keep back, Squire Armour,” he said firmly.
-“I’m nae a mild-mannered man, an’ ye may learn it
-to your cost.”</p>
-
-<p>Squire Armour glanced at him savagely. “Dinna
-ye dare talk to me, ye libertine, ye blasphemous
-rhymster. Ye dare to stand there wi’ my daughter,
-proclaiming her dishonor to my very eyes?”</p>
-
-<p>“There is no dishonor, Squire Armour,” replied
-Robert calmly, “for your daughter is—my wife.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your wife!” echoed the old man, staggering
-back in amazement. “I’ll nae believe it. It’s a lie.
-I’d rather see my daughter disgraced forever than be
-your wife.”</p>
-
-<p>“Father, are you mad?” gasped Jean in horrified
-accents.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ ye an Elder in the Kirk, a so-called ‘God-fearin’
-man’!” cried Robert scathingly, his eyes
-blazing with scorn. “I tell ye, Squire Armour, she
-is my wife, an’ all your bitter, unreasoning hatred
-o’ me canna’ alter that unhappy fact.”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment the old man stood gazing at them
-in helpless rage. Then he turned to Jean, his voice
-trembling with suppressed emotion. “What proofs
-have ye?” he asked hoarsely.</p>
-
-<p>“I have my marriage lines, father,” she answered
-quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“Where were ye married?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Why, father, we——” began Jean hesitatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Was it in the Kirk?” he interrupted sternly.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” she faltered. “It was——”</p>
-
-<p>“Not in the Kirk?” he cried, his voice rising
-menacingly. “Who was the minister? Who married
-ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“There was no minister, father.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nae minister!” he exclaimed in horror.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait, father, you don’t understand,” cried Jean
-quickly; “’twas a Scotch marriage; ye ken what that
-is—and,” she bowed her head guiltily, “why it is.
-And here are my lines signed by Robert acknowledging
-me as his wife.” She took from the bosom of her
-gown a folded paper which she handed to her father.</p>
-
-<p>He read it through carefully. “This is na legal
-or binding,” he exclaimed angrily.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis perfectly legal, Squire Armour,” replied
-Robert calmly, “even if it is irregular, and is as binding
-as though we were married in Kirk.”</p>
-
-<p>“It shall be set aside,” fumed the old man. “I
-will not have it so. Ye shall both renounce it, I
-tell ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, father,” cried Jean tearfully, going to his
-side. “’Tis too late now; would you shame me in
-the eyes of the world?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do these few written lines make your shame
-any the less?” he shouted wrathfully. “Will not
-all the neighbors know why he had to give them to
-ye? Ye would throw awa’ your life on this poverty-stricken,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-shiftless rhymster, but ye shall not do it;
-ye must give him up, do ye hear?” and he raised
-his arm menacingly.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, no, father,” she exclaimed frantically,
-falling on her knees beside him; “I cannot give
-him up now, I cannot.” After all the weary weeks
-of anxious fears and doubts she knew at last that
-she had found her heart, and now asked no greater
-happiness than to be allowed to remain with her husband
-to share his humble life, to be the mother of his
-family. All the old ambitious thoughts were gone
-forever. She wondered that they ever existed.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye shameless bairn, ye must an’ shall!” he replied
-fiercely. “This is the end o’ it all,” and he
-vindictively tore into little bits the paper Jean had
-given into his hands. “We’ll hear nae mair of that,
-my lass, an’ I swear ye shall never see Robert Burns
-again, make up your mind to that.”</p>
-
-<p>With a cry of despair Jean sank half fainting
-into a chair.</p>
-
-<p>As he witnessed Squire Armour’s fiendish act
-Robert’s heart gave a great bound that sent the
-blood coursing madly through his veins. The marriage
-lines were destroyed; then he was free, free!
-Oh, the music in that word! Free to do as he
-wished. A sob of anguish caused him to look around
-at the kneeling figure of the unfortunate girl.
-Quickly the eager light died out of his face as he
-noted her suffering. Going to the kneeling girl he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-raised her gently to her feet, and holding her by the
-hand faced the inhuman father. “Squire Armour,
-ye would condemn your ain flesh an’ blood to shame
-an’ disgrace because o’ your hatred for me,” he said
-quietly, “but it shall not be. I defy ye. Come,
-Jean, we will go to the Kirk at once and Daddy Auld
-will marry us.” They turned to go, but the old man
-stepped between them and the door, his arms upraised,
-his eyes wild and glaring.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d sooner see her in her grave than bear the
-accursed name of Robert Burns,” he cried with
-solemn intensity. “Great though her imprudence
-has been, she can still look to a higher, an’ better
-connection than a marriage with ye.” Turning to
-Jean he continued sternly, “Speak, lass, say that
-ye’ll obey me, or the bitter curse o’ your parents
-will haunt an’ follow ye all the rest o’ your
-days.”</p>
-
-<p>“Think of the disgrace, father,” wailed the unhappy
-girl, clinging to his arm beseechingly.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll forget and forgive it all if ye’ll come
-back,” he replied, the great love for his child revealing
-itself in his eager tones. “Ye’re nae longer that
-man’s wife. Come an’ none will ever know o’ your
-dishonor.”</p>
-
-<p>“My God, mon!” exclaimed Robert in horrified
-accents, “where is your father’s pride, your ain
-honor, your manhood!”</p>
-
-<p>But Squire Armour heeded him not. “Come, my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-daughter, come,” he said tenderly, leading the weak,
-wavering girl to the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye canna expect to keep this a secret from the
-world, Squire Armour,” cried Robert indignantly.
-“Matters have gone too far for that; soon your
-daughter’s name will be blasted irretrievably, while
-mine will be coupled with that of blackguard. It
-must not be. Ye must let Jean go to the Kirk wi’
-me this very night or I shall inform the Elders in the
-Kirk.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’ll have no time to turn informer, my laddie,”
-snarled Squire Armour, turning on him fiercely;
-“for I mean to have ye brought before the Kirk
-sessions, an’ ye’ll be punished as ye deserve for the sin
-ye have committed, an’ ye shall sit on the cutty
-stool, where all your friends an’ neighbors can jeer
-an’ scoff at ye. This very night will I send the
-parish officers after ye, Robert Burns. Ye can take
-this warning or no, just as ye please, but I hope they
-find ye here. Come, lass, we’ll go hame to your
-mither, noo.” He drew the terrified, half-fainting
-girl firmly through the door and down the path to the
-road.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’re an old hypocrite!” hooted Souter, following
-them to the gate, where he stood shaking his fist
-angrily after the departing visitors, and shouting his
-frank opinion of the Squire in no mild or flattering
-terms.</p>
-
-<p>“I alone am to blame,” cried Robert despairingly,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-as he watched them gallop madly away into the
-threatening night. “An’ only the bitterest sorrow,
-the most poignant grief will I know until that wrong
-is righted.”</p>
-
-<p>“What will ye do noo, lad?” asked Mrs. Burns,
-breaking in upon the melancholy sadness which enveloped
-him like a pall. (She had entered the room
-in time to hear Squire Armour’s parting injunction.)
-“Ye heard what the Squire threatened. Oh, dinna
-disdain the littleness of prudence, my son.”</p>
-
-<p>“I willna, mother,” replied Robert dully, after a
-pause. “I have decided to go awa’ from Mossgiel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go awa’?” she repeated fearfully. “Nay, nay,
-laddie, ye mustna! I fear for ye in your present
-state o’ mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“I must, mother,” he answered wildly. “I willna
-sit on the cutty stool to be made the laughing stock
-o’ the whole neighborhood, to bring shame on ye
-all.” He walked restlessly up and down the room
-as he continued feverishly, “I willna stay here to
-skulk from covert to covert under all the terrors
-of a jail, for I ken that in a little while the merciless
-pack of the law will be baying at my heels
-like bloodhounds.” He turned to her suddenly,
-“Mother, I mean to leave Scotland, perhaps forever.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, nay, nay, my bairn; I canna, I willna, let ye
-go,” answered his mother, clinging to him passionately.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“There, there, mither, dinna make it harder for
-me.” He put his arm around her tenderly and pressed
-her to him for a moment. “Noo, mother,” he said
-quietly, “will ye pack my chest? I have nae time to
-spare,” and he led her gently to the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Where will ye be goin’?” inquired Gilbert.</p>
-
-<p>“To the Indies, to Jamaica,” replied Robert
-quickly. “Ye ken Dr. Douglas has a place for me
-there as overseer of his plantation. He has offered
-it to me mony times.” He turned in nervous haste
-to his mother, who stood in the doorway anxiously
-watching him. “Hurry, mither, please, I am in torture
-o’ mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, laddie,” she answered sorrowfully.
-“God will direct your footsteps aright,” and she
-closed the door behind her and quickly made her way
-to his chamber.</p>
-
-<p>“Will ye see Mary before ye go, Robert?” asked
-Gilbert.</p>
-
-<p>He felt an infinite pity for his brother, who was
-leaving behind him everything he held dear.</p>
-
-<p>“If she will come to me,” faltered Robert. “Tell
-her I’m goin’ an’ that I will go wi’ a lighter heart
-if she bids me godspeed. Watch o’er an’ protect
-her, Gilbert,” he continued, placing his hand on his
-brother’s shoulder. “An’ I hope one day she may
-forget faithless Robert Burns, an’—an’ ye, Gilbert,
-will be made happy.” He turned away as he
-finished, grief gnawing at his heart.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>An eager light flashed in Gilbert’s eyes as he answered
-fervently, “I would lay doon my life to serve
-her,” and with a quick look into the averted face he
-quietly left the room.</p>
-
-<p>Mechanically Rob took his bonnet from the peg
-and throwing his long plaid around him went out into
-the air, and silently, sorrowfully he stood there
-watching the gloomy clouds that hung low in the
-heavens through eyes misty with tears. His soul
-was filled with unutterable sorrow at the coming
-parting, with dread of the unknown future to be
-passed alone in a strange, inhospitable foreign land.
-Oh, the agony of that thought, alone! Suddenly
-there came floating softly, peacefully, borne on the
-back of the south wind, which was blowing gently
-against his face, the alluring, seductive voice of the
-Goddess Muse. Insistently she urged her way into
-the dulled and listless ear of the grief-stricken man.
-Not for long was she denied admission, however.
-With a cry of joy, that even in that dreaded hour of
-parting his Goddess had not deserted him, he eagerly
-opened the book he held in his hand, his favorite book,
-“Tristam Shandy” by Sterne, and wrote quickly,
-lovingly on the flyleaf the impassioned words which
-were being whispered in his ear. Hungrily the pencil
-sped over the paper, till, with a sigh of regret,
-he dropped his hand, the voice was hushed, the message
-was finished. As he stood there eagerly reading
-his verses by the light which streamed through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-the window, the door softly opened and Mary came
-swiftly to his side, her pure face pitiful in its childlike
-sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it true ye are gang awa’ frae Scotland, Robbie?”
-she asked breathlessly. He bowed his head.
-“Oh, my heart beats heavy for ye, laddie.” There
-was infinite compassion in her voice. “But ye maun
-be brave noo if ever ye were.” She nestled her little
-hand in his. He clasped it fervently.</p>
-
-<p>“O, Mary, my Highland lassie!” he cried passionately,
-“I want to hear ye say before I go that ye
-forgive me for the sorrow I have brought into your
-pure young life.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hush, laddie,” she answered softly, “there is
-naught to forgive; ye had to do your duty like
-an honorable mon. I hae been very happy wi’
-ye, laddie, an’ the memory o’ that happiness will
-be wi’ me always.” She leaned against him for a
-brief moment, then slowly drew herself away and
-looked tenderly up into his face. “In this sad parting
-hour,” she faltered, “I can tell ye without shame
-that I love ye wi’ a’ my being, an’ will until I
-dee.”</p>
-
-<p>“Heaven bless ye, Mary,” he whispered brokenly.
-“The thought of your love will gie me courage to
-bear my exile bravely.”</p>
-
-<p>“Exile!” she repeated shuddering. “Oh, what a
-drear word, to think ye must be exiled in your noble
-youth, that ye maun leave your hame, your country,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-to live alone in some foreign clime.” The tears
-streamed down her pallid cheeks. “We will a’ miss
-ye sair, lad,” she continued bravely, “and we will
-pray for ye, an’—an’—oh, ’twill be sae hard to say
-good-by, perhaps forever.” She threw her arms
-about his neck and clung to him passionately.</p>
-
-<p>He held the weeping child in his strong, loving
-embrace, his face close to hers. “Oh, why was I
-born, only to bring sorrow, pain an’ disgrace to
-those I hold dear?” he cried in an agony of grief
-and remorse. “Bitterly am I atonin’ for my act
-o’ imprudence; an exile, a failure,” he gave a mirthless
-little laugh; “aye, a failure, for e’en the hopes
-of success held out to me have a’ vanished in disappointment.
-Oblivion has enveloped me in its darkening
-pall, for whichever way I turn naught but
-darkest gloom, with not e’en a ray of light, meets
-my wretched gaze.” A flash of lightning pierced
-the darkness, followed shortly by a heavy, prolonged
-roll of thunder. She nestled closer to his
-side.</p>
-
-<p>“Be not discouraged, laddie,” she said; “’tis always
-darkest before dawn, an’ who kens what may
-yet happen?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, nae, nae,” he interrupted with a despairing
-shake of his head, “e’en the elements conspire against
-me, for I maun face this coming storm on foot to
-reach Greenock. ’Tis all a part of my just punishment.”
-The wind had risen and with it a driving mist<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-which soon enveloped them in its damp embrace. But
-they heeded it not.</p>
-
-<p>“Bide a wee, dinna go to-night,” she pleaded,
-while the wind tossed her tangled curls seductively
-around his neck and in his sorrowing face. “Listen
-to the wind. Oh,’tis a bad night to start on a journey,”
-and she clung to him tighter, her skirts flapping
-about his limbs like some live thing, thrilling
-him by their touch.</p>
-
-<p>“Before ye came out, lassie,” he replied quietly,
-stilling the tumult in his heart, “I wrote some verses
-in this book as a parting song; how appropriate they
-are for this occasion ye will see. Listen,” and holding
-the book up to the light he began to read:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“The gloomy night is gathering fast,</div>
-<div class="verse">Loud roars the wild inconstant blast;</div>
-<div class="verse">Yon murky cloud is foul with rain,</div>
-<div class="verse">I see it driving o’er the plain;</div>
-<div class="verse">Chill runs my blood to hear it rave,</div>
-<div class="verse">I think upon the stormy wave,</div>
-<div class="verse">Where many a danger I must dare,</div>
-<div class="verse">Far from the bonnie banks of Ayr;</div>
-<div class="verse">’Tis not the surging billows’ roar,</div>
-<div class="verse">’Tis not that fatal deadly shore,</div>
-<div class="verse">Tho’ death in every shape appear,</div>
-<div class="verse">The wretched have no more to fear;</div>
-<div class="verse">But round my heart the ties are bound,</div>
-<div class="verse">That heart transpierced with many a wound;</div>
-<div class="verse">These bleed afresh, these ties I tear,</div>
-<div class="verse">To leave the bonnie banks of Ayr.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The wind had risen rapidly and the old beech tree<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-was shrieking and groaning overhead as its branches
-strove like maniac arms with the tempest. The Ayr
-could be plainly heard roaring its diapason on its
-rocky banks in the darkness below, while the thunder
-crashed overhead and the lurid glare of lightning
-ever and again lit up the yard.</p>
-
-<p>Unheeding its warning he continued, his melancholy
-sonorous voice, with its mournful cadences,
-floating out with passionate longing, filling his listener
-with unutterable sadness:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Farewell, old Coila’s hills and dales,</div>
-<div class="verse">Her heathy moors and winding vales;</div>
-<div class="verse">The scenes where wretched fancy roves,</div>
-<div class="verse">Pursuing past unhappy loves.</div>
-<div class="verse">Farewell my friends, farewell my foes,</div>
-<div class="verse">My peace with thee, my love with those;</div>
-<div class="verse">The bursting tears my heart declare,</div>
-<div class="verse">Farewell the bonnie banks of Ayr.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>As his voice died away he heard the sound of
-sobbing, and looked up, to see his mother standing in
-the doorway.</p>
-
-<p>“Come awa’, lad, come in out of the night air!”
-she called tenderly, controlling her sobs.</p>
-
-<p>Silently they entered the cottage. Robert crossed
-the room to his brother’s side.</p>
-
-<p>“Gilbert,” he said quietly, “ye take the songs an’
-verses ye will find on my table an’ send them to Mr.
-Aiken. Mayhap they will bring you in a bit o’ money
-to help ye in your struggle wi’ poverty, an’ forgive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-me that I maun leave ye to battle wi’ misfortune
-alone.” Turning to Mary he continued, lovingly,
-“Mary, lass, will ye accept my Bible as a parting
-gift?” She looked at him with shining eyes. “Ye’ll
-find it in the oak box with the glass lid in the attic.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll prize it for aye, Robert,” she sobbed gratefully,
-pressing his hand, “an’ our prayers will follow
-ye to that far distant land, where I hope
-success awaits ye.”</p>
-
-<p>He drew her to him gently and pressed a kiss on
-her pure brow. “Farewell, lassie, may ye be happy,”
-he breathed fervently. Turning again to Gilbert
-he spoke rapidly, “Farewell, brother, give my love
-to the dear brothers an’ sisters when they come hame.”
-He shook his hand warmly.</p>
-
-<p>“God keep ye, Robert,” answered Gilbert quietly.</p>
-
-<p>Gently Robert drew his weeping mother into his
-arms. Tenderly he pulled down the apron which
-she had flung over her head to hide her sorrow, and
-wiped away her tears. “Noo, mother,” he whispered
-brokenly, “I—I maun say good-by; the day
-has drawn to its close an’ I maun start on my journey
-to Greenock. Dinna greet, dear mither.” He let
-her weep on unconstrainedly a few moments.</p>
-
-<p>Finally her bitter sobbing ceased and looking up
-into his face she cried passionately, “I canna give
-ye up, my son, never to see ye again.” She took
-his cheeks lovingly between her hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’re making it hard for me to go, mither,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-he cried, utterly distracted. “But the die is cast,
-my hands are on the plow, an’ I canna turn back
-noo. Ye ken there is naught but disappointment
-an’ disgrace to look forward to here, an’——”
-Suddenly a loud cheer from outside the cottage
-interrupted him. They listened in silent wonder.
-Above the noise of the wind, which had risen to a
-gale, and the swish of the rain, which now beat in
-swirling gusts about the cottage, came the voices of
-Souter and Donald shouting and cheering like boys
-on a frolic. Quickly they opened the door. A gust
-of wind dashed the rain fiercely in their faces.
-Through the mist and gloom they could vaguely make
-out the outlines of a coach standing at the gate,
-which had approached unheard in the storm.</p>
-
-<p>“Robert, Robert!” cried Souter, looming up out
-of the darkness and looking decidedly weatherbeaten.
-“’Tis news I have, great and glorious
-news.”</p>
-
-<p>“News?” they all repeated in wonder.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, mon?” asked Rob, trembling with
-excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“It can speak for itsel’,” replied Souter gleefully,
-“for here it is.” He pointed behind him. They
-looked down the path and saw rapidly approaching
-the door a tall man, enveloped in a long cloak,
-escorted by a servant in livery. At that moment the
-light fell on his wet face and they started forward in
-amazement.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Lord Glencairn?” cried Robert incredulously,
-his heart throbbing with a strange new-born hope.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, my lad, and near drowned,” laughed the
-visitor genially. Robert grasped his outstretched
-hand and drew him to the door.</p>
-
-<p>With words of welcome and delight they made
-room for him to enter. Quickly he removed his wet
-cloak from his shoulders and threw it to his servant,
-who hung it beside the fire, while descanting on the
-inclemency of the weather. Nervously and anxiously
-they waited for the great man to speak his errand.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he turned from the fireplace, and, addressing
-Robert, he said brightly, “Well, Mr. Burns,
-you see I have not forgotten you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my lord,” faltered Robert, his face white
-with suppressed feeling, “I—I had despaired of
-seein’ you mair; do ye—bring me—hope? Is it—am
-I——” his faltering voice stopped abruptly, but
-his eager eyes continued to search the noble face
-which was looking so kindly into his, as if he would
-draw the news from him.</p>
-
-<p>“It is good news,” answered Lord Glencairn,
-smiling brightly, “and you are famous; yes, my
-lad, your poems are at last published and already
-have become the rage in Edinburgh; the name of
-Robert Burns is on the tongue of all, high and low,
-prince and peasant.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank God,” cried Mary softly, a look of
-rapture on her face.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Burns turned excitedly to her son, her hands
-clasped nervously. “Oh, laddie, laddie, ye’re a great
-mon, noo!” she exclaimed proudly.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment Robert stood there speechless, a
-look of incredulous wonder on his face. “My
-lord,” he faltered at last, “can it be true, what
-you’re telling me, that my songs are—accepted, read
-an’—praised in Edinburgh?” Lord Glencairn
-bowed. “Oh, sir,” he continued, with a nervous
-catch in his voice, “it seems too good to be true, too
-good.”</p>
-
-<p>Gradually the warm color came back to the pale
-face, the hurried breathing, which seemed almost to
-smother him, became calmer, the nervous, excited
-tension relaxed, and, with a smile of rapture and
-content on his upturned face, he exclaimed fervently,
-“At last my hopes and ambitions are realized, the
-bright sunlight of success has crowned my efforts;
-my verses are known an’ loved in Edinburgh! Oh,
-do ye hear that, my loved ones?” He stretched
-out his arms lovingly to them. “Nae mair poverty
-for us noo, mither, nae—nor disappointments.”
-He turned to Lord Glencairn, who was being assisted
-into his cloak. “Oh, sir, I canna tell ye what is in
-my heart,” he continued earnestly, “but ’tis overflowing
-wi’ love an’ gratitude to ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“There, there, my lad, time is precious,” replied
-Lord Glencairn kindly, buttoning up his cloak.
-“’Tis late and we have far to go and the postchaise<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-is awaiting us. I came here not only to bring you
-news, Mr. Burns, but to take you back with me to
-Edinburgh.” He laughed heartily at the look of
-startled amazement that appeared on the faces before
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“To Edinburgh!” gasped Robert unbelievingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, lad,” replied his lordship earnestly, his
-eyes flashing with admiration for the modest young
-genius. “To Edinburgh, where fame and fortune
-await you, where society stands with outstretched
-arms to receive you as a conquering hero come to
-claim his own. To the capital city, where all unite
-in paying homage to the wonderful genius of Robert
-Burns, our Scottish Bard. Will you come?” and
-he held out his hand invitingly to the wondering lad,
-who was gazing at him, his soul in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Am I dreaming?” he cried slowly, looking about
-him for some confirmation of his fears. “Go to
-Edinburgh wi’ ye, sir, as the Bard of Scotland?
-O God, can this be true? My wildest hopes ne’er
-held out such dreams o’ greatness, such happiness.”
-His voice vibrated with feeling. He paused and took
-a deep breath, then he continued joyfully, all the sorrows
-of the past forgotten in his excitement, “A few
-moments ago, my lord, I was bidding farewell to
-these, my loved ones, forever. I was about to start
-for the Indies, a wretched exile, a disappointed failure,
-and noo fate once mair alters my destiny.”
-With a glad laugh he seized Lord Glencairn’s outstretched<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-hand, and, turning to his loved ones, he
-cried, his voice ringing out clear and strong, a
-conscious thrill of pride running through it, “Nae
-more tears, mither, except those of happiness, nae
-more sorrow or care, for I can leave ye all wi’ a light
-heart noo, wi’ joy instead o’ sadness. ’Tis true
-I go from here an outcast, but I’ll return to ye
-a hero.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>BOOK II</h2>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XII</h3>
-
-<p>The scene that opened on our hero in Edinburgh
-was altogether new, and in a variety of other respects
-highly interesting, especially to one of his
-disposition of mind. To use an expression of his
-own, he “found himself suddenly translated from
-the veriest shades of life,” into the presence, and
-indeed into the society, of a number of persons
-previously known to him by report as of the highest
-distinction in his country. From those men of letters
-in general his reception was particularly flattering.
-And they interested themselves collectively
-and individually in the cultivation of his genius.</p>
-
-<p>In Edinburgh literature and fashionable society
-are a good deal mixed. Our Bard was an acceptable
-guest in the gayest and most elevated circles, and received
-from female beauty and elegance those flattering
-attentions above all others most grateful to
-him. A taste for letters is not always conjoined
-with habits of temperance and regularity, and Edinburgh
-at this period contained perhaps an uncommon
-proportion of men of considerable talents, devoted
-to social excesses, in which their talents were
-wasted and debased.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Robert entered into several parties of this description
-with his usual vehemence. His generous
-affections, his ardent eloquence, his brilliant and daring
-imagination fitted him to be the idol of such
-associations. The sudden alteration of his habits
-of life operated on him physically as well as morally.
-The humble fare of the Ayrshire peasant he had
-exchanged for the luxuries of the Scottish metropolis,
-and naturally the effect of this change could not
-be inconsiderable. He saw the danger, and at times
-formed resolutions to guard against it, but he had embarked
-on the tide of dissipation and was borne along
-its stream. Some six months after his triumphant entrance
-into the city he had returned to Mossgiel for
-a fleeting visit to his home, and to assist his brother,
-who had taken upon himself the entire support of
-their aged mother, and who was struggling with
-many difficulties on the farm of Mossgiel. It will
-easily be conceived with what pleasure and pride
-he was received by his mother, his sisters, and brothers.
-He had left them poor and friendless; he
-returned to them high in public estimation and easy
-circumstances. He returned to them unchanged in
-his ardent affections, and ready to share with them
-to the uttermost farthing the pittance that fortune
-had bestowed. He had been keenly disappointed
-not to find Mary there. He learned, to his sorrow,
-that she had gone back to the Highlands shortly
-after he left for Edinburgh. He felt that she was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-lost to him now forever, for, while his heart prompted
-him to hurry to her side, reason told him that the
-visit would but fill her cup of sorrow to the brim.
-For, believing as he did, that he was still bound to
-Jean in spite of the destruction of her marriage
-lines, he knew he would only have to part from her
-again, to leave her there with her sad thoughts, her
-loneliness, while he returned to the gay life, where
-it was so easy to forget or at least to still the voice
-of sorrow. Having remained with them a few days
-he proceeded again to Edinburgh, first stopping off
-at Mauchline to call at the home of Squire Armour,
-only to be met with curses and to be driven from
-the door by the stern, unyielding man.</p>
-
-<p>Robert returned to Edinburgh, his heart filled
-with bitterness and sorrow. For a while he brooded
-over his troubles, which threatened to plunge him
-into a state of extreme melancholy. But at last resentment
-and anger crowded out all other thoughts,
-and it was not long before he succeeded in drowning
-recollection in the midst of the society and dissipation
-of the metropolis.</p>
-
-<p>A year passed by, during which time he had vainly
-tried to get word to Jean Armour. He had heard
-that she had given birth to twins, and the thought
-that they were without the protection of a father’s
-name filled him with grief and remorse. Time and
-again he had written her, only to have his letters returned
-unopened. Finally he had received a letter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-from her father, stating that “the children were
-dead and that Jean had quite forgotten him, and
-was about to be joined in wedlock with a neighboring
-rich farmer; that now he hoped Robert would
-leave him and his daughter in peace,” etc., etc. He
-laid down the letter with a thrill of joy stirring his
-blood. Free at last! He had done his duty as
-a man of honor, and now, after all the bitter heartache
-and the long separation, he was free to marry
-his little sweetheart. “Oh, thank God!” he cried
-aloud, in an ecstasy of joy. “Thank God, the
-miserable tangle in our lives will soon be straightened.”
-He had long entertained a desire to visit those
-parts of his native country which were so celebrated
-in the rural songs of Scotland, and he would now
-gratify that desire with Mary’s home as the objective
-point. As soon as arrangements could be
-made he started for the Highlands on horseback,
-accompanied by a friend, one Will Nichol, and,
-his fame having preceded him, they were royally entertained
-on their journey through the country.
-Finally they arrived in Dornoch, where Mary was
-living quietly with her sister, and soon the long parted
-lovers were clasped in each other’s arms. Later that
-day he told her the glorious news of his release, his
-freedom from all ties, told her of his undying love,
-and swore that never again should they be parted in
-this life. And Mary with a prayer of thankfulness
-in her faithful heart, blushingly gave her willing consent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-to a speedy marriage. The next day they all
-returned by easy stages to Edinburgh. Mrs. Dunlop,
-an old friend of Robert’s, took the country
-maiden under her protecting wing and gave her a
-home until the marriage could be solemnized, the date
-having been set one month from the time of their
-arrival.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XIII</h3>
-
-<p>John Anderson, the proprietor of the “Bull’s
-Head,” stood gazing wrathfully upon the scene of
-disorder which met his eyes as he opened the door
-of the sitting-room of his distinguished lodger’s
-apartments. It was early evening, and still that
-lodger remained in bed, although he had been called
-at different intervals throughout the day by the
-irate, though kind-hearted, landlord himself. “Dear—dear—dear,”
-he muttered to himself, as he arranged
-the furniture, “I’ll just give Robbie a bit
-o’ my mind.” He went to the door of the sleeping
-apartment and looked in. “Sleepin’ like a bairn,”
-he said softly, “an’—an’ wi’ his boots on. Ma
-certie!” He raised his hands in horror. “Weel,
-I’m glad ye’re nae under the bed. Ah, weel, young
-blood must hae its course. I mind I was young mysel’,
-an’ if I do say it I could drink mair whusky than
-any mon in the toon. Oh, those were happy days,”
-and he sang softly to himself, as he continued his work
-about the room:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“We are na fou’</div>
-<div class="verse">We’re nat that fou’,</div>
-<div class="verse">But just a droppie in our ee.</div>
-<div class="verse">The cock may craw,</div>
-<div class="verse">The day may daw’,</div>
-<div class="verse">An’ ay we’ll taste the barley bree.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A knock on the door interrupted his song.</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, who is it?” he called impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>“Open the door,” replied a female voice eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“A lassie,” exclaimed John in amazement. “Oh,
-Robbie, ye devil.” He swung open the door and
-stood back to allow the gorgeously dressed lady to
-enter the room. Her dress of rich purple brocaded
-silk, cut in the extreme of fashion, rustled stiffly
-over the polished floor. Her head with its powdered
-wig was held haughtily erect as she surveyed the
-room with sparkling black eyes that nervously took
-in her surroundings, through the tiny holes in the
-black mask which concealed her face.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I thought—isn’t Mr. Burns at home?” she
-stammered uneasily.</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, what may ye be wantin’ wi’ Mr. Burns?”
-asked John cautiously. He had been bothered to
-death with answering the questions of the silly
-women who flocked to the parlors of the inn in
-hopes of seeing their idol.</p>
-
-<p>The lady turned on him sharply. “None of your
-business, my good man,” she retorted haughtily.
-“How dare you question me, sirrah?”</p>
-
-<p>John was quite taken aback by the imperious tones,
-but he still had his suspicions. “Weel, I thought
-perhaps ye were one o’ the artless bonnie wenches
-who were here last night wi’ the lads makin’ merry
-till the wee sma’ hours. If ye are——” he paused
-significantly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>She flashed him an angry look. “Make your mind
-easy on that score, my good fellow,” she retorted icily.
-“I have called to interview Mr. Burns on an important
-matter. Is he at home?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye; he is in there asleep,” replied John, pointing
-to a door beside the large book cabinet, which
-nearly occupied one side of the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Asleep!” she repeated incredulously. “Lud, he
-retires uncommon early for a gallant,” and there
-was a note of disappointment in her deep contralto
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Early is it?” said John, with a knowing smile.
-“Faith, he hasna been up this day.”</p>
-
-<p>“What?” she ejaculated in horror. “Not all
-day? Then you must awaken him immediately. I
-must have speech with him at once,” and she spread
-her voluminous draperies over the wide lounge and
-calmly seated herself. “Do you hear?” she cried
-impatiently, as John made no move.</p>
-
-<p>“I hae excellent hearin’, mum,” replied John
-carelessly, “but I ken when I’m well off, an’ I hae
-nae desire to feel the toe o’ Robert’s boot.”</p>
-
-<p>“A pest on your stubbornness, fool,” she cried
-angrily, springing to her feet.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ I hae my doubts o’ a lass who comes to a
-mon’s lodgings at night,” continued John, resenting
-her impatience. “It’s na respectable.”</p>
-
-<p>She looked him over insolently, then shrugged her
-shoulders. “I protest, landlord,” she replied, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-a mocking tone, “I am quite respectable, even if
-I am here unchaperoned. But, Lud, I like not conventionalities,
-and this adventure suits my madcap spirit
-well.” She walked to the door of the sleeping chamber
-and was about to open it, when his voice arrested
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“I ken it all the time,” he cried indignantly.
-“Ye’re a brazen hussy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Landlord!” she gasped in astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ ye can leave my inn,” continued John, now
-thoroughly aroused. “We are respectable, if ye
-are na.”</p>
-
-<p>“Peace, fool!” she exclaimed furiously. “I am
-Lady Glen——” she stopped and bit her lips angrily
-at the indiscreet slip of her tongue. Suddenly a
-daring thought entered her mind. One glance at his
-face told her that he had not caught the name. To
-think was to act with my lady. Then she continued
-glibly, “I am Lady Nancy Gordon, daughter of the
-Duke of Gordon, of Gordon Castle. It will be all
-over town in a day,” she thought with malicious
-satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>John staggered back as though he had been shot.
-“Ye Lady Nancy?” he gasped in amazement. “Oh,
-my lady, I ask your pardon.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis not easily granted, numskull,” replied the
-imperious beauty, her black eyes flashing dangerously.
-The sound of a carriage rolling over the
-cobble stones suddenly arrested her attention. For<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-a moment she listened intently, then, with a startled
-exclamation, she turned to John and said in a frightened
-whisper, “’Fore heaven! if it should be my husband—my
-father, I mean, in pursuit of me.” She
-ran hastily to the window from where a view of the
-street could be obtained and threw open the casement.</p>
-
-<p>“It would serve ye right, my lady,” said John
-to himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Great heavens! ’tis my uncle, Sir William
-Creech!” she gasped. Then she said aloud, “Landlord,
-’tis my father, as I feared! Oons! what a scrape
-I’m in.” She closed the shutter hastily.</p>
-
-<p>“’Twill ruin your reputation to be found here
-at night, my lady,” cried John concernedly, trotting
-nervously to the window.</p>
-
-<p>“O Lud,” she replied airily, “I’m not concerned
-over my reputation, ’tis already torn to ribbons by
-my dear friends. ’Tis my—my father’s wrath I
-fear. He is like to do some mischief.” An imperious
-knocking sounded on the door below.</p>
-
-<p>“He has found ye, lassie,” cried old John excitedly.
-“Go down to him; dinna let him find ye
-here in Robbie’s chamber. Ye ken the blame will
-all fall on the lad,” and he sought to escort her to
-the door, but she evaded his outstretched hand with
-laughing unconcern.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, nay, my good fellow. I protest, I will not
-see him,” she exclaimed, with reckless abandon.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-She would keep up the impersonation till the end.
-Another such chance to blast her enemy’s reputation
-would not come to her in a lifetime, she thought
-wickedly. “Listen,” she cried impetuously. “My
-father, the Duke of Gordon, while he admires the
-poetry of Mr. Burns, does not admire the man himself,
-consequently he did not send him an invitation
-to attend the masked ball which is given at Gordon
-Castle to-night,” she explained glibly. “’Twas a
-monstrous insult to the Bard of Scotland, and I told
-my father so, and that I would not countenance it.
-Then I stole away, as I thought, unobserved, and came
-here to induce Mr. Burns to return with me. Once
-inside the castle my father will be forced to receive
-him graciously. Now, hurry, landlord, tell him to
-dress and we’ll slip out quietly, and, with your connivance,
-elude my—father’s vigilance.” She watched
-him narrowly to note the effect of her story.</p>
-
-<p>“My lady,” replied John proudly, “the lad goes
-to Athol Castle to-night, so ye had better gang hame
-wi’ your father.” She gave a quick start of delighted
-satisfaction. So he was going after all. If
-she had only known that and felt sure of it, she might
-have spared herself this nerve-racking experiment,
-she thought impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>The pounding had kept up incessantly, and now
-a stern, commanding voice called out for the landlord.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s calling me,” said John nervously; “ye’d<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-better go doon an’ explain a’ to him,” he told
-her pleadingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Landlord, where the devil are you?” They
-could hear the heavy tread of feet walking about
-the rooms below.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s inside the house,” whispered John, wringing
-his hands.</p>
-
-<p>“O Lud, he seems most angry, doesn’t he?” she
-said in a subdued voice. She had suddenly grown
-tired of the deception, and was eager now to get
-away. “I—I think perhaps ’twould be best if he—er—my
-father didn’t find me here after all,” she
-admitted. “I—I really dare not face his anger.”
-She jumped up quickly, all her bravado vanished.
-“Get me out of this place, landlord, quick, quick!”
-she gasped, clinging to him. Oh, why had she come?
-Sir William would make such a disagreeable scene
-if he found her here.</p>
-
-<p>“Into that room wi’ ye!” cried John quickly,
-pointing to a small door in the opposite side of
-the room; “an’ I’ll get your father out o’ the
-house.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why couldn’t the old fossil have stayed at
-home?” she said to herself angrily. “This promised
-to be such a romantic adventure, landlord,” she said
-aloud, poutingly. “And now ’tis all spoiled. Plague
-take it. Hurry, landlord, and get my—father away,
-for I must return to the ball before my absence is
-noticed.” She went into the room, her heart filled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-with apprehension, and closed the door, which John
-promptly locked.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank the Lord,” he muttered with a sigh of
-relief. “I breathe easier.” Going to the door leading
-to the hall, he listened for a moment. From
-below came the sound of clinking glasses. He closed
-the door quickly. The coast was clear now. His
-guidwife was waiting on the customer. He hurried
-across the room and was about to release his prisoner,
-when he heard the door of Robert’s chamber open.
-He turned quickly and found his lodger yawning in
-the doorway.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, John Anderson, my Jo John,” said he
-lazily, “what’s all the row here, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>John looked up guiltily. “Are ye up, laddie?”
-he stammered.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, John, I’m walkin’ round in my bed,” retorted
-Robert dryly. “Dinna ye think it’s time for
-me to be up?” he asked. “What’s the matter, mon?
-stand still, ye make me dizzy.”</p>
-
-<p>John was uneasily walking up and down, casting
-surreptitious glances at the door of the room which
-held the fair captive. “Oh, Johnny, my Jo John,”
-laughed Robert as he caught sight of the old man’s
-lugubrious countenance, “ye’ve been drinkin’ too
-much Usqubaugh.”</p>
-
-<p>“Too much what, Robbie?” he asked nervously.</p>
-
-<p>“Usqubaugh. Dinna ken what that is? It’s
-whisky, whisky, whisky.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I ken, laddie,” replied John, smiling grimly.
-“Ye needna’ repeat it; one whisky is enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not for me,” laughed Robert, slapping him on
-the shoulder. “Ye dinna ken my capacity.” The
-noise of a chair overturning in the next room arrested
-his attention.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?” he asked quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s n—nothing,” stammered John.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s somebody in that room,” exclaimed Rob,
-putting his ear to the crack in the door. “I hear
-her walking around.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, nay, Rob, it’s nobody,” protested John,
-pushing him away.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, oh, John Anderson, my Jo John!” cried
-Rob, pointing an accusing finger at the flushed,
-embarrassed face of the old man, “I’m on to
-ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“For shame, Robbie, an’ me wi’ an old wife below
-stairs,” he answered indignantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Faith, I’ll just find out who it is,” chuckled Rob,
-going toward the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, nay, lad!” remonstrated John, holding him
-back. “Wait, I’ll tell ye who it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, I knew it,” ejaculated Rob triumphantly.
-“Who is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s—it’s the Bailie,” faltered John.</p>
-
-<p>“The Bailie? what’s he doing in there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, he—he came to arrest ye for debt,” glibly
-lied the old man. “So I told him to wait in there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-till ye came hame, an’ noo he’s my prisoner; that’s a’,
-Robbie.”</p>
-
-<p>Rob grasped his hand gratefully. “Ye’re a true
-friend, John Anderson. Let me see, how much do I
-owe him?”</p>
-
-<p>John backed quickly away from him. “Nay, nay,
-laddie!” he said decidedly. “I havena anither
-penny.”</p>
-
-<p>“Neither have I,” laughed Rob ruefully. “So
-I’ll leave ye to get him out the best way ye can; he’s
-your prisoner, not mine. I’d like to pitch him down
-stairs. Come on, John, between us we ought to manage
-the old Shylock.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, nay, Robbie,” he retorted dryly. “Take
-my word for it, we’d hae our hands full.”</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, I’ll get into the rest of my clothes, for I’m
-due in society,” yawned Rob, going to his room.
-“Get rid of him, John; do what ye like with him;
-he’s no friend of mine,” and he went in and closed
-the door behind him.</p>
-
-<p>John softly followed him to the door and turned
-the key in the lock. “I’ll take nae chances,” he said
-grimly.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-evening,” said a sweet voice timidly. He
-turned around and with a gasp of astonishment
-beheld a young girl standing in the doorway. Suddenly
-he gave a great start. Could his eyes deceive
-him? Was that beautiful creature in the long white
-opera cloak, her golden locks piled in a gorgeous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-mass high upon her little head, really the barefooted
-lass he had seen only a few days ago, in her short
-skirt of plaid?</p>
-
-<p>“Mary Campbell, is it yoursel’, lass?” he finally
-gasped.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, ’tis really me,” laughed Mary happily.
-“I’m goin’ to the ball at Athol Castle with Mrs.
-Dunlop. I wanted Robbie to see me in my gown
-before I went, so Mrs. Dunlop left me here, while she
-drove over to pick up Mrs. McLehose; then she’ll
-return for me. Where is Robbie, John?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s in there dressing, Mary, but whist, I’ve
-something to tell ye first.”</p>
-
-<p>“About Robbie?” she asked anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, there’s the devil to pay here, Mary.” The
-old man’s face looked gloomy and perturbed.
