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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Life of Sir Walter Scott, by Robert
-Chambers
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Life of Sir Walter Scott
- with Abbotsford Notanda
-
-Authors: Robert Chambers
- Robert Carruthers
-
-Editor: W. Chambers
-
-Release Date: November 11, 2022 [eBook #69330]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Susan Skinner, Charlie Howard, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIFE OF SIR WALTER
-SCOTT ***
-
-
-
-
-
- LIFE
-
- OF
-
- SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-
-
- LIFE OF
- SIR WALTER SCOTT
-
- BY
- ROBERT CHAMBERS. LL.D.
- WITH
- ABBOTSFORD NOTANDA
- BY
- ROBERT CARRUTHERS, LL.D.
-
- [Illustration: View of Abbotsford and grounds from the Tweed.]
-
- EDITED BY W. CHAMBERS.
-
- W. & R. CHAMBERS,
- EDINBURGH AND LONDON.
- 1871.
-
-
-
-
- LIFE
-
- OF
-
- SIR WALTER SCOTT
-
- BY ROBERT CHAMBERS, LL.D.
-
-
- WITH
-
- ABBOTSFORD NOTANDA
-
- BY ROBERT CARRUTHERS, LL.D.
-
-
- EDITED BY W. CHAMBERS
-
-
- W. & R. CHAMBERS
- LONDON AND EDINBURGH
- 1871
-
-
-
-
- Edinburgh:
- Printed by W. and R. Chambers.
-
-
-
-
-PREFATORY NOTE.
-
-
-The present Memoir of Sir Walter Scott was written by my brother,
-the late Dr R. Chambers, immediately after the decease of the great
-novelist, and having been issued at a small price for popular reading,
-had what was then considered a large circulation--180,000 copies.
-It was subsequently republished, with some improvements. The Memoir
-is now reproduced in somewhat better style, as a small but fitting
-contribution in homage of the great man, the centenary of whose birth,
-15th August 1871, is about to be very generally celebrated. I have
-taken the liberty of adding only a few paragraphs, distinguishable
-by being enclosed within brackets. The principal of these insertions
-refers to the manner in which my brother had the honour to become
-acquainted with, and acquired the esteem of, Sir Walter Scott.
-
-To the Memoir are now appropriately appended certain ‘Abbotsford
-Notanda,’ descriptive of the friendly intercourse which long subsisted
-between Sir Walter and his factor and amanuensis, William Laidlaw,
-prepared by one well qualified to write on the subject, Dr R.
-Carruthers, Inverness.
-
- W. C.
-
-EDINBURGH, _June 1871_.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
- PARENTAGE 1
-
- BIRTH--BIRTHPLACE--EARLY SCENES 8
-
- THE LAND OF SCOTT 10
-
- SCHOOL-BOY DAYS 16
-
- UNIVERSITY 25
-
- PROFESSION 28
-
- POLITICAL OPINIONS--SOLDIERING 33
-
- VISIT TO PEEBLESSHIRE 35
-
- MARRIAGE 37
-
- POEMS 42
-
- WAVERLEY NOVELS 51
-
- SIR WALTER AND MR R. CHAMBERS 64
-
- LATER NOVELS, AND LIFE OF NAPOLEON 67
-
- PECUNIARY MISFORTUNES 70
-
- LATER EXERTIONS 82
-
- CONCLUDING YEARS--DECEASE 87
-
- PERSONAL APPEARANCE 97
-
- CHARACTER 99
-
- CONCLUSION 105
-
-
- ABBOTSFORD NOTANDA 109
-
-
-
-
-LIFE OF SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
-
-
-
-PARENTAGE.
-
-
-Sir Walter Scott was one of the sons of Walter Scott, Esq., Writer to
-the Signet, by Anne, daughter of Dr John Rutherford, Professor of the
-Practice of Medicine in the University of Edinburgh.
-
-His paternal grandfather, Mr Robert Scott, farmer at Sandyknow, in
-the vicinity of Smailholm Tower, in Roxburghshire, was the son of Mr
-Walter Scott, a younger son of Walter Scott of Raeburn, who in his
-turn was third son of Sir William Scott of Harden, in which family the
-chieftainship of the race of Scott is now understood to reside. Sir
-Walter’s grandfather, Mr Robert Scott, farmer at Sandyknow, as we learn
-from the _Border Antiquities_, ‘though both descended from and allied
-to several respectable Border families, was chiefly distinguished for
-the excellent good sense and independent spirit which enabled him to
-lead the way in agricultural improvement--then a pursuit abandoned to
-persons of a very inferior description. His memory was long preserved
-in Teviotdale, and still survives, as that of an active and intelligent
-farmer, and the father of a family all of whom were distinguished by
-talents, probity, and remarkable success in the pursuits which they
-adopted.’
-
-Walter, the third son of Sir William Scott of Harden, lived at the time
-of the Restoration, and embraced the tenets of Quakerism, which at
-that period made their way into Scotland. For this he endured a degree
-of persecution for which it is now difficult to assign a reason. The
-Scottish Privy-council, by an edict dated June 20, 1665, directed his
-brother, the existing representative of the Harden family, to take away
-his three children, and educate them separately, so that they might
-not become infected with the same heresy; and, for doing so, he was to
-be entitled to sue his brother for the maintenance of the children. By
-a second edict, dated July 5, 1666, the Council directed two thousand
-pounds Scots money to be paid by the Laird of Raeburn for this purpose;
-and, as he was now confined in the Tolbooth of Edinburgh, where he
-was liable to be further tainted by converse with others of the same
-sect there also imprisoned, the Council further ordered him to be
-transported to the jail of Jedburgh, where no one was to have access
-to him but such as might be expected, to convert him from his present
-principles.
-
-Walter, the second son of this gentleman, and father to the novelist’s
-grandfather, received a good education at Glasgow College, under
-the protection of his uncle. He was a zealous Jacobite--a friend and
-correspondent of Dr Pitcairn--and made a vow never to shave his beard
-till the exiled House of Stuart should be restored; whence he acquired
-the name of _Beardie_.
-
-Dr John Rutherford, maternal grandfather to the subject of this memoir,
-was one of four Scottish pupils of Boerhaave, who, in the early part
-of the last century, contributed to establish the high character of
-the Edinburgh University as a school of medicine. He was the first
-Professor of the Practice of Physic in the university, to which office
-he was elected in 1727, and which he resigned in 1766, in favour of
-the celebrated Dr John Gregory. He was also the first person who
-delivered lectures on Clinical Medicine in the Infirmary. His son, Dr
-Daniel Rutherford, maternal uncle to the novelist, was afterwards, for
-a long period, Professor of Botany in the Edinburgh University, and
-further distinguished by his great proficiency in chemistry. Dr D.
-Rutherford was one of the cleverest scientific men of his day; and,
-but for certain unimportant circumstances, would have been preferred
-to the high honour of succeeding Black in the chair of Chemistry. When
-he took his degree in 1772, Pneumatic Chemistry was in its infancy.
-Upon this occasion he published a thesis, in which the doctrines
-respecting gaseous bodies are laid down with great perspicuity, as
-far as they were then known, and an account also given of a series of
-experiments made by himself, which discover much ingenuity and address.
-He was the first European chemist who, if the expression may be used,
-_discovered_ nitrogen. Had he proceeded a single step farther, he would
-have anticipated the discoveries of Priestley, Scheele, and Lavoisier,
-respecting oxygen, which have rendered their names immortal. As it
-was, the experiments and discoveries of Dr Rutherford made his name
-respected all over Europe.
-
-The wife of Dr John Rutherford, and maternal grandmother of Sir
-Walter Scott, was Jean Swinton, daughter of Swinton of Swinton, in
-Berwickshire, one of the oldest families in Scotland, and at one period
-very powerful. Sir Walter has introduced a chivalric representative of
-this race into his drama of _Halidon Hill_. The grandfather of Jean
-Swinton was Sir John Swinton, the twentieth baron in lineal descent,
-and the son of the celebrated Judge Swinton, to whom, along with Sir
-William Lockhart of Lee, Cromwell intrusted the chief management of
-civil affairs in Scotland during his usurpation. Lord Swinton, as he
-was called, in virtue of his judicial character, was seized, after the
-Restoration, and brought down to Scotland for trial, in the same vessel
-with the Marquis of Argyll. It was generally expected that one who had
-played so conspicuous a part in the late usurpation, would not elude
-the vengeance of the new government. He escaped, however, by suddenly
-adopting the tenets of the society to which Walter Scott of Raeburn
-afterwards attached himself. On being brought before the parliament for
-trial, he rejected all means of legal defence; and his simply penitent
-appearance and venerable aspect wrought so far with his judges, that
-he was acquitted, while less obnoxious men were condemned. It was
-from this extraordinary person, and while confined along with him in
-Edinburgh Castle, that Colonel David Barclay, father of Robert Barclay,
-the eminent author of the _Apology for the Quakers_, contracted those
-sentiments which afterwards shone forth with such remarkable lustre in
-his son.
-
-While the ancestry of Sir Walter Scott is thus shewn to have been
-somewhat more than respectable, it must be also stated, that, in his
-character as a man, a citizen, or a professional agent, there could not
-be a more worthy member of society than his immediate parent. Mr Walter
-Scott, born in 1729, and admitted as a Writer to the Signet in 1755,
-was by no means a man of shining abilities. He was, however, a steady,
-expert man of business, insomuch as to prosper considerably in life;
-and nothing could exceed the gentleness, sincerity, and benevolence
-of his character. For many years, he held the honourable office of an
-elder in the parish church of Old Greyfriars, while Dr Robertson, the
-historian of _America_ and _Charles V._, acted as one of the ministers.
-The other clergyman was Dr John Erskine, much more distinguished as
-a divine, and of whom Sir Walter has given an animated picture in
-his novel of _Guy Mannering_. The latter person led the more zealous
-party of the Church of Scotland, in opposition to his colleague, Dr
-Robertson, who swayed the moderate and predominating party; and it is
-believed that, although a Jacobite, and employed mostly by that party,
-the religious impressions of Mr Scott were more akin to the doctrines
-maintained by Erskine, than those professed by Robertson.
-
-Mrs Scott, while she boasted a less prepossessing exterior than
-her husband, was enabled, partly by the more literary character of
-her connections and education, and more perhaps by native powers
-of intellect, to make a greater impression in conversation. It has
-thus become a conceded point, that Sir Walter derived his abilities
-almost exclusively from this parent. Without pretending to judge in
-a matter of such delicacy, it may at least be allowed that the young
-poet was at first greatly indebted to his mother for an introduction
-to the literary society of which her father and brother were such
-distinguished ornaments. It has somewhere been alleged that Mrs
-Scott, who was an intimate friend of Allan Ramsay, Blacklock, and
-other poetical wits of the last century, wrote verses, like them, in
-the vernacular language of Scotland. But this can be denied, upon
-the testimony of her own son. The mistake has probably arisen in
-consequence of a Mrs Scott of Wauchope, whose maiden name was likewise
-Rutherford, having published poetry of her own composition. Mrs Walter
-Scott, who was altogether a woman of the highest order of intellect
-and character, was, at an early age, deemed worthy by her father
-to be intrusted with the charge of his house, during his temporary
-widowhood; and thus she possessed opportunities enjoyed by few young
-ladies of her own age, and of the period when she lived, of mixing
-in literary society. It is unquestionable that this circumstance
-was likely to have some effect in later life upon her son, with the
-training of whose mind she must, in virtue of her maternal character,
-have had more to do than her husband. It may be further mentioned that
-Mrs Scott had been principally educated by a reduced gentlewoman,
-a Mrs Euphemia Sinclair (grand-daughter of Sir Robert Sinclair of
-Longformacus), who kept a school for young ladies in the now wretched
-precincts of Blackfriars’ Wynd, in Edinburgh, and who had the honour
-of educating many of the female nobility and gentry of Scotland, some
-of whom were her own relations. Sir Walter’s own words respecting
-this person are given in the work entitled _Traditions of Edinburgh_:
-‘To judge by the proficiency of her scholars, although much of what is
-called accomplishment might then be left untaught, she must have been
-possessed of uncommon talents for education; for all the ladies above
-mentioned’ [the list includes Mrs Scott] ‘had well-cultivated minds,
-were fond of reading, wrote and spelled admirably, were well acquainted
-with history and with the belles-lettres, without neglecting the more
-homely duties of the needle and accompt-book; and, while two of them’
-[meaning, as there is reason to believe, Mrs Scott, and Mrs Murray
-Keith, the Mrs Bethune Baliol of the _Chronicles of the Canongate_]
-‘were women of extraordinary talents, all of them were perfectly well
-bred in society.’ Sir Walter further communicated that his mother, and
-many others of Mrs Sinclair’s pupils, were sent, according to a fashion
-then prevalent in good society, to be _finished off_ by the Honourable
-Mrs Ogilvie, lady of the Honourable Patrick Ogilvie of Longmay, whose
-brother, the Earl of Seafield, was so instrumental, as Chancellor of
-Scotland, in carrying through the union with England. Mrs Ogilvie
-trained her young friends to a style of manners which would now be
-considered intolerably stiff; for instance, no young lady, in sitting,
-was permitted ever to touch the back of her chair. Such was the effect
-of this early training upon the mind of Mrs Scott, that even when she
-approached her eightieth year, she took as much care to avoid touching
-her chair with her back as if she had still been under the stern eye of
-Mrs Ogilvie.
-
-
-
-
-BIRTH--BIRTHPLACE--EARLY SCENES.
-
-
-Sir Walter Scott was born at Edinburgh on the 15th of August 1771,
-being the birthday of the great European hero [Napoleon] whose deeds
-he was afterwards to record. He was the third of a family consisting
-of six sons and one daughter. The eldest son, John, attained to a
-captaincy in an infantry regiment, but was early obliged to retire
-from service on account of the delicate state of his health. Another
-elder brother, Daniel, was a sailor, but died in early life. Of him Sir
-Walter has often been heard to assert, that he was by far the cleverest
-and most interesting of the whole. Thomas, the next brother to Sir
-Walter, followed the father’s profession, and was for some years factor
-to the Marquis of Abercorn, but eventually died in Canada in 1822, in
-the capacity of paymaster to the 70th Regiment. Sir Walter himself
-entertained a fondly high opinion of the talents of this brother; but
-it is not borne out by the sense of his other friends. He possessed,
-however, some burlesque humour, and an acquaintance with Scottish
-manners and character--qualities which were apt to impose a little,
-and even induced some individuals to believe, for some time, that he,
-rather than his more gifted brother, was the author of ‘The Novels.’
-
-Existence opened upon the author of _Waverley_ in one of the duskiest
-parts of the ancient capital, which he has been pleased to apostrophise
-in _Marmion_ as his ‘own romantic town.’ At the time of his birth, and
-for some time after, his father lived at the head of the College Wynd,
-a narrow alley leading from the Cowgate to the gate of the college.
-The two lower flats of the house were occupied by Mr Keith, W.S.,
-grandfather of the Knight Marischal of Scotland, and Mr Walter Scott
-lodged on the third floor, his part of the mansion being accessible by
-a stair behind.
-
-It was a house of what would now be considered humble aspect, but at
-that time neither humble from its individual appearance nor from its
-vicinage. As it stood on the line necessary for the opening of a street
-along the north skirt of the new university buildings, it was destroyed
-on that occasion, and never rebuilt. Speaking of this house in a series
-of notes communicated to a local antiquary in 1825, Sir Walter said:
-‘It consisted of two flats above Mr Keith’s, and belonged to my father,
-Mr Walter Scott, Writer to the Signet; there I had the chance to be
-born, 15th August 1771. My father, soon after my birth, removed to
-George’s Square, and let the house in the College Wynd, first to Mr
-Dundas of Philipstoun, and afterwards to Mr William Keith, father of
-Sir Alexander Keith. It was purchased by the public, together with Mr
-Keith’s’ [the inferior floors], ‘and pulled down to make way for the
-new college.’
-
-It appears, however, that, before Sir Walter could receive any
-impressions from the romantic scenery of the Old Town of Edinburgh, he
-was removed, on account of the delicacy of his health, to the country,
-and lived for a considerable period under the charge of his paternal
-grandfather at Sandyknow. This farm is situated upon high ground, near
-the bottom of Leader Water, and overlooks a large part of the vale of
-Tweed. In the immediate neighbourhood of the farm-house, upon a rocky
-foundation, stood the Border fortlet called Smailholm Tower, which
-possessed many features to attract the attention of the young poet. It
-was his early residence at this romantic spot that imparted an intense
-affection for the southern part of Scotland, to which he finally
-adjourned. Some account of the district which he so dearly loved may
-here properly be given.