-“There’s a—a lady in that room.”</p>
-
-<p>“A—a lady!” gasped Mary in amazement, looking
-at the door of Robbie’s chamber.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, Lady Nancy Gordon hersel’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then it’s true,” cried Mary, sinking into a
-chair, a great fear tugging at her heart. “It’s
-true, then, all the stories I hear, that Robert is be—bewitched
-wi’ her. I wouldna’ believe it before.
-Mrs. Dunlop says it isna’ true, that Robbie hasna’
-changed, but noo what can I think? Oh, laddie, oh,
-laddie!” and she sank back pale and trembling.</p>
-
-<p>“There, lassie, Robert doesna’ care a penny for
-that lass,” he said tenderly. “She is only a heartless<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-coquette, o’er fond of adventure,” and he laid
-his wrinkled hand caressingly on the golden head.
-“Noo look here, Mary, ye mustna’ expect Robert
-to be an angel all the time. He thinks only
-of ye, and he loves ye just as fondly, e’en if
-he does smile and make love to the ladies who
-throw themsel’s at his feet. He would lose his
-popularity, ye ken. ’Tis only an amusin’ pastime,
-lassie, an’ but gives him inspiration for his
-poetry, so dinna’ take it to heart. Ye ken Rob is
-highly sensitive, a most temperamental lad, who is
-very susceptible to the charms of the fair sex, but
-whist, Mary, he isn’t marrying any of them. There
-is only one lassie who will be his wife noo, and she’s
-nae far away from me this moment.” And he nodded
-his head sagely.</p>
-
-<p>“Why dinna’ they leave him alone?” sighed Mary
-disconsolately. “’Tis very unmaidenly in them to
-seek for his favor so openly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Noo, lassie,” said John seriously, “we maun
-get Lady Nancy out o’ this scrape, for the house
-is watched noo by her father, who suspects her presence
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>He walked up and down the room for a few
-moments plunged in deep thought. All at once his
-face brightened.</p>
-
-<p>“I have thought o’ a scheme, lassie,” he said suddenly.
-“Let Lady Nancy take this long cloak of
-yours; ’twill cover her o’er entirely; then she can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-walk boldly out past her father; he will think ’tis
-ye, Mary, and will na’ stop her. Ye’re both of a
-height,” and he regarded her with anxious eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Why should I help her?” said Mary, her heart
-still heavy and sore.</p>
-
-<p>“For Robbie’s sake,” pleaded John. “Her father
-will blame the lad for it all; perhaps he will shoot
-him, and he an innocent man. Why, lassie, he
-doesna’ even ken the lass is in the house.”</p>
-
-<p>“Doesna’ ken it?” repeated Mary, smiling incredulously.
-“Why, John, Robert isna’ blind. If
-she is in his room——”</p>
-
-<p>“But she isna’ in his room, Mary,” interrupted
-John. “She’s in there, scared to death,” and he
-pointed to the door opposite.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” comprehended Mary with a sigh of relief.
-“That’s different. I’ll help her noo, John,” and
-she jumped eagerly to her feet, her face flushed and
-earnest.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the girlie,” replied John heartily. Going
-to the door, he opened it and whispered to Lady
-Nancy to come out.</p>
-
-<p>“Lud, I thought you were never coming,” she
-flashed as she hastily entered the room. She stopped
-short upon seeing Mary.</p>
-
-<p>“This lady will help ye get away,” said John,
-looking angrily at the bogus Lady Nancy.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<img src="images/illus5.jpg" width="475" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Mary quickly divested herself of her mantle and threw it about
-the bare shoulders of the disdainful lady.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Where have I seen that face before?” Lady
-Glencairn asked herself nervously, looking closely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-into Mary’s flushed, innocent face, that reminded
-her so guiltily of Lady Nancy Gordon herself.</p>
-
-<p>Mary quickly divested herself of her mantle and
-threw it about the bare shoulders of the disdainful
-lady, who hastily drew the large hood over her elaborate
-court wig, entirely concealing it within its
-voluminous folds.</p>
-
-<p>With a quick careless word of thanks to Mary, she
-walked to the door, and calling to John, who was
-quietly turning the key in Robert’s door, to show
-her the way out, she swiftly left the room, and with
-wildly beating heart, passed her uncle at the outer
-door, and mingled her presence with the stream of
-gallant courtiers and laughing, gayly-dressed ladies
-that wended its boisterous way along the crowded
-thoroughfare.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XIV</h3>
-
-<p>When Mary found herself alone she sat down pensively
-in the big leather chair, feeling very sad and
-thoughtful. Of course she trusted Robert absolutely,
-but how could he really love such an ignorant little
-country girl like herself, when there were so many
-grand, rich, beautiful ladies surrounding him all the
-time and suing for his favors, even seeking him out
-in his own rooms? But her face brightened as she
-thought of what John had told her. “It isna’ his
-fault if the women lose their hearts over him,” he had
-said, and in her heart she felt she could not blame
-anyone for loving Robbie. She rose and softly approached
-his door. Then she paused. No, she would
-wait till he came and found her himself. But she did
-wish he would hurry and finish dressing before Mrs.
-Dunlop came back. She strolled aimlessly about the
-room looking with listless eyes at the collections of
-souvenirs and bric-a-brac which filled the mantels and
-covered the tables. She noted with wonder the profusion
-of ladies’ gloves, ’kerchief, scarfs, a slipper or
-two and a motley collection of other articles littering
-the table. She picked up a beautiful pink mask and
-idly turned it over; on the back she read, “Dropped
-by Lady Nancy at the Charity Ball given in honor
-of the Prince of Wales.” She put it down, her lips<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-trembling. He must prize it very highly, she
-thought with a pang of jealousy; but as she read
-the various inscriptions on the back of a number of
-the others, she smiled and told herself what a silly she
-was. Of course he couldn’t be in love with all the
-owners of those many favors. She picked up the
-mask again and held it before her eyes. How funny
-to cover one’s face in such a manner, she thought.
-She fastened the elastic behind her ear, and with
-a woman’s curiosity wondered how she looked
-in it. She quickly spied the large cheval mirror
-in the cabinet. “How funny I do look,” she
-said to herself with a little amused laugh, as
-she caught sight of her reflection. “Nobody would
-ever know me.” As she drew closer to the mirror
-in pleased wonder her dancing eyes slowly wandered
-from the top of the glittering coil of her
-golden hair, dwelt for an instant in blushing
-modesty on the gleaming, bare shoulders, and rested
-in loving, blissful content on her simple trailing robe
-of ivory-tinted embroidered silk. She looked angelically
-lovely as she stood there innocently admiring
-her winsome reflection.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that really the Highland Mary who used to
-wander barefooted through the glens and vales, the
-simple dairymaid who made butter for Colonel
-Montgomery?” she asked herself dreamily. “Am
-I awake, I wonder? How Souter Johnny would
-open his eyes if he could only see me noo in this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-beautiful gown, carrying a fan an’ wi’ my hair done
-up high.” She laughed gleefully but softly at the
-thought. “Wouldna’ they be proud to see me such a
-grand lady.” She walked stiffly across the room
-with all the dignity she could command, her
-chin held high and taking quick little pleased
-glances over her shoulder at her reflection. It was
-Mary’s first long gown, and it was not to be wondered
-at, when in turning quickly around a chair she
-easily became entangled in her train, and with a little
-frightened gasp she suddenly found herself on her
-knees endeavoring to extricate her feet from the
-clinging mass of silk and linen in which they were
-enmeshed. Finally she succeeded in regaining her
-feet, but not until she had with extreme care seated
-herself did she breathe a sigh of relief. She eyed her
-train ruefully. “If I should fall doon before all
-the great people at the ball, I should be so ashamed,”
-she said, sighing dismally. “They would all laugh
-at me. But Robert says I am nicer than anyone in
-all the world.” She reveled in that thought an instant,
-then her face lengthened. “But I ken there
-is a difference, a great difference; I am only a simple
-country lass without any learnin’ whatever, while
-Lady Nancy is——” she rose suddenly as a thought
-occurred to her, her hands clasped tightly together.
-“Suppose he should grow ashamed of his ignorant
-little country wife,” she whispered with trembling
-lips; “it would break my heart in twain.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>She held out her hands passionately toward her
-unseen lover. “Ye willna’ ever regret makin’ me
-your wife, will ye dear?” she whispered imploringly.
-“Ye willna’ be sorry in years to come.” Quickly
-her loving, trustful faith reasserted itself. “Nay,
-nay, my heart tells me ye willna’, so I’ll be foolish
-nae more. I’ll tell him what a silly lass I’ve been an’
-how he’ll laugh at my doubting fears.” She took a
-step toward his door, when it opened and Robert came
-quickly into the room, dressed for the ball, looking
-very handsome in his plain and unpretending dress of
-blue homespun, for he still retained the same simplicity
-of manner and appearance that he brought with
-him from the country. He stopped in amazement
-as he came face to face with his unexpected visitor.</p>
-
-<p>Mary with a thrill of joy at the sight of her lover
-waited eagerly for the words of praise which she
-knew her appearance would elicit, and for which she
-hungered, but as he stood looking at her so calmly,
-so coldly, her joy turned to wonder and fear. What
-was the matter? Didn’t she please him? With
-a little gasp she put her hand nervously to her
-face. As it came in contact with the mask, which
-she had forgotten to remove, her heart gave a quick
-bound of relief. Of course! He didn’t know her.
-“He doesna’ ken who I am at all,” she thought
-gleefully.</p>
-
-<p>As his eyes rested upon the pink mask, Robert<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-gave a sudden start, then glanced quickly at the
-table. No, it wasn’t there. So then this was Lady
-Nancy herself. He recognized her hair, her figure,
-and above all the mask. “So my haughty lady
-thinks it safer to play wi’ fire incognito, eh?”
-he thought grimly. “Weel, I’ll teach ye a lesson,
-my fine lady; ye need one badly.” Then aloud, “I’m
-indeed honored, madam, by your presence here to-night,”
-he said, bowing low before her.</p>
-
-<p>Mary courtesied deeply. Oh, it was so exciting to
-be talking with her Robbie, and how surprised he
-would be when she unmasked.</p>
-
-<p>“Haven’t ye a word to say to me, fair lady?”
-continued Robert softly, as she stood silently before
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll sure ken my voice,” she thought in trepidation;
-“if I could only talk like a lady.” She wondered
-if she could imitate the haughty tones of Lady
-Nancy Gordon herself. She’d try. She seated herself
-languidly. “Then you don’t recognize me?”
-she asked, disguising her lyric voice, as near as possible,
-in the lazy drawl of Lady Glencairn’s voice.</p>
-
-<p>He started and looked at her intently. It didn’t
-sound like Lady Nancy at all, but who else could
-she be? he thought blankly. “Your voice sounds
-like—but nae, I maun be mistaken,” he said doubtfully.
-“Nay, madam, I do not recognize you. Will
-you not remove——”</p>
-
-<p>“What, my face?” laughed Mary. She had marvelously<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-lost all trace of her country intonation.
-“Oh, nay, sir! I’m too much attached to it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well ye might be, fair lady!” replied Robert,
-“but why do ye hide your beauty so jealously?”
-He reached out his hand to lift the mask from her
-face, but, with a rippling laugh, she eluded him, and
-from behind the high-backed settle made reply.</p>
-
-<p>“Be not impatient, Mr. Burns,” she said saucily;
-“you shall see my face in good time, I warrant ye!”
-It must be Lady Nancy after all, he told himself.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis a promise of paradise, madam!” he cried
-fervently, entering into the spirit of adventure.</p>
-
-<p>Mary looked at him reproachfully. Did he think
-she was really Lady Gordon? she wondered. The
-thought gave her pause. Well, she would find out
-how much he really cared for her, how much truth
-there was in the gossip she had heard. “Rumor
-sayeth, Mr. Burns, that ye are in love with the beautiful
-Lady Nancy Gordon; is that so?” she asked,
-fanning herself languorously.</p>
-
-<p>He smiled quizzically into her face. “Rumor hath
-many tongues, fair lady, and most of them lying ones.
-The lady doesna’ suit my taste; even her money
-couldna’ tempt me, an’ I need the money badly.
-That will take her conceit down a peg I’ll warrant,”
-he thought grimly.</p>
-
-<p>“But she is very beautiful, I hear,” said Mary,
-filled with delight at his answer.</p>
-
-<p>“That I grant ye. Mistress Nancy is most<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-adept in the use of the hare’s foot an’ of the paint
-box. I’ll wager she can teach even our incomparable
-actress, Mrs. Siddons, a few tricks in the art of
-makeup. Oh, but ye should see the lady in the early
-morning. ’Fore heaven, she resembles damaged
-goods!” Now would come the explosion of wounded
-pride and outraged dignity, he thought calmly, but
-his amazement was unbounded when the seeming
-Lady Nancy jumped up and down, ecstatically clapping
-her hands in a very undignified manner. “Ye
-seem o’er pleased at my remark,” he exclaimed with
-a puzzled frown.</p>
-
-<p>“I am, I am pleased!” she cried joyfully.</p>
-
-<p>“What?” he stammered taken aback—“why, I—I
-thought ye were——” He stopped, flushed and
-embarrassed.</p>
-
-<p>“Were Lady Nancy Gordon!” she finished. “O
-Lud, if I were, I wouldn’t feel complimented at all the
-flattering things I’ve heard!” and she went off in
-a peal of merry laughter.</p>
-
-<p>“Who are ye then, who comes to my chamber at
-night?” he asked curtly, chagrined at his mistake.
-She shook her head and laughed softly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye shall know in good time,” she replied coquettishly.
-“I—I must make certain that ye dinna’ love—me.”
-She smiled, but her heart was beating wildly.</p>
-
-<p>“I love only one maiden, an’ I make her my wife
-within a week,” he answered with dignity.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ ye’ve no regrets for Lady Nancy, nor for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-Mrs. McLehose, nor—nor any o’ the grand ladies
-ye’ll be givin’ up to marry the little country
-maiden?” she asked softly, forgetting in her eagerness
-her lapse into her natural speech.</p>
-
-<p>“None, my lady,” he replied firmly. “Noo, lets call
-a truce to this masquerade! I am at a loss to understand
-your errand here to-night, but do not press
-ye for an explanation, and as I am due at the Duke
-of Athol’s, I must bid ye good-night.” He bowed
-coldly, and started to leave her.</p>
-
-<p>But with a cry of joy, which thrilled him to the
-heart, she drew near to him with outstretched arms.
-“Robbie, lad, canna’ ye guess who I am?” she
-cried. “I’m nae a grand lady at all, I’m only your
-Highland Mary.” With a quick movement, she tore
-off the mask from her flushed and radiant face and
-threw it far from her.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary, is it ye?” he gasped, almost speechless
-with surprise. He could scarcely believe his senses.
-This radiantly beautiful lady his Highland Mary?
-was such a metamorphosis possible?</p>
-
-<p>She made him a little courtesy. “Aye, ’tis
-Mary!” she answered, her heart beating fast with
-pleasure. Quickly she told him how she had come,
-why she had come, and how long she had waited,
-just to hear his words of approval. “Do I please
-ye, laddie?” she asked shyly.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment he could not speak. Her wonderful
-perfection of beauty startled him. He drew her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-closely into his arms, kissing her with almost
-pathetic tenderness. “Mary, my love, my sweet
-lass!” and his voice trembled. “Pleased! Good
-Heavens, what little words those are to express my
-feelings. I can tell ye how you look, for nothing can
-ever make ye vain! Ye’re the most beautiful lassie
-I’ve ever seen! Ah, but I’m proud of ye this night.
-Ye’re fit to wear a coronet, Mary lass! I ken there
-will not be a grand lady at the ball to-night who
-will look half sae bonnie, nor hae such sweet, dainty
-manners, as my country sweetheart.” He held her
-off at arm’s length and glanced with affectionate
-adoration, from the fair, golden-crowned head down
-to the point of the small pearl-embroidered slipper
-that peeped beneath the edge of the rich, sheeny
-white robe.</p>
-
-<p>“It seems so strange to be here in Edinburgh,
-decked out in all this finery,” she murmured dreamily,
-“and on my way to a real ball. Is it really me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, ’tis ye, Mary, I’ll swear to that!” he cried
-heartily, kissing the sweet, ingenuous face raised to
-his so wistfully. She blushed with pleasure, and
-bashfully turned her head away. “Ye dinna’ think
-I look awkward, do ye laddie?” she inquired in a low,
-timid voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, ye’re grace itself, sweetheart!” he replied
-reassuringly, raising her chin till her drooping eyes
-met his.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ ye wouldna ken I was only a dairymaid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-if it werena for my speech, would ye?” she interrogated,
-with pathetic hopefulness. Her concerned,
-anxious little face and wistful manner touched him
-deeply.</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldna have ye changed for all the world,
-Mary!” he told her tenderly, pressing his lips to the
-one little curl which hung unconfined over her snowy
-shoulder. “Be your own pure, sweet self always,
-for ye’re the fairest of all God’s creatures to me
-noo.”</p>
-
-<p>She gave a deep sigh of absolute content, and
-leaned against him silently for a moment. Then she
-looked up at him brightly. “This fine dress makes
-me quite a grand lady, doesna’ it?” she prattled
-innocently.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye! every inch a queen!” and he made her a
-deep bow.</p>
-
-<p>“But it isna mine, Robbie,” she whispered confidentially.
-“I borrowed it for the night only, like
-Cinderella in the fairy book, to make my début into
-fashionable society,” and she laughed gleefully, like
-a little child telling a wonderful secret. “It’s Mrs.
-Dunlop’s wedding gown, Robbie; isna it just
-sweet?” She passed her hand gently over the folds
-of the silk and there was awe and reverence in the
-touch. “Oh, how I love to smooth it, ’tis so soft an’
-rich an’ glossy; it isna’ wrong to love the beautiful
-things, is it, laddie?” she asked earnestly.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay,” replied Robert, smiling tenderly at her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-naïveté. “Love the pretty things all ye like, dearie,
-for hereafter ye shall have the finest gowns in town.
-Ye shall select whatsoever your fancy pleases—dresses,
-bonnets, mits, boots,” and he enumerated
-on his fingers all the articles he could remember so
-dear to a woman’s heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall I really, really?” she gasped as he
-finished, looking at him with wondering eyes. “I
-hae never bought a pretty thing in a’ my life, ye ken,
-an’ oh, won’t it be just sweet? We’ll go to the shops
-to-morrow, an’ Mrs. Dunlop will help me select my—my
-wedding gown.” She held her head away bashfully,
-blushing pink before the sudden fire that
-gleamed in the dark eyes bent on her so devotedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Your wedding gown?” he repeated, with dreamy
-softness. “Let it be silk, Mary, white, soft and
-shimmering, to float around ye like a cloud of sunshine.
-An’ ye must have a bridal veil too, lassie, one
-sae fine an’ transparent that it will cover ye o’er like
-the morning mist.”</p>
-
-<p>“I would be afraid to buy so much,” she replied
-gravely. “’Twould be too costly, an’ ye canna’
-afford to waste sae much money to deck me out like
-a lady,” and she shook her head in firm disapproval.</p>
-
-<p>He laughed heartily at her sober face and air of
-housewifely prudence. “My dear,” he whimsically
-told her, “dinna’ ye mind the cost. A weddin’
-doesna’ often happen in one’s lifetime, sae we’ll make
-it a grand one this time.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Ye’ll spoil me, Robbie,” she answered, smiling
-happily.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, ye’re too sweet and lovely to be spoiled.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, ye ken,” she replied demurely, “sweet
-things spoil the quickest.”</p>
-
-<p>Before he could reply, the rattle of a carriage
-over the pavement sounded loudly through the
-room. As it stopped at the door, Mary gave a little
-sigh of regret. “It’s Mrs. Dunlop, returning for
-me at last,” she said. She secretly hoped the sharp
-old eyes would not miss the cloak.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, like the good fairy godmother,” smiled
-Robert, as he led her out of the room and down the
-stairs.</p>
-
-<p>“I feel as if I were in a dream,” she murmured
-softly, picking up her train, and lovingly holding it
-over her arm, as she walked daintily across the sidewalk
-to the waiting carriage. “If I am, laddie,”
-she continued earnestly, “I hope I may never awake
-from it; I want to dream on forever.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XV</h3>
-
-<p>When Lady Glencairn, after her arrival at the Duke
-of Athol’s, found that Robert had not come—indeed
-she and Lord Glencairn and Sir William Creech, her
-uncle, had been the first to arrive—she decided recklessly
-to visit him at his chambers, so she had easily
-stolen away unnoticed by all save one, on her indiscreet
-journey. Sir William had seen her as she
-slipped guiltily out through the conservatory window
-and had followed her with growing suspicions
-to the door of Robert’s chamber, where he waited in
-impotent wrath for her to reappear, after having
-questioned the guidwife within the inn. And he
-was not deceived when she came out, wrapped in the
-disguising cloak and mask. He followed her like a
-grim servitor till she reached the castle, and as she
-was noiselessly reëntering by the conservatory window,
-he called to her to wait. With a startled gasp
-she turned, and as her eyes rested on her uncle’s
-accusing face, she gave a little laugh, half scornful,
-half defiant, and leisurely throwing off her cloak and
-mask, stood waiting for him to speak.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye foolish woman!” he told her angrily.
-“How could ye be so imprudent, reckless mad, as to
-visit a man’s chamber at night?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t preach to me, uncle,” she answered sullenly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-“No one knows of my being there, not even
-Mr. Burns himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what were ye thinkin’ of to do such a reprehensible
-act?” he demanded sternly. She turned on
-him suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>“Because I love him!” she exclaimed passionately,
-casting prudence to the winds. “I went there to tell
-him of my love, to give myself to him, to beg him to
-take me away from here, to take me anywhere, only
-to let me be near him, to stay with him. But I was
-forced to come away without seeing him, thanks to
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment he regarded the reckless woman in
-silence, amazement, shame, and anger struggling for
-the mastery.</p>
-
-<p>“Alice, of what are you thinking?” he ejaculated
-finally, catching her roughly by the arm. “You
-must control yourself. I speak for your own good.
-Think no more of this idle poet, for only shame,
-ruin and unhappiness can come to ye and your husband,
-unless ye give up this unholy passion.”</p>
-
-<p>She laughed scornfully. “My husband!” she
-cried bitterly. “Don’t remind me of that fossil!
-You, and the rest of my family, are to blame for my
-being fettered, tied to a man I do not love. If it
-were not for that, I could find the happiness I
-crave.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sh! be calm!” he continued, looking anxiously
-around. “You may be overheard. Foolish woman!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-do you forget that Robert Burns, as well as yourself,
-is married.”</p>
-
-<p>“He is not!” she flashed impetuously. “That
-was no legal tie. Some foolish chit of a country lass
-flung herself at him, with the usual result. Any
-man would have done as he did, but unlike most men,
-he, out of pity and from a high sense of honor, married
-her; but it was an irregular marriage, which
-was speedily annulled by the girl’s father. He is
-free now, free as ever he was. The girl has given
-him up, poor fool. I only am the shackled one, a
-prisoner for life, unless——” An eager light flashed
-in her deepened eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Unless Robert Burns elopes with ye!” he finished
-sarcastically. “I warn ye, Alice, not to play with
-edged tools;’tis o’er dangerous. Be more careful
-or others will suspect what I already know.” She
-smiled disdainfully and shrugged her shapely shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“Do not force me to open your husband’s eyes!”
-he retorted, angered by her irritating indifference.
-She looked at him, her heart filled with sudden fury.
-How she would like to hit him in the face with her
-fan, how she hated him and his interference, his
-unwelcome advice. “Already,” he continued irritably,
-“you have given that scandalmonger, Eppy
-McKay, cause to suspect your too warm and ardent
-affection for Mr. Burns, by openly showing jealousy
-of Lady Nancy Gordon.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I jealous of Nancy Gordon?” she repeated, with
-airy scorn, walking toward the door of the conservatory.
-“Huh, not I, uncle; I am not so unconscious
-of my own charms,” and she drew her magnificent
-figure up to its full height, then smiled insolently into
-his perturbed and nervous face. “I thank you for
-all your advice,” she murmured sweetly as they traversed
-the long hall, “but remember, hereafter, that
-I mean to steer my own canoe, whether it leads me
-into safe waters or through the rapids.” And with
-a radiant smile upon her sensuous lips she entered
-the drawing-room, leaning affectionately upon the
-arm of her outraged but speechless relative. Quietly
-she took her place by her waiting husband’s side, her
-dark eyes full of a bewitching and dangerous softness,
-for her thoughts were on the one guest whose
-very name had the power to move her so completely.</p>
-
-<p>Never had she appeared so dazzlingly beautiful, as
-she stood there meeting her friends and acquaintances
-with a deep ceremonious courtesy for the distinguished
-ones, a smile and a nod for her intimates,
-and an air of high-bred insolence and extreme self-satisfaction
-pervading her whole appearance.</p>
-
-<p>No one was ever bored at the Duchess of Athol’s
-brilliant “at homes.” One always felt sure of
-meeting at least three or four justly celebrated
-personages under her hospitable roof. And to-night
-society was a-gog, for it was to welcome the farmer-poet,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-Robert Burns, who had returned from his
-triumphant tour through the Highlands. Soon the
-capacious drawing-rooms were crowded. There was
-the rustle of silk and satin, rare and delicate perfumes
-shaken out of lace kerchiefs, while the heavy
-scent of the many bouquets oppressed the warm air
-to the point of suffocation. There was an interminably
-monotonous murmur of voices, only broken at
-rare intervals by a ripple of mild laughter. Over
-by the large windows that overlooked the terrace
-stood a group of people gazing earnestly out beyond
-the gardens at some object, which had arrested their
-attention, with various degrees of interest.</p>
-
-<p>“Whatever is happening below on Princes
-Street?” suddenly inquired one of the ladies, nervously
-clutching the arm of the man nearest her.
-Eppy McKay was an eccentric maiden lady of questionable
-age and taste. Of more than ordinary
-height naturally, she looked a giantess in her powdered
-wig, which towered fully a foot in the air, and
-which was decorated profusely with waving plumes,
-rosettes and jewels. Her lowcut gown of crimson
-satin, over a petticoat of quilted green silk, was cut
-extremely low, revealing a vision of skin and bones,
-powdered to a ghastly whiteness. Her affectations,
-her simperings, and her poses accorded society much
-amusement, of which fact she was blissfully unconscious.</p>
-
-<p>“There is a crowd gathered around a carriage,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-but farther than that I cannot make out,” replied
-Mr. Mackenzie, the famous author and publisher.</p>
-
-<p>A prolonged shout from below increased the restlessness
-of the timid Eppy. “Oh, dear!” she gasped.
-“If it should be an uprising of the Jacobites,” and
-she looked fearfully into the amused faces of her
-companions.</p>
-
-<p>With a disgusted grunt, Sir William Creech shook
-his arm free from her clawlike clutch. “Nonsense,
-woman, ye’re daft!” he answered impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, upon my word!” she murmured in injured
-surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“The mob is increasing—’tis coming nearer!”
-exclaimed Mr. Mackenzie, stepping out upon the
-wide balcony.</p>
-
-<p>“So it is,” affirmed Eppy, retreating behind the
-heavy curtains. “Lady Glencairn!” she called as
-her ladyship approached the window. “Listen to
-those murmurs! Oh, dear! it makes me so nervous.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glencairn stepped out upon the balcony,
-followed by the timid Eppy, and stood contemplating
-the scene in the brightly lighted street below
-them.</p>
-
-<p>“It sounds not ominous,” she said quietly, after a
-moment. “Lud, what a throng! They have unhitched
-the horses from a carriage, and are themselves
-drawing it hither.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is in the carriage, can you see?” eagerly
-asked Eppy, straining her eyes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“A gentleman, who is evidently addressing the
-people,” answered Lady Glencairn slowly. She
-gazed intently at the figure silhouetted against the
-light of the street lamps. Surely she knew that
-form. At that moment he turned, and with a flush
-of surprise, a thrill of joy, she suddenly recognized
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my life,’tis Robert, Robert Burns!” she
-cried excitedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, I recognize him now,” said Mr. Mackenzie.</p>
-
-<p>“And you say they are drawing him hither?” inquired
-Sir William incredulously, turning to his
-niece.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, and why not?” she replied brightly, turning
-to the others. “They should carry him on their
-shoulders, for he deserves all homage.”</p>
-
-<p>“And ’tis said the Scots are not demonstrative,”
-ejaculated Mr. Mackenzie, as another burst of applause
-and cheers, followed by laughter, reached their
-ears.</p>
-
-<p>“You hear how demonstrative they can be when
-occasion demands enthusiasm,” replied Lady Glencairn
-stanchly, “when genius knocks at the door of
-their hearts. See how Edinburgh has utterly lost
-control of its conservative old self, and all over the
-poetic genius of Robert Burns.”</p>
-
-<p>“True, he has indeed stirred the hardest-hearted
-Scot by his fascinating poetry,” mused Mr. Mackenzie
-admiringly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“How I shall love him,” sighed Eppy dreamily.
-“In sooth I do now,” and she simpered and dropped
-her eyes like a love-sick school girl.</p>
-
-<p>“And she has never met the man yet!” cried Sir
-William in amazement. “The woman’s daft,” he
-muttered, turning away.</p>
-
-<p>“I do wish he would come,” sighed Eppy. “I
-want to tell him how much I admire him and his
-poetry. Oh, I have the dearest little speech, that
-Sibella, my sister, composed, all prepared to say when
-I am presented to him.” She rolled her eyes up ecstatically.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall also recite one of his odes to him,” she
-continued, in the tone of one who is about to confer
-a great favor. “I know ’twill please him
-greatly,” and she fanned herself languidly.</p>
-
-<p>“What have you selected?” inquired Lady Glencairn,
-laughing openly. The woman’s vanity amused
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“Such a sweet conceit,” simpered Eppy.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it ‘Tam O’Shanter’s Tale’?” inquired Mr.
-Mackenzie, interestedly.</p>
-
-<p>“No, oh, no!” she replied, shaking her head.
-“’Tis monstrous long to recite.”</p>
-
-<p>“An ode to a calf,” said Sir William grimly,
-“would be more appropriate.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps ’tis the tale of ‘The Twa Dogs,’” hazarded
-Lady Glencairn. Eppy laughed gleefully and
-shook her head.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Tell us the name, madam; we’re no children!”
-roared Sir William, glaring at her like an angry
-bull.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re so gruff,” pouted Eppy reproachfully.
-“Do you all give it up?” They nodded. “Well,
-then, don’t be shocked,” and she shook her finger at
-them coquettishly; then leaning forward she whispered
-loudly, “’Tis entitled ‘To a Louse.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Heaven, preserve us!” ejaculated Mr. Mackenzie,
-laughing heartily.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s touched here!” cried Sir William commiseratingly,
-putting his finger to his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you choose that?” gasped Lady Glencairn,
-in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“Because ’tis a beautiful conceit,” answered Eppy
-soulfully. “I protest, I mean to recite it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I vow ’tis a most singular selection.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see why,” snapped Eppy spitefully.
-“’Twas written round a fact.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really, I hadn’t heard of that,” answered her
-ladyship, coolly turning away.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder at that,” cooed Eppy innocently,
-although a little malicious twinkle appeared in her
-eyes. “You of all people should know everything
-pertaining to Mr. Burns and his verses.” Lady
-Glencairn stiffened suddenly, and cast a quick look
-at the stern face of her uncle.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean by that?” inquired Sir
-William aggressively, turning to Eppy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, nothing, nothing!” she hastily replied,
-frightened by what she had said.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything concerning Mr. Burns, my husband’s
-protégé, and my friend, my dear friend, I
-may call him, does interest me mightily, Miss McKay.
-Pray tell me the story connected with the
-poem, if you care to!” and Lady Glencairn turned
-her glittering eyes, which were narrowed dangerously,
-upon the face of the crestfallen Eppy.</p>
-
-<p>Sir William gave a snort of anger. “Ye couldn’t
-stop her; she is dying to tell all she knows!” he said
-crustily.</p>
-
-<p>Eppy cleared her throat vigorously. “Well, it
-was this way,” she began confidentially. “Mr.
-Burns was sitting behind a lady in Kirk, one Sabbath,
-who had on a new bonnet, of which she seemed
-most proud. As he was admiring its beauty, his
-keen eyes detected this horrid little animal crawling
-over the gauze and lace.”</p>
-
-<p>“How fascinating,” murmured Mr. Mackenzie in
-mocking rapture.</p>
-
-<p>“And it immediately inspired his pen to write the
-verses which have made such a sensation in town,”
-concluded Eppy, looking eagerly at her listeners for
-some look or word of approval.</p>
-
-<p>“What a—a creepy story,” said Lady Glencairn,
-with a little shiver of repulsion.</p>
-
-<p>She turned to her quickly. “’Tis said, my dear,
-and I ask you not to repeat it, for I promised not to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-tell, that the lady in question was Agnes McLehose,
-the beautiful grass widow, who is such an ardent admirer
-of Mr. Burns, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really!” murmured Lady Glencairn coldly.</p>
-
-<p>“And the airs she put on!” cried Eppy, with
-lofty indignation. “Why, do you know——”</p>
-
-<p>But Lady Glencairn interrupted her sharply. “I
-do not care to speak of Agnes McLehose,” she retorted
-frigidly, “and I never indulge in scandal,
-especially before my friends, so let us not disgust
-them with any woman’s gossip.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are quite right,” affirmed Eppy affably.
-“I do not believe in it myself; it always comes back
-to one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who can understand a woman?” grunted Sir
-William aloud.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s most easy to understand men,” retorted
-Eppy quickly.</p>
-
-<p>With a sigh of impatience, Lady Glencairn took
-Mr. Mackenzie’s arm and silently they reëntered the
-drawing-room. They wended their way through the
-groups of people standing about, for the largest and
-most brilliant portion of the assemblage were standing,
-the sofas, ottomans, and chairs being occupied
-by the puffy old dowagers, who were entertaining
-each other with choice bits of scandal; and, finally,
-came to a standstill beside the grand piano. For a
-moment they remained quiet, listening to the glorious
-voice of Madame Urbani, who from the great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-drawing-room above was trilling forth an aria from
-grand opera. From her position Lady Glencairn
-commanded a good view of the large arch through
-which the guests entered the drawing-rooms. Anxiously
-she watched for the handsome face and
-curly black hair of the poet above the crowd that
-surrounded her. “Why does he not come? what can
-be detaining him?” she asked herself for the hundredth
-time. Perhaps he was with Lady Nancy
-Gordon, she thought jealously, looking about the vast
-room. She was sure she had not yet been announced.
-It looked very suspicious that neither she, nor Robert,
-had arrived. And her heart was consumed with
-bitter jealousy, although her smiling face bore no
-traces of the raging fire within. How she hated that
-doll-faced beauty for being single and free! How
-she would delight in trampling her in the dust, she
-thought cruelly. Nearly a month had elapsed since
-Robert left Edinburgh, since she had seen him. A
-month filled with vain longing and unrest. And since
-his return, she could scarcely restrain her intense
-longing to see him. Day after day she would drive
-slowly past his lodgings, hoping to catch a glimpse
-of his glowing, dark face, which had such power to
-thrill her to the very depths of her intense and
-passionate nature. That longing had taken possession
-of her to-night, when she had slipped out and
-stolen away to his rooms, and she would have willingly
-given her body and soul to him, for the asking;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-but her good angel had protected her from her
-own indiscretion, and saved her unsuspecting victim
-from a great remorse. The gurgling voice of Eppy
-McKay broke in abruptly on her disturbing revery.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear, I wish Mr. Burns would come,” she
-said plaintively.</p>
-
-<p>“He is usually very punctual,” answered Lady
-Glencairn, opening her large fan of ostrich plumes
-and fanning herself indolently.</p>
-
-<p>“Genius is never governed by any rules of punctuality
-or propriety,” observed Mr. Mackenzie.</p>
-
-<p>“Then he is exempt,” replied her ladyship, smiling
-brightly. “Ah! you truant. Where have you
-been?” she demanded of her husband, who joined
-them at that moment.</p>
-
-<p>“Incidentally getting a breath of fresh air, my
-dear,” replied Lord Glencairn, smiling lovingly into
-his wife’s face. “But in reality, I was listening to
-the ovation which Robert was receiving as he drove
-through Princes Street.” Her eyes suddenly brightened.</p>
-
-<p>“How I wish I could have heard his speech to the
-masses,” she cried enthusiastically. “For I must
-confess, James, that no man’s conversation ever
-carried me off my feet so completely as that of Robert
-Burns.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, my lady!” he retorted in mock alarm.
-“Then it behooves me to keep my eye on you hereafter.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>She joined in the laugh that followed, then remarked
-audaciously, “But, I vow, a little flirtation
-is really most exhilarating now and then.” She
-flashed her brilliant eyes mockingly upon the horror-struck
-countenance of Eppy McKay.</p>
-
-<p>“How indiscreet!” exclaimed Eppy in amazement,
-“and you are a married woman, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis perfectly shocking, isn’t it?” mimicked her
-ladyship insolently.</p>
-
-<p>Eppy pursed her thin lips, while a little spot of
-color dyed her parchment-like cheeks. “Well, I do
-not approve of married women flirting,” she replied
-primly, and as she caught the look of amusement
-which passed between her ladyship and Mr. Mackenzie,
-she added sourly, “Especially in public.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Then you do approve of it in private,”
-replied her ladyship sweetly, innocently opening her
-eyes to their widest.</p>
-
-<p>Eppy gave a gasp of horror. “Mercy, no!” she
-cried indignantly, “I should say not.” And she
-tossed her head in virtuous anger.</p>
-
-<p>“Robert Burns!” announced the footman at this
-juncture.</p>
-
-<p>There was a sudden hush, a movement of excitement,
-and the group around the door fell back, and
-everybody made way for the most important guest
-of the evening, who for the last hour had been the all-absorbing
-topic of conversation. Lady Glencairn
-started violently, as she heard the name announced.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-For a brief instant she closed her eyes, feeling faint,
-and trembling in an ecstasy of joy. He was here
-at last! Her heart throbbed so violently it stifled
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“How noble he looks!” exclaimed Eppy in an
-awestruck tone, as she watched the tall figure in a
-polite but determined manner coolly elbowing a passage
-among the heaving bare shoulders, fat arms,
-the long trains, and bulging bustles and paniers
-that seriously obstructed his way. “And to think
-that man is but a lowly-bred peasant,” observed Mr.
-Mackenzie, as he watched him bending low over the
-hand of their hostess.</p>
-
-<p>“A man’s a man, for all that!” murmured her
-ladyship, worshipful pride in her voice and in her
-dazzling eyes, as she watched him approach, bowing
-right and left. She drew herself up with the conscious
-air of a beauty who knows she is nearly perfect,
-and with a smile she extended her jeweled hand.
-“I’m so glad to see you here to-night,” she says
-sweetly, although a glance like fire seen through
-smoke leaps from beneath her silky eyelashes, but
-Robert saw it not; he was bending low over her fair
-hand. “Welcome back to Edinburgh!” she continued,
-pressing his hand warmly.</p>
-
-<p>A bright smile lighted up his dark visage.
-“Thank ye,” he returned simply. Then he turned
-to Lord Glencairn with outstretched hand. “My
-lord!” he said warmly, “how glad, how delighted,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-I am to again press the hand of my patron, my
-friend.”</p>
-
-<p>“The pleasure is mutual, my lad!” he replied. A
-kindly smile lighted up his noble face, as he perceived
-the ruddy glow of health in the full cheeks,
-the flashing eyes of the young poet. “Ah, you return
-to us looking bonnier than ever,” he continued.
-“Your triumphant tour through the north with
-its Highland chieftains and lords at your feet, has
-not turned your head after all.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert laughed good-naturedly. “Not a bit of
-it,” he replied frankly.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me present Mr. Henry Mackenzie,” introduced
-Lady Glencairn at this juncture.</p>
-
-<p>Robert advanced eagerly to meet him, his hand
-extended, his eyes flashing with delight. “The
-author of the ‘Man of Feeling,’ the first book I
-loved and admired years ago!” he exclaimed in direct
-frankness. “It is an unexpected pleasure, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“The pleasure is mutual,” replied Mr. Mackenzie,
-flushing at the compliment. “We witnessed
-your triumphant progress up Princes Street, and
-were delighted at the ovation you received.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert laughed happily. “Was it not wonderful?”
-he answered in his sonorous voice, which had
-such a thrilling richness in it. “I could scarcely
-realize it was the once poor, humble Robbie Burns
-they were cheering. I am indeed happy; my
-popularity has not begun to wane yet.” He regarded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-the great publisher with kindling eyes.
-“That I am so favorably known, is due to your
-kindly articles in your inestimable paper, <i>The
-Lounger</i>, and your unbiased criticism of my poems,
-which brought me before the public, and I thank you
-most heartily for that generous criticism which was
-so judicious withal.” A little murmur of approval
-from his listeners greeted his last words.</p>
-
-<p>“’Twas a pleasure, believe me, Mr. Burns,” he
-answered quietly, “to lend a helping hand to assist
-a struggling genius.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank ye,” said Robert, simply.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe you have never met our esteemed
-contemporary, Mr. Sterne, author of ‘Tristam
-Shandy,’” observed Mr. Mackenzie, and he quickly
-made the introduction.</p>
-
-<p>Robert turned quickly to the grave and dignified
-scholar. “Little did I ever dream,” he said fervently,
-“that I would one day meet and converse with
-my two favorite authors.”</p>
-
-<p>A smile of gratified vanity overspread the rugged
-features of the scholar. “I am proud indeed,” he
-observed pompously, “if my book has found favor in
-your eyes, Mr. Burns.” And soon they had become
-engaged in an animated conversation, much to the
-chagrin of one of his admirers, who had been waiting
-patiently to be introduced. She had been mentally
-rehearsing her little speech for some time, and was
-now waiting for the opportunity to deliver it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“No one would ever take him for a farmer,” she
-thought in open-mouthed, worshipful adoration.</p>
-
-<p>“He looks quite like a gentleman,” said a haughty
-voice near her, in a tone of great surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Huh! he makes love to every woman he meets!”