-
-
-
-
-THE LAND OF SCOTT.
-
-
-The district which this mighty genius has appropriated as his own,
-may be described as restricted in a great measure to the counties of
-Roxburgh and Selkirk, the former of which is the central part of the
-frontier or Border of Scotland, noted of old for the warlike character
-of its inhabitants, and even, till a comparatively late period, for
-certain predatory habits, unlike anything that obtained at the same
-time, at least in the southern portion of Scotland. Though born in
-Edinburgh, Walter Scott was descended from Roxburghshire families,
-and was familiar in his early years with both the scenery and the
-inhabitants, and the history and traditions, of that romantic land.
-He was indeed fed with the legendary lore of the Borders as with a
-mother’s milk; and it was this, no doubt, which gave his mind so
-remarkable a taste for the manners of the middle ages, to the exclusion
-of all sympathy for either the ideas of the ancient classics, or the
-literature of modern manners. There was something additionally engaging
-to a mind like his in the poetical associations which have so long
-rendered this region the very Arcadia of Scotland. The Tweed, flowing
-majestically from one end of it to the other; the Teviot, a scarcely
-less noble tributary; with all the lesser streams connected with these
-two--the Jed, the Gala, the Ettrick, the Yarrow, and the Quair--had,
-from the revival of Scottish poetry, been sung by unnumbered bards,
-many of whose names have perished, like flowers, from the face of the
-earth which they adorned. From all these associations mingled together,
-did the mind of this transcendent genius draw its first and its
-happiest inspiration.
-
-The general character of this district of Scotland is pastoral. Here
-and there, along the banks of the streams, there are alluvial strips
-called _haughs_, all of which are finely cultivated; and the plough, in
-many places, has ascended the hill to a considerable height; but the
-land in general is a succession of pastoral eminences, which are either
-green to the top, or swathed in dusky heath, unless where a patch of
-young and green wood seeks to soften the climate and the soil. Much of
-the land still belongs to the Duke of Buccleuch, and other descendants
-of noted Border chiefs, and it annually supplies much of what both
-clothes and feeds the British population. Being little intruded upon by
-manufactures, or any other thing calculated to introduce new ideas, its
-population exhibit, in general, those primitive features of character
-which are so invariably found to characterise a pastoral people. Even
-where, in such cases as Hawick and Galashiels, manufactures have
-established an isolated seat, the people are hardly distinguishable, in
-simplicity and homely virtues, from the tenants of the hills.
-
-Starting at Kelso upon an excursion over this country, the traveller
-would soon reach Roxburgh, where the Teviot and the Tweed are joined--a
-place noted in early Scottish history for the importance of its town
-and castle, now alike swept away. Pursuing upwards the course of the
-Teviot, he would first be tempted aside into the sylvan valley of
-the Jed, on the banks of which stands the ancient and picturesque
-town of Jedburgh, and whose beauties have been rapturously described
-by Thomson, who spent many of his youngest and happiest years amidst
-its beautiful _braes_. Farther up, the Teviot is joined by the Aill,
-and, farther up still, by the Rule, a rivulet whose banks were once
-occupied almost exclusively by the warlike clans of Turnbull and
-Rutherford. Next is the Slitrig, and next the Borthwick; after which,
-the accessories of this mountain stream cease to be distinguished.
-Every stream has its valley; every valley has its particular class
-of inhabitants--its own tales, songs, and traditions; and when the
-traveller contrasts its noble hills and clear trotting _burnies_ with
-the tame landscapes of ‘merry England,’ he is at no loss to see how the
-natives of a mountainous region come to distinguish their own country
-so much in poetical recollection, and behold it with such exclusive
-love. When the Englishman is absent from his home, he sees a scene
-not greatly different from what he is accustomed to, and regards his
-absence with very little feeling. But when a native of these secluded
-vales visits another district, he finds an alien peculiarity in every
-object; the hills are of a different height and vesture; the streams
-are different in size, or run in a different direction. Everything
-tells him that he is not at home. And, when returning to his own glen,
-how every distant hill-top comes out to his sight as a familiar and
-companionable object! How every less prominent feature reminds him of
-that place which, of all the earth, he calls _his own_! Even when he
-crosses what is termed the height of the country, and but sees the
-waters running _towards_ that cherished place, his heart is distended
-with a sense of home and kindred, and he throws his very soul upon
-the stream, that it may be carried before him to the spot where he has
-garnered up all his most valued affections.
-
-There is one part of Roxburghshire which does not belong to the great
-vale of the Tweed, and yet is as essentially as any a part of the Land
-of Scott. This is Liddesdale, or the vale of the Liddel, a stream which
-seeks the Solway, and forms part of the more westerly border. Nothing
-out of Spain could be more wild or lonely than this pastoral vale,
-which once harboured the predatory clans of Elliot and Armstrong, but
-is now occupied by a race of more than usually primitive sheep-farmers.
-It is absolutely overrun with song and legend, of which Sir Walter
-Scott reaped an ample harvest for his _Border Minstrelsy_, including
-the fine old ballads of _Dick o’ the Cow_ and _Jock o’ the Syde_.
-
-It may be said, indeed, that, of all places in the south of Scotland,
-the attention of the great novelist was first fixed upon Liddesdale.
-In his second literary effort--the _Lay of the Last Minstrel_--he
-confined himself in a great measure to Teviotdale, in the upper part
-of which, about three miles above Hawick, stands Branxholm Castle, the
-chief scene of the poem. The old house has been much altered since
-the supposed era of the _Lay_; but it has nevertheless more of an
-ancient than a modern appearance, and does not much disappoint a modern
-beholder. For a long time, the Buccleuch family have left it to the
-occupancy of the individuals who act as their agents or chamberlains
-on this part of their extensive property; and it is at present kept in
-the best order, and surrounded by some fine woods of ancient and modern
-growth. Seated on a lofty bank, it still overlooks that stream, and is
-overtopped by those hills, to which, it will be recollected, ‘the lady’
-successively addressed her witching incantations.
-
-The small vale of Borthwick Water, which starts off from the strath
-of the Teviot a little above Hawick, contains a scene which cannot
-well be overlooked--namely, Harden Castle, the original though now
-deserted seat of the family of Scott of Harden, from which, through the
-Raeburn branch, Sir Walter Scott was descended. This, though neglected
-alike by its proprietor and by tourists, is one of the most remarkable
-pieces of scenery which we, who have travelled over nearly the whole of
-Scotland, have yet seen within its shores. Conceive, first, the lonely
-pastoral beauty of the vale of Borthwick; next, a minor vale receding
-from its northern side, full of old and emaciated, but still beautiful
-wood: penetrating this recess for a little way, the traveller sees,
-perched upon a lofty height in front, and beaming perhaps in the sun,
-a house which, though not picturesque in its outline, derives that
-quality in a high degree from its situation and accompaniments. This is
-Harden House or Castle; but, though apparently near it, the wayfarer
-has yet to walk a long way around the height before he can wind his
-way into its immediate presence. When arrived at the platform whereon
-the house stands, he finds it degraded into a farm-house; its court
-forming perhaps a temporary cattle-yard; every ornament disgraced;
-every memorial of former grandeur seen through a slough of plebeian
-utility and homeliness, or broken into ruin. A pavement of black and
-white diced marble is found in the vestibule, every square of which
-is bruised to pieces, and the whole strewed with the details of a
-dairy. The dining-room, a large apartment with a richly ornamented
-stucco roof, is now used as the farmer’s kitchen. Other parts of the
-house, still bearing the arms and initials of Walter Scott, Earl of
-Tarras, great-grandfather of the late Mr Scott of Harden, and of his
-second wife, Helen Hepburn, are sunk in a scarcely less proportion.
-This nobleman was at first married to Mary, Countess of Buccleuch, who
-died, however, without issue, leaving the succession open to her sister
-Anne, who became the wife of the unfortunate Duke of Monmouth, eldest
-natural son of Charles II. Through this family connection, the Earl of
-Tarras was induced to join in the conspiracy which usually bears the
-name of the Rye-house Plot, for which he was attainted, only saving his
-life by giving evidence against his more steadfast companion, Baillie
-of Jerviswood, the great-grandfather of another Scottish proprietor,
-who happened to be an immediate neighbour of Harden. It may be asked
-why Mr Scott did not inherit the title of his ancestor: the answer
-is, that it was only thought necessary to invest the husband of the
-Countess of Buccleuch with a title for his own life--which proves that
-the hereditary character of the peerage has not always been observed
-in our constitution. While all of this scene that springs from art is
-degraded and wretched, it is striking to see that its natural grandeur
-suffers no defalcation. The wide-sweeping hills stretch off grandly on
-all hands, and the celebrated _den_, from which the place has taken its
-name, still retains the features which have rendered it so remarkable
-a natural curiosity. This is a large abyss in the earth, as it may
-be called, immediately under the walls of the house, and altogether
-unpervaded by running water--the banks clothed with trees of all kinds,
-and one side opening to the vale, though the bottom is much beneath
-the level of the surrounding ground. Old Wat of Harden--such is the
-popular name of an aged marauder celebrated in the _Minstrelsy of the
-Scottish Border_--used to keep the large herds which he had draughted
-out of the northern counties of England in this strange hollow; and
-it seems to have been admirably adapted for the purpose. It was this
-Border hero of whom the story is told somewhere by his illustrious
-descendant, that, coming once homeward with a goodly prey of cattle,
-and seeing a large haystack standing in a farm-yard by the way, he
-could not help saying, with some bitterness: ‘By my saul, an ye had
-four feet, ye should gang too!’
-
-
-
-
-SCHOOL-BOY DAYS.
-
-
-It is understood that, at the ‘evening fire’ of Sandyknow, Sir Walter
-learned much of that Border lore which he afterwards wrought up in his
-fictions. To what extent his residence there retarded his progress in
-school instruction, is not discovered. After being at Sandyknow, he
-was, for the sake of the mineral waters, sent, in his fourth year,
-to Bath, where he attended a dame’s school, and received his first
-lessons in reading. Returning to Edinburgh, he made some advances in
-the rudiments of learning at a private school kept by a Mr Leechman in
-Hamilton’s Entry, Bristo Street [now a small, decayed building, with
-a tiled roof, occupied by a working blacksmith]. This was his first
-school in Edinburgh. It is almost certain that his attendance at school
-was rendered irregular by his delicate health. He entered Fraser’s
-class at the High School in the _third year_--that is to say, when
-that master had carried his class through one half of the ordinary
-curriculum of the school; wherefore it is clear that any earlier
-instruction he could have received must have been in some inferior
-institution, and very probably communicated in a hurried and imperfect
-manner. It is at the commencement of the school year in October 1779
-that his name first appears in the school register: he must have then
-been eight years of age, which, it may be remarked, is an unusually
-early period for a boy to enter the third year of his classical course.
-What is further remarkable, his elder brother attended the same class.
-It is therefore to be suspected that his educational interests were
-sacrificed, in some measure, to the circumstances of the school, which
-were at that period in such an unhappy arrangement as to teachers,
-that parents often precipitated their children into a class for which
-they were unfitted, in order to escape a teacher whom they deemed
-unqualified for his duties, and secure the instructions of one who bore
-a superior character.
-
-Although Mr Luke Fraser was one of the severest flagellators even of
-the _old school_, he enjoyed the reputation of being a sound scholar,
-so far as scholarship was required for his duties, and also that of
-a most conscientious and painstaking teacher. He first caused his
-scholars to get by heart Ruddiman’s _Rudiments_, and as soon as they
-were thoroughly grounded in the declensions, the Vocabulary of the same
-great grammarian was put into their hands, and a small number of words
-prescribed to be repeated every morning. They then read in succession
-the _Colloquies_ of Corderius, four or five lives of Cornelius Nepos,
-and the first four books of Cæsar’s _Commentaries_. Ere this course
-was perfected, the greater part of Ruddiman’s _Grammatica Minora_, in
-Latin, was got by heart. Select passages from Ovid’s _Metamorphoses_,
-the _Bucolics_ and the first _Æneid_ of Virgil, concluded the fourth
-year; after which the boys were turned over to the rector, by whom
-they were instructed for two years more; making the course in all six
-years. It must also be understood, that every one of the three masters
-besides Mr Fraser pursued the same system, bringing forward a class
-from the first elements to the state in which it was fitted for the
-attention of the rector; after which he returned once more to take up
-a new set of boys in the first class--and so forth for one lustrum
-after another, so long as he was connected with the school. If any
-teacher could have brought a boy over such a difficulty as that which
-attended the commencement of Sir Walter’s career at the High School,
-it would have been Mr Fraser; for few of his profession at that time
-were more anxious to explain away every obstruction in the path of his
-pupils, or took so much pains to ascertain that they were carrying the
-understandings of the boys along with them through all the successive
-stages. Apparently, however, neither the care of the master nor the
-inborn genius of the pupil availed much in this case, for it is said
-that the twenty-fifth place was no uncommon situation in the class for
-the future author of the Waverley Novels.
-
-After two years of instruction, commenced under these unfavourable
-circumstances, Sir Walter, in October 1781, entered the rector’s
-class, then taught by Dr Alexander Adam, the author of many excellent
-elementary books, and one of the most meritorious and most eminent
-teachers that Scotland has ever produced. The authors read by Dr Adam’s
-class at this period, and probably during the whole of his career, were
-Virgil, Horace, Cicero, Sallust, Livy, and Terence; but it was not in
-reading and translating alone that an education under this eminent man
-consisted. Adam, who was an indefatigable student, as the number and
-excellence of his works testify, was a complete contrast to Mr Fraser.
-The latter hardly ever introduced a single remark but what was intended
-to illustrate the _letter_ of the author; whereas Dr Adam commented at
-great length upon whatever occurred in the course of reading in the
-class, whether it related to antiquities, customs, and manners, or
-to history. He was of so communicative a disposition, that whatever
-knowledge he had acquired in his private studies, he took the first
-opportunity of imparting to his class, paying little regard whether it
-was above the comprehension of the greater number of his scholars or
-not. He abounded in pleasant anecdote; and while he never neglected
-the proper business of his class, it is certain that he inspired a
-far higher love of knowledge and of literary history into the minds
-of his pupils than any other teacher of his day. At the same time,
-he displayed a benevolence of character which won the hearts of his
-pupils, and nothing ever gave him so much pleasure as to hear of their
-success in after-life. To this venerable person, Sir Walter was always
-ready to acknowledge his obligations, and it is not improbable that
-much of his literary character was moulded on that of Dr Adam.
-
-As a scholar, nevertheless, the subject of this memoir never became
-remarkable for proficiency. There is his own authority for saying,
-that, even in the exercise of metrical translation, he fell far
-short of some of his companions; although others preserve a somewhat
-different recollection, and state that this was a department in which
-he always manifested a superiority. It is, however, unquestionable,
-that in his exercises he was remarkable, to no inconsiderable extent,
-for blundering and incorrectness; his mind apparently not possessing
-that aptitude for mastering small details, in which so much of
-scholarship, in its earliest stages, consists.
-
-Regarding his school-days, we may introduce an extract from an original
-letter on the subject. ‘The following lines were written by Walter
-Scott when he was between ten and eleven years of age, and while he was
-attending the High School, Edinburgh. His master there had spoken of
-him as a remarkably stupid boy, and his mother with grief acknowledged
-that they spoke truly. She saw him one morning, in the midst of a
-tremendous thunder-storm, standing still in the street, and looking at
-the sky. She called to him repeatedly, but he remained looking upwards
-without taking the least notice of her. When he returned into the
-house, she was very much displeased with him: “Mother,” he said, “I
-could tell you the reason why I stood still, and why I looked at the
-sky, if you would only give me a pencil.” She gave him one, and, in
-less than five minutes, he laid a bit of paper on her lap, with these
-words written on it:
-
- “Loud o’er my head what awful thunders roll,
- What vivid lightnings flash from pole to pole,
- It is thy voice, my God, that bids them fly,
- Thy voice directs them through the vaulted sky;
- Then let the good thy mighty power revere,
- Let hardened sinners thy just judgments fear.”
-
-The old lady repeated them to me herself, and the tears were in her
-eyes: for I really believe, simple as they are, that she values these
-lines, being the first effusion of her son’s genius, more than any
-later beauties which have so charmed all the world besides.’