-replied Sir William spitefully.</p>
-
-<p>With a thrill of rapture at the thought, Eppy
-attracted the attention of Lady Glencairn, and
-whispered in that lady’s impatient ear, “Introduce
-me, please; I see Mr. Burns is regarding me very
-closely.”</p>
-
-<p>Presently a lull occurred in the discussion, and
-Lady Glencairn smilingly introduced the garrulous
-old lady to the poet, as a “warm admirer of his
-poems.” “And of you, too,” eagerly interrupted
-Eppy, clasping his hand in both of her own. “Oh!
-I have longed for this moment, that I might clasp
-the hand of Scotia’s Bard, and tell him how I love
-him,”—she broke off with a smothered giggle. “I
-mean his poems; oh, they are too heavenly for utterance,”
-and she rolled her little gray eyes till only the
-whites showed. “Sibella—she’s my sister, and a
-dear creature if I do say so—and I have had many
-a lovely cry over them,” she rattled on hardly pausing
-for breath. “Ah, they have made us so happy.
-You must come and see her, won’t you, she’s a writer
-also, and you can have a sweet talk over your art.
-We belong to a literary family, you know. Rob
-Don, the Gaelic poet, belonged to our clan. We take<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-after him.” She smiled affectedly and batted her
-little eyes in what she fondly believed a very fetching
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>Robert had vainly tried to edge in a word, and
-now stood listening to the silly prattle, a smile of
-amusement playing round his mobile mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“A long way after,” observed Sir William dryly.
-Then he threw up his hands in dismay, for Eppy had
-started off again.</p>
-
-<p>“Here I am rattling off a lot of nonsense,” she
-gurgled, “but I do enjoy your talking so much, Mr.
-Burns. I vow I could listen to it all day. I shall
-always remember this happy occasion of our meeting.”
-She stopped, out of breath, panting but
-happy.</p>
-
-<p>Robert regarded her quizzically for a moment
-while an audible titter was heard throughout the
-rooms. “You quite overwhelm me, Miss McKay,”
-he drawled at last. “But I have nevertheless enjoyed
-conversing with you. Really, madam, I felt
-quite eloquent and did myself full justice,” and he
-bowed gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you flatterer!” tittered Eppy, slapping his
-arm coquettishly with her fan. “But I am not
-madam yet.” She ventured a quick look at Sir
-William.</p>
-
-<p>“Robert, I have been requested to ask you to
-recite one of your favorite poems; will you honor
-us?” asked Lord Glencairn, coming forward.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At once there was a chorus of inanely polite voices.
-“Oh, do recite, Mr. Burns!” “Please give us ‘Tam
-O’Shanter’s Ride,’” etc., etc.</p>
-
-<p>Robert slowly looked around him at the sea of
-faces, and suddenly a feeling of resentment filled his
-heart. Must he parade himself before these empty-headed
-noodles, who regarded him in the light of a
-curiosity, a plaything, to amuse them by his antics?
-Why didn’t they ask Mr. Mackenzie or Mr. Sterne or
-Dr. Blacklock, Mr. Ramsay, or any one of the others
-to read from their books?</p>
-
-<p>“I must ask ye to excuse me to-night,” he replied
-coldly. “I have been speaking in the open air and
-my voice is tired.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I will recite in your stead,” cried Eppy,
-determined to make an impression on the romantic
-young farmer.</p>
-
-<p>They crowded around her, laughing and joking,
-for poor Eppy was the innocent, unsuspecting butt
-of society.</p>
-
-<p>“What is your selection?” someone asked
-seriously.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis about the cunning little animal Mr. Burns
-saw on the lady’s bonnet,” replied Eppy. “The
-lady’s name was—er——” She paused and looked
-inquiringly into Robert’s grimly amused face.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye would be very much surprised, perhaps
-shocked and grieved, Miss McKay,” he answered,
-“were I to mention the lady’s name here, so I’ll spare<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-your feelings. Please recite the poem.” Eppy
-made a deep courtesy, blissfully unconscious that the
-lady in question was none else than herself. And
-after arranging her dress to her satisfaction, cleared
-her throat affectedly and made several ineffectual attempts
-to begin the recitation. Gradually a look of
-comical despair puckered up her face, and turning to
-Robert with an embarrassed giggle, she exclaimed
-poutingly, “I cannot recall a single line. How provoking,
-and I protest. I knew every line by rote this
-morning. Please start me on the first verse, Mr.
-Burns.”</p>
-
-<p>The spectacle of this silly old woman making a
-fool of herself before that heartless crowd both annoyed
-and embarrassed Robert. “The last verse is
-my favorite,” he replied, frowning angrily at the
-amused titters which reached his ears from all sides,
-and quickly he read the verse through:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Oh wad some power the giftie gie us</div>
-<div class="verse">To see ourselves as others see us.</div>
-<div class="verse">It wad fra many a blunder free us, and foolish notion</div>
-<div class="verse">What airs in dress and gait wad leave us, and e’en devotion.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>And none knew whether the shaft was pointed at
-them or at the object of their mirth, who stood before
-him with clasped hands and a smile meant to be
-winning on her weak face, listening with all her
-senses.</p>
-
-<p>“How true that is,” murmured Lady Glencairn.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, indeed,” sighed Eppy soulfully. “What<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-fools some people make of themselves, and they never
-know it, which is the funny part of it.” She darted
-a quick glance at Lady Glencairn, who returned the
-look calmly and evenly, although she was saying to
-herself, “Is she the fool she appears, or is she giving
-me a dig, I wonder?”</p>
-
-<p>She turned to Robert. “Mr. Burns, will you find
-me a chair, please; I am rather fatigued, standing
-so long.”</p>
-
-<p>He offered her his arm. “It will be rather a
-difficult matter,” he observed, looking about him
-vainly. “Still, I can try.” And he moved through
-the swaying crowd and out upon the balcony, with
-her little gloved hand resting lightly on his coat
-sleeve.</p>
-
-<p>“I saw you this morning, Mr. Burns, on Calton
-Hill,” she observed lightly, “but at a distance.
-Upon driving nearer I lost sight of you; you must
-have vanished into the air.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all,” replied Robert, sitting beside her
-on the low balustrade. “I found a beautiful solitude
-amongst a luxuriant growth of willows, which
-no doubt you overlooked.”</p>
-
-<p>“To be sure,” she returned. “Now I remember.
-A sad scene occurred there a few years ago; a lady
-from Loch Carron drowned herself in the little pond
-they hang over, because the man she loved despised
-her.” Her voice was soft and low. She drooped
-her eyes and sighed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Poor unhappy woman,” sighed Robert sympathetically.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at him quickly, her face flushing, her
-eyes earnestly searching his face. “Then you would
-have pitied her?” she asked almost breathlessly.</p>
-
-<p>“He cannot be a man who would not pity a woman
-under such circumstances,” he replied simply and
-thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“She loved him devotedly, recklessly,” she continued,
-her voice trembling with suppressed emotion;
-“but she had no moral right to do so,” she continued.
-“She was a wife, a miserable, unhappy
-wife; she deserved much pity, but he was pitiless
-and uncharitable. He despised her weakness, and so—she
-drowned herself.” Her voice sank into a
-strained, unnatural whisper.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor unhappy woman!” he repeated compassionately.
-“She was over-hasty, I fear.”</p>
-
-<p>“You would not have consigned her to such a
-fate, would you?” she faltered, laying her soft
-feverish hand on his.</p>
-
-<p>He started violently and was silent for a time.
-Then, slowly, sorrowfully he turned and looked into
-her tell-tale face; for a moment she gazed at him,
-her eyes glittering with an unholy light, her bosom
-heaving tumultuously. Then she slowly drooped her
-head.</p>
-
-<p>“’Twould be a heavy load to have on one’s conscience,”
-he replied constrainedly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He rose from his seat and stood looking thoughtfully
-across to where Edinburgh castle loomed up on
-the hill, so cold and gloomy, outlined against the
-blue sky.</p>
-
-<p>She glided swiftly to his side. “Robert, let
-me——” she began passionately, when the cold
-voice of Sir William Creech rooted her to the spot
-in terror. Out of the shadow walked her uncle, and
-ignoring her presence he addressed himself to Robert.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Mr. Burns!” he said angrily, “perhaps
-ye’ll condescend to notice me now, your publisher,
-Sir William Creech.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope ye’re well,” returned Robert indifferently.</p>
-
-<p>Sir William quivered with rage. “Ye’ve been in
-town a week, and yet ye have not called to notify me
-of your arrival,” he sputtered.</p>
-
-<p>“I quite forgot, Sir William,” answered Rob repentently;
-“you see I’m not a good business man.
-However, to-morrow I will call and we will arrange
-our much neglected business matters.”</p>
-
-<p>“And there is much to arrange. Why did ye
-refuse to write for my weekly? I offered to pay ye
-well for it,” he snarled.</p>
-
-<p>“Pay!” flashed Rob indignantly. “Do you think
-to buy the fruit of my brain like so much merchandise,
-at so much a line for a penny newspaper? I
-am not a penny journalist, I am a poet. Whenever
-I embark on any undertaking it is with honest enthusiasm,
-and to talk of money, wage, or fee would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-be a downright prostitution of the soul,” and his
-eyes flashed dangerously.</p>
-
-<p>“You do not despise money, Robert Burns?” retorted
-Sir William sarcastically.</p>
-
-<p>“Most certainly not!” replied Robert quickly.
-“’Tis a most necessary commodity, but extremely
-elusive, and to show you that money has no terrors
-for me, I shall expect a settlement to-morrow in full.
-Some £300 are due me from the sale of the last
-edition of my songs.” He returned Sir William’s
-wrathful gaze, his eyes full of righteous anger and
-strong determination.</p>
-
-<p>“Just one word more, Mr. Burns!” he began
-belligerently, but Robert raised his hand with a
-stately gesture.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m in a sorry mood for business, Sir William
-Creech,” he warned him, a steely glitter in his eye.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, ye will hear what I’ve to say,” insisted Sir
-William doggedly. “Ye are under contract to me,
-sir; but instead of living up to the terms of that
-agreement, ye are scattering broadcast to every person
-that pleases your fancy, a song or an ode or a
-poem, which diminishes the worth and consequent
-sale of your collection.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lud, uncle,” interposed Lady Glencairn quickly,
-“I’ll warrant it makes not the slightest difference.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis not fair to me,” sputtered Sir William,
-“and I warn ye, Mr. Burns, ye must not do it again.
-I strictly forbid it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Uncle!” gasped Lady Glencairn in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye forbid?” repeated Robert in immeasurable
-scorn. “Ye nor any man living can dictate to Robert
-Burns. I shall write when an’ for whom I please.
-I will not barter an’ sell my soul like so much merchandise.
-You published my collection of songs an’
-have made money out o’ the transaction, which is
-mair than I have done. I am sick of it all; I am
-done with your roguery, your deceit, now an’ forever.”
-And he waved his hand in angry dismissal.</p>
-
-<p>“But our contract,” gasped Sir William, taken
-aback.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis ended now, canceled by your ain insult, an’
-I shall take means to collect my just dues.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you not hasty?” asked Lady Glencairn
-concernedly.</p>
-
-<p>“I told ye to call to-morrow,” snarled Sir William,
-“and I’ll pay ye, then ye can gang your own gait.
-I have sought to give you advice, but ye were too
-haughty and independent, and ye wouldn’t listen,
-but ye will yet see and realize the bitter truth of
-my words, so go on in your career of folly and its
-inevitable ruin, for ye’ll soon be at the end of your
-tether, and may the devil claim ye for his own.”
-He stalked angrily away, muttering to himself, “Ye
-upstart, ye low-born peasant, I’ll humble ye yet!”</p>
-
-<p>Robert turned to Lady Glencairn with a smile of
-apology on his lips. “I ask your pardon, Lady
-Glencairn,” he said humbly, “for being the cause of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-this unseemly scene in your presence, but my anger
-was aroused, an’ I simply couldna’ help speaking my
-thoughts—I am always doing the wrong thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, nonsense!” she responded laughingly. “Let
-us forget it and join the others.” She took his arm
-and they slowly entered the ballroom, where they
-were speedily joined by Lord Glencairn and a party
-of friends, who immediately surrounded them.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear,” said Lord Glencairn, “do you know
-that you have left us an unconscionable time? Is
-there some witchery about yon balcony that I know
-not of?” and he smiled affectionately upon his wife,
-whose eyes were shining with happiness.</p>
-
-<p>“Your pardon, James, but I’m sure our absence
-was not noted in such a distinguished assemblage.”
-She glanced carelessly about the room at the groups
-of sedate-looking people gravely conversing with each
-other while they strolled slowly, aimlessly about with
-much dignity and ceremony, and an almost imperceptible
-sneer curled her full lips. “Oh, the stiff
-formality of some of these Calvinistic old fossils!”
-she remarked contemptuously to Robert.</p>
-
-<p>“From all such people, good Lord deliver us,”
-he replied in a low chant.</p>
-
-<p>“Amen!” cried Eppy, looking archly at Sir
-William. “Give me youth and gayety always.”
-Sir William looked his unspoken scorn.</p>
-
-<p>“You and I may well sigh for youth, Miss McKay,”
-quavered the venerable Dr. Blacklock. “Many<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-moons have passed since he eluded our clutch and
-fled, never to return,” and he sighed dismally.</p>
-
-<p>“Speak for yourself, Doctor,” bridled Eppy. “I
-shall never let go my hold on youth,” and she tossed
-her head indignantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Speaking of fossils,” said Lady Glencairn pointedly,
-turning to Eppy, “I wonder what can have
-happened to Mrs. Dunlop?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, she is always late for effect,” she replied
-spitefully.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Dunlop is a very dear friend of mine,”
-observed Robert quietly, but his eyes flashed with
-indignation.</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon for my rudeness,” murmured
-Lady Glencairn sweetly.</p>
-
-<p>“I understand Mrs. Dunlop is chaperoning a new
-beauty,” said Lord Glencairn inquiringly to his
-wife.</p>
-
-<p>She gave him a side glance that was far from
-pleasant. New beauty, indeed! There was only one
-recognized beauty in Edinburgh and she would not
-yield the palm to anyone. “I really do not know to
-whom you allude, James,” she said coldly.</p>
-
-<p>The Duchess of Athol, who was standing near,
-smiled significantly. “Mrs. Dunlop asked permission
-to bring a young friend, who was visiting her
-from the Highlands,” she remarked pleasantly. “I
-do not know her in the least, and they may not come
-at all.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Dunlop and Miss Campbell!” announced
-the footman loudly. With a smile on his handsome
-face and a hurried word of apology, Robert rapidly
-walked to meet the approaching couple, who were
-the cynosure of all eyes. Mrs. Dunlop was recognized
-by all as a woman of much importance in Edinburgh
-society. She knew everybody and everybody
-knew her, for she was the lineal descendant of the immortal
-Wallace, a fact of which she was justly proud.
-She was a motherly looking woman, with a charming
-smile and a pleasant, taking manner.</p>
-
-<p>But the murmur of admiration throughout the
-room was not for her; it was for the slim little girl in
-white with the blue eyes and fair hair, which glittered
-like gold beneath the brilliant light of the chandeliers.
-“Who can she be?” they whispered to each
-other in wonder. “Evidently not a person of importance,
-else she would be dressed in the fashion of
-the day and have her hair powdered.”</p>
-
-<p>“At last, Mary, ye’re here!” cried Robert delightedly,
-placing her hand within his arm. She
-clung to it with a nervous clutch.</p>
-
-<p>“The child is frightened to death,” whispered
-Mrs. Dunlop, smiling indulgently.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<img src="images/illus6.jpg" width="475" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“‘Mrs. Dunlop and Miss Campbell,’ announced the footman loudly.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Lady Glencairn turned very pale, as she recognized
-the girl she had met in Robert’s room. She trembled
-and could scarcely regain her usual composure
-as Robert with a proud tenderness lighting up the
-depths of his black eyes, led the vision of youth and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-perfect beauty up to the hostess, to whom he introduced
-Mary. Then he turned to Lady Glencairn.
-“Lady Glencairn, allow me to introduce to you Miss
-Campbell. You remember Highland Mary, do you
-not?”</p>
-
-<p>She gave a slight start and her muscles tightened.
-The dairymaid sweetheart here in Edinburgh? she
-thought in amazement. What could it mean?</p>
-
-<p>“Quite well,” she answered, extending her cold
-jeweled hand. “I little dreamed I should ever meet
-you here like this, but the unexpected always
-happens.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dinna’ ye mind, my lady,” replied Mary simply,
-“ye said ye would be glad to see me whenever I came
-to town.” She raised those marvelous, innocent eyes
-of hers and smiled. Why did Lady Glencairn
-shrink from that frank and childlike openness of
-regard? Why did she for one brief moment feel
-herself to be vile and beneath contempt? She
-turned to where Mrs. Dunlop was conversing animatedly
-with their hostess, a flush akin to shame mantling
-her haughty face.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Duchess,” she was saying apologetically,
-“pray pardon our late arrival, but I assure you
-’tis not made for effect; our carriage broke down on
-the way.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppy started in amazement; had she overheard her
-spiteful remark?</p>
-
-<p>The Duchess graciously inclined her stately<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-head. “So glad you got here at all, Mrs. Dunlop,”
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>Robert turned laughingly to the group of eager
-people importuning him for an introduction to the
-beautiful débutante. “Time forbids my introducing
-ye individually to Miss Campbell,” he said good-naturedly,
-“therefore let me present ye collectively
-to Highland Mary, my future wife, whom ye have
-all read of an’ loved in my poems.” A ripple of
-applause greeted the news, and congratulations
-poured in upon them, both hearty and sincere.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glencairn staggered slightly, her face paling,
-but she quickly recovered and stood haughtily
-erect, fanning herself a little more rapidly, her full
-red lips tightened to a thin malicious line.</p>
-
-<p>Eppy rushed up to Mary effusively. “May I
-kiss you, dear?” she asked gushingly, “you are so
-sweet and pretty, just like I was a few years ago,”
-and she kissed the blushing girl with a resounding
-smack. “You’ll be married in Edinburgh, I presume?”
-she continued volubly. “I must attend the
-wedding.”</p>
-
-<p>“The marriage will be most private, madam,”
-observed Robert coldly.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you stay long in Edinburgh, Miss Campbell?”
-asked Lady Glencairn abruptly, forcing a
-smile to her lips.</p>
-
-<p>“No, not long, your ladyship,” replied Mary
-timidly. The cold metallic tones of the haughty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-lady frightened her strangely. “I—I ne’er thought
-I’d e’er come to Edinburgh,” she said, “but——”
-She hesitated and looked shyly at Robert, and then
-looked modestly down at the bit of cobweb lace which
-she held in her hand and which did duty as a ’kerchief.</p>
-
-<p>“But I found the barrier between us was down,
-that I was free as ever to wed the sweetheart of my
-boyhood days,” he explained with simple dignity.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, but you make a bonnie couple,” exclaimed
-Mrs. Dunlop admiringly. “Well, I don’t blame
-anyone for falling in love with you, Robert,” she
-declared frankly. “You’re a great man,” and she
-nodded her head vigorously. “And a handsome one,
-too.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert blushed and shook his finger in warning at
-his old friend, although a tender smile played around
-his eyes and mouth. “Mrs. Dunlop, men are said to
-flatter women because they are weak,” he said, “but if
-it is so, poets must be weaker still, for the artful compliments
-I have received from your sex have absolutely
-turned my head, an’ really I begin to look on
-myself as a person of no small importance,” and he
-roguishly winked his eye at his old friend.</p>
-
-<p>“I never knew a man yet who was averse to flattery,”
-retorted the old lady good-naturedly.</p>
-
-<p>In the brief lull that followed the general laugh,
-the voice of Lord Glencairn could be heard in conversation
-with Mary, who was earnestly gazing up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-into his face, all traces of timidity gone, for she felt
-singularly at her ease in the presence of the kindly
-old nobleman. “And so you mean to take Robert
-away from us for good, eh?” he was saying in his
-earnest, serious manner.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye ken he is fair anxious to get back to Mossgiel
-now,” replied Mary, blushing deeply.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glencairn snapped her fan together convulsively.
-“You mean to leave Edinburgh for good?”
-she asked in faint, incredulous accents, turning to
-Robert.</p>
-
-<p>The people crowded around and a storm of protest
-arose. “What madness!” “Leave Edinburgh
-for the country!” “They couldn’t hear of such a
-thing.” “He owed a duty to them as Scotland’s
-Bard!” etc., etc.</p>
-
-<p>Robert turned to them and spoke lightly, although
-with an undercurrent of seriousness. “I ken I am
-but wasting my time, my energies, my talents here,
-amid the sensual delight which your city affords,”
-he said. “I am not formed for it. I am but a
-rustic at heart and in manners, and the country is
-my only vantageground.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary stole softly to his side and snuggled her
-hand in his. “Isn’t it sweet to be in love?” cried
-Eppy cooingly, to Sir William, in a sibilant aside.
-“Think what we are missing.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re too old for such nonsense,” replied Sir
-William gruffly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, indeed!” flashed Eppy. “Huh, a woman’s
-never too old to love,” with an indignant toss of her
-head.</p>
-
-<p>“No, nor to make a fool of herself,” retorted Sir
-William, smiling grimly.</p>
-
-<p>“But we cannot give you up just yet,” declared
-Lord Glencairn emphatically, placing his hand affectionately
-on Robert’s shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure, Mr. Burns,” said Mr. Mackenzie
-gravely, “that your friends and admirers would not
-advise such a move for you, especially as you are
-now riding high on the top wave of success.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have nothing to gain by staying here, Mr.
-Mackenzie,” replied Robert, turning to him and
-speaking slowly and thoughtfully, “for, as you observe,
-I am now firmly established as a poet. I fear
-I am not proof against the subtle temptations which
-constantly beset my path and which push aside all
-thoughts of poesy; so as discretion is the better part
-of valor,” he continued, looking lovingly at the girl
-clinging so confidingly to his arm, “I shall flee from
-it all to my farm, my plow, and there amid those
-innocent, wholesome surroundings pass my remaining
-days in peace wi’ my wife by my side.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Dunlop sighed dismally and shook her white
-curls in decided disapproval. “Laddie, you will be
-taking a false step,” she declared emphatically;
-“your place is here before the public.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed it is!” gurgled Eppy soulfully. “I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-protest Edinburgh cannot spare its poet yet. Your
-old farm can wait for you yet a while.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary looked at his thoughtful face with anxious
-eyes. She prayed fervently that nothing would dissuade
-him from his purpose. For it had been at
-her earnest solicitation that he finally decided to
-give up the enervating pleasures of the Capital, and
-to retire to the country where he would be free from
-the contaminating influences which now surrounded
-him.</p>
-
-<p>He smiled reassuringly into her perturbed little
-face. No power on earth could tempt him to break
-the promise he had so willingly made her on that
-first day of her arrival in the gay metropolis, he
-thought fondly. He turned to his questioners, who
-were eagerly awaiting his answer, his face shining
-with fixed determination.</p>
-
-<p>“My friends,” he said quietly, “I am only a
-farmer born, a son of the soil. My one ambition
-now is to have my own roof-tree near the Doon,
-where amidst the beauties of harmonious nature the
-Goddess Muse will commune with me as of old, for
-’twas there the greatest inspiration of my soul came
-to me, and I know if all else fails me an independent
-livelihood awaits me at the plowtail.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tut, tut, the plowtail, indeed!” sniffed Mrs.
-Dunlop indignantly.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glencairn, who had been feverishly toying
-with her fan, turned suddenly to Mary, a sneering<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-smile on her crimson lips, “And have you no higher
-ambition for your future husband, Miss Campbell?”
-she demanded, her voice strangely harsh and metallic.
-“Are you content to have him bury his talents
-in the country?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! Oh, yes!” answered Mary shyly, a happy
-smile dimpling her sweet face. Then she added
-naïvely, “Ye ken, I’ll hae him all to myself then.”
-Robert laughed merrily at this naïve confession.</p>
-
-<p>“Young man,” observed Mr. Sterne pompously,
-“take my word for it, you’ll repent it if you leave
-Edinburgh now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Robbie, what will everybody think?” cried Mrs.
-Dunlop tearfully. “You are daft to run away while
-the world is literally at your feet.”</p>
-
-<p>“For how long?” he asked laconically.</p>
-
-<p>“Until you tire of its homage, my lad,” replied
-Lord Glencairn stanchly.</p>
-
-<p>Robert shook his head with a doubting smile.
-“’Twill not be I who will tire first, my lord,” he
-returned quietly. “I know myself and the world so
-well. You see the novelty of a poet in my obscure
-situation, my imperfection of awkward rusticity has
-raised a partial tide of public notice which has borne
-me to a height where I am absolutely certain my
-abilities are inadequate to support me.” He looked
-around a trifle defiantly at the rows of serious
-faces, a little feeling of resentment welling up in his
-heart.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“You are over-modest, my dear Burns,” observed
-Mr. Mackenzie with kindling eye.</p>
-
-<p>Robert shook his head with somber dignity. “Too
-surely do I see the time when the same tide will leave
-me and recede as far below the mark of truth.” He
-turned and faced the people suddenly, his hands outstretched,
-his eyes filled with melancholy enthusiasm.
-Raising his voice he proceeded prophetically, “My
-friends, you will all bear me witness, that when the
-bubble of fame was at its height I stood unintoxicated,
-with the inebriating cup in my hand, looking
-forward to the hastening time when the blow of
-calumny should dash it to the ground with all the
-eagerness of revengeful triumph.”</p>
-
-<p>“That time will never come, Robert,” cried Mary
-softly, “for we will leave this life behind us in a
-very short while noo.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Glencairn slapped him on the back with
-playful earnestness. “Come, come, my lad!” he
-cried gayly, “this will never do; you are in the
-dumps; throw it off, lad, and be merry. Do not
-heed the idle gossip of your unsuccessful rivals and
-the scandal mongers. Rest assured your popularity
-and fame will never die whether you remain here
-or retire to the country.”</p>
-
-<p>“Would I could think so,” sighed Robert gloomily.</p>
-
-<p>Eppy suddenly gave a nervous little giggle. “I
-vow I feel like crying,” she observed hysterically,
-“I wish everybody wouldn’t look so mournful.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mackenzie turned quickly to his hostess.
-“My dear Duchess,” he said courteously, “you
-were going to show us your new painting in
-which Mr. Burns is the central figure of the
-group.”</p>
-
-<p>At once the silent group became animated. “Oh,
-yes, do!” cried Eppy, with a yearning look at
-Robert. “I wonder if I could pick you from among
-the others?” she coyly observed.</p>
-
-<p>“I trust, madam, that my phiz will be recognizable,”
-he replied dryly.</p>
-
-<p>The Duchess turned to her husband. “Take Miss
-Campbell and lead the way to the gallery,” she said
-quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“Is Mr. Burns to take me?” inquired Eppy of
-her hostess, but she had followed her husband, leaning
-on the arm of Mr. Mackenzie.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glencairn smiled sweetly, “So sorry, Miss
-McKay, but Sir William has asked for that pleasure.”</p>
-
-<p>“I?” gasped Sir William, with a comical look of
-dismay.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at him maliciously. “Yes, did you
-not?” she raised her eyebrows inquiringly, an innocent
-smile hovering about her mouth.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment he sputtered, then with a grim
-smile he snarled sarcastically, “’Twill afford me
-great pleasure.”</p>
-
-<p>With a wildly beating heart Lady Glencairn took<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-Robert’s arm and started for the stairs, followed
-by the others.</p>
-
-<p>Eppy sniffed suspiciously. “Oh, I understand
-now,” she observed spitefully with a meaning smile.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought you would, dear,” flashed her ladyship
-mockingly, over her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you coming, madam?” demanded Sir William
-testily, offering his arm.</p>
-
-<p>With an indignant clack of her tongue, Eppy
-haughtily brushed past him and swiftly mounted the
-stairs, leaving the disgruntled Sir William to follow
-at his leisure.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XVI</h3>
-
-<p>Among those that crowded around the carriage of
-Robert Burns earlier in the evening, listening to
-his inspiring oration, stood a girl of twenty or
-thereabouts, whose pale, haggard face and tearful
-eyes attracted some passing attention from those
-near her. She was dressed in an ankle length skirt
-of gray, over which a red shawl had been tastefully
-draped. A black velvet bodice confined the loose
-white gimpe at the waist, while from her left shoulder
-a brilliant plaid hung gracefully to the bottom
-of her dress. Around her neck row upon row of
-different colored beads hung loosely to her waist.
-Upon the blue-black hair which fell around her
-face in waving masses, a wreath of white and pink
-heather was twined becomingly. Her unusual attire
-attracted much attention.</p>
-
-<p>“She must be a gypsy,” they told each other
-wonderingly. Finally, after many conjectures, someone
-in the crowd volunteered the information that
-she was a street singer who had been seen singing
-through the streets of the town for a day or so.
-Their curiosity appeased, they turned to their idol
-once more. Every now and then a convulsive sob
-shook the young girl’s slender, graceful figure. Like
-one who hungered for food and drink she watched the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-speaker, her heart in her eyes, her hands clasped
-tightly upon her breast. When the eager throng unhitched
-the horses from the open carriage she had
-breathlessly watched every movement, and when they,
-with wild bursts of applause and good-natured
-laughter, sped away up Princes Street, pulling the
-carriage behind them, she had swiftly followed, the
-center of a noisy gang of street urchins and idle
-brawlers.</p>
-
-<p>With a mighty cheer, which brought the watchmen
-running to the spot pell-mell, they finally
-stopped at Athol Castle and quickly lined themselves
-on each side of the striped awning avenue, from the
-curbing to the door, to watch the great man pass
-within.</p>
-
-<p>The gypsy frantically elbowed her way through
-the pompous coachmen and good-natured cabbies
-who had pressed forward to witness the new arrival,
-and reached the inner edge of the crowd. At that
-moment Robert stepped from his carriage and walked
-quickly up the avenue. With a little cry of joy she
-stretched out her hands to arrest his attention, but
-he passed inside without having once caught a
-glimpse of this strange follower.</p>
-
-<p>A derisive laugh went up from those who had
-curiously watched the peculiar actions of the gypsy.
-At the sound she dropped her arms hurriedly, the
-blood rushing to her pale cheeks. With one quick,
-startled glance at the mocking faces beside her, she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-turned quickly and threaded her way through the
-line of splendid equipages, with their prancing horses,
-till she reached a secluded part of the street, where
-she stopped and looked back at the brilliantly lighted
-castle, tears of bitter disappointment and despair
-slowly trickling down her wan cheeks. As she stood
-there in the bright moonlight, a prey to her bitter
-thoughts, a handsome equipage, drawn by a prancing
-pair of steeds, attracted her listless attention. As
-it slowly drove past the wretched girl a sweet young
-face crowned with golden hair appeared in the open
-window, followed by a white arm. Her little hand
-was noticeably bare of jewels. With a sweet word of
-pity the girl tossed a silver piece at the feet of
-her unfortunate sister. The gypsy indifferently
-watched the carriage out of sight. Then, after a
-moment’s hesitation, she stooped and picked up the
-coin, and without looking at it put it carelessly in
-her pocket, a flush of shame and mortification mantling
-her dark cheek. For a while she stood in moody
-silence, listening to the strains of music which came
-faintly to her from the castle. Suddenly she lifted
-her face to the heavens, her arms upraised, her lips
-moving in some prayer or incantation. For a moment
-she stood thus, then slowly her arms dropped to
-her side. There was a new calm look of determination
-in her face as she quickly traced her steps back to
-where the crowds still lingered about the closed doors
-of Athol Castle. She stood on the outskirts of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-the crowd unseen in the shadow, her restless eyes
-searching here and there, peering into the open windows,
-up and down the high stone wall which bordered
-the huge garden, then back again, finally
-resting upon the closed portals with a look of keen
-disappointment shining in their depths. What she
-sought was evidently not there. She stamped her
-foot in impotent despair, a muttered imprecation
-on her lips; she would search again. Gradually she
-made her way back unnoticed by the crowd, who
-were intent on listening to the music which floated
-out bewitchingly on the still air, till she reached
-the wall where it joined the corner of the castle.
-Motionless she stood under its shadow, her heart
-beating loudly as some idler drew near her place of
-concealment. Suddenly a form loomed up before
-her. With a startled cry she pressed close against
-the ivied wall in sudden terror.</p>
-
-<p>“She come this way,” a voice cried eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, Sandy, she’s hidin’ among the ivy,” said
-another.</p>
-
-<p>She heard them beating noisily about the thick
-vines which hung in wild profusion over the walls,
-her heart in her mouth. Frantically she tore the
-vines apart until she reached the bare wall behind.
-Then with breathless eagerness she pulled them together
-again, effectually concealing her presence
-from her pursuers. She pressed closer and closer
-against the cold stones, shivering apprehensively
-as they approached her hiding place. Suddenly she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-felt her support give way with a dull, creaking noise,
-and before she could recover her equilibrium, she
-found herself in a heap on the ground. She looked
-up in time to see the door through which she had
-fallen swing quickly into place and realized that
-unwittingly she had found an old and evidently
-unused entrance through the wall. Quickly rising
-to her feet she looked about her, then she gave a
-little cry of joy as she caught sight of the splashing
-fountains in the moonlight, for she knew she was
-inside the gardens belonging to the Duke of Athol.
-Eagerly she gazed about her at the leafy shrubberies,
-the massive oaks and beeches, the rose garden
-with its wealth of scented flowers. And for a brief
-moment she gave herself up to the painful reveries
-the familiar sights recalled to memory, while the tears
-of self-pity and heart-longing welled up in her
-gloomy eyes and flowed unrestrainedly down her
-cheeks. Presently, with a mirthless laugh of impatience,
-she dashed the tears angrily away and walked
-quickly up the grassy terrace toward the brilliantly
-lighted castle. Through the large window which
-looked over the low balcony she watched the incessant
-stream of people coming and going, while others
-walked aimlessly about the rooms or chatted in
-groups. For some time she crouched beside the
-low silver spruce, her eyes fixed upon the moving
-scenes within. Then with a start she recognized the
-golden-haired young lady who had given her the
-silver piece, surrounded by a group of cavaliers. She<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-saw, too, with a pang of jealousy, the tenderness
-with which the poet greeted her and led her up to
-the haughty lady in purple. For some time she
-watched them in melancholy silence, a prey to conflicting
-emotions. By and by a group of ladies
-drifted out on the balcony. They were discussing
-the golden-haired girl, who had been introduced into
-their midst that evening, and the announcement of
-her marriage to the poet, Robert Burns. The gypsy,
-as she heard those words, uttered a smothered cry
-of amazement and horror, then sank half fainting
-on the grassy lawn, moaning like one stricken unto
-death. How long she lay there with senses dulled
-by pain she never knew. Presently, bitter recollection
-returned and with it an agony of fear that
-blanched her lips and made her limbs to quake, while
-grief and despair, like two grim sentinels, stood
-eager watch beside her. Slowly she staggered to
-her feet and turned her weary eyes once more upon
-the balcony. There was no one there. Listlessly
-she watched the gay figures darting past the windows.
-Suddenly her muscles tightened like a hound’s
-on the scent. The golden-haired girl suddenly glided
-out on the balcony, a glorious vision of loveliness.
-Pensively she leaned over the railing watching the
-swans, which looked ghostly in the moonlight, swimming
-majestically round and round the small pond
-of water into which the spraying fountain was
-playing.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XVII</h3>
-
-<p>Mary soon grew weary of looking at the many paintings
-which lined the walls of the galleries; she wished
-they would go back to the pretty rooms downstairs,
-where the music was playing and the young folks were
-dancing. She had enjoyed that. She tried to force a
-smile of interest to her lips as the old Duke described
-the subjects on the canvases before them. He soon
-perceived her weariness, however, and calling to Mrs.
-Dunlop, who was being bored beyond measure, as
-she told her friends wearily, he requested her to
-show Miss Campbell the gardens by moonlight, to
-which she gladly assented. Quickly they descended
-the broad staircase, and slowly wended their way
-across the large drawing-room. Mrs. Dunlop took
-her young charge to the large window and waved
-her fat hand toward the magnificent view which lay
-stretched before them. “Isn’t it grand, Mary?” she
-observed lightly. It was an old story to her. Spying
-an old friend across the room, she excused herself
-to Mary and told her to enjoy herself,
-then smilingly left her to her own devices. After
-admiring the somber beauty of Edinburgh Castle,
-Mary perceived the flowing fountain which splashed
-tunefully below her in the garden. She stepped out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-on the balcony, a smile of pleasure lighting up her
-sweet face. For a while she stood listening to the
-rhythmic fall of the water, blissfully unconscious of
-the presence of the unseen watcher. Suddenly before
-her startled vision there sprang the form of the
-gypsy. With a cry of alarm Mary stepped back
-and was about to enter the room, when a voice calling
-her by name arrested her wondering attention.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait, Mary Campbell!” hissed the voice of the
-gypsy.</p>
-
-<p>Mary turned and looked into the white face gazing
-up at her so defiantly, and she recognized the
-girl to whom she had tossed the money. Suddenly
-she gave a gasp of astonishment. “Jean Armour!”
-she exclaimed incredulously.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, Jean Armour,” repeated the gypsy.
-“Come down to me; I must have a word with you
-alone,” she whispered sibilantly.</p>
-
-<p>Mary gave a quick look around. Mrs. Dunlop
-was still deep in her gossip, and Robert was nowhere
-to be seen. She walked to the end of the
-balcony and found the steps. Quickly she reached
-the bottom, and going to Jean took her two hands
-in hers and shook them warmly. She was so glad
-to see anyone from Mossgiel, friend or foe.</p>
-
-<p>Jean regarded her advance with sullen suspicion.
-“Two years ago I was an invited guest here at Athol
-Castle,” she sneered bitterly, “while you were a barefooted
-dairymaid in Mossgiel. Now look at us. You<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-are the lady and I am an outcast, singing on the
-streets for my daily bread.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary looked at her in amazement. “But what
-has happened?” she asked wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p>“My father has turned me into the street,” answered
-Jean dully.</p>
-
-<p>“Had ye done wrong?” inquired Mary timidly.</p>
-
-<p>Jean laughed mirthlessly. “Wrong?” she repeated,
-“aye, if refusing to marry an old man I
-detested be wrong.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ your father turned ye out for that?”</p>
-
-<p>“For that,” she replied stonily, “and because I
-refused to give up Robert Burns.”</p>
-
-<p>“But—but ye gave him up long ago, Jean, of
-your own free will,” faltered Mary, an awful fear
-clutching at her heart. “An’ your father wrote
-Robert,” she continued breathlessly, “that ye willingly,
-gladly renounced all claims on him, that ye
-even hated his name, an’ that ye hoped never to see
-or hear o’ him again.”</p>
-
-<p>A look of hatred spread over the face of the
-other. “My father lied when he wrote that,” she
-cried with bitter intensity, “for I told him I would
-never renounce my marriage to Robert, irregular
-though it was, and I never will. He is my husband,”
-and she glared defiantly at the shrinking girl, who
-was looking at her with searching, frightened
-eyes. For a moment the poor child stood there like
-a lifeless figure as the words stamped themselves<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-one by one on her bewildered brain and sent it reeling
-into darkness and vacancy. She felt sick and
-dizzy. There was a rushing sound in her ears, the
-garden swung round dizzily before her eyes, yet
-she stood still, speaking no word, although a quiver
-of agony passed over her pallid face.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Robert, my love, have I lost ye again?” she
-thought dully. “I knew it was only a dream, too
-sweet to last.” There was a choking sensation in her
-throat, but she did not weep. As in a horrid dream
-she heard the sharp metallic voice hissing in her
-ear, “He is my husband, Mary Campbell. You must
-give him up to me.” She roused herself out of
-the lethargy into which she had fallen, and unclasping
-her hands, she wearily pushed back her curls
-from her brow and fixed her large pathetic eyes on
-Jean, who instinctively shrank back before the
-speechless despair of that helpless gaze. “But ye
-have no claim on Robbie noo, Jean,” she faltered
-slowly, “since your irregular marriage was publicly
-dissolved.” She paused and her pale lips quivered.
-“Why have ye come here noo to disturb
-him?” she asked with infinite pathos. “He is
-happy, so happy noo. Dinna destroy that happiness;
-go awa’; leave him to me. Ye took him
-from me once; dinna separate us again.” Her voice
-broke and a hard sob choked her utterance. A great
-pity welled up in Jean’s heart for the stricken child,
-but she steeled herself against it and remained sullenly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-quiet. Presently Mary spoke again. “I hae
-nothing in this world, Jean, and I love him so,”
-she said with dreamy wistfulness, “better than life
-itsel’. We have loved each ither for years, an’
-that love has grown stronger an’ stronger as each
-year passed by, till noo it’s part o’ my very being.”
-Her voice rose to passionate pleading. “Oh, what
-is your weak fancy compared to such a love, Jean
-Armour?” she asked piteously. “Oh, I tell you I
-canna give him up to you again.” She sank down
-convulsively on the high-backed bench under the
-balcony, her form quivering with low heart-breaking
-sobs. Tears of sympathy slowly filled Jean’s eyes
-as she watched the grief-stricken girl before her, but
-with an angry frown she hardened her heart and
-forced herself to think of her own wrongs and pitiable
-condition.</p>
-
-<p>“You must give him up!” she answered harshly,
-“and to-night.” She paused a moment to watch
-the brilliant crowd within the drawing-room, passing
-and repassing each other with slow, stately bearing
-as they walked with ease and grace through the
-dignified measures of the minuet. By and by she
-turned to the drooping form and spoke again. “My
-God, girl, don’t you suppose I too love him!” she
-exclaimed passionately. “Why have I tramped mile
-after mile, half starving, subjected to all kinds of
-insults, struggling to reach here to see him, if it
-were not for that love?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Mary slowly raised her head and looked at her in
-reproachful sadness. “Your love has only brought
-him, an’ all of us, sorrow and disgrace,” she said
-with pathetic simplicity. “He never loved ye, Jean
-Armour, ye ken that weel.”</p>
-
-<p>Jean winced at the blunt truth, and a quiver of
-anger passed over her defiant face. “I know that
-only too well,” she replied bitterly. Then she gave
-a little mocking laugh, which nevertheless held a
-suggestion of tears. “You may have his heart, Mary
-Campbell,” she continued, “but I am what you can
-never be, his wife and the mother of his bairns.”</p>
-
-<p>“The bairns,” repeated Mary blankly, “are they
-alive, Jean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, they are alive, thank God!” murmured Jean
-softly, “that is why I am here, Mary, that is why
-I must demand my rights, for my bairns’ sake.”