-
-Before quitting the High School, he, along with his brothers, received
-the advantages of some tutorial training under a Mr Mitchell, who
-afterwards became a minister connected with the Scotch Church. Previous
-to entering the university of Edinburgh, young Walter spent some time
-with his aunt at Kelso. Here, in order that he might be kept up in his
-classical studies, he attended the grammar-school, at that time under
-the rectorship of Mr Lancelot Whale, a worthy man and good scholar,
-who possessed traits of character not unlike some of those which have
-been depicted in Dominie Sampson. It was while thus residing for a
-short time at Kelso, about 1783, that Sir Walter made the acquaintance
-of James Ballantyne, then a schoolboy of his own age, with kindred
-literary tastes.
-
-Sir Walter’s education being irregular from bad health, he did not
-distinguish himself as a scholar, yet often surprised his instructors
-by the miscellaneous knowledge which he possessed, and now and then was
-acknowledged to display a sense of the beauties of the Latin authors
-such as is seldom seen in boys. In the rough amusements which went
-on out of school, his spirit enabled him to take a leading share,
-notwithstanding his lameness. He would help to man the Cowgate Port
-in a snow-ball match, and pass the Kittle Nine Steps on the Castle
-Rock with the best of them. In the winter evenings, when out-of-door
-exercise was not attractive, he would gather his companions round
-him at the fireside, and entertain them with stories, real and
-imaginary, of which he seemed to have an endless store. Unluckily, his
-classical studies, neglected as they comparatively were, experienced an
-interruption from bad health, just as he was beginning to acquire some
-sense of their value.
-
-It would, nevertheless, be difficult to say whether Scott was the worse
-or the better of the interruptions he experienced in school learning.
-He lost a certain kind of knowledge, it is true, but he gained another.
-The vacant time at his disposal he gave to general reading. History,
-travels, poetry, and prose fiction he devoured without discrimination,
-unless it were that he preferred imaginative literature to every
-other; and of all imaginative writers, was fondest of such as Spenser,
-whose knights and ladies, and dragons and giants, he was never tired
-of contemplating. Any passage of a favourite poet which pleased him
-particularly was sure to remain on his memory, and thus he was able
-to astonish his friends with his poetical recitations. At the same
-time, he admits that solidly useful matters had a poor chance of
-being remembered. His sober-minded parents and other friends regarded
-these acquirements without pride or satisfaction; they marvelled at
-the thirst for reading and the powers of memory, but thought it all
-to little good purpose, and only excused it in consideration of the
-infirm health of the young prodigy. Scott himself lived to lament the
-indifference he shewed to that regular mental discipline which is
-to be acquired at school. He says in his autobiography: ‘It is with
-the deepest regret that I recollect in my manhood the opportunities
-of study which I neglected in my youth; through every part of my
-literary career, I have felt pinched and hampered by my own ignorance;
-and I would at this moment give half the reputation I have had the
-good-fortune to acquire, if by doing so I could rest the remaining part
-upon a solid foundation of learning and science.’
-
-It is the tradition of the family--and the fact is countenanced by this
-propensity to tales of chivalric adventure--that Sir Walter wished at
-this period of his life to become a soldier. The illness, however,
-which had beset his early years rendered this wish bootless, even
-although his parents had been inclined to gratify it. His malady had
-had the effect of contracting his right leg, so that he could hardly
-walk erect, even with the toes of that foot upon the ground. It has
-been related by a member of his family that, on this being represented
-to him as an insuperable obstacle to his entering the army, he left
-the room in an agony of mortified feeling, and was found some time
-afterwards suspended by the wrists from his bedroom window, somewhat
-after the manner of the unfortunate Knight of the Rueful Countenance,
-when beguiled by the treacherous Maritornes at the inn. On being asked
-the cause of this strange proceeding, he said he wished to prove to
-them that, however unfitted by his limbs for the profession of a
-soldier, he was at least strong enough in the arms. He had actually
-remained in that uneasy and trying posture for upwards of an hour.
-
-His parents made many efforts to cure his lameness. Edinburgh at this
-time boasted of an ingenious mechanist in leather, the first person
-who extended the use of that commodity beyond ordinary purposes; on
-which account there is an elaborate memoir of him in Dodsley’s _Annual
-Register_ for 1793. His name was Gavin Wilson, and, being something of
-a humorist, he exhibited a sign-board intended to burlesque the vanity
-of his brother-tradesmen--his profession being thus indicated: ‘Leather
-leg-maker, _not_ to his Majesty.’ Honest Gavin, on the application of
-his parents, did all he could for Sir Walter, but in vain.
-
-An attempt was made about the same time to give him instructions in
-music, which used to be a branch of ordinary education in Scotland.
-His preceptor was Mr Alexander Campbell, then organist of an Episcopal
-chapel in Edinburgh, but known in later life as the editor of _Albyn’s
-Anthology_, and author of various other publications. Mr Campbell’s
-efforts were entirely in vain: he had to abandon his pupil in a
-short time, with the declaration, that he was totally deficient in
-that indispensable requisite to a musical education--an _ear_. It
-may appear strange, that he who wrote so many musical verses, should
-have wanted this natural gift; but there are other cases to shew
-that a perception of metrical quantities does not depend on any such
-peculiarity. Dr Johnson is a splendid instance. Throughout life, Sir
-Walter, however capable of enjoying music, was incapable of producing
-two notes consecutively that were either in tune or in time. He used to
-be pressed, however, at an annual agricultural dinner, to contribute
-his proper quota to the cantations of the evening; on which occasions
-he would break forth with the song of _Tarry Woo_, in a strain of
-unmusical vehemence, which never failed, on the same principle as Dick
-Tinto’s ill-painted sign, to put the company into good-humour.
-
-
-
-
-UNIVERSITY.
-
-
-Sir Walter was placed in the University of Edinburgh, October 1783.
-The usual course at this famed seminary is, for the first year, to
-attend the classes of Latin and Greek, to which, during the second,
-are added Mathematics and Logic; the third and last year of the course
-of a merely liberal education is spent in attending the lectures on
-Moral and Natural Philosophy. It would appear that Sir Walter did not
-proceed regularly through this academical course. He was matriculated,
-or booked, in 1783, at once for the Humanity or Latin class under
-Professor Hill, and the Greek class under Professor Dalyell; and for
-the latter, once more in 1784. But the only other class for which he
-seems to have matriculated at the college was that of Logic, under
-Professor Bruce, in 1785. Although he may perhaps have attended
-other classes without matriculation, there is reason to believe that
-his irregular health produced a corresponding irregularity in his
-academical studies. The result, it is to be feared, was, that he
-entered life much in the condition of his illustrious prototype, the
-Bard of Avon--that is, ‘with a little Latin and less Greek.’
-
-Between his twelfth and fifteenth year, young Scott had a particularly
-favourite companion of his own age, John Irvine, the mutual attraction
-being a love of fictions of a chivalrous description, furnished by
-an eminent circulating library, which had been founded in Edinburgh
-by Allan Ramsay, and situated in the High Street, a short way above
-the Tron Church, and then belonged to Mr James Sibbald, a person of
-literary tastes, who edited the _Edinburgh Magazine_, and a collection
-of Scottish poetry. This old-fashioned library, the first of its kind,
-passed in time into the hands of Mr Alexander Mackay; and was finally
-sold off in 1831. With a volume from this precious repository, the two
-youths sometimes adjourned to the picturesque sides of Arthur’s Seat,
-where, seated together so as to read from the same page, they revelled
-in the adventures of heroes and heroines of romance.
-
-It will thus be observed that Sir Walter’s acquirements in his early
-years did not lie nearly so much in ordinary branches of education, as
-in a large stock of miscellaneous reading, taken up at the dictation
-of his own taste. His thirst for reading is perhaps not described in
-sufficiently emphatic terms, even in the above narrative. It amounted
-to an enthusiasm. He was at that time very much in the house of his
-uncle, Dr Rutherford, at foot of Hyndford’s Close, near the Netherbow,
-and there, even at breakfast, he would constantly have a book open by
-his side, to refer to while sipping his coffee, like his own Oldbuck
-in the _Antiquary_. His uncle frequently commanded him to lay aside
-his book while eating, and Sir Walter would only ask permission first
-to read out the paragraph in which he was engaged. But no sooner was
-one paragraph ended than another was begun, so that the doctor never
-could find that his nephew finished a paragraph in his life. It may be
-mentioned that Shakspeare was at this period frequently in his hands,
-and that, of all the plays, the _Merchant of Venice_ was his principal
-favourite.