-Then she continued quickly, feverishly, “Had it not
-been for them I would have done my father’s bidding,
-would have forgotten Robert, renounced him utterly,
-and married the man my father had chosen for me,
-but I wanted my little ones to have the protection of
-a father’s name, so I stubbornly refused his commands.
-After my father had driven me from his
-door with curses on his lips, I discovered too late
-that Robert had tried again and again to see me,
-had even begged my father to allow him to legalize
-our marriage, and that his overtures were met with
-scorn and abuse. Then I decided to come to Edinburgh<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-myself to tell Robert the truth and to claim
-my rights.” She paused defiantly.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glencairn upon her return to the drawing-room
-had missed Mary, and upon learning from
-Mrs. Dunlop that she was upon the balcony, she
-sauntered slowly in that direction. As she stepped
-through the window she heard the low murmur of
-voices, and looking down perceived with amazement
-the young girl seated below her in company with a
-fantastically-dressed gypsy. Suddenly, with a start,
-she recognized the voice of Jean Armour. Hastily
-concealing herself behind a large marble pillar she
-listened in growing wonder, her face becoming hard
-and repellent, to the direful confession of her god-daughter.</p>
-
-<p>“I arrived in Edinburgh after a month of hardships,”
-continued Jean with suppressed excitement,
-“and to-night I saw him in all his prosperity entering
-the castle like a king, looking so handsome, so
-contented, and so very happy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, he is happy noo,” replied Mary softly.
-“Happier than he’ll e’er be on earth again, perhaps,”
-and she closed her eyes wearily.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment there was silence, broken only by
-the monotonous hum of voices and the faint twanging
-of the harp from within the drawing-room. Presently
-Mary opened her eyes and spoke again.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye maunna blame Robert for anything at a’,
-Jean,” she said loyally. “He thought the bairns were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-dead, an’ he believed your father’s words, but noo,
-when he kens a’, he will do his duty nobly for his
-bairns’ sake.” She smiled bravely into the eager
-face of the other. “Ye have the right to him, Jean,
-I see that noo,” she continued sadly, “an’—an’ forgive
-my rude and unkind words to ye just noo,”
-and gently she held out her little hand.</p>
-
-<p>Jean took it tenderly in her own. “What will
-you do now, where will you go?” she asked with a
-feeling of remorse.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall go back to Colonel Montgomery’s,” replied
-Mary, in a sad, spiritless voice, from which all
-the life seemed to have fled, “where I can see
-my friends sometimes. Mistress Burns loves me, an’
-I—I may see Robbie, if only from the window as
-he passes. It willna harm anyone.” She looked at
-Jean in a pleading, timid manner, while her mouth
-quivered pathetically, but she forced a wan smile
-to her pale lips and then slowly turned and walked
-toward the stairway. As she mounted the bottom
-step Jean ran quickly to her side and clasped her
-hand impulsively.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary, I’m so sorry for you,” she said pityingly,
-“but I’m doing it for my bairns’ sake, ye ken
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“I understand, Jean,” answered Mary simply, “I
-dinna blame ye.” She leaned back against the marble
-balustrade. “But, oh, it’s hard, bitter hard,” she
-murmured brokenly; “if I could only die here and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-noo.” She stretched out her hands with a sort of
-wild appeal. “Oh, Robbie, my darlin’,” she exclaimed
-in a sobbing whisper, “how can I tell ye,
-how can I break your heart? I thought ye had
-drunk your cup o’ misery empty, but the dregs are
-yet to be drained.”</p>
-
-<p>The sympathetic tears rolled down Jean’s face.
-“Will you tell him I’m here, Mary, and that I must
-see him at once?” she asked pleadingly. Mary
-slowly bowed her head in assent. “Oh, how I dread
-to meet him,” continued Jean in a frightened whisper,
-“to have him look at me with stern and angry eyes;
-to know that he longs to be free, and that he wishes
-me dead, perhaps.” She covered her face with her
-hands and shivered apprehensively.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye needna fear, Jean,” replied Mary, with reproachful
-pride. “Robert Burns is a mon of honor;
-ye should know that weel. I’ll go noo an’ tell him
-ye are here.” For a moment she swayed as if about
-to fall, but she recovered herself in an instant and
-slowly mounted the few remaining steps to the balcony.
-As she reached the top she pressed her hand
-against her heart as if that action would still its
-rapid beating. “Heaven give me the strength to tell
-him,” she breathed, and, with a little prayer on her
-lips, she slowly entered the drawing-room, where she
-found Mrs. Dunlop anxiously looking for her.</p>
-
-<p>Jean watched her for a few moments, then, with
-a sigh of nervous dread, she turned and paced restlessly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-up and down within the deep shadows beneath
-the overhanging trees. She had only taken
-one turn when she felt herself seized by the arm and
-drawn into the bright moonlight. Smothering the
-startled cry of alarm which rose to her lips she
-turned and faced her assailant. “Lady Glencairn!”
-she gasped, starting back in astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>“So, Jean Armour,” hissed her ladyship, “’tis
-you whose name has been coupled so disgracefully
-with that of Robert Burns.”</p>
-
-<p>Jean dropped her head quickly, flushing crimson
-before the scornful light in the other’s eyes, which
-flashed like stars in the pale moonlight that came
-streaming down upon them. “Then you have
-heard?” she faltered, after a little frightened pause.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I have heard everything,” her ladyship returned
-witheringly, “and my suspicions of you of
-two years ago have turned out to be right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Please say no more now, Lady Glencairn,” retorted
-Jean sullenly. “Let me go.” She tried to
-pass, but Lady Glencairn put a restraining hand
-upon her shoulder. “I will say no more, you foolish
-girl,” she replied angrily. “Why do you insist
-upon thrusting yourself upon Robert Burns, to-night?
-He utterly detests your memory. He has
-done with you forever.”</p>
-
-<p>Jean looked at her defiantly. “I am his wife. He
-must acknowledge me,” she declared firmly.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glencairn laughed scornfully. “You foolish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-child, do you think he will ever forgive you for
-stepping in between him and Mary Campbell again?”
-she asked with studied indifference. “No, he would
-hate you; you know his erratic temper, my dear Jean;
-you would but ruin your chance for a reconciliation
-forever, if he sees you now, when his heart is torn by
-grief and sorrow at losing for the second time the one
-lass who is all the world to him.” She paused and
-watched narrowly the look of dread and doubt creep
-slowly over the downcast face before her.</p>
-
-<p>By and by Jean looked up, her eyes burning with
-unshed tears and shining feverishly. “What shall
-I do then, Lady Glencairn?” she asked helplessly,
-“where shall I go?”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glencairn did not answer for a few moments.
-She was thinking with a thrill of joy that
-Jean’s coming would separate the two lovers forever.
-“More than likely Robert would now remain in Edinburgh,”
-she mused with wildly beating heart. “But,
-on the other hand, if he stayed he would quixotically
-marry Jean Armour, and publicly right her in the
-eyes of the world,” she thought jealously, “and
-then——” She broke off and stared at the girl intently.
-“If she were out of the way,” she thought
-maliciously, “might not his fickle fancy be caught in
-the rebound?” These thoughts flowed quickly
-through her brain, and her eyes half shut wickedly,
-her gleaming white bosom heaving from her hurried
-breathing, as she decided on her course. “You must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-leave here at once,” she said softly, taking Jean’s
-hand with an affectation of tenderness.</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot return to my father,” she replied dully.
-“I have nowhere to go now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go to an inn for to-night,” said her ladyship
-hurriedly, “and I’ll come to you in the morning and
-advise you as to your future movements, and help
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I must see Robert first.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glencairn frowned impatiently. “Foolish
-girl, take my advice and wait until to-morrow. You
-will lose nothing by it, for I will myself plead with
-Robert in your behalf.”</p>
-
-<p>Jean did not answer. She stood mute and undecided.</p>
-
-<p>“Surely, my dear Jean,” continued Lady Glencairn
-mockingly, “you don’t expect him to proclaim
-you as his dearly beloved wife before them all,
-do you?” She waved her hand carelessly toward the
-drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p>Jean flushed and looked away. “No, I didn’t
-come for that,” she muttered slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“Then why not do as I advise? I know that when
-the keen edge of his grief has worn off he will willingly
-take you to his heart and by a church marriage make
-you his lawful wife,” and she threw her warm arm
-over the shoulders of the yielding girl.</p>
-
-<p>Jean gave a nervous little laugh. “I vow, Lady
-Glencairn, I have not the courage to meet him now,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-she said. “I—I thank you gratefully for your
-kindness. I—I know ’tis better to wait——” She
-paused and sighed dejectedly. “You’ll find me at
-the Star and Garter Inn in King’s Court,” she said
-quickly after a moment’s indecision. Then she drew
-her scarf hurriedly about her shoulders as if anxious
-to get away.</p>
-
-<p>At that instant a laughing group of people came
-out on the balcony. Lady Glencairn hastily drew
-her back in the shadows. “Go, go quickly!” she
-whispered, “before you are seen.” With a panting
-word of thanks Jean glided through the bushes, and,
-skirting the patches of light, she soon reached the
-secret door through which she had so unceremoniously
-entered and passed out to the street now
-deserted, save for the motionless coachmen asleep on
-their boxes. Lady Glencairn breathed a sigh of
-relief as she watched Jean fade out of sight, swallowed
-up in the darkness. “Both out of the way
-now,” she murmured, a triumphant smile on her
-full crimson lips. She walked quickly toward the
-balcony. “What a contemptible creature I have
-become,” she thought with careless unconcern.
-“And all for love of a low-born peasant,” and she
-laughed derisively, as she mounted the steps. She
-slowly entered the drawing-room, feeling strangely
-nervous and guilty, to find a great many people
-going to supper. Robert had grown tired of the
-heat and glare and noise, and seeing Mary sitting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-so weary and wan looking, surrounded by a crowd of
-admirers who worshiped at the shrine of youth and
-beauty, he crossed quickly and whispered his wishes
-to her. She rose gladly and both advanced to bid
-their hostess farewell.</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry you cannot remain longer,” said the
-Duchess with genuine cordiality. “You must bring
-Miss Campbell some afternoon to see me, Mr.
-Burns, when I am not receiving the public,” and
-with a pleasant smile she bade them good-night.
-Slowly they made their way through the crowd and
-met Lady Glencairn coming swiftly toward them.</p>
-
-<p>As her eyes rested upon his happy countenance
-she knew that he was still in ignorance of Jean’s
-arrival in Edinburgh. “Won’t you have some supper?”
-she inquired brightly. “Don’t go yet.”</p>
-
-<p>But Robert quietly insisted, as he perceived Mary’s
-increasing languor and pallor. So Lady Glencairn,
-with anger and disappointment gnawing at her
-heart, for she had hoped to show him the beauties
-of the garden by moonlight before he went, seeing
-that remonstrances were of no avail, bade them both
-an effusive good-night. “Don’t forget my garden
-party to-morrow,” she said with a patronizing smile,
-touching Mary’s cold hand lightly. “I shall expect
-you,” and she turned to greet her husband, who was
-approaching with Mr. Mackenzie.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank ye, your ladyship,” answered Mary simply,
-making a little courtesy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Let me escort you to the carriage, Miss Campbell,”
-said Lord Glencairn, at once offering her his
-arm.</p>
-
-<p>“And allow me to follow,” added Mr. Mackenzie,
-slipping his arm through Robert’s, to whom he whispered,
-“How dare you, sir, how dare you be such
-a provokingly happy man in this miserable old
-world?” Robert laughed, and they all walked slowly
-down to the carriage, conversing gayly on their
-way.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Mary stopped with a little exclamation
-of dismay. “We’ve forgotten Mrs. Dunlop,” she
-said contritely.</p>
-
-<p>With a laugh Lord Glencairn dispatched a footman
-to find her, and the good lady soon appeared,
-flushed and panting from her hurried departure.
-With a last handshake all around Robert sprang in
-beside them and within a couple of minutes the carriage
-was out of sight.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye were the queen of the evening, Mary, just
-as I told ye ye’d be,” said Robert triumphantly.
-“Have ye enjoyed yoursel’?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ay, for a whiley,” answered Mary listlessly,
-leaning back against the heavy padding of the seat,
-with eyes heavy and sad. She had had no opportunity
-as yet to tell Robert the dread news, and her
-heart was filled with misgivings as she thought of
-Jean waiting patiently in the garden for him to
-come to her. She started up suddenly, resolved to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-tell him, but the sight of his happy face, and the
-presence of Mrs. Dunlop, cooled her courage, and
-she leaned back again silent and miserable. If she
-didn’t tell him to-night what would Jean do? With
-her usual unselfishness she gave no thought to self.
-She was miserably unhappy, but she would not allow
-herself to think of her own sufferings. Her whole
-thought was of him and the darkness into which he
-would soon be plunged, and of Jean and her bairns,
-Robert’s bairns. She sighed quiveringly, and a little
-pang of jealousy shot through her heart like a breath
-of fire, but it soon passed away and left only a dull
-ache that would always be there now, she thought
-wearily, as they rolled along toward home. She
-clasped her hands together feverishly. “Should she
-whisper to him now, tell him all and bid him drive back
-to Jean?” she asked herself in an agony of indecision.
-At that moment the carriage stopped at the door
-of Mrs. Dunlop’s mansion. It was too late now.
-She gave a little sigh of relief, though her heart
-was filled with grief and anxiety. Robert escorted
-her to the door, with loving pride in her daintiness, in
-her sweet air of refinement. She looked very frail and
-spirituelle, as she turned to him quietly and bade
-him good-night.</p>
-
-<p>“Has something gone wrong, Mary?” he inquired
-solicitously, noticing with alarm her wan face,
-her languid air of weariness.</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head slowly, not daring to trust<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-her voice. Mrs. Dunlop put her arm about her
-fondly.</p>
-
-<p>“The lassie is tired, Robert,” she said in her
-motherly way, “and no wonder. She’ll be as bright
-as a lark in the morning.” Bidding them both a
-tender good-night, he turned and ran down the steps,
-jumped into the carriage, and drove off toward his
-chambers, whistling softly to himself the tune of
-“Mary of Argyle.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XVIII</h3>
-
-<p>The next day a grand garden party was given at
-Glencairn Hall. All Edinburgh was invited, and
-they came eagerly to see the great poet, who was on
-the eve of leaving the social world to retire to his
-farm in Ayrshire, and to see Highland Mary, the
-dainty, flower-like sweetheart of their idol. The
-grounds looked very bright and gay. Refreshment
-booths of red and white canvas were dotted here and
-there on the smooth velvet lawns. Bright flags of all
-nations waved from different parts of the gardens—signals
-of putting, archery, and dancing—and the
-seductive music of the Queen’s theater orchestra rose
-up and joined the songs of birds and the tinkle of the
-fountains in full play. Girls in light summer costumes
-were grouped picturesquely beneath the stately oaks
-and beeches. Gay laughter echoed from the leafy
-shrubberies, and stray couples were seen sauntering
-carelessly through the rose gardens, too much absorbed
-in each other to notice what was going on
-around them.</p>
-
-<p>Presently out of the same rose garden a man
-walked hurriedly, followed by a woman, who quickly
-overtook him, to his perceptible annoyance. They
-were Sir William Creech and Eppy McKay. Eppy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
-looked exceedingly ugly in the full glare of the bright
-sun. She was dressed in a brilliant plaid gown, the
-style of which seemed to accentuate her angularity;
-and a huge Gainsborough hat was perched jauntily
-upon her towering court wig. Her small green eyes
-looked coquettishly at her irate companion. He
-stopped and glared at her fiercely.</p>
-
-<p>“But I desire to take a smoke,” he said wrathfully.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t object to smoke, Sir William,” she
-tittered coyly.</p>
-
-<p>He looked about him wildly as if seeking some
-means of escape from his admirer. “But I wish
-to be alone,” he cried almost pleadingly.</p>
-
-<p>She opened her eyes and regarded him reproachfully.
-“Oh, you are joking, Sir William, but you
-cannot scare me away.”</p>
-
-<p>With a groan of despair he continued his walk, hoping
-to escape from his persistent admirer. “Great
-heavens! I’ll go daft yet,” he muttered as he perceived
-her close at his elbow. For a few minutes he puffed
-furiously at his pipe, casting angry glances from
-time to time at his unwelcome companion, who trotted
-along so contentedly at his side. Finally Sir
-William concluded that he could not elude her attentions
-for the time being, so decided to make the best of
-the infliction. “Do I go too fast for you?” he asked
-maliciously, as he heard her puffing away vigorously
-beside him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“No, indeed,” she replied with a little breathless
-giggle. “You couldn’t go too fast for me, for I
-am as light and quick on my feet as ever I was. In
-faith, why shouldn’t I be?” she continued gayly.
-“I am only 32. You see I am so much younger than
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>He snorted angrily. “Well, you don’t look it,”
-he retorted. She stopped short and looked at him
-in amazed indignation.</p>
-
-<p>“What?” she quavered, a little out of breath,
-“I don’t look younger than you?”</p>
-
-<p>At the sign of approaching tears, Sir William
-frowned impatiently. “I mean you don’t look—32,”
-he said diplomatically.</p>
-
-<p>She simpered and thanked him for the compliment.</p>
-
-<p>He smiled grimly as he said to himself, “She’s
-over 60 if she’s a day.”</p>
-
-<p>“They all tell me I don’t look my age,” she said
-gushingly. “It’s my artistic soul that keeps me so
-young and fresh-looking.” They sat down on a
-bench, glad of the opportunity to cool themselves
-after their strenuous walk. “Do you know,” she
-said dreamily, fanning herself, “I am very different
-from most artistic people.” He looked at her. “Oh
-my, yes, indeed!” she affirmed convincingly. “I
-don’t live in the clouds, I am of the earth earthy,”
-and she gave him another languishing look.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye don’t tell me,” he retorted mockingly.</p>
-
-<p>“But I love art,” sighed Eppy ecstatically.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
-“When I was young,” she went on reminiscently,
-“I mean when I was younger,” she corrected herself
-with a startled look at her silent companion, “I came
-near having a painting from my own hand hung in
-the National Gallery.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are a clever woman,” he remarked sarcastically.</p>
-
-<p>“It was this way,” she explained volubly. “I
-had painted a lovely marine. I do marines much
-better than anything else,” with a self-conscious
-smirk, “and upon showing it to Mr. William Nichol,
-a dear man, but one who drinks to excess, he promised
-to mention it to the Lord Mayor. Well, it made
-me exceedingly nervous, I vow. However, I bought
-a most lovely frame for it, Nile green in color, with
-sweet red plush ends.” She cleared her throat affectedly
-and continued with evident delight. “I do like
-things to match,” she explained, “and the green was
-the exact shade of the water. It was simply exquisite.”
-She clasped her hands together and rolled her
-eyes heavenward. “And the red ends exactly
-matched the cow, which was a lovely shade of——”</p>
-
-<p>“Cow?” echoed Sir William in amazement.
-“Did I hear you say cow?”</p>
-
-<p>Eppy looked at him pettishly. She didn’t like to
-be so violently interrupted. “Certainly a cow,”
-she returned frigidly. “Is there anything strange
-in a cow?” and she drew herself up with an injured
-air.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“No, there’s nothing strange in a cow when it
-is by itself,” replied Sir William dryly, “but in a
-marine, well, it is a little hard on the cow.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t know what you are saying, Sir William,”
-flashed Eppy indignantly. “Please don’t
-interrupt me again. The cow I have reference to was
-in one corner drinking. I heard Lady Nancy Gordon
-telling Mrs. McLehose that the cow looked as if
-it were trying to drink the ocean dry; the idea!”
-and she clucked her tongue against her teeth in contemptuous
-scorn. “She’s a cat,” she continued
-spitefully; “I never could bear her. She was uncommon
-jealous of me, yes, indeed, but that’s another
-matter.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir William turned crimson, and seemed about to
-choke, as he tried to smother his laughter. “You
-were telling me about your marine,” he finally stuttered.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t hurry me, Sir William,” said Eppy
-coquettishly. “Well, I took it to Lord Mundobbo.
-You know whom I mean; at that time he had something
-to do with the National Gallery; Mr. Nichol
-didn’t inform me as to his exact connection with it.”
-She paused and gazed soulfully into space. “Shall
-I ever forget the day? The sun was high in the
-heavens—but there,” she broke off with a deprecating
-smile. “I really must restrain my poetic impulse.
-But as I was saying,” she rambled on quickly, “the
-sky was overcast and threatening snow——”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I thought the sun was shining, Miss McKay,”
-interrupted Sir William gruffly.</p>
-
-<p>She was beginning to get on his nerves again. “I
-am a little mixed in my metaphors,” apologized
-Eppy condescendingly, “but you flustrate me so,
-Sir William,” and she tapped him playfully with her
-fan. “Well, I felt that victory was mine. I took
-off the paper—it was pink, tied with a yellow string—and
-laid it before him.” She paused impressively,
-then she continued in an elocutionary tone of voice.
-“He gazed at it long and silently. He was simply
-speechless. I knew he’d be. I said to him, ‘Lord
-Mundobbo, as much as it grieves me to part with my—ahem—masterpiece,
-for the sake of art I will permit
-you to add it to the collection of paintings in the
-National Gallery.’ Said he, ‘Miss McKay, really I
-appreciate this honor you do me and the National
-Gallery. It is a masterpiece of its kind, but I cannot
-accept it.’”</p>
-
-<p>“The brute!” exclaimed Sir William in mock
-anger. “Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“He said if I would change the ocean into a fresh
-water pond and give the cow a chance, he might
-consider it,” and Eppy tearfully regarded her now
-laughing companion with an aggrieved air.</p>
-
-<p>“Did ye do it?” inquired Sir William, rising to
-his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Did I do it!” repeated Eppy with horror expressed
-in every tone of her voice, every feature of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-her pointed face. “No, sir,” she replied emphatically.
-“Never would I willingly spoil a work of art.
-That was my first and only. I couldn’t improve on
-it. But my artistic soul was smothered, and now
-another, a poetic spirit has taken its place.” She
-smiled dreamily, a sigh of content escaping her
-parted lips.</p>
-
-<p>“A case of the survival of the fittest, eh?” he
-retorted brusquely.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment they walked on in silence, Sir William
-wondering how to get rid of the incubus, and
-Eppy happy over the impression she fondly imagined
-she had made upon Sir William. Just then a bend
-in the avenue brought them in full view of the broad
-terrace in front of the hall, where Robert’s handsome
-figure was outlined clearly against the dazzling blue
-of the sky. Several people were grouped near him.
-He seemed to be in animated conversation with some
-of them, and his face was radiant with smiles. With
-a cry of delight, Eppy hurried forward to greet him,
-forgetting Sir William utterly, much to his amazement.
-That she, or anyone, would dare leave him so
-unceremoniously to join Robert Burns angered him
-beyond measure. He followed her slowly at some little
-distance, with no very pleasant expression on his
-stern features.</p>
-
-<p>Later in the afternoon when it was close to sunset,
-and all other amusements had given way to
-the delight of dancing Sir Roger de Coverly on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-springy green turf to the silvery music of the
-orchestra, Mary and Mrs. Dunlop put in their
-appearance. Mary was looking very beautiful in a
-clinging, old-fashioned white crepe de chene, another
-old relic of Mrs. Dunlop’s dead and gone slim youth.
-While they danced, she reclined languidly in a low
-chair, her sad eyes fixed mournfully upon Robert’s
-glowing face as he lay stretched in lazy length
-at her feet. The day had passed and still she had had
-no opportunity to tell him the dire news, for she had
-not seen him since the night before.</p>
-
-<p>While the dancing was in progress a liveried page
-walked noiselessly over the turf and stopping beside
-the recumbent figure of the poet, quietly handed him
-a note. He leisurely opened it and read it at a
-glance. “Say I’ll be right there,” he said to the
-waiting page after a moment’s meditation. He
-excused himself to Mary and the others and followed
-the man indoors, with a frown of impatient wonder
-clouding his brow.</p>
-
-<p>Under the shadow of a noble maple, Lady Glencairn
-was seated in earnest conversation with her
-uncle. Her ladyship was looking exceedingly beautiful
-in a pink-flowered summer silk, which puffed and
-billowed around her, with a bunch of white heather
-at her breast and a wreath of the same dainty flowers
-in her picturesque Leghorn hat. She held a pink-lined
-parasol over her head, and from under the
-protecting shadow her dark lustrous eyes flashed disdainfully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
-as she regarded her scolding companion.
-Suddenly she gave a start and leaned forward to
-watch the group opposite. She had noticed the quiet
-entrance of the servant and the immediate departure
-of the poet, and idly wondered who it was that
-desired to see Robert on such urgent business that
-they must needs follow him here. The minutes
-passed and still he did not return. She was growing
-anxious. “Suppose”—and she started violently at
-the sudden thought—“suppose it was by some unfortunate
-chance Jean Armour herself?” She rose
-quickly to her feet, with a word of apology and
-after a quick look around, in which she noticed Mary’s
-pale face and restless manner, she walked leisurely
-toward the house. Once inside she rang for the page
-and upon questioning him learned that the young
-woman who had insisted on seeing Mr. Burns, and who
-was none other than Jean Armour, as she concluded
-from the man’s description, had just gone, and that
-Mr. Burns was now seated in the drawing-room alone.
-Hastily dismissing him, she stole softly into the
-parlors, and there beside the table, his face in his
-hands, sat Robert, his shoulders heaving convulsively.
-She looked at him a moment and the tears
-of pity came into her luminous eyes. Then softly
-she walked to his side and laid her cool hand upon
-his feverish head. “Robert, I am so sorry for you,”
-she said gently.</p>
-
-<p>He lifted his head with a start and rose quickly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-to his feet. It didn’t occur to him to ask what she
-meant or to inquire how she knew what had happened
-in that room, and she was secretly glad that he demanded
-no explanation. “Where is she?” he asked
-dully.</p>
-
-<p>“She has gone,” she answered quickly. “I—I met
-her at the door and offered to assist her, gave her
-money and advised her not to make any unnecessary
-scandal in town, but to return to her home at once.
-You know she is my godchild. So she promised to
-go, and I presume she is now on her way.” She
-looked him straight in the eyes as she glibly told this
-falsehood. She didn’t know what arrangements he
-had made with Jean, but she daringly made the lying
-explanation, confident that he would believe it, for he
-could have no possible reason for suspecting her
-motives, or any means of finding out at present that
-she had not indeed met Jean, who might have altered
-her plans at the last moment.</p>
-
-<p>A look of anger came over his face for a moment,
-then as quickly died away, and his eyes filled with a
-hopeless, despairing look. He walked slowly to the
-window, his hands clenched together behind him, and
-stood there, pale and miserable and wretched, gazing
-out upon the scene of happiness he had just left.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glencairn watched him with eyes filled with
-passion, and her heart beat with painful thuds as she
-fought against the desperate longing to throw herself
-into his arms and comfort him. She glided<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-quickly to his side and put her hand gently within
-his arm and stood there in sympathetic silence although
-she was consumed with jealousy as she
-watched his melancholy eyes riveted on the fair
-face of his lost sweetheart. For a while they stood
-there in gloomy quiet. Presently a deep, heartrending
-sigh, which was almost a sob, escaped his
-trembling lips.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ we were so happy a few minutes ago,” he
-murmured brokenly. “An’ noo ’tis all over.” He
-paused and bit his lips convulsively. Presently he
-went on in a dull, low tone as if speaking to himself,
-“How true it is, there’s many a slip ’twixt cup
-and lip.” Lady Glencairn pressed his arm tenderly,
-but remained silent. “What have I to live
-for noo?” he continued with despairing mournfulness.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything, Robert,” murmured her ladyship
-tenderly, gazing up into his face with glittering eyes.</p>
-
-<p>He turned and looked at her in wonder. As he
-saw the feverish flush on her face, felt her hot breath
-on his cheek, he remembered with a start her peculiar
-words and meaning looks at Athol Castle the
-night before. Lady Glencairn noted with apprehension
-the look of stern coldness spread quickly over his
-face, and the nervous tears of disappointment and
-passionate longing welled up in her eyes. Then with
-reckless abandon she dropped her head against his
-shoulder and let the tears flow unrestrainedly. For a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-moment Robert stood there speechless with surprise
-and horror, for he knew at last that what he had
-vaguely feared was an indisputable fact; knew that
-his hostess, the wife of his dearest friend and counsellor,
-entertained a guilty passion for him. It filled
-him with righteous anger that she would willingly betray
-the love and confidence of the noblest gentleman
-in the kingdom. He placed the weeping woman in a
-chair and stood looking down upon her with a frown
-of displeasure. “Lady Glencairn,” he said coldly,
-“if these tears are for my unhappy fate, I thank ye
-for your sympathy.”</p>
-
-<p>She caught his hand and held it tightly within
-her arm. “Oh, no, no, Robert, ’tis not that,” she
-whispered passionately. “Do you not remember the
-Lady of the Lake I told you of last evening?” He
-made no reply. Then she continued slowly, her voice
-low and shaking, “Read my fate in that of hers.”</p>
-
-<p>Still he would not understand her. “I fear I do
-not understand your meaning, my lady,” he replied,
-trying to withdraw his hand from her grasp, but
-she held it firmly.</p>
-
-<p>“Cannot your heart understand mine?” she cried
-recklessly. “Does it not pity my wretchedness?”</p>
-
-<p>He was silent for a moment. He knew he could
-no longer parry with her, for her words and meaning
-were too plain to admit of any misunderstanding.
-He turned to her, his face set and firm. “Lady
-Glencairn,” he said sternly, “you dishonor yourself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-by such madness, and all for naught. My heart is
-noo numb with sorrow, it could feel no throb of
-yours, even were I vile enough to see no evil in usurping
-your husband’s rights.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do not remind me of my unhappiness!” she
-exclaimed impatiently. “I married him when I was
-a girl, before I knew what love was. Then you came
-into my life, and I knew that the fire of love was
-not dead within me.” Her rich seductive voice
-trembled with passion.</p>
-
-<p>“I pray you cease!” he entreated her, but she
-went on rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me speak, Robert!” she cried, clinging to
-him frantically. “I can no longer contain myself,
-for I love you better than my life, better than my
-honor, my good name; I care not for them now.
-Oh, pity me, pity me!” and she flung herself down
-on her knees before him and burst into a storm of
-irrepressible weeping.</p>
-
-<p>Robert looked around apprehensively. The
-thought that someone might suddenly enter the
-room filled him with alarmed dismay. With a quick
-movement he raised her to her feet, and his voice
-trembled with deep feeling when he next spoke. “I
-do pity you,” he said sorrowfully, “but I pity your
-husband more, when he learns of your faithlessness.”
-He paused and regarded her with reproachful sadness.
-“Oh, why have you severed forever the threads
-of our friendship by such imprudence, such rashness?”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-As he finished he bowed his head and walked
-slowly toward the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Do not leave me like this!” she panted desperately.
-“Can’t you see you are killing me by your
-coldness.” She held out her arms in piteous entreaty
-as she continued tenderly, “Tell me you didn’t mean
-it, Robert. Say you are but testing my love for
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned on her quickly and at his look of
-contemptuous scorn she drooped her head and the
-hot blood rushed to her face. “Are you lost to all
-sense of prudence, honor and decency?” he cried in
-scathing accents. “Heaven knows I’m no moralist,
-no saint,” and he gave a mirthless little laugh as he
-thought of the opinion Edinburgh had formed concerning
-his morality—then he went on firmly, solemnly,
-“But I would sooner cut this erring heart of
-mine out of this body than fall so low as to betray the
-honor of my friend who trusts me.” She started
-to speak again, but he raised his hand quickly.
-“Say no more, Lady Glencairn,” he said with calm
-dignity, “an’ I’ll forget this distressing conversation,
-and continue thro’ life to respect equally with
-himself, the wife of my friend.”</p>
-
-<p>Slowly the warm color faded from her cheeks,
-leaving her ashy pale, while through her suddenly
-narrowed eyelids a vindictive light gleamed tigerishly.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve said enough!” she hissed through her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-clenched teeth. “I have lowered myself to you as
-I would to no other man living, only to be scorned
-and humiliated. God!” she laughed wildly, hysterically,
-and threw herself face downward upon the
-ottoman. “Fool, fool!” she cried with bitter self-abasement.
-“How I hate and despise myself for
-what I have done; would I had died before I had
-uttered such damning words,” and she beat her
-jeweled hands frantically against the cushions.</p>
-
-<p>“I beseech you to be careful, Lady Glencairn,”
-cried Robert in amazed alarm, going to her.</p>
-
-<p>She turned on him fiercely. “You, of all men,
-posing as a model of virtue and goodness, prating of
-husband’s honor, wife’s duty.” She measured him
-with a scornful, sneering glance of fury. “You,
-who have the name of making love to every female
-in petticoats who crosses your path, you hypocrite!”</p>
-
-<p>Robert fixed his eyes upon her in silence and the
-utter scorn of the look stung her heart to its center.
-Presently he controlled his anger sufficiently to be
-able to speak, and still eying her with that straight,
-keen look of immeasurable disdain, he said in cold,
-deliberate accents, “Your ladyship has been misinformed
-as to my past conduct. I do not claim
-to be more than human, but I know my name is as
-yet clear from the taint of dishonor.”</p>
-
-<p>“You poor fool, you country yokel!” she stormed
-furiously, walking up and down between him and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-the door like a caged lioness. “Did you think you
-could scorn such a woman as I with impunity? Do
-you think I will stand the humiliation of being repulsed,
-despised, shamed? I tell you no, no, never;
-’tis but a step from love to hate, you should
-know that.” She paused in her nervous walking and
-stood facing him, her eyes ablaze with the uttermost
-anger, her beautiful figure drawn rigidly erect.
-“You shall be made to feel the depth of my hatred
-before long, Robert Burns,” she threatened, and
-there came a dangerous gleam in the flashing, dark
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall leave Edinburgh within the hour,”
-replied Robert quietly. Was there ever such another
-unfortunate being as himself? he thought grimly, and
-a wave of unutterable sadness rushed over him.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, that you will,” retorted her ladyship with
-a sneering, bitter laugh. “But not as you anticipate,
-with the plaudits of the world ringing in your ears.
-Instead of that, only contemptuous silence will greet
-your departure as you leave here in shame and disgrace,
-and when you have sunk once more into poverty
-and oblivion, you will repent bitterly ever
-having made an enemy of Alice Glencairn.” As
-these words left her lips, she swept haughtily past
-him like an outraged queen and left the room, leaving
-him standing there like one in a trance.</p>
-
-<p>He brushed his hands across his eyes as if to assure
-himself that he was awake, that he wasn’t the subject<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-of some hideous hallucination, but no, he was painfully
-conscious of the reality of it all. He heaved a
-deep sigh and sank wearily into a chair, his eyes
-riveted upon the floor in melancholy meditation. A
-little cry aroused him from the profound gloom into
-which his thoughts were plunged and looking fearfully
-up, dreading lest her ladyship had returned,
-his eyes rested upon the white, startled face of Highland
-Mary. She had watched him leave the grounds
-with listless curiosity, which changed to wonder and
-dismay when Lady Glencairn rose from her seat and
-sauntered toward the hall. For some minutes she
-nervously sat there wondering vaguely why he stayed
-so long and why her ladyship had followed him.
-Presently she rose and mechanically made her way
-over the springy sward toward the house. She
-couldn’t have told why she went or what she intended
-to do. She wondered in a vague way if Robert’s
-message could in any way concern Jean, but her
-thoughts dwelt longer upon the suspicions that had
-been raised in her innocent heart against her beautiful
-hostess, for she had recognized her as the bogus
-Lady Nancy in spite of the disguising mask, suspicions
-that filled her with uneasiness and alarm; and
-yet why should she be jealous? She told herself sadly
-she had renounced him forever, given him back to
-Jean, and in a few days she would pass out of his
-life forever. Oh, the agony that pierced her heart
-at the recollection of her past happiness! How<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-fleeting it had been—scarcely a week. She had
-drawn near the window by this time quite unconsciously.
-Suddenly the sound of voices within the
-room made her pause. She had not thought to listen
-nor meant to, but when she heard the passionate
-pleading voice of her ladyship and the stern replies
-from Robert, a feeling of fascinated horror took
-possession of her, rooting her to the spot. Motionless
-she stood there and heard all that passed within
-the room. And when the voices stopped and all was
-deathly still, she peered through the window. At the
-sight of her dear one sitting there all alone, with
-that look of intense suffering on his face, her heart
-cried out to him in sympathy. Quickly she opened
-the high French window and noiselessly stepped into
-the room. For a moment she stood watching him,
-her eyes filled with patient sorrow, infinite pity, and
-a world of loving compassion. Involuntarily a deep
-sigh escaped her. As he raised his head she went
-quietly up to him and placed a tender hand upon his
-arm. After one quick, heart-broken look at her
-he buried his face in his hands again.</p>
-
-<p>“Dinna distress yoursel’, laddie; I have known
-since last night at Athol Castle that our happy
-dream was ended.” She felt him stiffen beneath her
-touch. “Jean came to me in the gardens,” she
-explained with patient resignation. “I should have
-told ye last night, for she was waiting for ye
-to come to her, but I—I hadna’ the courage.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-There was silence for a moment, then he spoke in a
-low, spiritless tone.</p>
-
-<p>“Jean said that ye knew all,” he said without
-looking up. They remained quiet after that,
-plunged in bitter thought. There was nothing they
-could say to comfort each other, the wound was bleeding
-too freely as yet. Presently Robert raised his
-head, and with a despairing gesture pushed the heavy
-curls back from his fevered brow and rose unsteadily
-to his feet. They must get away at once, he thought
-feverishly. He took Mary by the hand and started
-for the door, when from the open window he heard
-his name called. Turning apprehensively he beheld
-Sir William Creech entering, followed by Lord Glencairn
-and several of his guests. In his hand Sir
-William held a newspaper, while a hard smile of
-triumph wrinkled his stem face.</p>
-
-<p>“I told ye, Robert Burns, ye would overreach
-yourself,” he cried jubilantly, shaking the newspaper
-at him.</p>
-
-<p>Robert looked at him apathetically. “Ye were
-ever a bird of ill omen,” he said quietly. “What
-have I done noo?”</p>
-
-<p>“You have seen fit to sign your name to an article
-in this paper, which has aroused the indignation of
-all Edinburgh,” replied Sir William without any
-preamble. “’Tis a most seditious article and shows
-that ye have embraced the doctrines of the French
-Revolution.”</p>
-
-<p>“A man has a perfect right to his opinion,” said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-Mrs. Dunlop decidedly, giving Sir William a scornful
-look.</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed he has,” echoed Eppy, nodding her head
-briskly. “I mean to stick to mine.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Glencairn turned and looked searchingly at
-Robert’s pale, gloomy face. “Is that true, Robert?”
-he asked gently.</p>
-
-<p>Robert did not reply. He seemed not to hear, in
-fact.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis a most serious charge, Mr. Burns,” remarked
-Mr. Sterne gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“If it be true,” retorted Mr. Mackenzie loyally.</p>
-
-<p>“Which is not at all likely,” flashed Eppy indignantly.</p>
-
-<p>She would believe nothing wrong of her hero,
-even if it were proven in black and white.</p>
-
-<p>“But listen!” continued Sir William eagerly.
-He scanned the article through quickly until he found
-what he sought. “Ah, here it is. It is stated here
-that Mr. Burns refused to stand up in the theater
-recently when ‘God save the King’ was being
-played,” and he glared about him indignantly.</p>
-
-<p>A quiet sneer curled Robert’s lips. “Anything
-else?” he asked sarcastically. “Out wi’ it or the
-venom of your spleen will poison ye,” and he fixed
-his eyes upon Sir William with disdainful indifference.</p>
-
-<p>“And there is more,” snarled Sir William. “’Tis
-known that ye have sent two cannon to the French
-Directorate with a complimentary letter, offering
-further assistance.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, no, impossible.” cried Lord Glencairn
-incredulously.</p>
-
-<p>“And,” continued Sir William vindictively,
-“there’s also a full account here which explains
-much of Mr. Burns’ reprehensible conduct here in
-town, as well as in Ayrshire, where it seems his
-amours were as numerous and questionable as they
-are at the present time.”</p>
-
-<p>“For shame, Creech!” cried Lord Glencairn with
-indignation.</p>
-
-<p>“How fascinating he must have been even when a
-farmer,” giggled Eppy aside to Mrs. Dunlop, who
-was casting indignant glances at Sir William.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis a libelous article,” she flashed angrily,
-“and I for one do not believe a word of it. Robert,”
-she said, turning to the silent figure standing
-so pale and calm before his inquisitors, “deny this
-absurd charge before it is given further credence!”</p>
-
-<p>“He cannot deny it,” said Sir William. “His
-name is at the bottom of it,” and he held it up to
-their view.</p>
-
-<p>“And I’ll attempt no denial,” replied Robert in
-a full ringing voice, “for I know it would be useless.
-Know, then, that I do sympathize with the
-French people in their struggle for freedom, and I
-did help them all that lay in my power. I hope
-that France may gain the prize for which she is
-fighting, a free and independent republic, and that
-she may set up her standard of liberty and independence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-as did the United States of America, when
-they were delivered from the toils of the British.”</p>
-
-<p>There was an uncomfortable silence when he had finished
-his declaration. His amazed and incredulous
-listeners could hardly believe they had heard him
-aright. They looked aghast at each other, not
-knowing just how to take it. Their embarrassed
-silence was soon broken, however.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye hear those seditious sentiments,” cried Sir
-William in an I-told-you-so tone of voice.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Glencairn shook his head gravely. “’Tis
-dangerous to speak thus, Robert,” he said with
-solemn earnestness. “You should be careful——”</p>
-
-<p>“Careful of what?” interrupted Robert with
-impatient scorn. “Lest I offend people with my
-plain speaking of the truth?” He paused and looked
-around him with flashing eyes and dilated nostrils.
-“Who is careful of my feelings?” he demanded.