-
-Another choice companion at this period was young Adam
-Ferguson--afterwards known as Sir Adam Ferguson--son of Dr Adam
-Ferguson, author of the _History of the Roman Republic_, and who
-remained an intimate friend during life. The house of Dr Ferguson was
-a villa situated on the east side of a southern suburb of Edinburgh,
-called _The Sciennes_, from its proximity to the remains of an ancient
-monastery, dedicated to St Catherine of Sienna. Dr Ferguson’s house
-is remarkable as that in which young Walter Scott had an opportunity
-of being in the company of Robert Burns. Scott had read Burns’s
-poetry, and he ardently desired to see the poet. An opportunity was
-at length furnished, when Burns, on visiting Edinburgh in 1787, came
-by invitation to the residence of Dr Ferguson. Of the meeting, Scott
-has communicated an unaffected description to Mr Lockhart. Sir Adam
-Ferguson favoured me with some particulars of the visit of Burns to his
-father’s house on this occasion.
-
-It was the custom of Dr Ferguson to have a conversazione at his house
-in the Sciennes once a week, for his principal literary friends. Dr
-Dugald Stewart, on this occasion, offered to bring Burns, a proposal
-to which Dr Ferguson readily assented. The poet found himself amongst
-the most brilliant literary society which Edinburgh then afforded.
-Sir Adam thought that Black, Hutton, and John Home were among those
-present. He had himself brought his young friend Walter Scott, as yet
-unnoted by his seniors. Burns seemed at first little inclined to mingle
-easily in the company; he went about the room, looking at the pictures
-on the walls. The print described by Scott, from a painting by Bunbury,
-attracted his attention. It represented a sad picture of the effects
-of war: a soldier lying stretched dead on the snow, his dog sitting in
-misery on one side, while on the other sat his widow, nursing a child
-in her arms. The print was plain, yet touching; beneath were written
-the following lines, which Burns read aloud:
-
- ‘Cold on Canadian hills or Minden’s plain,
- Perhaps that parent mourned her soldier slain;
- Bent o’er her babe, her eye dissolved in dew,
- The big drops mingling with the milk he drew,
- Gave the sad presage of his future years,
- The child of misery baptised in tears.’
-
-Before getting to the end of the lines, Burns’s voice faltered, and
-his big black eye filled with tears. A little after, he turned with
-much interest to the company, pointed to the picture, and, with some
-eagerness, asked if any one could tell him who had written these
-affecting lines. The philosophers were silent--no one knew; but, after
-a decent interval, the pale lame boy near by said in a negligent
-manner: ‘They’re written by one Langhorne.’ An explanation of the place
-where they occur (poem of _The Country Justice_) followed, and Burns
-fixed a look of half-serious interest on the youth, while he said:
-‘You’ll be a man yet, sir.’ Scott may be said to have derived literary
-ordination from Burns. Somewhat oddly, the name Langhorne is quoted
-at the bottom of the lines, but in so small a character that the poet
-might well fail to read it.[1]
-
-
-
-
-PROFESSION.
-
-
-About his sixteenth year, Sir Walter’s health experienced a sudden
-but most decisive change for the better. Though his lameness remained
-the same, his body became tall and robust, and he was thus enabled
-to apply himself with the necessary degree of energy to his studies
-for the bar. At the same time that he attended the Lectures of
-Professor Dick on Civil Law in the college, he performed the duties of
-a writer’s apprentice under his father; that being the most approved
-method by which a barrister could acquire a technical knowledge of his
-profession, though it has never been uniformly practised.
-
-Respect for his parents and for the common duties of life, was always a
-strong feeling in Scott; he therefore applied himself without a murmur
-to the desk in his father’s office, though he acknowledges that the
-recess beneath was generally stuffed with his favourite books, from
-which, at intervals, he would ‘snatch a fearful joy.’ He even made his
-diligence in copying law-papers a means of gratifying his intellectual
-passions, often writing an unusual quantity, that with the result he
-might purchase some book or object of virtù which he wished to possess.
-It should be mentioned that the little room assigned to him on the
-kitchen-floor of his father’s house in George Square was already made
-a kind of museum by his taste for curiosities, especially those of an
-antiquarian nature. He never was heard to grudge the years he had spent
-in his father’s painstaking business; on the contrary, he recollected
-them with pleasure, for it was always a matter of pride with him to be
-a man of business as well as a man of letters. The discipline of the
-office gave him a number of little technical habits, which he never
-afterwards lost. He was, for instance, much of a formalist in the
-folding and disposal of papers. The writer of this narrative recollects
-folding a paper in a wrong fashion in his presence, when he instantly
-undid it, and shewed, with a school-masterlike nicety, but with great
-good-humour, the proper way to perform this little piece of business.
-
-While advancing to manhood, and during its first few years, Scott,
-besides keeping up his desultory system of reading, attended the
-meetings of a literary society composed of such youths as himself. A
-selection of these and of his early schoolfellows, became his ordinary
-companions. Amongst them was William Clerk, son of Mr Clerk of Eldin,
-and afterwards a distinguished member of the Scottish bar. It was
-the pleasure of this group of young men to take frequent rambles in
-the country, visiting any ancient castle or other remarkable object
-within their reach. Scott, notwithstanding his limp, walked as stoutly,
-and sustained fatigue as well, as any of them. Sometimes they would,
-according to the general habits of those days, resort to taverns for
-oysters and punch. Scott entered into such indulgences without losing
-self-control; but he lived to think this ill-spent time. As to other
-follies equally besetting to youth, it is admitted by all his early
-friends that he was in a singular degree pure and blameless. His genial
-good-humour made him a favourite with his young friends, and they could
-not deny his possessing much out-of-the-way knowledge; yet it does not
-appear that they saw in him any intellectual superiority, or reason to
-expect the brilliant destiny which awaited him. The tendency of all
-testimony from those who knew him at this time is rather to set him
-down as one from whom nothing extraordinary was to be looked for in
-mature manhood.
-
-We can easily see the grounds of this opinion. Scott had not been
-a good scholar. He shewed none of the peculiarities of the young
-sonneteer, for poetry was not yet developed in his nature. Any
-advantage he possessed over others of his own standing lay in a kind
-of learning which seemed useless. It is not, then, surprising that he
-ranked only with ordinary youths, or perhaps a little below them. It
-is asserted, however, by James Ballantyne, that there was a certain
-firmness of understanding in Scott, which enabled him to acquire
-an ascendency over some of his companions; giving him the power of
-allaying their quarrels by a few words, and disposing them to submit
-to him on many other occasions. Still, this must have looked like a
-quality of the common world, and especially unconnected with literary
-genius.
-
-When Scott’s apprenticeship expired, the father was willing to
-introduce him at once into a business which would have yielded a
-tolerable income; but the youth, stirred by ambition, preferred
-advancing to the bar, for which his service in a writer’s office was
-the reverse of a disqualification. Having therefore passed through the
-usual studies, he was admitted of the Faculty of Advocates, July 1792.
-This is a profession in which a young man usually spends a few years to
-little purpose, unless peculiar advantages in the way of patronage help
-him on. Scott does not appear to have done more for some sessions than
-pass creditably enough through certain routine duties which his father
-and others imposed upon him, and for which only moderate remuneration
-was made. He wanted the ready fluent address which is required for
-pleading, and his knowledge of law was not such as to attract business
-to him as a consulting counsel. While lingering out the first few idle
-years of professional life, he studied the German language and some
-of its modern writers. He also continued the same kind of antiquarian
-reading for which he had already become remarkable.
-
-Amongst other things giving a character to his mind, were certain
-annual journeys he made into the pastoral district of Liddesdale,
-where the castles of the old Border chiefs, and the legends of their
-exploits, were still rife. On these occasions, he was accompanied by an
-intelligent friend, Mr Robert Shortreed, long after sheriff-substitute
-at Jedburgh. No inns, and hardly any roads, were then in Liddesdale.
-The farmers were a simple race, knowing nothing of the outward world.