-“Not those who think themselves my superiors by
-accident of birth.” He turned to Sir William
-Creech and continued quickly, his voice vibrating
-with suppressed indignation. “I’ve never wronged
-ye, Sir William Creech, yet ye are miscreant enough
-to seek my ruin, for I’m fair sure ’twas ye yourself
-who inserted that scurrilous article in that paper ye
-hold in your hand, in which my faults, my past
-errors and follies are now being aired.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir William turned a sickly color. “Think what
-you like,” he muttered savagely. “’Tis time the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-people of Edinburgh knew the character of the man
-they are honoring.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sir William Creech, you are an old brute!”
-cried Eppy, her little gray eyes flashing fire, and
-going up to him she continued in haughty disdain,
-“Remember, sir, I will have naught to do with you
-in the future; I turn my back on you,” and she suited
-the action to the word.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, Robert had spoken in an undertone to
-Mrs. Dunlop, and that good soul, putting an arm
-around Mary, who stood white and trembling like a
-frightened child, walked to the door, and Robert, after
-a formal inclination of his head, started quietly
-but proudly after them. They had reached the door,
-when it suddenly opened and Lady Glencairn stood
-upon the threshold, her head held haughtily erect,
-her lips curled in a disdainful sneer. She entered the
-room and closed the door behind her, then turned and
-faced the wondering group which was being augmented
-by the entrance, through the window, of a
-number of the guests whose curiosity had been
-aroused by the unusual scene to which they had been
-listening in speechless amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“Alice, what has happened?” cried Lord Glencairn
-in an alarmed voice. Her ladyship’s white,
-nervous face, the peculiar glitter in her eyes, startled
-him out of his usual calmness.</p>
-
-<p>“James, I am deeply sorry to wound you,” she
-began nervously, “but it’s best that you should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-know how grievously you have been betrayed by one
-of your honored guests here to-day,” and she fixed
-her narrowed eyes upon the startled face of Robert
-Burns.</p>
-
-<p>A great fear of impending danger came over him
-as he saw the revengeful look which she flashed at him,
-and he involuntarily straightened himself as if to
-receive a shock. There was a surprised movement
-among the crowd, and a low murmur of many voices
-broke the tense stillness which followed her accusation.</p>
-
-<p>“I—betrayed?” repeated Lord Glencairn, in astonishment.
-“What mean you, my dear?”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean,” she answered, and the lie rolled glibly
-off her crimson lips, “that your distinguished guest,
-Robert Burns, has to-day wantonly and without provocation
-grossly insulted the wife of his friend and
-host.” As the ignoble lie left her lips, there was an
-audible indrawn breath of startled surprise from
-the amazed listeners. Then they turned and fixed
-their wondering gaze upon the accused man, who,
-after an inarticulate exclamation of horror, stood as
-though carved out of stone.</p>
-
-<p>“I for one do not believe it,” cried Mrs. Dunlop
-indignantly, and she returned Lady Glencairn’s look
-of haughty displeasure with a withering glance of
-scornful disbelief.</p>
-
-<p>“Nor I,” echoed Eppy, with a youthful toss of
-her head.</p>
-
-<p>“What was the nature of the insult, Alice?”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
-asked Lord Glencairn gravely. No doubt she had
-taken offense where no offense was intended, he
-thought indulgently.</p>
-
-<p>Before she could answer, Robert stepped quickly
-up to her with flashing eyes and lips trembling with
-anger. “Madam, that I have had the misfortune
-to offend ye, I am sorrowfully aware,” he said with
-bitter sarcasm, “but that I have been guilty of
-offering ye an insult, none knows better than yourself
-how little cause ye have to accuse me of such
-monstrous ingratitude, such a contemptible betrayal
-of the laws of hospitality. I am quite willing that
-you should repeat every word of the conversation
-that passed between us in the room a few minutes
-since, and if aught that I have said can be construed
-as an insult to your ladyship, then do I stand ready
-and whiling to abide by the consequence of such an
-indiscretion.” He looked her straight in the eyes,
-and with folded arms calmly waited for her to
-speak.</p>
-
-<p>Not long did she return the look, however, for the
-utter scorn of it stung her guilty heart to its core.
-Not that she felt any compunction for what she was
-doing—her whole soul was up in arms against him,
-and she would not stop until she had meted out her
-spiteful revenge upon him to the fullest extent. His
-evident contemptuous defiance irritated her beyond
-measure—she was angrier with him than ever—already
-she had a sort of strange feeling of triumph<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-at the vengeance she had designed, for she knew that
-her word would be believed against his; even now
-she could read suspicion and conviction in many of
-the serious faces that surrounded her, much to her
-satisfaction. He had thrown down the challenge,
-had he? Well, she would take it up. No one knew
-what had passed between them save themselves, and
-no one would ever know the truth, and the truth
-would now be a very small factor in working out
-her present scheme of vengeance. All these thoughts
-flashed quickly through her mind, and her answer
-was ready on her lips almost soon as he had finished
-speaking. With well-simulated indignation she drew
-herself haughtily away from him, with a gesture of
-repulsion. “Dare you deny your protestations of
-love and devotion?” she replied. “Why, my lord,”
-she continued scornfully, turning to her husband, who
-was now regarding Robert with serious, thoughtful
-eyes, a look of wounded pride and deepening sorrow
-gradually shadowing his noble countenance, “before
-I could stop him he had fallen upon his knees
-and begged me to be false to you, and to give him my
-love, my favors.”</p>
-
-<p>“Great God!” cried Robert, staggering back,
-white and speechless, while a wave of the blackest
-despair engulfed him completely, for he knew that
-the outrageous lie had sealed his doom as utterly as
-though it had been the truth; knew that all denials
-from him would be useless in the face of that accusation.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-He sank back into a chair in helpless resignation,
-his independent spirit, his haughty pride
-wounded almost unto death.</p>
-
-<p>When Mary heard the lying accusation she
-started forward with a little cry on her lips. Freeing
-herself from Mrs. Dunlop’s restraining hand, she
-took a few steps toward Lord Glencairn, her face
-aglow with indignation, her timidity, her fear of
-the great ones surrounding her, forgotten for the
-moment, as she sought to defend the man she loved.</p>
-
-<p>“My lord!” she cried thrillingly, “’tis not true;
-Robbie did not insult her ladyship, for I——”</p>
-
-<p>But, with an angry flush, Lady Glencairn interrupted
-her. “I say he did,” she retorted harshly.
-Then, as Mrs. Dunlop drew the frightened girl away,
-she continued with insulting emphasis, “James, bid
-this man and his virtuous Highland Mary begone
-at once! Their presence here is an insult to respectable
-people,” and she flashed them a malicious
-look.</p>
-
-<p>“Alice, Alice!” exclaimed Lord Glencairn, in
-accents of deep reproach, “that is unworthy of
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert felt as though he must choke with fury.
-He forgot the presence of Lord Glencairn. He forgot
-everything but his just indignation. “My
-God!” he cried passionately, striding up to the
-sneering woman, “you dare to speak so—you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I!” she returned coolly, eying him disdainfully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-up and down. “What have you to say
-against me?” She drew herself up imperiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Only this,” replied Robert in a low, tense voice,
-“ye may say what you will of me, but as ye value
-your happiness, do not breathe aught against the
-fair name of Mary Campbell.”</p>
-
-<p>She uttered an angry exclamation, but remained
-speechless and so pale that her lips were devoid of
-color. If he were dishonorable enough to tell everything,
-she thought, with a thrill of fear, it would
-make things decidedly embarrassing and humiliating
-for her, besides giving her enemies a choice bit
-of scandal, which they would use to excellent advantage.</p>
-
-<p>At this point a few of the guests, feeling decidedly
-uncomfortable and very much <i>de trop</i>, quietly left
-the room, but the others, and the room was filled,
-held their ground, shamelessly reveling in the extraordinary
-scene, the like of which had never before
-been seen in an Edinburgh drawing-room, which
-was being enacted before them.</p>
-
-<p>“Robert, lad,” whispered Mrs. Dunlop, in a loud
-aside, “ye must say something. Deny this charge.
-I know you are innocent of any wrong doing.
-Speak, tell his lordship so!” and she pointed to
-where he stood crushed and silent, in speechless
-sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>“What can I say, Mrs. Dunlop?” replied Robert,
-in an agony of indecision. “Would ye have me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-flatly contradict her ladyship and accuse her of
-lying?” He paused a moment with patient sadness.
-“Nay, nay, friend, there is nothing I can say noo
-that will smooth matters or clear me in the eyes of
-the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you must tell them the truth,” insisted
-Mary. “Dinna’ let them believe this monstrous thing
-of you.” She looked indignantly at the cold repellent
-face of her ladyship, and continued fearlessly,
-“She’s a bold, wicked woman, and she seeks
-your ruin!”</p>
-
-<p>“How dare you, you insolent creature!” hissed
-her ladyship furiously, while the amazed guests
-looked in open-mouthed amazement at the demure
-little dairymaid so suddenly transformed, standing
-with head thrown back and eyes flashing accusingly.</p>
-
-<p>But Robert remained rigidly silent. He would
-not be so base, so ungrateful as to shatter his benefactor’s
-belief in his wife’s honor, her veracity, he
-told himself in a spirit of self-sacrifice. He owed
-all he had in the world to him, and he would remain
-silent for his sake, and he kept his eyes fixed unresponsively
-on the rug at his feet, but the little drops
-of perspiration stood out on his brow, as he fought
-against the temptation to clear his good name from
-ignominy.</p>
-
-<p>Throwing open the door Lady Glencairn pointed
-to it dramatically, “There’s the door, Mr. Burns,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-she said insolently; “do not compel me to call my
-servants.”</p>
-
-<p>“Jezebel!” muttered Mr. Mackenzie through his
-clenched teeth.</p>
-
-<p>“If he goes I go too,” flashed Mrs. Dunlop, casting
-an indignant look at her hostess.</p>
-
-<p>“So will I,” echoed Eppy.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait!” cried Mary vibrantly. Her silvery voice
-rang out above the confusion, as the guests moved
-about among themselves asking all sorts of inane
-questions, exploiting their views upon the subject—some
-loudly extolling Lady Glencairn’s attitude in
-the matter and others as stoutly defending the
-bard. Instantly there was an astonished hush.</p>
-
-<p>“My lords and ladies,” continued Mary thrillingly,
-“listen to me! I tell ye that Robert Burns is
-innocent o’ this contemptible charge laid against him.
-I know it, for I was outside the window yonder an’
-heard all that passed between him and her ladyship.”</p>
-
-<p>“Spy!” hissed Lady Glencairn between her teeth,
-unheard in the hubbub of voices which had commenced
-again with Mary’s statement as the subject
-of comment, then she laughed mockingly. “How
-absurd,” she cried to those about her. “My dear
-James, let us end this scene. I will not stay here to
-be insulted. Come, my friends, let us retire,” and
-she took her husband’s arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye shall listen to the truth, all of ye!” cried
-Mary resolutely. Clasping and unclasping her little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-hands with nervous intensity, her eyes filled with
-determined purpose, she faced the fickle crowd that
-was regarding her with such open admiration for
-her stanchness, her bravery. “I heard her ladyship
-swear to ruin Robert because he spurned her
-unwomanly offers of love,” she declared, with convincing
-earnestness.</p>
-
-<p>A guilty flush reddened the creamy pallor of her
-ladyship’s face. “Oh, the shame of it, my lord,
-to be thus humiliated before my guests!” she cried,
-bursting into nervous tears. “Surely, my lord, you
-would not listen to such monstrous tales,” she
-pleaded.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, believe me, I speak the truth,” exclaimed
-Mary, a great fear in her heart as she saw the tender
-look Lord Glencairn bestowed upon his weeping
-wife.</p>
-
-<p>He was torn and spent by conflicting emotions.
-He did not doubt his wife, yet the words of the
-young girl rang true, and there was only truth
-and nobility stamped upon the gloomy face of the
-poet. What was he to believe? How could he decide?
-His confidence in his wife had never yet been
-shaken—yet, stay—there was once when—but he
-would not think of that time, it was so long ago,
-yet think of it he did with uneasy misgivings. If
-she had deceived him once, might she not again? he
-asked himself fearfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Burns, will you assure me on your word of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-honor as a man that you are entirely innocent of
-any intentional insult to Lady Glencairn?” asked
-Mr. Mackenzie bluntly. He had taken his place beside
-Robert, along with Mrs. Dunlop and Mary and
-Eppy McKay, together with a few more of Robert’s
-sympathizers and stanch believers in his innocence.
-And now he asked the question in hope of eliciting
-some explanation, some excuse, anything, from the
-silent man.</p>
-
-<p>Robert raised his head and without looking at
-any one particular person, answered simply, indifferently,
-as many thought.</p>
-
-<p>“I have always held Lady Glencairn in the highest
-respect and admiration,” he said quietly. “She alone
-knows what is the end she aims at, by attributing
-feelings to me with regard to her which I have
-never conceived, and words which I have never uttered.”
-And he sank once more into his listless
-attitude.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Glencairn passed his hand over his brow in
-a bewildered manner. “You were ever truthful,
-Robert,” he muttered so low that none but his wife
-heard his implied doubt of her.</p>
-
-<p>She turned on him witheringly. “My lord, you
-insult me by lending an ear to aught he or his witness
-can say in his behalf,” she exclaimed frigidly. Then,
-turning to the onlookers, she continued with insolent
-innuendo in words and manner, “You all know
-the infatuated attachment of this maid for Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-Burns, who has bewitched her until she is ready to
-sacrifice every consideration of truth, reason, or duty
-to shield her guilty lover.”</p>
-
-<p>“What a scandal this will cause throughout
-Edinburgh,” whispered Eppy to Mrs. Dunlop, who
-was almost beside herself with speechless indignation
-by this time. She had been listening with growing
-anger to Lady Glencairn’s insolent falsehoods, for
-she knew they were falsehoods, and she would never
-believe that Robbie would belittle himself by lying,
-for he was too brutally frank and truthful at times
-to be thoroughly an agreeable companion.</p>
-
-<p>Eppy’s inopportune remark was the straw that
-broke the camel’s back, and she turned on her hotly.
-“Hold your tongue, ye old busy body!” she exploded
-violently, nearly knocking the astonished
-Eppy down by the suddenness, the unexpectedness,
-of the retort.</p>
-
-<p>“I was never so insulted in my life,” Eppy
-gasped tearfully, making little dabs at her eyes
-with a dainty ’kerchief, and casting hurt, reproachful
-glances at the blunt old lady, who, after delivering
-her shaft at the unoffending Eppy, turned to
-Lord Glencairn, the fire still flashing in her determined
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord Glencairn,” she said, with a touch of defiance,
-“you may forbid me your house hereafter,
-and indeed I hardly believe I will be welcome,” with
-a look at the scornful face of her hostess; “but I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-care not; I believe in Robert’s innocence, and that
-Mary Campbell has only spoken the truth.” A few
-nodded their heads to each other in approval. Lord
-Glencairn stood mute, a prey to the doubting fear
-which gripped his heart.</p>
-
-<p>Her ladyship, with one quick look around at the
-wavering faces of her friends, knew that she was
-losing ground, and the color faded from her cheeks.
-A look of nervous fear came into her steely eyes.
-She must restore their shaking confidence in her—but
-how? It gave her a strange feeling of satisfaction
-to know that whatever the outcome, she had
-ruined his popularity for the present, but she wanted
-to ruin him utterly—to turn every door in Edinburgh
-against him. If she could only get someone
-to speak in her behalf, she thought prayerfully, as
-she looked about her. Suddenly her eyes rested on
-the saturnine features of her uncle, who was regarding
-her with a malicious smile of triumph. An eager
-light came into her hard eyes. He hated Robert
-Burns; he would help her out if anyone would; she
-would risk it. His word coupled with hers would
-instantly turn the tide in her favor. And risking
-all upon the throw, she called out loud enough to be
-heard above the murmur of voices, “Uncle, it seems
-my word is not fully believed,” she said, with a little
-pitying, disdainful smile, which brought the flush
-of embarrassment to the cheeks of several, who happened
-to catch her eye; “so if you will oblige me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-by relating what you know of the unpleasant circumstances,
-perhaps your word will be accepted by
-our doubting friends.” Her lazy voice was replete
-with insulting sarcasm.</p>
-
-<p>All eyes turned to look at Sir William, who, after
-one quick, angry glance at the cool, smiling face of
-his strategic niece, cleared his throat with irritating
-precision, and, without glancing at the startled face
-of his victim, who had started to his feet upon hearing
-the amazing request of her ladyship, spoke
-quickly and harshly, a faint tinge of color dying his
-yellow skin as the dastardly lie left his lips.</p>
-
-<p>“I overheard Mr. Burns’ insults to my niece,” he
-said firmly. “I was standing behind the curtain
-there,” pointing to a large window, “where I had
-gone only a moment before Lady Glencairn entered
-the room, to glance out of the window, having heard a
-noise without, and before I could make my presence
-known, Mr. Burns had thrown himself upon his
-knees, and—and I did not disturb them,” he concluded
-lamely.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye perjurer!” cried Robert furiously. “By
-heaven, I could choke ye with your own lie!” and he
-turned white with passion. Sir William cowered
-back, a look of fear in his shifty eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Robbie, take me hame, take me hame,”
-gasped Mary, with heart-breaking pathos, and she
-sank half fainting in the chair Robert had vacated.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, James, let us retire,” said Lady Glencairn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-sweetly, casting a look of grateful triumph at
-her uncle. “I am sorry you have lost a friend, but
-I could not shield him,” and she pressed his arm with
-affected tenderness. Slowly, sorrowfully he allowed
-himself to be drawn to the door.</p>
-
-<p>“My lord!” cried Robert hoarsely, “have ye no
-word to say to me? Ye have heard the proofs of
-my innocence; will ye not believe them?” and his
-whole soul was in his eyes as he eagerly searched the
-downcast face of his old benefactor.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Glencairn gave him one sad, reproachful
-look. “Oh, Robert,” he said brokenly, “and I
-trusted you so.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert dropped his hand, which he had extended
-pleadingly, and a flush mounted to the roots of his
-hair, which quickly faded, leaving him paler than
-before, while a look of wounded pride and unutterable
-bitterness flashed into his stern face.</p>
-
-<p>“I will attempt no further denial, my lord,” he
-said slowly, with quiet dignity. “Calumny has at
-last reared its vicious head to strike like some venomous
-serpent, seeking to crush me in its enveloping
-folds. The genius of the Bard is ignored, forgotten—only
-my obscure birth, my sins, my indiscretions,
-my faults are remembered now,” and he smiled
-with mournful bitterness.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye have been too puffed up with pride and
-vanity,” cried Sir William brutally. “Edinburgh
-has tired of you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Robert gave a scornful little laugh. “Why,” he
-asked, looking around at those who had been only
-too glad to fawn upon him a few moments before,
-“because I am no longer a curiosity for the vulgar
-to gaze at?” He spoke with biting sarcasm. He
-paused a minute, then continued bitterly. “Oh, fool
-that I have been! At last my eyes are opened to my
-true position in your world of society. How I hate
-and despise the hypocrisy of you so-called some-bodies!
-How you fawn and smirk and bow down
-to wealth and position, while the man of genius, of
-avowed worth is disbelieved, dishonored, and insulted!
-God, the humiliation of it all!” His eyes
-flashed with righteous anger and the indignant scorn
-in his voice cut deeply through the thin skin of
-more than one of his listeners. “I have endured
-the insults heaped upon my head to-day in bitterness
-of spirit and in silent scorn,” he continued stormily,
-“but noo my outraged manhood at last rebels, and I
-throw down my gage of contemptuous defiance.”</p>
-
-<p>“Robert, calm yourself, laddie!” whispered Mrs.
-Dunlop apprehensively, laying a restraining hand
-upon his arm, which trembled with excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“Your friends will never believe aught against
-you, Mr. Burns,” exclaimed Mr. Mackenzie, with
-deep feeling in his voice.</p>
-
-<p>“My friends!” repeated Robert wildly. “I have
-none, I want none in this purse proud city. No
-longer will I submit to insulting condescension. No<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-longer will I skulk into a corner of the street like
-the veriest nobody on earth, lest the rattling equipage
-of some gossiping titled blockhead mangle me
-in the mire.”</p>
-
-<p>“Robert, I have always loved you,” exclaimed
-Lord Glencairn, with rebuking reproachfulness.</p>
-
-<p>“But ye believe the worst of me noo,” replied
-Robert passionately. “It only needed this scene
-of scandal to show my friends in their true colors.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then go back to your low-born friends where
-ye belong,” snarled Sir William vindictively.</p>
-
-<p>“I mean to go back,” retorted Robert, his face
-flushing crimson, “and with gladness will I shake
-the dust of this unjust city off my feet.” A softer
-look came over his haggard face and his eyes filled
-with a yearning look of utter heart-weariness, a sudden
-longing for the blissful quiet of his country
-home. A tender sweetness came into his voice as
-he continued softly, “I will return from whence
-I came, to the plowtail, where the poetic genius of
-my country found me and threw her inspiring mantle
-over me.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary took his hand in hers, and with infinite tenderness
-murmured fondly, “An’ ye’ll find the banks
-an’ braes of bonnie Doon holding out their arms to
-welcome ye back to your native heath once more,
-laddie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let us hope he’ll shine to better advantage<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
-there,” sneered Sir William. A nervous little titter
-broke the tense silence.</p>
-
-<p>Robert turned on him, goaded to sudden fury.
-“Ye bird o’ ill omen!” he panted hoarsely, “I have
-never injured ye; I have brought money into your
-empty pockets. But ye will repent bitterly for
-swearing away my life as ye have this day, for e’en
-though I leave Edinburgh in shame and disgrace,
-’tis not for ay. Nay! I thank God my works will
-live after me, that my name will yet become immortal.”
-His words rang out wildly and with impassioned
-intensity.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glencairn laughed mockingly, and, turning
-to some of her friends standing near, she made some
-low-toned remark, evidently a sarcastic witticism at
-the expense of the speaker, which elicited a burst of
-hollow laughter from her listeners, who, while they
-wished to remain in the favor of the leader of Edinburgh
-society, stood in wholesome awe of the blunt
-speech, the scornful wit of the brilliant poet on
-trial before them.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye vain boaster!” scoffed Sir William loudly,
-“you’ll be forgot within a week,” and he laughed
-derisively.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye may scoff, ye may laugh,” retorted Robert
-hotly. “Ye may call me egoist if ye like, but I know
-what I have done for my country—I have attuned
-my wild artless notes to sing her praises, joys, and
-sorrows, and I know those songs will live forever in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-the heart of every true Scotsman.” Suddenly, like
-a ray of sunshine which dispels the morning mist,
-his dark haughty face took upon itself a noble,
-thoughtful, rapt expression—his wildly flashing eyes
-softened—his furrowed brow smoothed, and, fixing
-his luminous eyes upon the disdainful face of his
-hostess, he continued with melancholy pathos and
-prophetic solemnity, “Ah, my lady, ye have
-trampled my good name low in the dust to-day, but
-my prophetic spirit tells me the day is coming, even
-though ye an’ all my traducers here be dead, rotted
-and forgot, when one name will be remembered, cherished
-and proclaimed above all others of Scotland,
-aye, the world, and that name, my lords and ladies,
-will not be of any rich titled somebody! Nay, ’twill
-be that of the plowman-poet of Ayrshire, Robert
-Burns.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XIX</h3>
-
-<p>The situation in which Robert now found himself
-was calculated to awaken reflection. The time had
-come, so he gloomily told his friend, Will Nichol, the
-morning after the garden party at Lord Glencairn’s,
-for him to abandon the gayety and dissipation
-of which he had been too much enamored; and
-all that day he pondered seriously, if gloomily, on
-the past, and formed virtuous resolutions respecting
-the future. He had weeks ago made up his mind
-to settle himself for life in the occupation of agriculture,
-and now that Edinburgh had tired of his
-peculiarities, and the novelty of his appearance had
-become an old story for them, there was nothing
-left for him to do but to start in on his new life as
-soon as possible. To further that end he called upon
-Sir William that day and demanded a settlement.
-When he left the office he found himself master of
-nearly £500. With the money in his pocket he
-again called on Will Nichols and requested him to
-assist him in the selection of a farm. With his
-advice and assistance he soon decided to lease the
-farm of Ellisland, on the banks of the River Nith,
-just above Dumfries. When he had in this manner
-arranged his plans for the future his generous heart,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-which was sore and bleeding from the many wounds
-it had recently received, wounds which seemed to the
-suffering man that would never heal in this life,
-turned in pity and remorse to the mother of his child—a
-thrill of yearning stirred him strangely as he
-thought of the little one—his son—a warm feeling
-of love welled up in his heart as he softly repeated
-the words; and listening to no consideration but
-those of honor and duty, and a strange feeling of
-growing affection, which made him pause in wonder,
-he sought out Jean at the Inn, having learned that
-she was still in town, contrary to Lady Glencairn’s
-assertion, which he had believed; and there, with his
-friends surrounding them, they were joined in a
-public declaration of marriage, thus legalizing their
-union and rendering it permanent for life.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Dunlop and Mary had not been present at
-the ceremony. Mary was confined to her bed in a
-state of nervous collapse, and Mrs. Dunlop, much
-as she loved Robert, and honored him for the noble
-step he was taking, could not leave the stricken girl.
-It was her wish and determination to keep Mary with
-her as long as she could content herself there. Her
-kind, motherly heart ached in silent sympathy for
-the child who had received such a bitter disappointment,
-and who was bearing her sorrows with such
-patient fortitude. Before Robert left the city she
-wrote for him to come and see her, assuring him of
-her continued friendship, etc., etc. That evening<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
-found him seated beside his stanch friend in whom
-he confided his hopes and his fears for the future,
-and soon he had poured out the bitterness of his
-heart, the yearnings of his soul, all the cruel disappointments
-of his tempestuous life. She listened in
-sympathetic silence, a smile of encouragement, every
-now and then, lighting up her face. When he had
-finished, she told him how proud she was of him, how
-she gloried in his strength of purpose, his new-made
-resolutions, cautioned him not to forget the new
-vows he had so lately formed, warned him of the
-many vices, the back-sliding state into which one of
-his temperament was so apt to fall. Then with infinite
-tenderness she told him of the courage of the
-sweet maiden who now lay upon her bed of sorrow
-in the upper room, told him of her loyalty, her pride
-in his greatness, in his nobility, while he listened with
-the burning tears streaming unchecked down his
-quivering cheeks. After a pause she took him by
-the hand and led him softly to the door of Mary’s
-chamber. “For the last farewell,” she whispered
-sadly. Then she left him standing before the door,
-gazing at it as though it were the gates of Heaven
-which were about to open for him at his bidding. A
-sweet voice bade him enter, in answer to his timid
-knock, and softly opening the door, he stepped into
-the room.</p>
-
-<p>Mary opened her beautiful, tired blue eyes, thinking
-it was her dear benefactress, and then what a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-divine rapture—what a dazzling wonder and joy
-flashed into them, giving them back their old luster
-of sunlight sparkling on an azure sea. She sprang
-up in her bed and stretched out her arms.</p>
-
-<p>“Robert!” she cried sobbingly. “Oh, Robbie,
-my darling.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Dunlop came back and softly closed the door
-on the sacred stillness that followed. Then she
-slowly wended her way down to her sitting-room and
-sat down with a deep sigh. “What a sad old world
-this is,” she thought. The time dragged along very
-slowly as she patiently waited for Robert to come
-down. Presently she heard the door above close
-ever so gently, and then his low footfall down the
-thick stair carpet. She rose and met him in the reception
-hall. He stood on the lowest step, his hand on
-the balustrade, his breast heaving with the strain of
-his emotions. Mrs. Dunlop took his hand tenderly
-and pressed it in loving sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>By and by he spoke, and the intense suffering in
-his voice touched her keenly. “As ye sow, so shall
-ye reap,” he muttered brokenly. She could only
-press his hand in silent sympathy. Gradually his
-grief became quiet and a look of melancholy resignation
-came over his expressive face.</p>
-
-<p>“When will you leave the city?” she asked
-quietly.</p>
-
-<p>He thought a moment. “My affairs will be settled
-by the week’s end,” he replied, “then I shall go<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-straight to Ellisland. I——” He paused a moment,
-then straightened himself, and continued in a
-firm voice, “Jean has gone to Mauchline. She will
-remain there until the house at Ellisland is in condition
-to receive her.” He held out his hand.
-“And now, dear, good friend, good-by.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, not good-by, laddie,” she answered tearfully.
-“Just <i>au revoir</i>, for I mean to visit you some
-day,” and she smiled through her tears.</p>
-
-<p>With a last shake of the hand, he left her, while
-above stairs a sweet, wan, tear-stained face, pressed
-close against the pane, watched his bowed figure
-striding moodily toward his lodging, watched it as
-it faded, growing dimmer and dimmer, till it was lost
-to sight.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<img src="images/illus7.jpg" width="475" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Robert Burns</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>BOOK III</h2>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XX</h3>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Now spells of mightier power prepare,</div>
-<div class="verse">Bid brighter phantoms round him dance;</div>
-<div class="verse">Let flattery spread her viewless snare,</div>
-<div class="verse">And fame attract his vagrant glance;</div>
-<div class="verse">Let sprightly pleasure too advance,</div>
-<div class="verse">Unveiled her eyes, unclasped her zone;</div>
-<div class="verse">Till last in love’s delicious trance</div>
-<div class="verse">He scorns the joys his youth has known.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>When Robert reached Ellisland the evening sun
-was flaming over the distant western hills. Not a
-breath stirred the crimson opening blossom, or the
-verdant spreading leaf. It was a golden moment
-for a poet’s heart. He stopped his horse by the door
-of the cottage and stood silently regarding his
-future home. He had secured from Mr. Miller in
-Dumfries, the owner of the farm, the keys, and declining
-the company of several, who offered to show
-him the way to his new possession, he set out on his
-journey in gloomy solitude. For a few moments he
-listened to the birds pouring their harmony on
-every hand, as if to welcome the wanderer, then
-with a sigh he unlocked the door and went
-within. A few weeks passed uneventfully. Upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-his arrival he had immediately begun to rebuild the
-dwelling house, which was inadequate to accommodate
-his family. It afforded his jaded senses much
-pleasure to survey the grounds he was about to cultivate,
-and in rearing a building that should give
-shelter to his wife and children (who were with Squire
-Armour in Mauchline, the stern old man having
-relented upon a bed of sickness), and, as he
-fondly hoped, to his own gray hairs; sentiments of
-independence buoyed up his mind; pictures of domestic
-content and peace rose in his imagination;
-and a few weeks passed away, the most tranquil, if
-not the happiest, which he had experienced for some
-time. His fame naturally drew upon him the attention
-of his neighbors in the district in which he lived,
-and he was received at the table of the gentlemen of
-Nithdale with welcome, with kindness and respect.
-It is to be lamented that at this critical period of his
-life he was without the restraining influences of the
-society of his wife, for a great change had
-taken place in his situation; his old habits were
-broken, and he brooded in melancholy abstraction
-upon his past glories in Edinburgh and his wrongs,
-while thoughts of Highland Mary constantly filled
-his waking hours, and caused him to forget the good
-resolutions he had formed, in his desire to drown
-recollections. The social parties to which he was
-invited too often seduced him from his rustic labor
-and his plain rustic food, and overthrew the unsteady<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
-fabric of his resolutions, inflaming those propensities
-which temperance might have weakened, and
-prudence finally suppressed. It was not long, therefore,
-before Robert began to view his farm with dislike
-and despondence, if not with disgust. Before his
-advent into Edinburgh society, and during his sojourn
-there, he had refrained from the habitual use
-of strong liquors. But in Dumfries the sins that so
-easily beset him continually presented themselves,
-and though he clearly foresaw the consequences of
-yielding to them, his appetite and sensations, which
-could not prevent the dictates of his judgment,
-finally triumphed over the power of his will.</p>
-
-<p>His great celebrity made him an object of interest
-and curiosity to strangers, and few persons of cultivated
-minds passed through Dumfries without attempting
-to see the poet, and to enjoy the pleasure
-of his conversation. As he could not receive them
-under his own humble roof these interviews passed
-at the inns of the towns, and often terminated in
-excesses, which Robert was seldom able to resist.
-Indeed, there were never wanting persons to share
-his social pleasures, to lead or accompany him to the
-tavern, to partake in the wildest sallies of his wit, or
-to witness the strength and degradation of his genius.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately he had for several years looked to
-an office in the excise as a certain means of livelihood,
-should his other expectations fail. He had been
-recommended to the Board of Excise before leaving<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
-Mossgiel, and had received the instructions necessary
-for such a situation. He now applied to be
-employed regularly, and was immediately appointed
-exciseman, or gauger, as it is vulgarly called, of the
-district in which he lived. His farm was after this,
-in a great measure, abandoned to servants, while he
-betook himself to the duties of his new appointment.
-To be sure he could still be seen at intervals directing
-his plow, a labor in which he excelled, but it was
-not at Ellisland that he was now in general to be
-found. Mounted on horseback, our hero was pursuing
-the defaulters of the revenue among the hills
-and vales of Nithdale, his roving eye wandering over
-the charms of nature, and muttering his wayward
-fancies as he moved along. Though by nature of an
-athletic form, Robert had in his constitution the
-peculiarities and delicacies that belong to the
-temperament of genius. Endowed by nature with
-great sensibility of nerves, he was in his corporeal,
-as well as in his mental system, liable to inordinate
-impressions, to fever of the body, as well as of mind.
-This predisposition to disease, which strict temperance
-in diet, regular exercise, and sound sleep might
-have subdued, habits of a very different nature,
-strengthened and inflamed.</p>
-
-<p>The following year Jean and her bairns came to
-live at Ellisland. He received them with quiet affection,
-and Jean, who had grown strangely humbled
-and passive, did her utmost to please him at all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
-times, never referring to the past, and tactfully
-avoiding all irritating subjects, and by her soothing
-presence, her loving words of comfort and sympathy,
-soon made her presence indispensable to her
-moody husband. Another year passed by, a year
-of anxiety for Jean, who was compelled to witness
-her husband’s lapses from sobriety, which now came
-so often, and to watch his health decline slowly, but
-surely, in consequence. In the midst of all his wanderings
-Robert met nothing in his domestic circle
-but gentleness and forgiveness, except the gnawings
-of his own remorse. He acknowledged his transgressions
-to his patient wife, promised amendment, and
-again received pardon for his offenses. But as the
-strength of his body decayed, his resolution became
-feebler, and habit acquired predominating strength.</p>
-
-<p>All this time Robert had entertained hopes of promotion
-in the exercise, but circumstances occurred
-which retarded their fulfillment, and which in his own
-mind destroyed all expectation of their ever being
-fulfilled. His steady friend, Mr. Mackenzie, interposed
-his good offices in his behalf, however, and he
-was suffered to retain his situation, but given to
-understand that his promotion was deferred, and
-must depend on his future behavior. This circumstance
-made a deep impression on Robert. He
-fancied that everyone held him in contemptuous pity,
-as a man of some genius who had dwindled into a
-paltry exciseman, and who was slinking out the rest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-of his insignificant existence in the meanest of pursuits,
-and among the lowest of mankind; and for
-days he would sit quietly on the banks of the river
-plunged in the gloomiest meditation.</p>
-
-<p>About this time he received word of Lord Glencairn’s
-death. The news plunged him into another
-fit of melancholy gloom, lessened somewhat, however,
-by the assurance that his noble benefactor had died
-knowing the truth, believing in Robert’s innocence,
-and asking his forgiveness.</p>
-
-<p>As his health declined his thoughts became more
-and more fixed upon Mary, who was once more in
-Mossgiel at Colonel Montgomery’s. He yearned
-with bitter longing to gaze upon her sweet face again,
-to hear her dear voice speak his name. These thoughts
-he strove vainly to conquer, to banish from his mind,
-for Jean’s patience and goodness, her loving forbearance,
-filled him with shame at his own unworthiness.
-But she gave no sign of the bitter heartache
-she endured. She accepted it all in patient resignation,
-striving by uniform prudence and good management
-to relieve his distress of mind regarding
-the material welfare of his little flock.</p>
-
-<p>Toward the end of spring he contracted a severe
-cold while in reckless pursuit of an offender, in a
-driving rain storm, and, having caught the guilty
-one, he celebrated the event at the inn, in company
-with some congenial spirits, seated in his wet clothes,
-the result being an attack of rheumatism, which laid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-him upon a bed of sickness for some weeks. His
-salary was but a small one, hardly sufficient to keep
-his family from want, and though hitherto his farm
-had yielded him a comfortable living, for some
-months it had been left to run itself, with the inevitable
-results. Planting time had come and gone, and
-still his ground lay all untouched. His laborers had
-refused to work for him longer without pay, and
-Souter Johnny, who was now making his home at
-Ellisland, could only attend to the lighter chores
-about the farm. And now things began to take a
-serious outlook for our hero and his family. Though
-sick and discouraged, with want staring him in the
-face, he still sent glowing reports of his continued
-prosperity to his loved ones in Mossgiel, reports that
-filled their anxious hearts with false hopes and prayerful
-thankfulness.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XXI</h3>
-
-<p>One day during Robert’s early convalescence,
-Souter, after having finished his chores, sauntered
-leisurely through the vegetable garden. It was a
-peaceful nook, and there were household odors of
-mint, and thyme, and boy’s love, which were pleasant
-to the soul of Souter Johnny, and reminded him of
-stewed rabbit, which he dearly loved, with all its
-attendant delicacies. He paced the path slowly, the
-light of the sinking sun blazing gloriously upon the
-brilliant gown of his companion, who was simpering
-along beside him, her little gray eyes looking down
-on him with flattering interest as she listened with
-apparent delight to his tales of daring adventure.
-Finally their conversation drifted to the sick man
-within.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor bonnie laddie,” sighed Eppy dolefully.
-“To think of him being so ill. We all loved him
-dearly in Edinburgh.”</p>
-
-<p>“He hasna’ been the same lad since he returned
-from there,” replied Souter. “He had many great
-disappointments in his young life, I tell ye,” and he
-shook his head dismally. “An’ noo everything has
-gone to the dogs wi’ him, ever since he has been
-in Ellisland. ’Twas a sorry day when he became an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-exciseman, say I.” He paused a moment reflectively,
-then continued earnestly, “But no matter
-what anybody says different, he has always done his
-duty faithfully, always on the tramp in all kinds of
-weather, till at last his robust constitution has given
-out, an’ he bowled over, so to speak.” He loyally
-refrained from mentioning that Robert’s illness was
-partly due to his imprudent way of living.</p>
-
-<p>Eppy sighed again. “And he the Bard of Scotland,”
-she returned commiseratingly. “How I pity
-him. Isn’t it sad Mr. MacDougall?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye,” replied Souter, with a quick look from
-under his shaggy eyebrows. “Ye hae a kind heart
-in ye, Miss McKay,” he observed after a pause.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you really think so?” she simpered. “I
-fear you are a base flatterer, Mr. MacDougall. In
-Edinburgh there were so many who flattered me, who
-sought for my favors, that I became wearied of it
-all, and longed for a change. That is why I came
-here to Ayrshire and purchased the farm adjoining,
-that I might rest during the summer.”</p>
-
-<p>“And then ye’ll be leaving us?” asked Souter
-with a deep sigh.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps not,” and she looked at him coquettishly.
-“Would anyone care if I did return to
-town?” she insinuated slyly.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis a wonder that such a bonnie lassie as ye
-should still be a maiden,” he observed abruptly with
-a sly look out of the corner of his eye.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I have had many offers,” she answered airily,
-though her heart fluttered with a newly-born
-hope.</p>
-
-<p>“Do ye ne’er get lonely, Miss McKay?”</p>
-
-<p>She sighed and cast down her eyes. “Yes, I do,”
-she declared plaintively, “and I’m lonely now in that
-great big house with only a servant for company.”</p>
-
-<p>“Souter Johnny,” said Souter to himself, “this
-is the chance of your lifetime; go in and win a home.”
-Having arrived at this resolution, he cleared his
-throat and pausing in his walk, faced the simpering
-old lady. “Mum, ye see before ye,” he remarked,
-not without some nervousness, “a single man, like
-yoursel’. Not from necessity, och nae; Souter
-Johnny, before he lost his handsome looks, could hae
-had his pick o’ any o’ the lassies, but I hae waited
-till noo——” he paused impressively.</p>
-
-<p>“Till now, Mr. MacDougall?” she repeated
-breathlessly, eager to have him continue.</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, noo I hae found her,” he answered, “an’
-she’s what I hae been lookin’ for a’ my life.”</p>
-
-<p>“How romantic you are,” she cried soulfully, with
-an admiring look.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, that I am, ’tis born in me,” he responded.
-“Do ye mind if I smoke, mum?” he asked carelessly.
-He took out of his waistcoat pocket his old black
-pipe and held it in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no,” she gushed. “I love to see you smoke,
-’tis so manly.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Having lighted his pipe and got it drawing to his
-satisfaction, he turned to her once more, and remarked
-casually, “Would ye call me too old to get
-married? I’m askin’ your advice noo.” He looked
-at her quizzically.</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head vigorously in the negative.
-“Age does not matter at all,” she observed sagely.
-“The question is do you feel peart?” and she regarded
-him with anxious eyes.</p>
-
-<p>A grim smile played around Souter’s lips. Removing
-his pipe, he replied with convincing firmness,
-“Never was sick in my life, strong and healthy.
-Feel my muscle!” and he held out his doubled arm
-to the timid Eppy, who shrank away bashfully. “It
-willna’ hurt ye,” he declared. Thus encouraged, she
-gingerly touched it with one finger. “Fine, isn’t
-it?” he asked proudly. Before she could answer
-he continued, “I have a fine appetite, mum, an’ I
-dinna’ feel my age. Noo I ask ye, am I too ugly to
-be looked at, mum? Dinna’ be afraid to tell me the
-truth.” He held up his head, straightened his bent
-shoulders and stood awaiting her reply.</p>
-
-<p>She eyed him a moment in silence. “Well, Mr.
-MacDougall,” she said doubtfully, after a pause, “I
-must confess you’re no beauty.” A look of disappointment
-came over Souter’s face, seeing which
-she hastened to reassure him. “But I care not for
-looks, Mr. MacDougall,” she cried earnestly. “One
-could get used to you. I’ve heard it said that one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-can get used to anything in time,” and she smiled
-sweetly into his downcast face.</p>
-
-<p>He gave her a quick look.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it as bad as that?” he returned reflectively.