-So much was this the case, that one honest fellow, at whose house the
-travellers alighted to spend a night, was actually frightened at the
-idea of meeting an Edinburgh advocate. Willie o’ Milburn, as this hero
-was called, at length took a careful survey of Scott round a corner of
-the stable, and getting somewhat reassured from the sight, said to Mr
-Shortreed: ‘Weel, de’il ha’e me if I’s be a bit feared for him now;
-he’s just a chield like ourselves, I think.’ On these excursions, Scott
-took down from old people anecdotes of the old rough times, and copies
-of the ballads in which the adventures of the Elliots and Armstrongs
-were recorded. Thus were laid the foundations of the collection which
-became in time the _Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border_. The friendship
-of Mr Edmonstone of Newton led him, in like manner, to visit those
-districts of Stirlingshire and lower Perthshire where he afterwards
-localised his _Lady of the Lake_. There he learned much of the more
-recent rough times of the Highlands, and even conversed with one
-gentleman who had had to do with Rob Roy. These things constituted the
-real education of Scott’s mind, as far as his character as a literary
-man is concerned.
-
-
-
-
-POLITICAL OPINIONS--SOLDIERING.
-
-
-From his earliest years, Sir Walter’s political leanings were towards
-Conservatism, or that principle which disposes men to wish for the
-preservation of existing institutions, and the continuance of power
-in the hands which have heretofore possessed it. ‘As for politics,’
-says Shenstone in his Letters, ‘I think poets are Tories by nature,
-supposing them to be by nature poets. The love of an individual
-person or family that has worn a crown for many successions, is an
-inclination greatly adapted to the fanciful tribe. On the other
-hand, mathematicians, abstract reasoners, of no manner of attachment
-to persons, at least to the visible part of them, but prodigiously
-devoted to the ideas of virtue, liberty, and so forth, are generally
-Whigs.’ There is much in this passage that hits the particular case of
-Sir Walter Scott. But moods of political feeling are not confined to
-individuals--they sometimes become nearly general over entire nations.
-At the time when Sir Walter entered public life, almost all the
-respectable part of the community were replete with a Tory species of
-feeling in behalf of the British constitution, as threatened by France;
-and numerous bodies of volunteer militia were consequently formed, for
-the purpose of local defence against invasion from that country. In the
-beginning of the year 1797, it was judged necessary by the gentlemen
-of Mid-Lothian to imitate the example already set by several counties,
-by embodying themselves in a cavalry corps. This association assumed
-the name of the Royal Mid-Lothian Regiment of Cavalry; and Mr Walter
-Scott had the honour to be appointed its adjutant, for which office
-his lameness was considered no bar, especially as he happened to be a
-remarkably graceful equestrian. He was a signally zealous officer, and
-very popular in the regiment, on account of his extreme good-humour and
-powers of social entertainment. His appointment partly resulted from,
-and partly led to, an intimacy with the most considerable man of his
-name, Henry, Duke of Buccleuch, who had taken a great interest in the
-embodying of the corps. It was also perhaps the means, to a certain
-extent, of making him known to Mr Henry Dundas, who was now one of His
-Majesty’s Secretaries of State, and a lively promoter of the scheme of
-national defence in Scotland. Adjutant Scott composed a war-song, as he
-called it, for the Mid-Lothian Cavalry, which he afterwards published
-in the _Border Minstrelsy_. It is an animated poem, and might, as a
-person is _now_ apt to suppose, have commanded attention, by whomsoever
-written, or wherever presented to notice. Yet, to shew how apt men
-are to judge of literary compositions upon general principles, and
-not with a direct reference to the particular merits of the article,
-it may be mentioned that the war-song was only a subject of ridicule
-to many individuals of the troop. The individual, in particular, who
-communicated this information, remembered a large party of the officers
-dining together at Musselburgh, where the chief amusement, at a certain
-period of the night, was to repeat the initial line, ‘To horse, to
-horse!’ with burlesque expression, and laugh at ‘this attempt of
-Scott’s’ as a piece of supreme absurdity.
-
-
-
-
-[VISIT TO PEEBLESSHIRE.
-
-
-In the autumn of 1797, Walter Scott, accompanied by his brother John,
-and Adam Ferguson, made an excursion to the borders of Cumberland,
-taking in their way the mansion of Hallyards, in the parish of Manor,
-Peeblesshire, where Dr Adam Ferguson was now temporarily settled with
-his family. Here Scott resided for a few days, visiting Barns and other
-places in the neighbourhood. In a small cottage on the property of
-Woodhouse resided a poor and singular recluse, dwarfed and decrepit, by
-name David Ritchie, who was visited as one of the curiosities of the
-district; and it was doubtless on this occasion that Scott received
-those impressions which afterwards figured in the character of the
-‘Black Dwarf.’
-
-Ritchie, with all his oddities, had a deep veneration for learning;
-and as he was told that Scott was a young advocate, he invested him
-with extraordinary interest. Ferguson gave an amusing account of the
-interview. He and his companion were accommodated with seats in the
-lowly and dingy hut. After grinning upon Scott for a moment with
-a smile less bitter than his wont, the dwarf passed to the door,
-double-locked it, and then, coming up to the stranger, seized him by
-the wrist with one of his hands, and said: ‘Man, hae ye ony poo’er?’
-By this he meant magical power, to which he had himself some vague
-pretensions, or which, at least, he had studied and reflected upon
-till it had become with him a kind of monomania. Scott disavowed
-the possession of any gifts of this kind, evidently to the great
-disappointment of the inquirer, who then turned round and gave a signal
-to a huge black cat, hitherto unobserved, which immediately jumped
-up to a shelf, where it perched itself, and seemed to the excited
-senses of the visitors as if it had really been the familiar spirit
-of the mansion. ‘_He_ has poo’er,’ said the dwarf, in a voice which
-made the flesh of the hearers thrill, and Scott, in particular, looked
-as if he conceived himself to have actually got into the den of one
-of those magicians with whom his studies had rendered him familiar.
-‘Ay, he has poo’er,’ repeated the recluse, and then going to his usual
-seat, he sat for some minutes grinning horribly, as if enjoying the
-impression he had made; while not a word escaped from any of the party.
-Mr Ferguson at length plucked up his spirits, and called to David to
-open the door, as they must now be going. The dwarf slowly obeyed; and
-when they had got out, Mr Ferguson observed that his friend was as
-pale as ashes, while his person was agitated in every limb. Under such
-striking circumstances was this extraordinary being first presented to
-the _real_ magician, who was afterwards to give him such a deathless
-celebrity.
-
-Before quitting the district, Scott had an opportunity of visiting the
-old inn and posting establishment of Miss Ritchie in Peebles, then, and
-for ten or twelve years later, the principal place of accommodation for
-travellers. Miss Ritchie, an elderly lady, was somewhat of an original
-in manner, and there can be little doubt that her peculiarities
-furnished such recollections as were afterwards matured in the
-character of ‘Meg Dods of the Cleikum Inn, St Ronans.’ Proceeding
-southwards, the tourists at length reached Carlisle, and extended their
-excursion to Penrith and other places of interest in Cumberland, where
-an incident occurred that requires more than a casual notice.]
-
-
-
-
-MARRIAGE.
-
-
-Two children, a boy and girl, named Charpentier, of French parentage,
-fell by circumstances under the guardianship of the Marquis of
-Downshire. In time, the boy received a lucrative appointment in
-India; on his naturalisation as a British subject, changing his
-name to Carpenter. Miss Carpenter was placed under the charge of a
-governess, Miss Nicholson, and, requiring a change of scene, was,
-through the kindness of Lord Downshire, sent with her governess to
-Cumberland, where she was to live in such pleasant rural spot as might
-be found by the Rev. Mr Burd, Dean of Carlisle. The two ladies arrived
-unexpectedly, when Mrs Burd was setting out for the sake of her health
-to Gilsland. This was at the end of the month of August or beginning of
-September 1797.
-
-Having duly arrived at Gilsland, which is situated near the borders of
-Scotland, they took up their residence at the inn, where, according to
-the custom of such places, they were placed, as the latest guests, at
-the bottom of the table. It chanced that three young Scottish gentlemen
-had arrived the same afternoon, and being also placed at the bottom of
-the table, one of them happened accidentally to come into close contact
-with the party of Mr Burd. Enough of conversation took place during
-dinner to let the latter individuals understand that the gentleman was
-a Scotchman, and this was in itself the cause of the acquaintance being
-protracted. Mrs Burd was intimate with a Scotch military gentleman,
-a Major Riddell, whose regiment was then in Scotland; and as there
-had been a collision between the military and the people at Tranent,
-on account of the Militia Act, she was anxious to know if her friend
-had been among those present, or if he had received any hurt. After
-dinner, therefore, as they were rising from table, Mrs Burd requested
-her husband to ask the Scotch gentleman if he knew anything of the
-late riots, and particularly if a Major Riddell had been concerned in
-suppressing them. On these questions being put, it was found that the
-stranger knew Major Riddell intimately, and he was able to assure them,
-in very courteous terms, that his friend was quite well. From a desire
-to prolong the conversation on this point, the Burds invited their
-informant to drink tea with them in their own room, to which he very
-readily consented, notwithstanding that he had previously ordered his
-horse to be brought to the door in order to proceed upon his journey.