-“Weel, looks is all a matter of taste. And noo let’s
-get down to business.” Eppy gave a start and her
-hands fluttered about nervously, as she waited for
-his next words. “Do ye think, mum, this sweet,
-lovely lassie I hae in my mind would hae me for a
-husband?” he insinuated softly.</p>
-
-<p>She gave a little gasp. “This is so sudden,” she
-simpered, then broke off abruptly—he hadn’t asked
-her yet. “Er—why don’t you ask the beautiful lassie.
-She might think of it.” She coyly looked down
-upon him from under her big bonnet.</p>
-
-<p>Souter threw down his pipe in his earnestness. “I
-will,” he ejaculated quickly, his eyes sparkling with
-triumph. “’Tis your ain bright sel’ for whom my
-heart is yearnin’. Will ye hae me, Eppy?”</p>
-
-<p>Eppy closed her eyes in blissful content. “My
-first proposal,” she thought joyfully. Opening her
-eyes, she gazed at him fondly. “Oh, I don’t want to
-make a mistake now,” she cried, half frightened, but
-she had no intention of refusing him, however.</p>
-
-<p>“Dinna’ fear,” replied Souter eagerly. “I’ll
-attend to that; there’ll be no mistake made, I’ll warrant
-ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re such a masterful man,” she exclaimed,
-with an admiring look, “and—well, there’s no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
-gainsaying you. I must confess a real live man
-about the house would be most comforting—to my
-sister, Sibella—and—and me, so I—I’ll have you,
-Souter,” and she threw herself into his arms with a
-cry of joy and thankfulness.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank ye, thank ye, mum,” said Souter gratefully.
-“I feel as if I had won the prize ticket in a
-grand lottery.” He heaved a great sigh of blissful
-content as he thought of the big house across
-the way. “There noo, my pipe is out again,” he
-observed, after a little pause, and he calmly turned
-his back and proceeded to relight it, leaving Eppy
-regarding him with reproachful eyes and pouting
-lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Souter,” she finally faltered, “I—I thought
-you were more romantic. We haven’t sealed our
-engagement by a—a——”</p>
-
-<p>“A—what?” asked Souter concernedly. “Is
-there something mair to do?”</p>
-
-<p>She sidled up to him, giggling bashfully, and after
-turning to see if they were observed, she put her arm
-around his neck and said pensively:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Gin a body meet a body comin’ thro’ the rye,</div>
-<div class="verse">Gin a body kiss a body, need a body cry.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>A comical look of comprehension dawned on
-Souter’s face. “O—oh! I see, ’tis a kiss ye mean,”
-he answered lightly. “Weel, noo, I’ll na’ stop ye<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
-if ye want to kiss me. If you can stand it, I can,”
-and he held his face up to hers, for she towered a
-foot above him. With a sudden dart, a downward
-sweep of her head, she glued her lips to the little
-man’s, then with a resounding smack she released
-him, with a sigh of absolute content upon her homely
-face. “Weel, noo, that’s not half bad,” observed
-Souter, smacking his lips reflectively.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Souter,” declared Eppy decidedly, after
-they had walked a few paces in quiet, “since you
-are a Highlander, you must wear the kilt, to please
-me; and it must be the tartan of our clan.”</p>
-
-<p>Souter threw up his hands in amazed horror.
-“Oh, dearie, dinna’ ask me to do that; I canna’ wear
-the kilt; I am na’ built that way,” and he looked
-down at his legs with whimsical seriousness.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ll not marry you,” she declared with
-apparent firmness.</p>
-
-<p>Souter hurriedly explained in trembling fear.
-“I’ll tell ye the truth, dearie: when I last wore the
-kilt the laddies laughed at my crooked legs an’
-called me a scarecrow, an’ I swore then I’d ne’er
-show my bare legs to mortal man again. Would ye
-hae me expose my miserable defects, womman?”</p>
-
-<p>She stood off and let her eyes rove slowly down
-his nether extremities with the air of a connoisseur.
-“I protest they do not look so badly,” she observed
-encouragingly.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<img src="images/illus8.jpg" width="475" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“‘Keep on turning,’ she commanded.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Looks are deceivin’, lassie,” quickly replied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
-Souter, who objected seriously to kilts. “My legs
-are na’ my beauty point, for a’ that; they are just
-twa wee bones, I tell ye, so be prepared for the
-worst,” and he shook his head dolefully.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well, as Mr. Burns says, ‘A man’s a man,
-for a’ that!’” she replied sweetly. Then after a
-moment’s reflection, she asked with tender solicitude,
-“Are they so very wee, Souter?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, ye should see them,” he replied eagerly,
-hoping to convince her as to his unfitness to wear
-the dress.</p>
-
-<p>Eppy held up her hands before her face in horror.
-“Whatever are you saying, Souter?”</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, my legs are a maist sensitive subject wi’
-me, my dear,” he returned apologetically.</p>
-
-<p>“Turn around,” she commanded. He did so in
-wonder. “Keep on turning,” she commanded. “I
-think, mayhap, they’re not so bad,” she observed
-after a critical inspection. “However, after we are
-wed I can decide better whether ye can wear the kilt
-or not.”</p>
-
-<p>Souter regarded her in meek astonishment, then
-he humbly rejoined, “Weel, if ye can stand their
-looks, I’ll na’ complain, but it’s o’er chilly at times,”
-and he shivered apprehensively.</p>
-
-<p>She laughed gayly. “Now, Souter, I must go
-home. Come over soon, you masterful man!”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, the first thing in the morning,” retorted
-Souter calmly, “an’ I’ll bring the minister wi’ me.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“The minister! Why bring him?” asked Eppy in
-amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“To marry us, my dear,” replied Souter quietly.</p>
-
-<p>“You must be daft man!” she cried in sudden
-alarm.</p>
-
-<p>Souter shook his head. “Ye’d better take no
-chances,” he retorted calmly. “I may change my
-mind,” and he carefully knocked the ashes out of his
-pipe and put it in his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“You impatient man!” fluttered Eppy. “I—I—come
-over and we’ll talk about it. Good-by,
-laddie,” and she tripped daintily off down the path
-toward the gate.</p>
-
-<p>Then Souter sat down on the seat under the big
-tree beside the house. “Souter Johnny,” he said to
-himself, “ye’re a devil with the wimmen, mon,” and
-a smile of self-satisfaction stole over his wrinkled
-face.</p>
-
-<p>“Souter Johnny!” panted Eppy, running back
-to him breathlessly, “I’ve changed my mind.”</p>
-
-<p>Souter jumped to his feet in sudden terror. Had
-he lost her after all, or rather, had he lost the home
-across the way? “W—what, do you mean?” he
-stammered.</p>
-
-<p>“I mean—you—you—may bring the minister,”
-she gasped, and away she fluttered down the walk
-before he could recover from his astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurrah! your fortune is made, Souter Johnny!”
-he cried aloud, when the meaning of her words had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
-dawned upon him, and he threw his bonnet high in
-the air. “Ye’ll nae hae to cobble shoes any mair,
-noo, for ye’ll be lord of the manor house, wi’ servants
-to wait on ye. Oh, the power of money! ye’ll
-ride out in your fine carriage, Souter, and as ye
-drive by, all the neighbors will be bowing and scraping
-to ye. I can see them noo. ’Twill be ‘Mr. MacDougall,
-will ye do us the honor to call at the castle;
-her ladyship would be pleased to see you.’ Then I’ll
-say to them that snubbed me when I was poor, ‘Weel,
-noo, ’tis very busy I am, attending to my estates and
-other social duties. Tell her grace that Mr. and
-Mrs. MacDougall will be pleased to have her visit
-us at MacDougall House, if she cares to meet us.’”
-And he stalked along majestically to the house with
-his head held proudly erect. “Noo, I’ll find the
-minister and make sure of my bird.” Arriving at
-the door of the cottage, he stopped, and addressing
-an imaginary butler, said pompously, “James, open
-the door, your master wishes to enter! Thank ye!
-Noo take my hat! Noo ye may go!” With a
-chuckle of delight he quietly opened the door and
-composing his features into their natural expression,
-entered the cottage and made his way to the kitchen,
-where he found a bowl of porridge awaiting him,
-which he hungrily devoured.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile in the other room Robert lay tossing
-feverishly upon his bed. Jean sat beside him
-smoothing his pillow from time to time, and soothing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
-his anguished mind with words of love and
-encouragement.</p>
-
-<p>“Blessings on your faithful head, Jean,” he murmured
-gratefully. “You’re the best, truest wife that
-erring mortal man ever had.” She flushed with
-pleasure at his words of praise. “Oh, this accursed
-rheumatism,” he groaned. “How it shackles one,
-making one as much a prisoner as though a ball
-and chain were attached to his ankle.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you are much better to-day,” said Jean
-brightly.</p>
-
-<p>“For a while only. I fear me this is my fatal
-illness,” he replied despondently.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t say that, Robert; you’ll be on your feet
-in a few days now,” and she looked hopefully into his
-worn and haggard face.</p>
-
-<p>He pressed her hand gently. “I haven’t been
-the best of husbands, lass,” he said after a pause.
-“I have sore tried your patience and your love
-ofttimes, by my unfaithfulness, my unworthiness.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not complain, Robert,” she answered
-quietly.</p>
-
-<p>“No, ye have never done that,” he said with a
-tender smile, “frequent though my lapses in sobriety
-and propriety have been.” He paused
-thoughtfully; presently he continued in mournful reflection,
-“But I was punished for those sins afterward,
-for then came remorse, shame, regret, the three
-hell hounds that ever dog my steps and bay at my
-heels.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“If it is God’s will——” began Jean, but he
-interrupted her.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, no, Jean,” he replied bitterly. “’Tis not
-God’s will that I should be here, racked with pain
-and tortured by the sins that come staring me in the
-face, each one telling a more bitter tale than his
-fellow. ’Tis only the result of my own headstrong
-folly.” She wiped away the drops of perspiration
-from his brow with tender fingers, while he lay panting
-from the excitement that the recital of his sorrows
-had occasioned.</p>
-
-<p>“There, do not distress yourself with such bitter
-thoughts,” she told him gently. “What is done, is
-done, and all our sins will be blotted out in that
-other life.”</p>
-
-<p>“That other life,” he repeated dreamily. “Can
-it be possible that when I resign this feverish being
-I shall find myself in conscious existence, enjoying
-and enjoyed? Would to God I as firmly believed it
-as I ardently wish it. If there is another life,” he
-continued with a flash of his old whimsical brightness,
-“it must be for the just, the benevolent, the
-amiable only, and the good. I’m sore afraid Rob
-Burns will na’ be able to get even a peep through
-the Pearly Gates.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hush, dear,” replied Jean with tender reproach.
-“’Twill be open to all. ‘Let whosoever will, come
-and have eternal life,’ the Master said.”</p>
-
-<p>He mused a while on that sweet thought. “Ah,
-weel, just noo,” he returned with a sigh, “this life<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
-is what we must face, and which I must cling to as
-long as I can for the sake of my little flock. Poverty
-and misfortune must be overcome, and at once.
-Our salvation now lies in my getting the supervisorship
-and increased salary; then we need have no fear
-of the future; we can laugh at fate.”</p>
-
-<p>“You sent your last poem, ‘Prettiest maid on
-Devon’s bank,’ to Mr. Thompson, didn’t ye, laddie?”
-asked Jean anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye,” he replied, closing his eyes wearily.
-“And I implored him for God’s sake to send me
-a few pounds to tide me over the present, till I got
-my promotion. I am not asking a loan, ’tis a
-business transaction,” he continued proudly, “and
-I ken he will send whatever he is able to spare.
-He is a good friend, and it grieves me bitterly to
-be obliged to ask help of him to keep us from starving.
-But,” and a note of independence crept into
-his voice, “my song is worth whatever he sends.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hunger and want can humble the most independent
-spirit,” returned Jean sadly. She rose and
-walked to the window and looked out into the twilight
-with searching, anxious eyes. “Posty should
-bring us an answer to-night,” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ he will,” cried Robert hopefully, “for
-Thompson willna’ disappoint me, for he kens I am
-in sore straits.”</p>
-
-<p>“Heaven bless him!” cried Jean fervently.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XXII</h3>
-
-<p>The next day our hero was in better health and
-spirits, and insisted upon being up and dressed.
-Jean, not without secret misgivings, got him into
-his clothes and helped him to the rocking-chair,
-which she had drawn up to the open window. For
-a while he sat there in silent content, bathed in the
-warm, golden light of the morning sun, whose genial
-beams seemed to infuse new vigor into his languid
-frame, while the gentle summer wind blew upon him
-with its exhilarating, refreshing warmth. After Jean
-had performed her household duties she returned to
-find him playing happily with their two boys, telling
-them tale after tale, while they sat perched on
-either arm of the big rocker, their eyes popping out
-of their round, healthy faces with excited interest.
-He looked up as she entered and smiled into her
-anxious face.</p>
-
-<p>“Do not tire yourself, Robert,” she cautioned him
-gently. “Come, lads, run out doors and play a wee,
-your father is tired.” But they clung to him
-affectionately.</p>
-
-<p>“One mair story,” they pleaded.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell us aboot Tam O’Shanter’s ride!” commanded
-Robert, Jr., gravely. Jean sat down while<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>
-he recited the stirring tale, and watched her husband
-with eyes aglow with love and pity. How changed
-he was, she thought with a sigh. What havoc had
-been wrought in that sturdy frame, that fine constitution,
-in the once ringing tones of his musical
-voice. Alas, all had flown, but with God’s help she
-would win him back to health and strength once
-more, she told herself with resolute determination.
-As he finished he kissed the earnest faces held up to
-his with such worshipful affection, and with a serious
-“Thank ye, father,” they turned and marched quietly
-out of the room and into the open air, and soon their
-childish treble floated in through the open window,
-bringing a smile of amused affection to the faces
-of their parents.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Robert, ye must be tired out,” remarked
-Jean presently. “Will ye not try and get a
-nappie?”</p>
-
-<p>“In a wee, Jean,” he answered, looking out of the
-window thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Then you must have a bittie of gruel now,”
-she said, rising and going toward the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, nay, Jean, I thank ye, but I canna’ eat nor
-drink nor sleep just at present.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then try and take a nappie,” she insisted,
-smoothing the pillows and sheets in anxious preparation.</p>
-
-<p>“A little later, Jean,” he replied a trifle impatiently.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>She sighed patiently. “Then I’ll leave ye for
-a while,” and she walked toward the door. “Ye’re
-quite comfortable?” she asked. He nodded. Slowly
-she closed the door upon him and applied herself to
-the task of getting the midday meal.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, a knock on the door startled her, interrupting
-her meager preparations. Hastily wiping
-her hands on her apron, she opened it, and there on
-the threshold stood two richly dressed strangers.
-“From the city,” she mentally said, noticing the
-elegance of their attire.</p>
-
-<p>Courteously raising his high conical blue silk hat,
-the younger man addressed her. “Is not this Mistress
-Burns, whom I have the honor to address?”
-he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I am Mistress Burns,” replied Jean with dignity.</p>
-
-<p>“We have come to see your husband. Will you
-inform him, my dear madam, that his friend Henry
-Mackenzie would be pleased to converse with him.”</p>
-
-<p>Jean opened wide the door, a look of pleasure on
-her face. “Please to enter,” she said quietly. They
-did so. She showed them into the living-room and
-bade them be seated. “Robert will be out directly,”
-she said, and hastily went to tell Robert of their
-arrival.</p>
-
-<p>“So this is where Scotland’s Bard lives,” remarked
-Mr. Mackenzie, looking about the room critically.
-“This cheerless hut, which bespeaks naught but
-poverty. Poor Burns, I pity him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“’Tis all his own fault,” testily replied his companion.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not so sure of that, Sir William,” said Mr.
-Mackenzie with a swift look at him. “I have always
-believed and maintained that Burns was innocent of
-that monstrous charge my Lady Glencairn brought
-against him, even though you did confess to being an
-eye witness of the occurrence. However, she has received
-her just deserts. She is at last totally
-ostracized.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do ye mean to say——” sputtered Sir William.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mackenzie raised his hand in a stately gesture.
-“I really do not care to discuss it, Sir
-William. But at last Edinburgh is beginning to
-realize how cruelly they have misjudged him, and
-they would welcome him back again, but I fear his
-pride and independence will prevent his accepting
-any assistance whatever.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir William gave a snort of impatience. “I
-cannot waste my sympathy on him,” he said angrily.
-“I am dispatched here to do my duty, and I must
-do it,” and his mouth set in a straight, determined
-line.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis a duty that for once is uncommon pleasant
-to you,” replied Mackenzie sarcastically. There
-was silence for a moment, then he continued, “I
-take it, the decision of the Board is final?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, ’tis irrevocable, sir,” replied Sir William
-gruffly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“And he must live on here as a poor exciseman,”
-murmured Mackenzie half to himself. “Live! In
-sooth ’tis but an existence,” and he strode to the
-window in sudden perturbation and gazed thoughtfully
-out upon the untilled land.</p>
-
-<p>The door of the chamber opened and Robert
-entered the room, a smile of pleasure lighting up
-his face. Mr. Mackenzie stepped eagerly forward
-and clasped his hand and shook it warmly.</p>
-
-<p>“I am uncommon glad to see ye beneath my humble
-roof,” said Rob earnestly, “and that ye havena’
-forgotten poor, hopeless Robert Burns.”</p>
-
-<p>Mackenzie led him to a chair. “Indeed, I have
-not,” he replied brightly. “Believe me, Mr. Burns,
-when I say that I prize your friendship above that
-of all men I know.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert was about to reply, when he caught sight
-of Sir William Creech watching them impatiently.
-He gave a great start and rose to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir William Creech!” he said slowly and bitterly.
-“To what do I owe this visit?”</p>
-
-<p>“I come on a matter of business,” replied Sir
-William, a flush rising to his cheek.</p>
-
-<p>“What business can ye have with me noo?” asked
-Robert with rising anger. “Perjurer, have ye come
-to gloat over the man ye helped ruin by your
-iniquitous falsehood? It isna’ good news ye bring,
-I warrant ye, else ye would not be the bearer of it.”
-And he gave a scornful little laugh.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Insulting as ever, Robert Burns,” snarled Sir
-William, a red spot of anger on each cheek, his
-eyes flashing wickedly. “Well, I’ll state my business
-briefly. Ye wrote to the Board of Commissioners
-for the position of supervisor in the
-excise. Your request has been voted on and was
-refused.” He spat the words out with vindictive
-satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>“Refused!” gasped Rob incredulously. He had
-felt so confident that the position would be given him.
-He sat down weakly in his chair, dazed for a moment.
-“But my name has been on the list of promotion for
-months,” he told them dully.</p>
-
-<p>“’Twas scratched off some weeks ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Scratched off? and why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because of your Jacobite tendencies,” replied
-Sir William coldly. “Many reports concerning
-your disloyal sentiments to your country have
-reached the Board, which utterly ruined any chance
-ye might have had of promotion.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert sat with bowed head, crushed by his disappointment.
-“Again must I drink deeply of the
-cup of humiliation and disappointment!” he cried
-bitterly. Presently he looked up at Mr. Mackenzie
-with a grim smile on his trembling face. “I am at
-last persuaded, Mr. Mackenzie, that it was of me the
-Hebrew sage prophesied when he foretold, ‘and behold,
-on whatsoever this man doth set his heart, it
-shall not prosper.’” His head dropped on his chest—his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>
-hands clenched the sides of the chair with despairing
-intensity. Suddenly he jumped to his feet,
-his face set and drawn, his eyes wild and flashing
-with bitter anger. “My curse on those damned
-informers, who have blasted my hopes,” he exclaimed
-hoarsely. “May the devil be let loose to torture
-them to madness.” Then he sank down in his chair
-exhausted by his passion, his face pale and quivering.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mackenzie hastened to his side, fearful of the
-consequences of the excitement on his frail constitution.
-Presently Robert spoke again, but in a
-weak, broken voice.</p>
-
-<p>“My last hope is torn from me,” he said despairingly.
-“What shall I do now? Ah, Mr. Mackenzie,
-I have felt all the sweetness of applause in my short
-life, but I am now experiencing the bitterness of the
-after-taste.” And the pitiful little smile, the pathetic
-catch in his voice, strangely moved the heart of his
-listener.</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon my question, Mr. Burns,” said he, “but
-surely the excise allows you a salary?”</p>
-
-<p>Rob laughed mirthlessly. “Aye,” he replied,
-“the munificent sum of thirty pounds a year.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thirty pounds a year!” repeated Mackenzie
-incredulously.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, only half of which I am getting now,”
-explained Robert bitterly. “Ye see I am ill and off
-duty.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“And are there no royalties on your songs or
-published collection coming to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ask Sir William,” retorted Robert bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no demand for your poems since you
-left Edinburgh,” replied Sir William crustily. “The
-youth Walter Scott has taken your place in their
-regard. He shows a remarkable talent for rhyming.”
-And a malicious smile appeared on his crafty
-face as he noted the quick flush appear on the expressive
-countenance of the sick man.</p>
-
-<p>His quivering features betrayed how deeply the
-barbed dart had entered his heart. He turned to Mr.
-Mackenzie with a resigned little gesture. “Ye see,
-sir,” he faltered with a pathetic smile, “how soon I am
-forgot.” He paused, and the weak tears of sickness
-welled up into his eyes; then he resumed with a
-shade of bitterness, “Scott is sure to succeed, for
-he is of noble birth. He’ll not be patronized, at
-least.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mackenzie had been thinking deeply, and now
-he turned to Robert with a resolute air. “Mr.
-Burns,” he said earnestly, “with your consent, I will
-go to the Board of Commissioners of Excise, of
-which the Duke of Gordon is the chairman, and move
-them to grant you full salary. They are well known
-to me and I am sure will not refuse my request.”</p>
-
-<p>A glad smile broke up Robert’s gloomy features.
-“Ye are a friend, indeed!” he cried fervently. “God
-grant they do not refuse you, for if they do, I must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
-lay my account with an exit truly <i>en poète</i>, for if
-I die not with disease, I must perish with hunger.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your interference will do no good here, Mr.
-Mackenzie,” hotly declared Sir William, glaring at
-Robert hatefully.</p>
-
-<p>“I think it will,” returned Mr. Mackenzie coolly.
-“’Twould be Lord Glencairn’s wishes were he alive,
-and his wishes will be respected by the Board, mark
-well what I tell you,” and he flashed him a significant
-look of defiance. Then turning to Robert, he shook
-him by the hand and bade him adieu, saying that
-he must return at once to Edinburgh. “And rest
-assured,” he concluded, “I will inform you at once
-of the decision of the Board, which without doubt
-will be favorable. Cheer up, my man, Scotland will
-not allow her ablest son to die of want and neglect,
-if Henry Mackenzie can prevent it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Heaven bless ye!” responded Robert gratefully.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Burns, if you——” began Mr. Mackenzie,
-then he hesitated a moment, but finally after a moment’s
-thought continued his sentence—“if you
-will but accept a loan,” and his hand sought his
-pocket, but Robert shook his head decidedly.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, Mr. Mackenzie,” he said proudly; “I
-canna’ accept it, thank ye.”</p>
-
-<p>Mackenzie sighed. “Oh, you sensitive people,”
-he remarked, “pride and poverty.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye see,” explained Robert gratefully, “I expect
-a few pounds from the sale of a poem, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
-will relieve my temporary embarrassment, and if
-the commissioners grant me full salary, I can start
-for the seaside, where I may regain my lost health.”
-He passed his hand wearily over his brow, which
-began to pain him, for the excitement had worn
-him out. “But I fear that has flown from me forever,
-that the voice of the Bard will soon be heard
-among ye no mair.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense!” replied Mackenzie brightly, putting
-his hand affectionately on Robert’s shoulder. “You
-will live for years yet, but you must take better care
-of this life which is so valuable to your family, to
-your friends and to the world.” There was deep
-concern in his pleasant voice and in his earnest eyes.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment the street door opened and Eppy
-appeared dressed youthfully in white, leading by the
-hand none other than Souter Johnny, who was looking
-decidedly crestfallen and sheepish, as he vainly
-tried to pull down his little short kilt over his thin,
-bony legs, for Souter was at last arrayed in full
-kilts, much to his evident sorrow. He looked exceedingly
-grotesque, squeezed into the suit, which
-was too small even for his undersized frame.</p>
-
-<p>“In the name of!—Souter Johnny, what means
-this?” gasped Robert in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“Canna’ a man wear the kilts without being
-laughed at?” answered Souter ruefully, resenting
-the amused look on their faces.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I must say ye look better in breeches,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
-observed Rob with a quizzical glance at Souter’s
-grotesquely thin crooked legs.</p>
-
-<p>“He wears them for my sake,” explained Eppy
-with a soulful look at the uncomfortable Souter;
-then she spied the visitors. “Why, Mr. Mackenzie,
-it is good to see you here!” she exclaimed effusively,
-and she made him a deep courtesy, purposely ignoring
-Sir William.</p>
-
-<p>“Daft as ever,” grunted Sir William audibly.</p>
-
-<p>She regarded him with a haughty look of disdain.
-“Daft!” she repeated. “Huh! you cannot insult
-me now with impunity!” she exclaimed in triumph.
-Turning to Souter, she called him to her side with
-a commanding gesture.</p>
-
-<p>“Noo, ye see, Robert, what has become of my
-breeches,” whispered Souter in Robert’s ear as he
-passed him. “She is wearing them,” and he winked
-his eye significantly.</p>
-
-<p>As he approached her, she reached out a long
-arm and drew him to her so suddenly that it took
-him off his feet. Finally he righted himself and
-stood close beside her, his little gray head, with the
-bonnet perched saucily on one side of it, scarcely
-reaching to her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Friends,” she announced proudly, “this gentleman
-is my—my husband,” and she noticed with
-pleasure the look of consternation which appeared
-on all their faces.</p>
-
-<p>“What!” cried Robert aghast.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“You’re married!” ejaculated Mr. Mackenzie
-incredulously.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor man,” sneered Sir William mockingly.</p>
-
-<p>Eppy tittered gleefully. “Yes, I was married
-to-day, and ’tis heavenly,” and she rolled her eyes
-in an ecstasy of joy.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, ’twas the best you could do, I suppose,”
-observed Sir William maliciously.</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t take you as a gift,” she flashed.
-“And you tried hard enough to win me, dear
-knows,” she went on with total disregard for the
-truth. “He was forever running after me,” she
-explained deprecatingly to Souter.</p>
-
-<p>“You—you—you are not speaking the truth,”
-sputtered Sir William furiously. “If I was running
-it was to get away from you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, of course you won’t admit it now,” she
-observed calmly. “But I am rejoicing that I didn’t
-marry you.” She looked Souter over critically.
-“Well, Souter may not be very handsome,” she
-remarked thoughtfully after a pause, “but he is
-a perfect picture in kilts,” and she gave a sigh of
-absolute content.</p>
-
-<p>“Women are queer creatures,” whispered Souter
-to Robert deprecatingly, “and my—my wife, ahem!
-weel, she’s the queerest of them a’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, my friends,” laughed Mr. Mackenzie, “I
-protest this time I must be off. Good-by, lad.”</p>
-
-<p>“May blessings attend your steps and affliction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
-know ye not,” answered Robert fervently. “Ye
-might take Sir William along, for he looks maist
-uncomfortable amongst honest people!” he added
-dryly.</p>
-
-<p>Mackenzie laughed grimly and passed out, leaving
-Sir William to follow.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye insulting pauper!” fumed Sir William, starting
-angrily for the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye can go back to your Edinburgh friends,”
-cried Robert with flashing eyes, “an’ tell them that
-e’en though ye found me almost on the verge of
-despair, with oblivion hovering dark over my still
-independent head, that I yet live in the hope of
-seeing the prophecy I made to them all that night
-fulfilled, and that Sir William Creech, my worst traducer,
-will be the first one to again court my favor.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll hear no more such insulting language!”
-roared Sir William threateningly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’ll not hear it t’other side of the door,”
-replied Robert quietly.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, but ye’ll get your fairin’ one of these
-days,” exclaimed Souter belligerently. “An’ ’twill
-be in hell, where they’ll roast ye like a herrin’,” he
-added grimly, much to Eppy’s horror.</p>
-
-<p>“Open the door for me, fellow!” shouted Sir
-William wrathfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Open it yoursel’,” replied Souter, “an’ I promise
-ye I’ll shut it behind your coattails mighty quick.”</p>
-
-<p>“Out of my way, idiot,” and with a shove he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
-brushed the little man aside and swiftly joined his
-waiting companion outside the gate.</p>
-
-<p>“Did ye see that?” gasped Souter, his eyes flashing
-fire. “Did ye see that? Let me get after him,”
-and he started for the door, with blood in his eyes,
-but Eppy with a little shriek of alarm grabbed
-him by the plaidie and held on to him with all her
-strength, which was not slight.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t, dearie, don’t, you might get hurt!” she
-cried tearfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, if ye say not, why I’ll let him gae,” returned
-Souter submissively.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, Robert,” said Jean gently, “you must lie
-down for a wee bit now.”</p>
-
-<p>“By the way, Rob,” laughed Souter reminiscently,
-“do ye mind the day——” He stopped short as
-Jean shook her head disapprovingly.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s had a most exciting morning,” she exclaimed
-gently, “and needs rest now. He’ll be feeling more
-peart to-morrow,” and she held out her hand in
-dismissal.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye mean get out, eh, Mistress?” said Souter
-good-naturedly. “Weel, weel, Souter Johnny can
-take a hint.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come, Souter,” called Eppy from the open doorway,
-where she had been impatiently waiting for her
-bridegroom, “come with me to your—your new
-home,” and she bashfully held her fan over her face
-with a nervous little giggle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Aye, that I will,” replied Souter, with alacrity.
-He turned to Robert with a new air of dignity which
-set comically upon his little figure. “If we can do
-anything for ye, Robert, dinna’ forget to send over
-to MacDougall House. Dinna’ forget my address.
-Mrs. MacDougall, my arm.” She grabbed it quickly
-and they walked to the door. “God-day all,” he
-called over his shoulder, and with a feeling of great
-contentment, that at last his troubles were over, and
-that he was entering upon a new life of ease and
-plenty, he closed the door behind them, and trotted
-along beside his wife, grinning like a schoolboy,
-across the fields to their new home.</p>
-
-<p>“Has the Posty come yet?” inquired Robert, after
-they had gone.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but he brought no letter for ye,” answered
-Jean sadly.</p>
-
-<p>The words of one of the verses of his “Ode to a
-Mouse,” came to him with gloomy presentiment.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“But, mousie, thou art no thy lane,</div>
-<div class="verse">In proving foresight may be vain;</div>
-<div class="verse">The best-laid schemes o’ mice and men</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Gang aft agley;</div>
-<div class="verse">An’ lea’e us naught but grief an’ pain</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">For promised joy;</div>
-<div class="verse">Still thou are blest compared wi’ me!</div>
-<div class="verse">The present only touchest thee;</div>
-<div class="verse">But och! I backward cast my e’e,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">On prospects drear’;</div>
-<div class="verse">An forward, tho’ I canna’ see,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">I guess and fear.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XXIII</h3>
-
-<p>Later that day two men might have been seen galloping
-their horses at full speed toward the little
-house on the hillside. They were determined, resolute
-looking men, evidently bent on serious purpose.
-Finally they reached the gate, and dismounting made
-their way to the door, the elder man insisting loudly
-upon accompanying the other, much to his visible
-annoyance.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no need for secrecy, Gilbert Burns,”
-said he grimly, and he followed him into the house
-and to the room where Robert sat with pencil in hand
-vainly courting his Muse. Jean, who was busily
-engaged in sewing, jumped to her feet with a little
-cry of amazement upon seeing her father before
-her. Robert held out his hand to his brother in delighted
-surprise, mixed with anxiety.</p>
-
-<p>“Brother!” he cried, “what brings ye to Ellisland
-in such haste? Is it bad news? Mother, our
-sisters, are they ill?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nay,” replied Gilbert constrainedly. “They
-are all well, Rob, and have sent their love to yourself
-and family.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank God for that,” responded Robert thankfully.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
-There was a little embarrassed silence, then
-Gilbert spoke again.</p>
-
-<p>“Robert, we—we are in sore trouble,” he confessed,
-his face anxious and troubled.</p>
-
-<p>“Trouble!” echoed Rob blankly. “What is
-wrong, brother?”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot hold Mossgiel any longer,” he replied,
-dejectedly. “The farm is but a wretched lease, as ye
-know, an’ I canna’ weather out the remaining year.
-Without assistance, Robert, I canna’ hope to hold
-our little family together any longer.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert’s heart sank within him as he heard the
-direful news. He glanced at Squire Armour apprehensively.
-“And Squire Armour?” he interrogated
-with an angry glance at that gentleman, who stood
-with a sneering smile on his harsh face, taking in the
-evidences of poverty that surrounded them. And with
-never a word of love or pity, nor of greeting to his
-daughter who sat there with white face and longing
-eyes, waiting to hear some news from her stern, implacable
-father, of her loving mother at home.</p>
-
-<p>“I have bought the lease of Mossgiel,” he growled,
-“an’ if your brother canna’ pay up the back rent,
-which is long past due, I shall seize everything and
-turn the whole lot of them out, every one.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert looked at him a moment in scornful silence.
-Presently he spoke, and the cutting sarcasm of his
-voice caused the old Squire to wince and drop his
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Ye are a most just, square, God-fearin’ man,
-Squire Armour,” he said. “The Kirk should be
-proud of ye.” Turning to Gilbert, he asked him
-the amount of his debt.</p>
-
-<p>“Only a matter of £4, brother,” he replied, “but
-’tis a fortune to me at present.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ I must have the money to-day or the farm,
-I care not which.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, father!” cried Jean, going to him, “do
-not be hard on him; he will pay you; only give him
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Jean!” flashed Robert angrily, “dinna’ stoop
-to ask mercy of that mon, even though he be your
-own father.” Jean turned away with a sigh.</p>
-
-<p>Squire Armour laughed derisively. “Ye’ll both
-be on your knees before long, I’ll warrant,” he cried
-harshly, “asking favors of me, especially when ye
-have naught to feed a starving family. Ye have
-made yoursel’ a fine, comfortable bed, my lassie,
-havena’ ye?” He sneered sarcastically, turning to
-his shrinking daughter. “But ’tis made, and ye can
-lie on it, ye ungrateful minx.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert rose quickly to his feet, his eyes flashing
-dangerously.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop! Squire Armour!” he commanded. “Dinna’
-dare to use such language to my wife in my own
-house, or weak, sick, and crippled as I am, I will
-throw ye into the road like the cur that ye are.”
-He stopped, breathless with indignation. Presently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span>
-he resumed with immeasurable scorn in his vibrating
-voice, “An’ they call such men as ye Christians!
-A sneaking, crawling, psalm-singing, canting hypocrite!
-Faugh! Were I the Lord, I would sicken at
-sight of ye.” He turned away and sat down beside
-his now weeping wife, and there was pity and compassion
-in the look he bestowed upon her.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve had enough of your blasphemy, Robert
-Burns. If ye canna’ pay the rent for your brother,
-my business is elsewhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“I had no one else to turn to in this, my hour
-of trouble,” murmured Gilbert brokenly. “If ye
-can help me without impoverishing yoursel’, for
-God’s sake do it, or I shudder to think what will
-become of the dear ones at home.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert was silent. He thought with anxious loving
-concern of his own little flock, of the slender
-resources at his command, of the gravity of his
-own situation, sick as he was and with such gloomy
-prospects staring him in the face—and yet was he
-not better off after all than they at Mossgiel? Had
-he not his salary, small as it was, and the promise
-of the supervisorship, besides the money that Thompson
-would pay him for his poem? He had much to
-thank God for, he thought gratefully.</p>
-
-<p>“I see ’tis no use delaying longer,” said Armour,
-looking at the serious, downcast faces before him.
-“I have given ye fair warning, Gilbert Burns, an’
-noo I’ll go.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He had reached the door, when Robert spoke
-quietly but firmly. “Wait!” he called. “Ye shall
-have the money, ye Shylock.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank God!” cried Gilbert with a loving glance
-at his brother’s calm face.</p>
-
-<p>Jean looked at him in speechless amazement.
-What did he mean? How could he help others when
-they were in such dire need themselves? she asked herself
-apprehensively.</p>
-
-<p>“Robert,” she whispered anxiously, “ye dinna’
-ken what ye say.”</p>
-
-<p>“My brother will meet ye at sundown, at the Inn,”
-continued Robert without heeding her warning, although
-his face took on a whiter hue. “He will
-bring ye every farthing of what is due ye. Noo
-go; there is the door; your business here is ended.
-Ye have brought naught but misery and trouble
-into my life by your unreasonable hatred o’ me, but
-the time will come, Squire Armour, when all the unhappiness
-and suffering ye have caused me and mine
-will rise up before ye like a hideous phantom, robbin’
-ye of all peace o’ mind on earth, and your hopes of
-salvation hereafter.” He drew nearer the gaping
-man, who was regarding him with angry, sullen eyes,
-and continued with a bitter, unforgiving intensity
-that filled his listeners with awe and horror, “An’
-when ye feel the chill icy hand of grim death clutching
-at your heart, ye’ll cry out for the sympathy
-and love of those whom ye cast out of your life, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>
-ye’ll cry in vain, an’ ye’ll die as ye have lived, a
-miserable wretched ending to a miserable selfish
-life.”</p>
-
-<p>As he finished his grim prophecy, Squire Armour
-gave a cry of nervous fear, and with blanched face
-and wild eyes he strove to speak, but the words would
-not pass his white, trembling lips. Finally he gasped
-in a frightened whisper which gradually rose to
-angry defiance:</p>
-
-<p>“How dare ye! How dare ye say such things
-to me, Robert Burns? I willna’ die like that and ye
-canna’ frighten me with your grim forebodings.”
-He paused and glanced at them all in turn, then
-hastily opened the door. Just as he was stepping
-out, he turned slowly and looked at the white, patient
-face of his daughter. For a moment he regarded
-her in silence, then with a visible effort he addressed
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“Jean,” he said, and his voice was noticeably
-softer, “ye are welcome to come back to your home.”
-He cast a quick look at the lowering face of his son-in-law
-and added vindictively—“alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, never alone, father,” replied Jean sadly,
-looking at her husband’s frowning face.</p>
-
-<p>The old man turned with sudden fury upon them.
-“I’ll wait till sundown for my money,” he shouted,
-“but not a minute longer!” and he closed the door
-behind him with a vicious slam.</p>
-
-<p>Gilbert was first to break the depressing silence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
-that ensued. He felt vaguely that all was not
-so well with his brother as he had been led to
-believe.</p>
-
-<p>“Forgive me, brother,” he murmured contritely,
-“for bringing this trouble on ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind, Gilbert; it was to be, I ken,” answered
-Rob absently.</p>
-
-<p>Gilbert was silent a moment. “But the money,
-Robert, is it—are ye——” he stammered, then
-stopped in embarrassed confusion.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis the sum I expect from the sale of a
-poem. Jean, see if there is aught of the Posty.”
-She rose and went to the window and peered anxiously
-down the dusty road.</p>
-
-<p>“I didna’ have the ready money with me,” went
-on Robert lightly, as if it were a matter of small
-importance, “or I would have fixed it up at once.
-But ye shall hae the money, laddie, when my letter
-comes,” and he smiled reassuringly into Gilbert’s
-anxious face.</p>
-
-<p>“God bless ye, Robert; ye have taken a great load
-off my heart.”</p>
-
-<p>Jean returned to her seat by the hearth, and listlessly
-took up her needlework. “I fear Posty has
-forgotten us to-day,” she said in answer to Robert’s
-questioning look.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<img src="images/illus9.jpg" width="475" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“‘I’ll wait till sundown for my money,’ he shouted.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A great fear seized his heart. For nearly a week
-he had hopefully awaited some word from Thompson.
-What could be the matter? “O God!” he prayed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>
-silently, “let him not fail me noo.” With a
-bright smile that sadly belied his anxious heart, he
-rose and, taking Gilbert’s arm, said gayly, “Come,
-brother, and see the new bairn that has been added
-to the flock this last year.”</p>
-
-<p>As they left the room Jean dropped her work in
-her lap and gazed after them with eyes filled with
-helpless tears of anxiety, at the thought of the hardships
-and suffering that lay in wait for them all.</p>
-
-<p>After admiring the baby in the trundle bed the
-two brothers talked of the dear ones in Mossgiel,
-and the many changes time had wrought in the lives
-of them all; spoke with tenderness of the sister who
-had recently been married—and dwelt with anxious
-concern on the struggles of their younger brother,
-who had left home to branch out for himself. For
-a time they forgot their own troubles, and Robert
-plied his brother with many questions concerning the
-welfare of all his old friends and neighbors, while
-Gilbert told him all the gossip of the village, of the
-prosperity of some of the lads, and the unfortunate
-situations of many of the others, thus leading up to
-the recital of their own troubles since Robert had left
-his home. He listened sorrowfully to the tale of
-hardship and unceasing toil which brought such
-little recompense, but not by word or look did he
-betray his own blighted hopes and gloomy prospects.
-Finally they had exhausted every subject save one,
-and that one had been uppermost in the minds of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span>
-both, but each had avoided the subject with a shrinking
-dread.</p>
-
-<p>No news of the little dairymaid had come to
-Robert for almost a year, and the thought that
-possibly she was ill or dead—or—and a hundred conjectures
-racked his brain and froze the eager questions
-that trembled on his lips. Gilbert must have
-read the longing in his brother’s heart, for, after a
-troubled glance at the dark yearning face gazing
-at him so beseechingly, he looked down at his toil-worn
-hands and awkwardly shifted one knee over the
-other. Presently he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary is still at Colonel Montgomery’s,” he
-observed, making an effort to speak lightly.</p>
-
-<p>“I heard she had left Mrs. Dunlop’s,” replied
-Robert feverishly, moistening his lips with the tip of
-his tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye,” sighed Gilbert. “She grew tired o’ the
-city and longed for the stillness, the restfulness of
-country life once more, so she came back to us and
-took her old place in the dairy. Poor lass,” and
-he looked thoughtfully out of the window and sadly
-watched the glorious sunset tinting the distant hills
-in a blaze of golden light.</p>
-
-<p>“An’—an’ is she well—is she happy?” murmured
-Robert in a soft, hushed voice. Gilbert did not
-answer for a moment. Presently he roused himself
-and slowly let his gaze wander back till it rested on
-his brother’s wistful face.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Can ye bear a shock, brother?” he asked
-quietly.</p>
-
-<p>Robert suddenly stiffened and his eyes grew wide
-and staring. He gripped the sides of the chair as a
-wave of sudden dizziness dulled his understanding.
-Presently it passed away, and like one in a dream
-he whispered hoarsely, “Tell me the worst, Gilbert;
-is—is she dead?”</p>
-
-<p>He closed his eyes and waited with breathless stillness
-for the answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank God, not that!” replied Gilbert feelingly.
-Robert breathed a sigh of relief. “But she
-is very ill, an’ I ken she hasna’ long on earth noo.
-The doctors say there is no hope for her,” and he bit
-his lips to keep back the rising tears.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly, sorrowfully, Robert’s head drooped till it
-rested on his bosom. For a moment he sat like one
-on the verge of dissolution.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, God!” he moaned bitterly, “that sweet
-young life crushed out in all its innocent purity, like
-a delicate flower, and through my sin, my reckless
-folly. Oh, how can I live and bear my punishment!”
-A convulsive sob racked his weakened frame. Gilbert
-bent over him with tears in his eyes, forgetting
-his own crushing sorrow in witnessing that of his
-brother.</p>
-
-<p>“Dinna’ greet so, Robert,” he cried. “’Twas
-not your fault, ye ken. It was to be.” His philosophical
-belief in fate helped him over many a hard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
-and stony path, and enabled him to meet with calmness
-and fortitude the many heartaches and disappointments
-which befell him.</p>
-
-<p>Soon the convulsive shudders ceased, and leaning
-wearily back in his chair, Robert fixed his great
-mournful eyes upon his brother in sorrowful resignation.</p>
-
-<p>“How did she look when ye last saw her, Gilbert?”
-he asked faintly, pressing his hand tightly
-to his heart, for the old pain had come back with
-exhausting results.</p>
-
-<p>“Like an angel, lad,” replied Gilbert tenderly.
-“So sweet and pure, so patient and forgiving.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does she suffer much?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nay,” he answered reassuringly. Then he
-continued, his voice soft and low, his strong features
-quivering from the restraint he put upon his feelings,
-“Her life is just slowly slipping away from
-her; day by day she grows weaker and weaker, but
-ne’er a complaint is on her lips. She is always so
-cheerful an’ smilin’ that it fair makes ye weep to see
-her fadin’ awa’ so fast,” and his voice broke into a
-hard sob.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Mary, my Highland Mary!” murmured
-Robert brokenly.</p>
-
-<p>“Her last wish is to see the Highlands, to—to die
-there,” continued Gilbert, his lips contracting with
-a sudden, sharp pain at the thought. “So before
-she grows any weaker, Mrs. Dunlop, who has come<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
-from town to see her, and who is wi’ her noo, is goin’
-to take her back to her old home in Argyleshire.”</p>
-
-<p>“Going home to die!” repeated Robert dreamily.
-“Oh, if I might be taken awa’ too, if my end would
-only hasten,” he muttered despairingly, with the
-weak selfishness of the sick and sorrowing. “Then
-might our departing souls be united as one, to be
-together for all eternity.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hush, Robert!” cautioned Gilbert, looking
-fearfully at the closed door. “Remember Jean and
-the bairns.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gilbert, I must see her before she goes!” he cried
-utterly distracted. “’Tis for the last time on earth,
-ye ken, lad,” and he jumped up, trembling with eager
-excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“Brother, would ye kill yoursel’?” cried Gilbert,
-seeking to restrain him. “’Tis madness for ye to
-go out in your weak condition.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dinna’ stop me, Gilbert!” he panted, and he
-flung open the door and rushed excitedly into the
-room where Jean sat in patient meditation. “Jean,
-get my bonnet and coat, quick, quick!” he commanded
-with his old-time vehemence. She jumped
-up pale and frightened and looked questioningly at
-Gilbert. Quickly he told her of Mary’s illness and
-Robert’s determination to go to her at once. When
-he had finished she went to her husband, the tears of
-ready sympathy in her eyes, for she was not jealous
-of his love for Mary. She had gotten over that long<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>
-ago, and laying her hand gently on his arm, she
-tried to coax him to sit down and listen to them.</p>
-
-<p>“They’ll have to pass by here on their way to
-Greenock,” she told him tenderly. “And ye may
-be sure, Robert, that Mary will not leave Ayrshire
-without saying good-by to you.” And so she reasoned
-with him, while Gilbert joined her in assurances
-of Mrs. Dunlop’s intention of stopping to see him
-as she passed the farm. Gradually the wild light in
-his eyes died down, the tense figure relaxed, and with
-a sigh of exhaustion he allowed himself to be taken
-back to his room.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’re sure she’ll not forget to stop here?” he
-asked with pathetic eagerness. Then he continued
-with wistful retrospection, “Two years have come
-and gone and not a word have we spoken to each
-other since that day we parted in Edinburgh! Oh,
-cruel, cruel fate!” He spoke so low that none heard
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Noo, Robert,” said Jean brightly, “you must
-take your gruel, ’twill give ye strength.” But he
-made a gesture of repulsion.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, Jean, I canna’ eat noo; ’twould choke me.
-I think I’ll lay me down to rest.” They soon prepared
-him for bed. Without a word, he turned his
-face to the wall and for the rest of the night he lay
-there with wide, staring, sleepless eyes, thinking,
-thinking, thinking.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XXIV</h3>
-
-<p>News of Robert’s illness soon reached Edinburgh,
-along with reports of his misconduct, profligacy, and
-intemperance, reports which were grossly exaggerated,
-together with many other slanderous falsehoods.</p>
-
-<p>And rumors of his poverty and the destitute
-condition of his family brought sorrow and anxiety
-to the hearts of many of his loyal friends, who
-were only too ready and willing to offer him all
-the help and assistance that would be needed, but
-they knew, too, his inflexible pride and independence,
-and realized how futile would be their offers of
-friendly assistance.</p>
-
-<p>For some days Lady Nancy Gordon had been
-anxiously puzzling her brain for some thought
-or scheme whereby she could help the unfortunate
-Bard who was plunged in such depths of poverty
-and misfortune. She was thinking of him now
-as she sat at the harpsichord, her fingers wandering
-idly over the keyboard in a running accompaniment
-to her thoughts. Her father softly entered the room
-at this juncture, but she did not turn her head nor
-intimate that she was aware of his presence. Presently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
-her touch grew more and more tender. Anon
-she glided into one of those dreamily joyous, yet
-sorrowful, mazurkas, that remind one of gay wild
-flowers growing in rich profusion over silent and forgotten
-graves. Lady Nancy had reason to boast of
-herself, for she was a perfect mistress of the instrument—and
-as her fingers closed on the final chord, she
-wheeled round abruptly on the chair, and rising to
-her feet greeted her father with a tender smile. For
-a moment she regarded him in thoughtful silence,
-then as he laid down his paper, she walked up to
-him, a frown of displeasure wrinkling her smooth,
-white forehead.</p>
-
-<p>“I think, father,” she said deliberately, with a
-haughty uptilt of her pretty nose, “I think it is
-perfectly disgraceful the way that hackney scribbler
-who writes for yon journal,” indicating the
-paper on the table, “either through malice or ignorance
-affixes such degrading epithets to the name of
-the Bard of Scotland, for by no other name will I
-ever speak of Robert Burns,” and she flashed an
-angry glance at the offending paper.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor obstinate lad,” sighed the Duke thoughtfully.
-His mind went back to the day after the
-garden party at Glencairn Hall, when he had sent
-for Robert to honor them with his presence at Gordon
-House, and how the poet had taken offense at
-some thoughtless remark of his, given in kindly
-spirit; how with haughty pride, and wounded dignity,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
-he had gotten up from the table and after
-thanking them for their hospitality, declared he had
-not come to be insultingly patronized and pitied, and
-refusing to listen to reason, or explanation, he had
-left in bitter resentment and blind misunderstanding.
-Lady Nancy too was thinking the same thoughts,
-and after a moment’s meditation she looked into her
-father’s kindly face and remarked earnestly:</p>
-
-<p>“Father, something must be done for him and his
-family at once.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, my dear,” he meekly replied, “our hands
-are tied by his own obstinacy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can we not get up a subscription for him?” she
-asked. He shook his head slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“’Twould be to no purpose, Nancy,” he returned
-thoughtfully. “He would refuse all offers of pecuniary
-aid. I know well his independent principles,
-and so do you.”</p>
-
-<p>They talked over many plans and projects, but
-none seemed feasible, and they were about to give up
-in despair, when Henry Mackenzie was announced.
-He had just arrived from Ellisland, and immediately
-spoke of his visit to the poet, and under what painful
-conditions he had found him—told them of his
-promise to Burns to secure the office of supervisor
-for him, and had called to consult with his lordship
-concerning its bestowal.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy listened with bated breath and tear-dimmed
-eyes as he spoke of the change in Robert, his poverty,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
-his indomitable courage and independence, in
-spite of the ravages of disease and the black, gloomy
-outlook for future prosperity.</p>
-
-<p>“Nancy and I were just discussing some means
-of alleviating his distress as you entered,” said the
-Duke as Mr. Mackenzie finished his recital. “And
-it affords me much gratification to be able to assist
-him to the office of supervisor of the excise and its
-attendant increase of salary.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Twill be a God-send to him, believe me, my
-lord,” returned Mr. Mackenzie feelingly.</p>
-
-<p>“The news will be dispatched to him at once!”
-cried Nancy with sparkling eyes. “’Twill relieve
-his present distress of mind.”</p>
-
-<p>With that assurance, Mr. Mackenzie rose, and
-thanking them for their kindness in behalf of the
-indigent poet, took his leave.</p>
-
-<p>Having finished luncheon, the old Duke excused
-himself, and going to his study, he made out the
-necessary papers of promotion for the struggling
-exciseman, with many a shake of his head and
-pitying sigh for the young genius who was reduced
-to such straits—driven to such a commonplace calling,
-through his headstrong recklessness, his foolish
-ideas of independence. Having signed them he sat
-back in thoughtful meditation. Suddenly the door
-opened, and his daughter asked permission to enter.
-Having gained it, she crossed to her father, and
-sinking down beside him, in an eager, impetuous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>
-manner quickly laid before him a project which had
-been formulating in her active brain while he was
-busy writing out the papers.</p>
-
-<p>He started back in amazement. “What!” he
-cried. “Are you out of your senses, Nancy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, papa, listen!” she exclaimed earnestly.
-“’Twill take but a day’s ride to reach Dumfries,
-and think how delighted he will be to receive the
-promotion from your hands,” and she slyly noted
-the effect of the bit of delicate flattery.</p>
-
-<p>He frowned and pursed his lips for a moment, and
-idly tapped the folded papers against his knee in
-thought. These signs boded success, as Nancy well
-knew, and springing to her feet she gave him a big
-hug that set him gasping.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Mistress Nancy!” he exclaimed as
-soon as he recovered his breath, “why do you
-want to take this wearisome journey at this season
-of the year, just to visit the home of this poor
-exciseman?” and he wonderingly regarded the face
-that had suddenly grown flushed and pensive, as she
-looked with worshipful eyes at the large engraving
-over the fireplace, which contained the figure of
-Burns in a characteristic attitude, reading one of
-his poems to the group of people that surrounded
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to see him once more before the fire of
-his genius grows cold,” she answered dreamily. “I
-want to see him in his home with his—his wife and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
-children around him.” She might have told him
-that she was heart-hungry for a sight of that dark,
-glowing face, the flashing black eyes that had
-thrilled her with such blissful pain, for the sound of
-that rich, majestic voice, that had so often stirred
-the uttermost depths of her heart. She felt that the
-yearning of her soul would not be satisfied till she
-had seen him again, spoken with him. She hoped,
-yet dreaded, that the sight of his changed face, his
-miserable surroundings, the commonplaceness of it
-all, of meeting the exciseman with his wife and children
-around him, rather than the idealized poet,
-would silence forever the strange unrest of her soul,
-banish all thoughts of sentiment from her mind, and
-destroy the spell of glamour which he had all unconsciously
-thrown about her. These thoughts flew
-through her mind with lightning speed while her
-father was making up his mind how best to dissuade
-her from her purpose.</p>
-
-<p>“I fear me, Nancy, ’twill give us both more pain
-than pleasure,” he said finally. “We may even lose
-our respect for him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t say that, father!” she cried reproachfully.
-“No matter how low he may have fallen, and
-I protest that fame has exaggerated his misconduct
-woefully, we people of Scotland cannot forget nor
-overlook the priceless treasure he has put into our
-thankless hands, a treasure that will be handed down
-to posterity with ever increasing regard, admiration<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
-and love for its author,” and her flashing blue eyes,
-that had so often reminded Robert of Mary Campbell,
-and which had formed a closer tie of comradeship
-between them, again sought and lingered upon
-the engraved likeness of her hero. The singular
-beauty of Lady Nancy Gordon was illumined by that
-happy expression of countenance which results from
-the union of cultivated tastes and superior understanding
-with the finest affections of mind, and the
-influence of such attractions had been keenly felt by
-the ardent poet, who was not altogether unaware of
-the impression he had made upon her heart, which
-was as susceptible to the charms of wit and intellect
-as was his own. As she stood gazing up at the picture,
-she thought with an odd little smile how she
-had openly sought for his favors, delighted in his
-apparent preference for her society even while she
-told herself she knew he was only attracted by her
-brilliancy—that she appealed to his intellect—charmed
-him by her wit, her cleverness. No, she
-had never touched his heart, she thought with a
-sigh, and a look of sadness came into her thoughtful
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I fear, Nancy, that Robert still harbors feelings
-of resentment against us,” protested the Duke
-after a pause. “I know he would rather not see
-us.”</p>
-
-<p>But Lady Nancy overruled his objection. “Then
-all the more reason for our assuring him of our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
-friendship and asking his forgiveness for any offense
-we have unintentionally offered him.”</p>
-
-<p>Seeing all arguments were useless, the old Duke
-finally consented, and with a hug and a kiss, Nancy
-left him and proceeded to make arrangements for
-their speedy departure for Ayrshire.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XXV</h3>
-
-<p>The next morning dawned bleak and dismal. A
-damp, penetrating mist hung over the farm like a
-pall, and the chill of the rain-laden air penetrated
-into the rooms and made itself felt even by the side
-of the brightest fires. It affected the inmates of Ellisland
-farm to an alarming extent. They sat gloomily
-around the hearth idly watching the smoldering peat
-fire, which failed to send out much warmth—as if
-it, too, felt the depressing influences which surrounded
-the little household and which had plunged
-them all into such a slough of despond.</p>
-
-<p>Robert had partaken of his bowl of porridge and
-now lay upon his bed, grateful for the added warmth
-of the woolen blankets which Jean had thrown over
-him with thoughtful solicitude. He appeared to
-the anxious watchers to be more like himself than he
-had been for some days, in spite of his restless, sleepless
-nights, as he lay there peacefully enjoying the
-antics of the children who were playing gleefully but
-quietly around the room their favorite game of
-“Blind man’s holiday.”</p>
-
-<p>At sundown the night before Gilbert had hastened
-to the Inn to meet Squire Armour and to plead for
-another day’s grace, but the implacable old man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>
-refused to listen to him when he found he had failed
-to bring the money, and stormily took his departure
-with threats of instant eviction, leaving Gilbert in
-a state of utter distraction. He watched the Squire
-ride furiously away in the direction of Mossgiel
-with a heavy, sinking fear at his heart, then slowly
-made his way, with pale face and clenched hands,
-back to his brother’s cottage, where he wrestled with
-the fears that assailed him in despairing silence.
-Several times during the night he was on the verge
-of saddling his horse and dashing home, but the hope
-that the morning would bring the long-expected
-letter to Robert checked the impulse, and so he sat
-the long night through anxiously waiting for the
-dawn, praying fervently that he might not be too
-late to save his dear ones from the vindictive
-anger, the unyielding resolution of their irate landlord.</p>
-
-<p>And now morning was here at last. Robert had
-fallen into a profound slumber of nervous exhaustion.
-Jean tucked him in carefully with the warm blankets,
-and taking the children with her, quietly closed the
-door upon the sleeping man with a prayer of thankfulness
-for his temporary respite from the troubles
-that surged about his head.</p>
-
-<p>When her duties were over and the children
-playing on the green, Jean took her sewing and
-joined Gilbert in the living room. He was walking
-restlessly up and down, with nervous, flashing eyes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span>
-that eagerly searched the road, as he passed and
-repassed the small window. His restless pacing, his
-look of hopeful anxiety smote Jean to the heart, for
-she had been bitterly resentful, and was still in a
-measure, against Gilbert’s selfishness in thinking
-only of his own extremity. It didn’t seem right or
-just that he should be here with outstretched hands,
-waiting to take the money that meant so much to
-their own struggling family at the present time, and
-without which she could only foresee grim want staring
-them all in the face—and she had to struggle
-with the desire that rushed over her to rise up and
-tell him of their bitter plight, to bid him go
-elsewhere for assistance; but the fear of Robert’s
-anger kept her silent. Then, too, she suddenly
-remembered that they had both kept their poverty
-and Robert’s continued ill luck and failures from the
-home folk, and it was only to be expected that
-Gilbert would naturally turn to his prosperous
-brother for assistance. “Prosperous, indeed! If he
-but knew,” and she sighed deeply, for her mother’s
-heart felt sore depressed as she thought of her own
-loved ones. They did not talk much. Each was
-too busy with his own gloomy thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>In fancy, Gilbert could see Squire Armour at Mossgiel
-Farm, ordering out his mother and sister, watching
-them with sinister eyes as they got together
-their meager belongings, and then when they, with
-streaming eyes, had carried out the last piece of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>
-furniture and stood gazing at the home that was no
-longer theirs, the cruel landlord had heartlessly
-laughed at their sorrow and, locking the door, had
-ridden away with the keys in his pocket, leaving
-them standing there not knowing whither to go nor
-where to find food or shelter.</p>
-
-<p>“O God! Not that! Not that!” he cried aloud,
-pausing in his walk with clenched hands, pale and
-wild-eyed.</p>
-
-<p>Jean looked up from her work in startled alarm.
-“Gilbert!” she cried. “What is it?”</p>
-
-<p>With a little mirthless laugh, he told her of the
-vision he had had, told of his fears for the safety
-of his home and the welfare of his loved ones.</p>
-
-<p>She listened with a feeling of shame at her heart
-and a flush of angry humiliation mantling her pale
-cheek.</p>
-
-<p>“’Fore Heaven, it makes me feel like cursing
-even the memory of my father,” she exclaimed bitterly
-with a flash of her old-time imperiousness.
-“But be not alarmed, Gilbert,” she continued with
-an encouraging smile. “Your mother is a match
-even for my father, and I’ll warrant she’ll not let
-him set his foot inside the threshold till you return.”
-His face brightened.</p>
-
-<p>“I had indeed forgot my mother’s independent,
-courageous spirit,” he replied with a sigh of relief
-and hopefulness.</p>
-
-<p>The depressing gloom thus lifted, they soon drifted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span>
-into a friendly, earnest conversation, and the minutes
-sped by without, however, the looked-for interruption
-of the overdue postman.</p>
-
-<p>Outside, the mist had long since been dispersed by
-the warm rays of the noonday sun, which was now
-shining brilliantly. A soft moisture glittered on
-every tiny leaf of the wild rose bushes which clustered
-beneath the window of the little cot, and on every
-blade of grass. The penetrating and delicious odor
-of sweet violets and blue-bells scented each puff of
-wind, and now and then the call of the meadow lark
-pierced the air with a subdued far-off shrillness. Suddenly
-the peaceful stillness was broken in upon by
-the sound of footsteps crunching slowly along
-the garden path on their way to the door of the
-cottage.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke of Gordon and his daughter had arrived
-in Dumfries the night before, and, after a night’s rest,
-they took the coach to Ellisland and put up at the
-little old Inn. There they made inquiries for the
-whereabouts of the home of the poet of the little
-old man who was boastfully describing the splendors
-of MacDougall House, none other than our old friend
-Souter, once more in his breeches, having asserted his
-authority, much to his wife’s secret satisfaction, for
-“she did so love a masterful man.” Whereupon
-Souter condescendingly offered to conduct them to
-the place they sought. And now, as they looked at
-the poor clay biggin and the evidences of poverty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>
-and neglect which surrounded them on all sides, their
-hearts sank within them.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose we will find Mr. Burns greatly
-changed?” said Nancy interrogatively with a little
-shudder of dread.</p>
-
-<p>“Weel, mum,” replied Souter reflectively, “we
-all change in time, ye ken. Some for worse, like
-mysel’, and some for the better, like yoursel’, askin’
-your pardon for my boldness. And ye ken Robbie’s
-life has been very hard these past few years.” He
-sighed and shook his head dolefully. “But I want
-to say right here,” and his heavy eyebrows drew
-together in a black scowl, “Robbie Burns’ sickness
-is na’ due to his drinkin’, as ye people of Edinburgh
-believe, and put in yer penny papers. Robbie is
-na drunkard. I hae known him from infancy, and I
-affirm that he has never been guilty of the gross
-enormities he has been charged with. He could
-always attend to his duties,” and he looked with
-aggressive suspicion into the downcast faces of his
-listeners for some sign of doubt of his assertion,
-which, though stanchly loyal, was not altogether true,
-as he knew only too well. “But there is nae use
-telling all ye know,” he told himself philosophically.
-“And what people don’t know about the food they
-eat, will no hurt their appetites.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am very glad to hear that,” ejaculated the
-Duke warmly.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ he is a fond father an’ a maist affectionate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span>
-husband,” continued Souter stoutly. “I’ll go in
-noo and tell him ye’re here,” and he strode into the
-house, leaving the couple standing in the path much
-to their astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t seem right, father,” said Lady Nancy
-sadly, “for such genius to dwell in that little hut,
-amid such surroundings. How I pity him.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a suggestion of tears in the sweet voice
-which her fond father noticed with sudden apprehension.
-He looked at her closely.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is to blame for his being here?” he retorted
-firmly. She remained discreetly silent. Then he
-continued in a softer voice, “But I mustn’t blame
-nor censure him, now that he is sick, and down at
-the bottom again. It is, indeed, a lasting pity that
-such genius should be allowed to smother here in
-poverty and among questionable companions, who,
-’tis said, seek only to bring him to their level, and
-who, alas! are but too surely dragging him there, I
-fear, a weak, unresisting, but also a remorseful,
-repentant victim.”</p>
-
-<p>“And must he stay on here, father, to die a poor
-exciseman?” asked Nancy with a strangely beating
-heart. “Even the added salary of the Supervisorship
-cannot be sufficient to keep such a family.” At
-that moment Souter opened the door. They turned
-to him quietly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what says Mr. Burns?” asked the Duke
-impatiently.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A little smile of amusement appeared on Souter’s
-face. “Mr. Burns begs you to enter and to be
-seated,” he replied.</p>
-
-<p>They complied with the injunction and were shown
-into the living-room, where they seated themselves.</p>
-
-<p>“I was also to tell ye,” continued Souter dryly,
-“that he will be with ye as soon as he can get into
-his damned rags.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!” exclaimed the Duke laughingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Excuse me, your ladyship,” answered Souter
-with a little nod to Lady Nancy, “but them’s his
-own words and I’m no the one to change the language
-o’ a Scottish poet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Has he only rags to wear?” asked Lady Nancy
-pitifully.</p>
-
-<p>“Hush!” cautioned her father, “he is here.”</p>
-
-<p>The door opened and Robert slowly entered the
-room. He had thrown his wide plaid around his
-shoulders, over his loose white shirt, and held it
-together with one hand that gleamed very white
-and thin against the bright colors. His black hair,
-now faintly streaked with gray and which had thinned
-considerably above his forehead, hung loosely about
-his neck, framing his gaunt face, and accentuating
-his pallor.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment they gazed upon the wreck of the
-once stalwart and ruggedly healthy youth, too
-shocked to utter a word. Robert was the first to
-break the silence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“My lord,” he exclaimed with something of his
-old brightness, “I am rejoiced, indeed, to see you
-at Ellisland. ’Tis a great surprise, but none the
-less a welcome one.” He shook the Duke’s outstretched
-hand with fervor.</p>
-
-<p>“The pleasure is mutual, my lad,” responded the
-Duke warmly. “’Tis a few years now since we
-parted, and in anger, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was in the wrong that night,” broke in Robert
-penitently, with a rueful shake of the head. “I sadly
-misjudged ye there, as I learned afterward, but my
-stubborn pride refused to accept the olive branch ye
-held out to me. Ye see,” he explained frankly,
-“’twas my unreasoning wounded pride and anger,
-and my disappointment which blinded me to all sense
-of right and justice. I realized after that ye were
-my friends and that ye resented the damning insult
-put upon me at Glencairn Hall.” He paused a
-moment, a frown of bitterness wrinkling his brow.
-Presently he looked up and holding out his hand
-again with one of the old magnetic smiles, said, “An’
-ye have forgiven my ingratitude, an’ are come noo
-to see me! I thank ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis all forgot. I forgave you at the time,”
-responded the Duke cordially. “I could not hold
-resentment against you.” He turned to his daughter,
-who was partly concealed in the embrasure of
-the deep window.</p>
-
-<p>“Nancy, child, speak to Robert.” She came<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span>
-slowly forward with hand outstretched, a faint flush
-dyeing her creamy skin, or perhaps it was the reflection
-of the pink satin gown she was wearing beneath
-the long velvet cloak, which, becoming unhooked, had
-slipped down off her shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>Robert rose to his feet, and his black, gloomy
-eyes lighted up with pleasure as they rested upon the
-dainty vision of loveliness before him. Lady Nancy
-had always reminded him of Mary Campbell, and
-to-day the resemblance was more striking than ever.
-For beneath the large leghorn with its waving, black
-plumes, her golden hair so like Mary’s, for the once
-unpowdered, glittered in all its beauty. Perhaps
-my Lady Nancy had remembered the likeness and
-had purposely heightened it by forgetting to use
-the powder which had hitherto covered the golden
-curls at all times. As she stood there with a wistful
-look upon her face, it was easy to perceive the resemblance
-to the timid dairymaid who, in borrowed
-finery, had created such a sensation at the Duchess
-of Athol’s “at home” three years before.</p>
-
-<p>“Lady Nancy, forgive my rudeness in not greeting
-you sooner,” he exclaimed fervently.</p>
-
-<p>“I am so glad we are reconciled, friends, once
-more,” she exclaimed impulsively. “It did seem as
-if you would never relent, you stubborn man,” and
-she smiled archly into his embarrassed face.</p>
-
-<p>“You find me greatly changed, of course,” he
-remarked after they had discoursed a while upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>
-their journey. She remained silent, but he read the
-sympathy shining in her blue eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“We read of your illness in town,” explained the
-Duke, “and believe me, Robert, we are deeply sorry
-for your affliction. But I trust the vigor of your
-constitution will soon set you on your feet again,”
-and he gave him a cheery smile of encouragement.</p>
-
-<p>Robert shook his head gloomily. “My health is,
-I think, flown from me forever,” he replied sadly,
-“altho’ I am beginning to crawl about the house,
-and once, indeed, have I been seen outside my cottage
-door.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t you let us know of your illness
-before?” exclaimed Lady Nancy reproachfully.
-“We are your friends.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert flushed painfully. “My miserable health
-was brought on and aggravated solely by my headstrong,
-thoughtless carelessness, and I felt so heartily
-ashamed of myself that I sought to conceal from all
-friends my real condition, but ’tis out at last. How
-long I will be confined to the house, God alone
-knows,” and he sighed deeply.</p>
-
-<p>“Do not give yourself up to despondency, my
-lad,” encouraged the Duke brightly, “nor speak the
-language of despair. You must get well.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed I must!” returned Robert grimly, “for
-I have three strong, healthy boys and if I am nipt
-off at the command of fate—gracious God! what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span>
-would become of my little flock?” and a look of
-distraction swept over his face at the thought.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t distress yourself needlessly, Robert!” exclaimed
-the Duke kindly. Then he continued earnestly,
-“If anything should happen to you, if you
-should be taken off before I am called, I promise
-that the children of Robert Burns shall never come
-to want.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Twould be a lasting disgrace to Scotland,”
-flashed Lady Nancy with kindling eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Robert grasped the Duke’s hand impulsively.
-“God bless ye for your noble assurance!” he cried.
-“Ye have lifted a heavy weight of care and anxiety
-off my mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, father!” suddenly exclaimed Lady Nancy,
-“I vow if you are not forgetting your principal
-errand here.” He looked at her with a puzzled
-frown. “Mr. Burns’ promotion,” she reminded him
-laughingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Gad zooks!” he exclaimed in amazement, jumping
-to his feet. “What an old dolt I am, to be sure.”
-Hastily diving his hand in the inside pocket of his
-elaborate, black-flowered satin square-cut, he
-pulled out a long paper with a red seal attached
-and handed it to the now bewildered Robert, who,
-after a quick glance at their smiling faces, opened
-the paper and quickly read its contents. Then he
-gave a gasp, followed by an ejaculation of delighted
-surprise and gratification.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“My lord,” he exclaimed, “this is indeed a gift
-to bring gladness to a man’s heart. I thank ye
-most gratefully for my promotion, and will endeavor
-to perform my duties to the best of my poor abilities
-as soon as my strength returns.” And the look
-of anxiety gave way to one of comparative contentment.</p>
-
-<p>“And your immediate recovery is of the first
-importance,” returned the Duke brightly. “You
-need a change.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not come to town, where you can have the
-best of medical attendance?” asked Lady Nancy
-quietly, though her heart beat furiously as she offered
-the suggestion.</p>
-
-<p>“That is impossible,” replied Robert. “The
-medical folk tell me that my last and only chance
-is bathing and sea air and riding. With my promotion
-and the increase of salary it brings, I can
-now obey their mandates,” and he held the paper
-to his breast with a sigh of relief.</p>
-
-<p>“Then the sooner you start, the better,” remarked
-the Duke kindly.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Nancy rose to her feet with a wan smile on
-her lips. “And the sooner we start for Dumfries,
-father, the better,” she returned.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right, child, we must hasten,” and he
-hastily arose and got his hat and cane together,
-then he turned once more to Robert. “Mr. Burns,
-pardon the suggestion, but is it not time to get<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span>
-out another volume of your poems?” he asked
-kindly.</p>
-
-<p>“I have not in my present state of mind much
-appetite for exertion in writing,” answered Robert
-slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“But they could be arranged for you by some
-literary friend,” quickly returned the Duke, “and
-advertised to be published by subscription.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert raised his head proudly. “Subscription!”
-he repeated. “No, no, that savors too much
-of charity,” and a look of obstinacy came into his
-darkened eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Remember,” said Lady Nancy gently, “that
-Pope published his Iliad by subscription, Mr.
-Burns.”</p>
-
-<p>He remained silent a moment, then after a little
-struggle with his obstinate pride, he answered with a
-touch of bitterness in his voice, “I realize that I
-am in no position to despise any means to add to
-my income or to leave my family better provided
-for after I am gone. I will take your advice and will
-at once speak to my dear friend Aiken about it.
-He will aid me.”</p>
-
-<p>The door opened and Jean entered the room. She
-had heard all the good news, and having met both
-the Duke and Lady Nancy while sojourning at Glencairn
-Castle a few years before, she felt she ought to
-thank them for their good offices in Robert’s behalf.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Nancy and the Duke greeted her warmly,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span>
-asked after the health of the children, expressed
-pleasure in seeing her again, and soon put her at her
-ease, for the sudden thought of her hasty marriage
-to Robert and the attendant slanderous gossip at first
-made her feel and appear self-conscious and
-restrained.</p>
-
-<p>“I was just telling Robert,” said the old Duke,
-“that he must go at once to the seashore.” She
-looked at her husband, and her wistful expression did
-not escape the keen eyes of Lady Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>“If he only could go at once,” faltered Jean, “I
-am sure the water would effect a cure, but——”</p>
-
-<p>Nancy gave her father a significant look, which
-clearly said, “They have no money, father.” At
-least, so he interpreted it, aided by his own shrewd
-guess at the state of affairs.</p>
-
-<p>“By the way, Robert,” he said jocularly, “can
-you swallow your pride sufficiently to accept a month’s
-salary in advance?” He pulled out a large, well-filled
-wallet and opened it.</p>
-
-<p>“We do not need it, my lord,” answered Robert
-firmly and a trifle coldly. “I am expecting——”
-Here Jean hurriedly interrupted him, knowing what
-he was about to say.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Robert!” she cried contritely, “I forget to
-tell you that the Posty left no letter.”</p>
-
-<p>“No letter!” he repeated dully, looking at her
-with wide-open, searching eyes. She sadly shook
-her head.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Here are £5, lad. Take the note and to-morrow
-set out for Brow,” and the Duke held out the note
-for his acceptance, but he sat with averted gaze in
-the proud silence of keen disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>“Do not refuse, Robert,” pleaded Jean softly.
-“’Tis only a loan.”</p>
-
-<p>Slowly he took the money and folded it between
-his fingers. “Thank ye, my lord,” he said quietly.
-“I will accept it, for I am in sore need of it at this
-moment.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right, my lad,” he said heartily. “What
-is a friend for if he cannot extend or receive a
-favor?” and he turned to help his daughter into
-her cloak.</p>
-
-<p>Quickly Robert pressed the money into Jean’s
-hand and whispered to her, “Take it at once to
-Gilbert and bid him hasten to Mossgiel before it
-is too late to save the roof over mother’s head.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Robert——” she protested, but he would
-not listen to her.</p>
-
-<p>“Do ye not see ’tis near sundown of the second
-day?” he told her impatiently, “and Gilbert will
-have to ride fast if he would get to Mossgiel before
-night overtakes him; noo hasten, Jean.” Still she
-lingered, reluctant to go.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, lad, this money is for you; it means your
-health, our happiness. It isn’t right to——”</p>
-
-<p>“We have got a roof over our head, Jean,” he
-interrupted sternly. “We maist keep one over my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span>
-mother and sister as weel. We will nae starve.
-There are only £4 due your father. Keep out one
-for our present needs. Noo go, lass, go.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus commanded, she hurried to the chamber where
-Gilbert sat in despairing solitude, his head held
-wearily between his hands, and conveyed to him the
-glad intelligence. And soon he was speeding furiously
-over the dusty road toward home, his face
-aglow with joy and eagerness.</p>
-
-<p>When Jean returned to the room she found
-Souter and Eppy there gayly chatting with the Duke
-and Lady Nancy, who were evidently much surprised
-to find their old friend Eppy at last married.</p>
-
-<p>“I am so glad to see you here, Lady Nancy,”
-gushed Eppy effusively. “You must come and see
-us before you return to Edinburgh. I live on the
-estate adjoining this farm.” He drew the smiling
-girl to the window and pointed out the beauties
-of MacDougall House. “He is poor,” she whispered,
-“but he is of noble birth, a MacDougall of
-Lorne. Souter!” she called aloud to her husband,
-who was looking exceedingly important as he stood
-balancing himself on his toes, his hands behind his
-back, a look of supreme self-satisfaction on his face,
-and listening, with an air of blasé indifference, to
-the conversation between the old Duke and Robert.
-As he heard his name called he leisurely turned his
-head in his wife’s direction.</p>
-
-<p>“Souter,” she continued in a tone meant to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span>
-careless, but which expressed plainly her feeling of
-pride, “isn’t it the Marquis of Lorne who is your
-first cousin?”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that, Souter?” asked Robert incredulously.</p>
-
-<p>Souter looked around him with a sickly smile. He
-had not thought to be cornered in this manner, when
-he had filled his wife’s mind with stories of past
-grandeur and noble connections, and it made him
-feel decidedly uncomfortable and embarrassed.</p>
-
-<p>“Er—didna’ ye ken that, Robbie?” he exclaimed
-with a look of feigned surprise on his reddened face.
-“Och, yes! By the by, Robbie,” he continued
-quickly, anxious to change the subject, “we came
-o’er to tell ye that we are gang to Brow on our
-honeymoon.” Here Eppy giggled and looked bashfully
-out of the window. “An’ my wife, Mrs. MacDougall,”
-with a flourish of the hand in her direction,
-which elicited another giggle from the lady in question,
-“has decided that we want ye to gang alang
-wi’ us.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert looked at him, then at Eppy in speechless
-surprise. Jean gave a little gasp, and her hand
-sought her husband’s arm and pressed it with
-delight.</p>
-
-<p>“Souter,” faltered Robert, “ye’re both doing
-this out of the kindness of your hearts, but I
-canna——”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll na take no for an answer. Ye may be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span>
-stubborn wi’ your lofty independence, your pride,
-but I can be just as stubborn as ye, Rab Burns, and
-I say it is settled,” said Souter.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis the hand of God,” whispered Jean softly.</p>
-
-<p>“God bless ye both,” faltered Robert, grasping
-Souter’s hand affectionately.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, father,” said Lady Nancy, who had witnessed
-this little scene with moist eyes, “I protest
-we must start on our journey.”</p>
-
-<p>“But first we must have a toast,” said Robert
-brightly. “’Tis most fitting. Jean, bring the
-punch bowl.” Quickly she brought from the closet
-the bowl of Inverary marble and placed it on the
-table, and into it she poured some hot water and
-sugar. “We have no wine to offer,” continued Robert,
-“nothing better than Highland whisky, but ye
-needna’ be afraid of becoming intoxicated, my lord,”
-and he smiled ruefully, “for I ken ’twill hardly be
-tolerable to your educated taste.” Jean had mixed
-the punch and now passed it around among the
-guests. “For auld lang syne!” cried Robert feelingly.
-“Is not that phrase most expressive? My
-lord, a toast,” and he raised his glass to the old
-Duke, who, after a moment’s hesitation, proposed
-“the health of Robert Burns, Scotland’s greatest
-Bard.”</p>
-
-<p>“We drink to that with pleasure,” exclaimed Lady
-Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, that we do,” echoed Souter heartily. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span>
-while the toast was being drunk he slyly whispered,
-“Rob, dinna’ say aught to my wife about—er—the
-old Marquis, my—ahem—cousin. Ye understand,”
-and he nudged him significantly.</p>
-
-<p>Robert smiled and assured him of his secrecy.</p>
-
-<p>“And noo,” said Souter proudly, looking at
-Eppy’s simpering face, “here’s to the bride.” She
-made a deep courtesy and quaffed her glass with conscious
-dignity at her sudden importance. “May she
-always believe in her husband,” he added in an aside
-to Robert, much to the latter’s amusement.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. MacDougall, here’s to your enemies, your
-foes,” proposed Robert.</p>
-
-<p>“What?” she cried, opening her eyes in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“May they have short shoes an’ corny toes,” he
-added with a merry twinkle in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Duke, a toast!” said Souter importantly.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke thought a moment. “Well, I drink to
-Mrs. MacDougall. May she soon have a house full
-of bairns,” he thoughtlessly proposed.</p>
-
-<p>Eppy gasped and turned crimson, and Lady
-Nancy bit her lips to keep back the smile her father’s
-well-meant but tactless speech occasioned.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean to insult me, my lord?” flashed
-Eppy indignantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Bless my soul, no,” returned the Duke in astonishment,
-who could see no reason for offense in his
-kindly-meant remark.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“The Duke meant well,” said Souter pacifically
-to his wife, whose eyes were flashing angrily.
-“An’—an’—stranger things might happen, ye ken,”
-and he rubbed his chin reflectively with a sly look
-out of the corner of his roguish eye at Robert. She
-tossed her head haughtily.</p>
-
-<p>“’Twould not be so monstrous strange, Mr. MacDougall,
-as you seem to think,” she retorted frigidly.
-Souter opened his eyes in speechless surprise. He
-was about to speak, but after one bewildered glance
-at the disdainful face of his bride, concluded that
-discretion was the better part of valor, and for the
-rest of that day he remained in thoughtful silence
-reflecting on the inconsistencies of woman kind
-in particular, and speculating upon the strange
-and mysterious workings of human nature in general.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke bade them all adieu and passed out into
-the garden, where its wild beauties attracted his
-eye. He wandered about, forgetting, in his admiration
-for the flowers, his daughter, who had lingered
-behind for one last farewell word—alone.</p>
-
-<p>“And so, Mr. Burns,” she said thoughtfully, looking
-after Jean’s retreating figure, “you have never
-regretted taking the step that bound your life to
-that of Jean Armour’s? Regretted doing your
-duty?” There was a note of regret in the vibrating
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Never, my lady,” he replied firmly. “It was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span>
-the only really good thing I have ever done in my
-wretched life.”</p>
-
-<p>She looked at him a moment with hungry eyes.
-“Do you never think of the old days in town?” she
-asked suddenly, and she was greatly surprised to
-see his face turn pale, his eyes flash and deepen.</p>
-
-<p>“For God’s sake, madam, do not mention the
-past!” he said, turning away. “All that has passed
-out of my life forever,” he murmured after a pause,
-“never to return.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you wish it so?” she asked faintly. He
-bowed his head slowly. She moistened her lips feverishly
-and drew near to him, her eyes filled with a
-light that would have startled him had he seen it.
-“Say not so! Must I give up the friendship of the
-only man I esteem and hold dear?” she panted
-breathlessly. “Oh, will you not renew the broken
-thread of our correspondence [he had written her
-several times since coming to Ellisland, but before
-Jean’s advent] and enjoy the sweet intercourse of
-thought, which will bring such gladness into my
-own life, and will brighten the gloom of your own,
-and will take naught from your wife’s peace of
-mind?”</p>
-
-<p>He raised his head and regarded her thoughtfully.
-“How can ye ask me that, my lady,” he answered,
-“when ye declared to me in your last letter that you
-meant to preserve my epistles with a view, sooner
-or later, to expose them to the pillory of derision and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span>
-the rocks of criticism?” And a look of resentment
-gleamed in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I protest, Mr. Burns,” she cried reproachfully.
-“I have, indeed, preserved your letters, but they will
-never leave my possession; they are cherished as the
-dearest treasures of my life.”</p>
-
-<p>He sighed and remained silent for a space. From
-the kitchen came the sound of children’s voices. He
-listened to it a moment, then turned to Lady
-Nancy, a look of resolution in his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Lady Nancy,” he said firmly, “I canna’ write
-to ye in sincerity. I have a wife and family, an’ I
-have given my word to Jean, and while I dare to sin,
-I dare not to lie, else madam I could perhaps too
-truly join grief with grief, and echo sighs to thine.
-But with one foot in the grave, I have no desire
-to stir up the old ashes of—friendship to find a living
-ember. ’Twould be but a weak, fitful burning at best.
-Nay, ’tis too late noo. Believe me, ’tis best, dear
-lady.” He rose to his feet and held out his hand
-again. “An’ noo farewell, Lady Nancy, farewell.”</p>
-
-<p>She took his hand and looked into his set, unmoved
-face, and a sigh of utter disappointment, of patient
-longing, involuntarily escaped her trembling lips.
-“If it must be, then farewell,” she answered slowly,
-a slight tremor in her soft voice. She walked to the
-door, then turned and fixing her eyes on him, she
-continued mournfully, “Do not quite forget me, will
-you, Robert? Let the scenes of nature remind you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span>
-of Nancy. In winter remember the dark shades of
-her life, for there are plenty; in summer, the warmth
-of her friendship; in autumn, her glowing wishes to
-bestow plenty on all, and let spring animate you with
-hopes that your absent friend may yet surmount the
-wintry blasts of life, and revive to taste a springtime
-of happiness.”</p>
-
-<p>He bowed his head gravely. “I shall remember
-ye, Lady Nancy—friend,” he returned feelingly.</p>
-
-<p>She gave him one long, lingering look. “Farewell,
-farewell!” she gasped, and when he raised his
-head she was gone.</p>
-
-<p>He sighed and walked thoughtfully to the window.
-“The past and all its pleasures will soon be but a
-dim memory,” he muttered grimly, “as one by one
-the connecting links which bound me to it are severed
-forever.” He paused and watched her as she joined
-her father in the garden, and a quizzical look flashed
-across his face. “Faith!” he muttered with a little
-smile, “who would believe the time would come when
-lovely women would plead in vain for the favors o’
-Rob Burns. Och! Robbie, ye are indeed fit only for
-the grave,” and he turned away from the window in
-earthly meditation.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XXVI</h3>
-
-<p>The next few days Jean was very busy with her
-preparations for their sojourn at the seaside. The
-date of their departure was already fixed and it now
-lacked but a few days before they would bid farewell
-to Ellisland forever, for Robert had decided to
-take up his residence in Dumfries when his visit
-was ended, for the duties of his new office would necessitate
-his being there the quarter part of his time.</p>
-
-<p>As the day of their departure drew near, Robert
-grew more and more depressed, and day by day he
-sat in melancholy silence beside the window gazing
-with unseeing eyes upon the tangled yet graceful
-wilderness of flowers. Jean watched him in growing
-fear and anxiety as he sank deeper and deeper into
-those protracted fits of gloom and depression,
-and vainly sought to find some reason for the
-sudden change. He had been so elated at getting
-his promotion and at the many advantageous
-changes it would make in their condition—had dwelt
-with affectionate wonder on Eppy’s kindness in
-extending to them the invitation to accompany them
-to Brow, and had seemed to greatly improve in
-health and spirits for a few days. Then came Gilbert’s
-letter stating that he had arrived in time to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span>
-prevent the eviction of the dear ones at home. The
-letter had plunged him into a state of feverish excitement
-and restless anxiety, and all day he would sit
-at the open window, watching with burning eyes
-the long narrow road that twisted and turned on its
-way to Mossgiel, straining his eyes eagerly at the
-approach of any casual traveler who might be passing,
-then with a look of patient despair, sink back
-in his chair, pale and listless, his unfocused eyes
-again gazing into space. One night after he had
-left his chair and had retired to his bed for the night,
-looking more haggard than usual, Jean spied on the
-floor a crumpled paper which had evidently dropped
-from his nerveless hand. Picking it up, she smoothed
-it out and found it to be Gilbert’s letter, which she
-had not seen, as Robert had read it to her and then
-put it carefully aside. Slowly her gaze wandered
-over it. Suddenly she gave a great start, for at the
-bottom of the page this sentence caught her eye:
-“Mary leaves to-morrow for the Highlands and will
-pass through Ellisland.” Thoughtfully she put the
-letter on the chair where he could find it in the morning,
-and sat down by the cradle of the bairn and
-gently rocked him till his fretful crying ceased; then
-she gave herself up to the heart-burning thoughts
-that filled her mind. She had tried so hard to be
-patient all these years, she had struggled and struggled
-to do her duty without a word of complaint,
-she thought, while bitter tears of patient grief and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</a></span>
-secret yearning for the love that she knew belonged
-to another rolled down her sorrowing cheek. She
-had no word of complaint to make against Robert
-though, for he had never sought to deceive her
-once, and there was no feeling of resentment in
-her heart against the little dairymaid. It was not
-the child’s fault. It was not the fault of either
-that they still loved each other. Only Robert
-might have shown her the letter, she thought with
-quivering lips; there was no need to keep it from
-her. She would know it when Mary came to the house,
-anyway. She might have guessed the reason for his
-sudden change, she thought, wiping away her tears,
-only her mind had been so filled with the household
-preparations for moving that Mary had been quite
-forgotten. For a while she gently rocked the sleeping
-child, watching its sweet, flushed face, listening to
-its soft breathing, and soon all disturbing thoughts
-slipped away from her troubled mind, and a peaceful,
-holy calm entered her patient heart and shone
-through her love-lit eyes. Covering its little form
-carefully, she carried the cradle into her chamber and
-placed it within reach of her bed. Then as she disrobed
-for the night in dreary silence, her eyes fixed on
-the pale face of her husband, who was tossing and
-muttering in his sleep, a tender wave of pity swept
-over her at the thought of the sweet lass who would
-shortly pass out of their lives forever, leaving only
-a sweet, haunting memory behind to remind them of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</a></span>
-her pathetic young life. Quickly she slipped into
-bed beside her restless husband, upon whose feverish
-cheek she pressed a tender kiss, and closing her tired
-eyes, fancied she slept, though her sleep was but a
-waking dream of love for her husband and children,
-in which all bright hopes and vague longings reached
-their utmost fulfillment, and yet were in some strange
-way crossed with shadows of sorrow and grief,
-which she had no power to disperse.</p>
-
-<p>On the following morning the heat was intense. No
-breath of air stirred a ripple on the sluggishly-flowing
-Nith, and there was a heaviness in the atmosphere
-which made the very brightness of the sky
-oppressive. Such hot weather was unusual for that
-part of Scotland, and, according to Souter Johnny,
-betokened some change. The sun was dazzling, yet
-there was a mist in the air as though the heavens were
-full of unshed tears. A bank of nearly motionless
-clouds hung behind the dark, sharp peaks of the distant
-mountains which lay beyond Mossgiel, for there
-was no wind stirring, and Robert, seated in his chair
-by the window, found himself too warm with his thick
-plaid wrapped closely around him, and throwing
-it back he let the sunshine bathe him in its golden
-glow and play on the uncovered ebony of his hair.
-He no longer watched the road with such eager
-intensity. Rarely this morning had his gaze wandered
-beyond the bush beneath the window, with its
-one snowy-white rose, the last rose of summer, nestling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span>
-among the faded, worm-eaten leaves, looking
-so pure, so fragrant, so delicately white against the
-background of rusty, dead-looking foliage. It had
-blossomed in the night, and in the morning when he
-had approached the lattice from force of habit, although
-he had given up all hope of seeing Mary before
-she left Ayrshire, he had spied it in all its delicate
-beauty. Each morning for six days now he had
-gone to that window, expecting before the day drew
-to its close to see the beloved form of his Mary
-approach, only to go to his bed at night in bitter
-disappointment. Gilbert’s letter stated she would
-start that day, and now the sixth day had come and
-yet there was no sign of her. He had told himself
-he would not watch the road this morning; there was
-no use, she had gone; she had not wanted to see him;
-she felt too bitter against him—it was only natural
-she should. These bitter thoughts had filled his mind
-with misery and wretchedness as he drew near the
-open window. Suddenly his eyes had rested on the
-spot of white nestling on the top of the bush. With
-a strange thrill at his heart, he had knelt down beside
-the latticed window, and folding his arms on the sill,
-gazed at the message from heaven, sent to bring
-peace and hope to his aching heart, so he fondly
-believed, while bright tears filled his eyes and brimmed
-over, falling warmly on his folded hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Mary, my love, my love!” he whispered
-brokenly. “Come to me before ye die.” And all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span>
-that morning he had watched it expand and stretch
-out its petals to its utmost, wafting its perfume up
-into his grateful nostrils, till a peace such as had
-not visited his heart for many years, smoothed out
-the lines of suffering from his brow and softened the
-hard light in his deepened eyes. A verse of a poem
-he had written a few years before flashed across his
-memory:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Oft hae I roved by bonnie Doon,</div>
-<div class="verse">To see the rose and woodbine twine;</div>
-<div class="verse">And like a bird sang o’ its luve,</div>
-<div class="verse">And fondly sae did I o’ mine;</div>
-<div class="verse">Wi’ lightsome heart I pu’d a rose,</div>
-<div class="verse">Fu’ sweet upon its thorny tree;</div>
-<div class="verse">But my fausse luver stole my rose,</div>
-<div class="verse">But ah! he left the thorn wi’ me.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Jean, coming into the room a little later, found him
-there, his head resting on his hands, a smile of
-contented calm upon his face, which now seemed
-like the face of the youth she had known in Mauchline,
-and the sight thrilled her strangely and brought
-a spasm of pain to her overcharged heart.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XXVII</h3>
-
-<p>That morning, when Robert first caught sight of the
-rose, he had experienced a sort of mental obsession
-in which his brain was mastered by the thought—an
-absurd idea perhaps, and one which his reason and
-his will both might easily have repelled, only he clung
-fondly to the belief, letting it fasten itself upon his
-mind and grow and grow—that Mary had passed
-away in the night, and that her spirit had found a
-temporary resting place in the heart of the white
-rose that had blossomed forth so unexpectedly, so
-unseasonably. He had watched the nodding flower
-on its long, slender stem of green, waving gracefully
-in the light breeze that had sprung up, and in
-his state of dreaming consciousness fancied he could
-see the wistful face of Highland Mary peeping out
-from among the snowy petals. As the feeling grew
-upon him that she had come to him in spirit, a great
-content settled down and around him, a mighty calm
-that seemed to still the troubled waters of his soul,
-and all the bitter discontent, the yearnings of his
-heart, the cravings, the unrest, faded away like a
-mist dissolved by the warm splendor of the sun. For
-a while he had sat there in blissful peace, a smile of
-ineffable rapture on his face, gazing with rapt adoring
-eyes at the dancing rose, which seductively blew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</a></span>
-nearer and nearer to him with each gust of the
-swiftly rising wind, then as he would lovingly stretch
-out his hand to touch it, to caress it, away it would
-go, eluding him like a dancing sunbeam, to the
-farthest side of the bush, bending its saucy head
-lower and lower till it was lost to sight for an instant,
-then up it would bound, gayly nodding, and then for
-a moment would pause in its restless elfin dance, quivering
-on its stem as though tired with its sportive
-play, its coquetry. The sky had grown gradually
-darker, and little waves disturbed the smooth surface
-of the greenish gray grass that swayed and undulated
-in running billows, as the wind rose. But the
-kneeling man was all unconscious of the gloom that
-had settled over the landscape, shutting out the glorious
-sunshine, stilling the song of the birds, and
-bringing in its train a damp chill that presaged a
-storm. The wind tossed the curls madly about the
-face of the poet, but still he did not move; only as
-the chill air struck through his thin shirt, he mechanically
-pulled his plaid about his shoulders, and
-dreamed on happily, of the old days, when the heart
-was young, before sorrow had embittered his life,
-dreamed of a life of love with Mary by his side,
-dreamed and dreamed far into the morning, and so
-Jean had found him and left him to his slumbers.
-Suddenly his eyes opened, but he did not move.
-He sat there feeling a little cramped and stiff, until
-hazy recollections dawned slowly upon his mind,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</a></span>
-then he raised himself from his crouching position,
-and leaning out of the window gazed with eyes that
-were wonderfully luminous at the blossom which was
-just beyond his eager reach. He inhaled deep
-breaths of its fragrant perfume, a smile of loving
-tenderness on his lips. All at once a feeling of
-sudden depression tightened around his heart as he
-noticed for the first time the deepening gloom without,
-felt the lowering temperature of the atmosphere,
-which chilled and depressed him so strangely. He
-looked again at the swiftly dancing flower, and his
-heart stopped beating for an instant, while a look
-of pain, of heart-breaking sorrow, darkened his face—the
-white petals were dropping one by one, and
-were being whirled and tossed madly through the air
-like flakes of snow. He watched in silence, as the
-wind, with reckless abandon, tore them out and scattered
-them here and there, some sailing merrily out
-of sight—one dashing through the open window and
-against the white, agonized face of the suffering
-man, clinging to it for a moment, in a sweet caress,
-a last embrace, then slipping down—down, till it
-found rest on the floor, where soon it was dead and
-forgotten. As the last snowy petal left its stem,
-leaving it looking so bare and pitiful nestling in
-among the leaves as though ashamed of its nakedness,
-a hard sob of anguish escaped his lips, for it seemed
-as if each petal contained a part of the soul of his
-loved one, and leaning his face against the sash, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</a></span>
-gave himself up to the crushing sorrow that submerged
-his soul and plunged him once more into
-black despair. It seemed as if the last link that
-had bound her to earth, and to him, was at last
-broken and she had passed on out of his life forever;
-not even the rose was left to preserve as a sacred
-memory to look at occasionally, to bring her presence
-nearer. And now no more such roses would
-bloom for him, not in this life anyway, and so he
-drearily mused in hopeless sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>All at once a vague feeling of uneasiness stole
-over him, a curious feeling that he was not alone;
-and yet he did not look around, for somehow it seemed
-that it was the spirit of his Mary still hovering in the
-air, seeking to comfort his grieving heart; and yet
-the strange feeling of her nearness was different from
-that emotion he had experienced when he in fancy
-had looked at her wistful face in the heart of the
-nodding rose. And suddenly he held his breath as
-the consciousness of her physical presence grew
-stronger and stronger upon him; his startled eyes
-fixed themselves upon the naked stem, swaying gently
-on the bush—he strained his ears to hear—he knew
-not what—he could not tell—a trembling seized his
-limbs—and when he heard a sweet, low voice call
-“Robert,” not from the slender stalk, but somewhere
-behind him, he gave no start of surprise. He told
-himself it—it—was only imagination—the great
-longing within him had—but there it was again—it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</a></span>
-could not be fancy—it—it must be—he turned slowly
-in the direction of the voice as if afraid to find naught
-but the empty room to mock him, for he had heard
-no sound to indicate a presence within the room. As
-his eyes grew accustomed to the gloom and his dulled
-vision cleared, he saw just inside the door, standing
-with hands outstretched to him—a flesh and blood
-reality, but oh! so pitifully changed. He gave a
-gasping cry and sprang to clasp the swaying form
-close to his throbbing breast.</p>
-
-<p>Ah! the rapture of that meeting, the blissful joy
-which filled his aching heart and crowded out stern
-recollections from his memory, while all thoughts of
-the grim present, its bitter facts which faced him,
-the vain regrets, all—all were now forgotten. The
-lines of pain in his haggard face were smoothed out
-gently and deep peace settled upon their troubled
-souls.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Mary!” he breathed softly, breaking the
-sacred stillness. “Ye have come at last. Oh, it has
-been so long, dearie, so long, and I have wanted ye
-so much,” and he held her to his heart in a strong,
-jealous, passionate embrace, as if he could never
-part with her again on earth, but would shield her
-from even the shadow of death, that he saw stamped
-on her pale, pinched features, and which glowed in
-the haunting depths of her tired blue eyes. A smile
-of sadness passed quickly over her face like the sun
-that peeps through the sudden rift of a cloud.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[382]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Ye knew, laddie, I couldna’ go awa’ without
-seeing ye just once mair,” she whispered tenderly.
-A fit of coughing suddenly racked her slender frame.
-He led her weak and trembling to a chair and gently
-wiped away the beads of perspiration from her forehead,
-and for a moment she leaned up against him
-in utter exhaustion. Presently she smiled up in his
-anxious face and faintly thanked him. “Dinna’ be
-alarmed, dearie,” she faltered. “I’m aright noo,”
-and she bravely straightened up in her seat, but he
-would not release her altogether.</p>
-
-<p>And so they sat, sad and silent, knowing the parting,
-the sad, final parting would come in a few
-quickly-fleeing moments.</p>
-
-<p>Outside the clouds had been gathering thickly
-over the sky, and now and then a few shafts of sunlight
-still forced a passage through them with steady
-persistency, although storm hovered over all, waiting
-the signal to burst forth. Suddenly a silver glare of
-lightning sprang out from beneath the black-winged
-cloud hanging low in the horizon, and a few large
-drops of rain began to fall. Mary nestled closer to
-him as she saw the brilliant flash, and shivered apprehensively.
-They both were thinking of that other
-storm, when he had bidden farewell to Ayrshire in
-poverty and despair, to take his place in Edinburgh
-among the high and mighty, to claim the reward
-of genius—honor, fame and renown. And now the
-time had come for her to say farewell, only there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</a></span>
-was a difference, and such a difference! She was bidding
-good-by to life, to love, to everything. A
-happy smile broke over her wistful face as she
-thought of her reward; it would not be such a fleeting
-thing as riches, honor and fame. Thank God,
-it was more than those; it was an eternity of happiness.
-No more sorrow, no more suffering, only
-peace, divine peace, such as the world knoweth not,
-such as she had never known in her short, eventful
-life.</p>
-
-<p>“And so, Mary,” murmured Robert brokenly,
-“the end of our life’s romance has come at last.”</p>
-
-<p>She put her little hand in his and pressed it
-warmly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, ’tis the end, Robin Adair. The end of all,
-but it had to come some time; we were but wearing
-our hearts out in vain longings, in bitter regrets,
-ye ken that, dear.” She paused and idly watched
-the rain, which was now coming down fiercely. “It
-will be better for—for us—all when I am gone,”
-she murmured presently, with a far-away look in her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>A sob of anguish caused her to turn quickly to
-the sorrowing man by her side. Putting her hand
-on his head, she continued in pathetic resignation,
-“I will be spared much pain and sorrow, ye ken,
-so dinna greet for me, laddie. I—I am content,
-nay glad to go, for I—I am so tired—so very
-tired of this—long, unhappy struggle.” Her voice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</a></span>
-trembled and the tears rolled slowly down her sad
-cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“If I, too, could only end it all,” he moaned.</p>
-
-<p>“Sh! laddie!” she answered in gentle reproach.
-“Ye mustna’ wish for death; ye have those dependent
-on ye, whom ye maun think of noo, Jean and the
-bairns.” Her voice grew very sweet and caressing.
-“I saw them as I came in. Oh, they are such bonnie
-little lads, dearie. So like ye, too. Gilbert is o’er
-fond of them; he is playing wi’ them noo.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Dunlop had been taken ill at the last moment
-and had commissioned Gilbert to take her place. She
-had supplied him plentifully with money for the
-journey and had then sorrowfully taken her departure
-for Edinburgh, her kind old heart sad and heavy.</p>
-
-<p>“Robbie lad,” continued Mary earnestly, “ye—ye
-maun take Jean close to your heart. Ye maun
-love her fondly for the bairns’ sake and—for her
-own, too, for she is a good, kind wife to ye, and ye’ll
-all—be very happy yet, I ken weel.”</p>
-
-<p>He slipped down from his chair to his knees and
-buried his tear-stained face in her lap. “When ye
-go, Mary,” he murmured brokenly, “I’ll never know
-peace and happiness again.” She let him weep on
-in silence. Presently he raised his head and looked
-at her. “Ye dinna’ ken, lassie, how I have hungered
-for a sight of your dear face—a word from your
-sweet lips, this last year.” He clung to her passionately.
-“An’ noo in a few minutes,” he continued<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</a></span>
-in anguish, “ye will pass out o’ my life forever and
-I maun live on here—desolate—and heart-broken.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, nay!” she cried reproachfully. “Dinna’
-say that, laddie, not alone, not alone,” and she looked
-compassionately at the door of the kitchen where
-Jean sat in patient misery holding her bairn to her
-aching heart. At that moment Gilbert softly opened
-the door and told them that they would have to
-start at once, that the storm would not let up and
-that they must catch the boat at Greenock that
-night.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye had better say good-by, noo,” and he closed
-the door quietly behind him.</p>
-
-<p>They looked at each other, too dazed for words.
-Then she started to rise to her feet, but he clasped
-her hands tightly, though she did not feel the pain,
-and pressed her into the seat again.</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet, not yet, Mary!” he gasped. “I
-canna’ let ye go just yet. ’Tis like tearing my heart
-out by its roots.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye mustna’ greet so, laddie,” said Mary, frightened
-by the vehemence of his sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis all my fault,” he moaned, “all thro’ my
-sinful weakness that ye are made to suffer noo, all
-my fault.”</p>
-
-<p>She put her fingers on his lips. “Sh! dearie!”
-she remonstrated softly. “Dinna’ blame yoursel’.
-If we suffer noo, we must na’ forget how happy we
-have been, and we were happy, weren’t we, laddie?”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</a></span>
-and she smiled in fond reminiscence, then continued
-a trifle unsteadily, “An—an hour’s happiness
-is worth a year of pain, for when we get sad
-an’ lonely, we can live it all over again, canna’ we?”
-She paused and sighed pathetically. “Only it—it
-isna’ real, is it, laddie?” A sudden break in her
-voice caused her to put her hand to her throat and
-look away with quivering lips. Then she went on
-in plaintive, pleading gentleness, “Ye will sometimes
-think of me—way up—in the Highlands, won’t ye,
-dearie? It willna’ wrong—Jean, for—soon your
-Mary will be—in Heaven, in her castle grand.”</p>
-
-<p>The thunder rolled along the sky in angry reverberating
-echoes, stilling the low voice, while frequent
-flashes of lightning leaped out like knives suddenly
-drawn from dark sheaths—yet toward the north
-over Greenock the sky was clearing, and streaks
-and beams of gold fell from the hidden sun, with a
-soothing promise of a clear and radiant sunset.
-Mary’s face brightened as she watched the sunbeams
-struggling through the lightened clouds, and
-she went on dreamily, in the prolonged lull of the
-storm:</p>
-
-<p>“My home there will be so fine, much finer than
-the castle in Edinburgh.” She smiled tenderly and
-let her hand slip down from his head to his heaving
-shoulder, where it rested in loving quiet. “How
-happy I was that night,” she mused; “an’ the sweet
-gown was so pretty I—hated to take it off, but it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</a></span>
-wasna’ mine.” She paused with quivering lips. “But—but—I
-was going to buy one the next day for
-my own, wasna’ I? A white one—all smooth and
-soft and shiny—for—for my wedding gown.” Her
-voice died away in a hushed, mournful quaver.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t, don’t, Mary!” sobbed Robert unrestrainedly.
-“I canna’ bear to think of that noo, noo
-when I maun give ye up forever.” He stroked her
-face and covered her pale, thin, toil-worn hands
-with heart-breaking kisses. Presently he grew
-calmer. “I shall never forget that night, Mary,
-that night with its pleasures and pain,” he went on
-with dreamy pathos. “It is ever in my thoughts;
-e’en in my dreams your dear bonnie face haunts
-me with its sweet, pathetic smile, and your tender lips
-seem to say, ‘laddie, ye were not true to your vows,
-ye have broken my heart.’” She gave a little cry
-of pain.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, laddie, I never thought that,” she cried,
-and she looked at him with gentle, pitying eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I wad try to speak, to implore your forgiveness
-for the misery I had caused ye,” continued Robert,
-his husky voice heard faintly above the wail of the
-wind, which shook the lattice with a sort of stealthy
-clatter, like a midnight prowler striving to creep in
-to steal and plunder. “And in my dumb despair
-and anguish I would clutch at your floating garments
-only to have them vanish into air, and I would
-awake to find myself—alone—with my bitter remorse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</a></span>
-and sorrow.” A low, choked sob broke from
-his hollow breast—he covered his face with his hands.
-“Can ye ever forgive me?” he murmured.</p>
-
-<p>Mary regarded him with infinite compassion, a
-heroic smile on her tired, quivering lips. “Freely
-do I forgive everything, laddie,” she replied, “an’
-when I am gone I want ye to remember always that
-Mary Campbell had only love, pity and forgiveness
-in her heart for ye.” She raised her trembling
-hands solemnly. “May God bring peace to your
-troubled heart, laddie, and may your future dreams
-be filled with joy and happiness, of love and prosperity.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<img src="images/illus10.jpg" width="475" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“The door opened and Jean quietly entered the room.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The door opened and Jean quietly entered the
-room, her tense, white face full of patient sorrow.
-She had sat in the kitchen for an eternity it seemed
-to the waiting woman, while Mary was taking her
-farewell of her husband. She had tried to talk to
-Gilbert, to interest herself in the news of home, but
-the words simply refused to leave her lips, and so
-she had sat there, listlessly watching the children
-playing around their uncle’s knee, her ears straining
-to hear some sound from the other room. No one
-knew how she suffered, to step aside, to welcome to
-her home his former sweetheart, to know they were
-there clasped in each other’s arms; and yet she did
-not feel bitter toward Mary somehow, strange as it
-might seem. She pitied her, she pitied them both,
-and it filled her with a strange feeling of surprise<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[389]</a></span>
-that she could feel so. Still loving Robert as fondly
-as she did, she could not help the feeling of despair
-which crept over her at times, to know, to fully realize,
-that she held only a secondary place in his
-affections, to hear him calling for another, for
-Mary. Sometimes in thought she caught herself
-bitterly arraigning him for his thoughtlessness, his
-apparent heartlessness; then the thought of his weak
-condition, his ill health, his distracted state of mind,
-these past months, tempered her judgment. He was
-hardly responsible for his actions, and if he were
-conscious of his own selfishness he had lost the power,
-the strength of will, to restrain his feverish impulses.
-She wondered vaguely if it would be different when—when
-she had passed away forever—if her memory
-would still come between them. She hoped not—she
-prayed that it might not be so.</p>
-
-<p>Gilbert had left her to her silent musings, and had
-gone out to harness the horses. Returning, he told
-her that they must start at once, so she had opened
-the door to tell them, and as her eyes took in the
-misery which was reflected in their white, drawn faces
-she was moved to intense pity, and the tears rained
-slowly down her cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, Mary, Gilbert says ’tis time to start,”
-she faltered. They both looked up slowly at the
-sound of her voice, then gazed dully into each other’s
-eyes. Presently Mary rose from her chair and stood
-up unsteadily, stretching out her little, cold, white<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[390]</a></span>
-hands to Robert, who clutched them in his own feverish
-palms as a drowning man clutches a straw.</p>
-
-<p>“The time has come to part, laddie,” she said
-bravely, a wan little smile on her bluish lips.</p>
-
-<p>A violent shuddering seized him, he did not move
-for a moment. Finally he staggered to his feet,
-and a quiver of agony passed over his face. He
-looked at her with dulled, glazed eyes and his face
-assumed a ghastly hue.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis so hard, so cruel, to say good-by forever,”
-he breathed huskily, for his throat was dry and
-parched. His swaying figure tottered a moment,
-then he drew her slowly into his arms and pressed
-his lips to her forehead. “’Tis the last time on
-earth, Mary,” he whispered brokenly. Her lips
-trembled, but she would not give way to the feeling of
-dizziness that threatened to rob her of her consciousness.
-She must leave him with a smile, she
-told herself; she must not make it harder for him.
-“Yes, for the last time, Robert,” she repeated slowly.
-“May God bless and watch over ye, Robin Adair—till—we—meet
-in Heaven. Good-by.” Her voice
-died away inarticulately, and she sank forward into
-his arms, where she lay motionless with closed eyes,
-utterly spent in body and spirit, and save for a
-shivering sob that now and then escaped her, she
-seemed almost insensible. Jean rushed quickly forward
-and drew her into a chair, while Gilbert fetched
-a glass of water, which he held to her white lips.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[391]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The wind shook the doors and whistled shrilly
-through the crevices, then as though tired of its own
-wrath, surged away in hoarse murmurs, through
-the branches of the creaking old beech, toward the
-Loch, and there was a short, tense silence while they
-waited to see signs of life appear in the face of the
-stricken girl. Presently she opened those azure blue
-eyes and smiled up in their anxious faces; then she
-struggled to her feet, but she put her hand quickly
-to her heart and tottered.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my—poor—weak heart,” she gasped faintly.
-Jean caught her quickly in her strong arms and
-stroked her soft cheek with a curious yearning sensation
-of love tugging at her heartstrings.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor dear,” she said compassionately, “you’re
-too weak to stand so much excitement,” and she put
-her back firmly in the chair. Mary attempted to
-rise again, but Jean would not permit her. “Gilbert
-shall carry you to the carriage,” she told her.
-Gilbert stepped to her side.</p>
-
-<p>“I will be a light burden noo, Gilbert,” she faltered,
-smiling pathetically into his strong, rugged
-face, which bore traces of his deep, bitter grief.
-Jean gently put her arms about her and in silence
-implanted a kiss on her pure, sweet face; then she
-turned away and covered her face with her hands.
-Gilbert bent over and picked up the frail body, and
-in spite of his efforts to restrain his emotion, a sigh
-that was almost a groan escaped him, for she was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[392]</a></span>
-no heavier than a child of a few summers. He carried
-her past his brother, who was sitting with head
-bowed upon his breast in an attitude of absolute
-despair.</p>
-
-<p>“Greet not for me, dearie,” whispered Mary
-faintly, stretching out her hand and letting it rest
-tenderly on his head. “God’s—will—be—done,”
-and her dry, burning eyes took their last look, and
-said their last farewell as Gilbert slowly carried her
-from the room and closed the door, shutting Robert
-out from her lingering gaze.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[393]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XXVIII</h3>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Then whilst his throbbing veins beat high</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">With every impulse of delight,</div>
-<div class="verse">Dash from his lips the cup of joy,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And shroud the scene in shades of night;</div>
-<div class="verse">And let despair, with wizard light,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Disclose the yawning gulf below,</div>
-<div class="verse">And pour incessant on his sight,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Her spectred ills and shapes of woe.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>For some moments Robert sat there, apparently
-dead to his surroundings. He had not looked up or
-moved as the door closed upon the retreating figures.
-He seemed to be in a state of complete exhaustion
-of mind and body. Presently the sound of the carriage
-rolling over the swishing, muddy driveway
-roused him from his lethargy. Raising his head he
-looked wildly around the room—then paused and
-listened—he was as one in a dream, realizing nothing
-plainly. He could hardly remember what had taken
-place during the past few minutes; he could grasp
-nothing tangible in thought or memory, till with a
-wild start he seemed to awake, as the rattle of the
-passing wheels brought back recollection. He staggered
-to the window and, throwing back the lattice,
-gazed out at the rapidly retreating blur of moving
-wheels and horses and shapeless figures, and watched
-it till it was lost to sight. As he stood there a soft<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[394]</a></span>
-change, a delicate transparency, swept over the dark
-bosom of the sky. Pale pink streaks glittered on the
-dusky horizon—darts of light began to climb upward
-into the clouds, and to plunge downward upon the
-waving field of hay; the radiance spread swiftly, till
-suddenly the whole heavens were bathed in the glorious
-light, and the last cloud, fading into nothingness,
-revealed the sun in all its matchless glory, hanging
-low in the sky just above the hills, behind which it
-would soon drop in stately splendor. Slowly the
-watcher sank down to his knees and leaned his tired
-head against the sash, his eyes closed and sunken.</p>
-
-<p>“She is gone, gone,” he murmured brokenly, “an’
-I am left all alone noo, all alone.” Jean bent over
-him with pathetic tenderness, and taking his limp
-hand in her own warm palm, she said with timid
-reproach:</p>
-
-<p>“Not alone, Robert, while you have your—bairns—and
-me.” She feared to call his attention
-to herself in the midst of his grief, lest he might
-revile her for standing between him and happiness;
-but he did not hear.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Jean, how can I take up the burden of life
-again?” he cried weakly, clinging to her hand with
-despairing strength. It thrilled her strangely to
-feel the grasp of his hand, to feel his weakness, his
-sudden dependence, the appeal in his dark, mournful
-eyes raised to hers so pitifully; she knelt beside him
-and drew his head down on her heaving bosom.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[395]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Ye must be brave,” she told him, her voice trembling
-with a new-found happiness, a sudden joy. He
-needed her now, needed her love and care more than
-ever. Then she continued softly, her voice vibrating
-with thrilling intensity, “Ye have much to live
-for yet, lad. Ye must be strong, ye must be brave.
-Pluck up your courage! I’ll help ye.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her wonderingly, then he slowly
-bowed his head. “Yes, Jean,” he said humbly, “I
-will be strong; I’ll try to be brave.”</p>
-
-<p>She helped him to his chamber, and placed him
-beside the window, where he could no longer watch
-the road, and left him. For a while he gazed out
-over the fields in apathetic calm, his mind a blank.
-Across the field he could see Souter Johnny at work
-in his garden. Suddenly he straightened up and
-listened. Souter was singing.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“O where, an’ O where is my Highland laddie gone?”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">came the old cracked voice. He closed his eyes
-wearily, but he could not shut out the sound.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Mary, my lost Highland Mary,” he whispered
-under his breath.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">THE END</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="bbox2">
-
-<p class="center">A Truly Great Story</p>
-
-<div class="box-inner">
-
-<p class="center larger">“THIS WAS A MAN!”</p>
-
-<p class="center">By HATTIE HORNER LOUTHAN</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="box-inner2">
-
-<div class="poetry-container smaller">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">His life was gentle; and the elements</div>
-<div class="verse">So mix’d in him, that Nature might stand up</div>
-<div class="verse">And say to all the world “This Was a Man!”</div>
-<div class="verse right">—<i>Shakespeare</i></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">The Victory of a Character over
-Circumstances.</p>
-
-<div>
-<img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-i1.jpg" width="100" height="100" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="box-inner">
-
-<p class="dropcap">If you read but one book this year, this is
-the book that you should read. It is the
-most powerful, soul-stirring tale that has
-passed through the presses in many years.
-It is a story of heredity, a story based on the belief
-that “blood will tell,” a story of sinners and of one
-who “was a man.” The scene is laid in Colorado at
-the present time. Frontispiece of Paul the hero.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center smaller">ATTRACTIVELY BOUND IN CLOTH</p>
-
-<p class="center">Price<br />
-$1.50</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE C. M. CLARK PUBLISHING CO.<br />
-BOSTON, MASS.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="bbox2">
-
-<p class="center">AN ANSWER TO “THE LEOPARD’S SPOTS”</p>
-
-<div class="box-inner">
-
-<p class="center larger"><span class="larger">YARB</span><br />
-AND<br />
-<span class="larger">CRETINE</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">By<br />
-DR. GEORGE B. H. SWAYZE</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">A Story of the Never-Ending
-Southern Problem of the Races</p>
-
-<div class="box-inner">
-
-<div>
-<img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-t.jpg" width="100" height="100" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">There is action in this book from the very first
-line until the last; there is also a deep, genuine
-heart interest, but greater than either
-of these is an able treatise on the greatest of
-all modern problems—the black man. Dr.
-Swayze takes a diametrically opposite view of the question
-from that of Rev. Thomas Dixon in “The Leopard’s Spots.”</p>
-
-<p>It is interesting to compare the books of these two men, the
-one a clergyman the other a physician. It would be quite
-natural to expect that the man of God would take a somewhat
-more gentle, more lenient view of the question than would the
-man of medicine, but the readers of “<span class="smcap">Yarb and Cretine</span>”
-assert that quite to the contrary Dr. Swayze has written
-with a sympathy and toleration which was totally lacking in
-the Rev. Mr. Dixon’s book.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smaller">ILLUSTRATED</span> <span class="spacer">Price
-$1.50</span> <span class="smaller">CLOTH BOUND</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">THE C. M. CLARK PUBLISHING CO.<br />
-BOSTON, MASS.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="bbox2">
-
-<p class="larger"><i>The Lieutenant<br />
-<span class="pad1">The Girl and</span><br />
-<span class="pad2">The Viceroy</span></i></p>
-
-<p>By<br />
-MARSHALL<br />
-PUTNAM<br />
-THOMPSON</p>
-
-<div class="box-inner">
-
-<p class="center">The Story of an American Lieutenant,
-a Patriotic Beauty and a Spanish
-Viceroy in South America</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="box-inner2">
-
-<div>
-<img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-i2.jpg" width="100" height="100" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">If you would read a romance, founded on
-South American and American history, a
-romance that will stir your blood and hold
-your attention from the moment you begin
-until you have read the last page, by all means read
-“The Lieutenant, The Girl and The Viceroy.” Not
-a dry or prosy page in the whole book. Beautifully
-written and cleverly told. Correct in historic information,
-but romantic in conception.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center smaller">ILLUSTRATED <span class="spacer"> </span>CLOTH BOUND</p>
-
-<p class="center">Price<br />
-$1.50</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE C. M. CLARK PUBLISHING CO.<br />
-BOSTON, MASS.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="bbox2">
-
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td class="larger">
-<span class="larger">Maid</span><br />
-of the<br />
-<span class="larger">Mohawk</span>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<i>By<br />
-FREDERICK<br />
-A.<br />
-RAY</i>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center"><i>A ROMANCE OF THE MOHAWK VALLEY
-IN THE DAYS OF THE REVOLUTION</i></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">¶ The picturesque valley of the Mohawk
-River—one of the tributary streams of the
-mighty Hudson—was the theatre of some
-of the most exciting incidents of the American
-Revolution.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">¶ It was settled by a mixture of Dutch,
-English and Irish and was the very border
-land of the Briton’s most terrible ally—the
-Indian.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">¶ In this fruitful region Mr. Ray has located
-the principal scenes of his romance and
-the only wonder is that no one has done it
-before him.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">¶ All of the characters are actively concerned
-in the Revolutionary War and many
-of them are historical personages, among
-whom might be mentioned: General Washington,
-Major Andre, Benedict Arnold, Sir
-Henry Clinton, James Riverton and many
-others. Whatever they do in the story is in
-perfect harmony with history.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>BOUND IN CLOTH</i></p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED WITH FRONTISPIECE<br />
-IN COLORS</i></p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Price, $1.50</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smaller">AT ALL BOOKSELLERS OR SENT PREPAID BY</span><br />
-THE C. M. CLARK PUBLISHING CO., <i>Boston, Mass.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="bbox2">
-
-<p class="center larger">A<br />
-WILDERNESS<br />
-CRY</p>
-
-<p class="center">By<br />
-GEORGE EDWARD DAY</p>
-
-<div class="box-inner">
-
-<p class="center">A Story With a Strong Moral Lesson</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">A Book That Every Young Man
-and Woman Should Read....</p>
-
-<div class="box-inner">
-
-<div>
-<img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-t.jpg" width="100" height="100" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">The greatest sacrifice that a woman can make is
-to give up the man she loves when she believes
-it to be her duty. This is the sacrifice
-which is made by the heroine of “A Wilderness
-Cry.” More than that, she is the wife of the man
-whom she denounces. For the man it is a harvest of his wild
-oats. The book ends happily, however. It is a story of
-modern times.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center smaller">BOUND IN CLOTH <span class="spacer"> </span> ILLUSTRATED</p>
-
-<p class="center">Price<br />
-$1.50</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE C. M. CLARK PUBLISHING CO.<br />
-BOSTON, MASS.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="bbox2">
-
-<p class="center">A BOOK FOR SAINTS AND SINNERS</p>
-
-<div class="box-inner">
-
-<p class="center larger"><span class="larger">FIRES</span><br />
-OF<br />
-<span class="larger">DESIRE</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">By<br />
-LAWRENCE R. MANSFIELD</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">The Story of a Modern Adam, and
-a Modern Eve; the Temptation,
-the Fall and the Tragedy</p>
-
-<div class="box-inner">
-
-<div>
-<img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-a.jpg" width="100" height="100" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">A young American of the cloth is sent
-to India as a teacher. He meets a
-beautiful native girl, pretends to marry
-her but in reality betrays her. Returning
-to America he finds that his sweetheart has gone
-to India and has met the girl he has betrayed. The
-end is tragic. A tale of great strength which every
-one should read.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center smaller">ILLUSTRATED <span class="spacer"> </span> BOUND IN CLOTH</p>
-
-<p class="center">Price<br />
-$1.50</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE C. M. CLARK PUBLISHING CO.<br />
-BOSTON, MASS.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="bbox2">
-
-<p class="center larger">The UNTAMED<br />
-PHILOSOPHER</p>
-
-<p class="center">AT HOME AND WITH</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">THE PLUGONIANS<br />
-OF PLUGOLIA</p>
-
-<p class="center">Being a Tale of Hens and some other People</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><i>by</i> FRANK W. HASTINGS<br />
-<span class="smaller">AUTHOR OF SEVERAL WIDELY UNKNOWN WORKS</span></p>
-
-<p>The book is a series of deliciously funny essays on such
-things as Marriage, Work, Love, Country, Church, Wrecks,
-Politics, Sundries, etc.</p>
-
-<p>The book bears this unique dedication, “To the everlasting,
-ever present, ever dignified, ever-plentiful and never
-murmuring weather these evidences of dementia are inscribed.”</p>
-
-<p>It is quite the funniest book of philosophy ever published
-and one of the best works of humor that have been issued in
-many years.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img src="images/hen.jpg" width="100" height="70" alt="A hen" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">THE C. M. CLARK PUBLISHING CO.<br />
-<span class="smaller">BOSTON, MASS.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Highland Mary, by Clayton Mackenzie Legge
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-</pre>
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-</body>
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