-At tea, their common acquaintance with Major Riddell furnished much
-pleasant conversation, and the parties became so agreeable to each
-other, that, in a subsequent walk to the Wells, the stranger still
-accompanied Mr Burd’s party. He had now ordered his horse back to
-the stable, and talked no more of continuing his journey. It may be
-easily imagined that a desire of discussing the major was not _now_ the
-sole bond of union between the parties. Mr Scott--for so he gave his
-name--had been impressed, during the earlier part of the evening, with
-the elegant and fascinating appearance of Miss Carpenter, and it was
-on her account that he was lingering at Gilsland. Of this young lady,
-it will be observed, he could have previously known nothing: she was
-hardly known even to the respectable persons under whose protection she
-appeared to be living. She was simply a lovely woman, and a young poet
-was struck with her charms.
-
-Next day Mr Scott was still found at the Wells--and the next--and
-the next--in short, every day for a fortnight. He was as much in the
-company of Mr Burd and his family as the equivocal foundation of their
-acquaintance would allow; and by affecting an intention of speedily
-visiting the Lakes, he even contrived to obtain an invitation to the
-dean’s country house in that part of England. In the course of this
-fortnight, the impression made upon his heart by the young Frenchwoman
-was gradually deepened; and it is not improbable that the effect was
-already in some degree reciprocal. He only tore himself away, in
-consequence of a call to attend certain imperative matters of business
-at Edinburgh.
-
-It was not long ere he made his appearance at Mr Burd’s house, where,
-though the dean had only contemplated a passing visit, as from a
-tourist, he contrived to enjoy another fortnight of Miss Carpenter’s
-society. In order to give a plausible appearance to his intercourse
-with the young lady, he was perpetually talking to her in French, for
-the ostensible purpose of perfecting his pronunciation of that language
-under the instructions of one to whom it was a vernacular. Though
-delighted with the lively conversation of the young Scotchman, Mr and
-Mrs Burd could not now help feeling uneasy about his proceedings, being
-apprehensive as to the construction which Lord Downshire would put upon
-them, as well as upon their own conduct in admitting a person of whom
-they knew so little to the acquaintance of his ward. Miss Nicholson’s
-sentiments were, if possible, of a still more painful kind, as, indeed,
-her responsibility was more onerous and delicate. In this dilemma, it
-was resolved by Mrs Burd to write to a friend in Edinburgh, in order
-to learn something of the character and status of their guest. The
-answer returned was to the effect that Mr Scott was a respectable young
-man, and rising at the bar. It chanced at the same time that one of Mr
-Scott’s female friends, who did not, however, entertain this respectful
-notion of him, hearing of some love adventure in which he had been
-entangled at Gilsland, wrote to this very Mrs Burd, with whom she was
-acquainted, inquiring if she had heard of such a thing, and ‘what kind
-of a young lady was it, who was going to take Watty Scott?’ The poet
-soon after found means to conciliate Lord Downshire to his views in
-reference to Miss Carpenter, and the marriage took place at Carlisle
-within four months of the first acquaintance of the parties. The match,
-made up under such extraordinary circumstances, was a happy one; a kind
-and gentle nature resided in the bosoms of both parties, and they lived
-accordingly in the utmost peace and amity.
-
-Scott now commenced house-keeping in Edinburgh, where he had hitherto
-lived in the paternal mansion. We now see him as a young married man,
-spending the winter in the bosom of a frugal but elegant society in
-Edinburgh, and the summer months in a retired cottage on the beautiful
-banks of the Esk at Lasswade; cultivating, as before, literary tastes,
-and storing his mind with his favourite kind of learning, but not as
-yet conscious of his active literary powers, or thinking of aught but
-the duties of his profession and the claims of his little family. As
-an advocate, he had perhaps some little employment at the provincial
-sittings of the criminal court, and occasionally acted in unimportant
-causes as a junior counsel; but he neither obtained, nor seemed
-qualified to obtain, a sufficient share of general business to insure
-an independence. The truth is, his mind was not yet emancipated from
-that enthusiastic pursuit of knowledge which had distinguished his
-youth. His necessities, with only himself to provide for, and a sure
-retreat behind him in the comfortable circumstances of his native
-home, were not so great as to make an exclusive application to his
-profession imperative; and he therefore seemed destined to join what a
-sarcastic barrister has termed ‘the ranks of the gentlemen who are not
-anxious for business.’ Although he could speak readily and fluently at
-the bar, his intellect was not at all of a forensic cast. He appeared
-to be too much of the abstract and unworldly scholar, to assume
-readily the habits of an adroit pleader; and even although he had been
-perfectly competent to the duties, it is a question if his external
-aspect and general reputation would have permitted the generality of
-agents to intrust them to his hands. Nevertheless, on more than one
-occasion, he made a considerable impression on his hearers. Once,
-in particular, when acting as counsel for a culprit before the High
-Court of Justiciary, he exerted such powers of persuasive oratory as
-excited the admiration of the court. It happened that there was some
-informality in the verdict of the jury, which at that time was always
-given in writing. This afforded a still more favourable opportunity for
-displaying his rhetorical powers than what had occurred in the course
-of the trial, and the sensation which he produced was long remembered
-by those who witnessed it. The panel, as the accused person is termed
-in Scotland, was acquitted.
-
-Simple and manly in habits, good-humoured, and averse to disputation,
-full of delightful information, kind and obliging to all who came near
-him, yet possessed of a rectitude and solidity of understanding which
-never allowed him to be the fool of any of his feelings, it is no
-wonder that Walter Scott was a general favourite, or that he attracted
-the regard of several persons of rank, as the Duke of Buccleuch, Lord
-Melville, and others. It was through the kindness of the first of these
-noblemen that, in 1799, he obtained the appointment of sheriff of
-Selkirkshire, an office of light duty, with a salary of £300 per annum.
-In the same year, Scott lost his father, who died in his 70th year,
-after a long period of suffering.
-
-
-
-
-POEMS.
-
-
-It was not Scott’s destiny to attain distinction as a lawyer. While
-never neglecting his professional duties, his mind had its main bent
-towards literature. Having learned German, he translated and published
-a version of Goethe’s _Goetz von Berlichingen_, a drama of such a
-romantic cast as harmonised entirely with his peculiar taste. He also
-was induced, by Mr M. G. Lewis, the well-known author of _The Monk_,
-to write two or three ballads on supernatural themes for a collection
-which was to be entitled _Tales of Wonder_. _Goetz_ appeared in
-February 1799, but met the fate of the former publication. When the
-_Tales of Wonder_ came out, Scott’s ballads, though unfortunate in
-their association, obtained some praise, yet, on the whole, might also
-be considered as a failure. These would have been disappointments to a
-man who had set his heart on literary reputation. To Scott, who was at
-all periods of his career humble-minded about his literary efforts,
-they were nothing of the kind. In this respect, he was a pattern to all
-authors, present and to come.
-
-The circumstances seem to have been almost accidental which led
-him to make his first serious adventure in the literary world. His
-schoolfellow, James Ballantyne, was now settled at Kelso in the
-management of a weekly newspaper. Merely to give employment to his
-friend’s types during the intervals of their ordinary use, Scott
-proposed to print a small collection of the old ballads which for
-some years he had been collecting on the Border. When the design was
-formed, he set about preparing the work, for which he soon obtained
-some assistance from Richard Heber and John Leyden--the former an
-Englishman of fortune, and an enthusiastic collector of books; the
-latter a Scottish peasant’s son, who had studied for the church, and
-become a marvel of learning, especially in languages and antiquities.
-The _Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border_ thus grew upon his hands,
-until it became such an assemblage of ballads, ancient and modern,
-and of historical annotation, as could only be contained in three
-octavo volumes. The first two made their appearance in January 1802,
-and met a favourable reception. Many of the ballads were entirely
-new to the world; even those which had been published before, here
-appeared in superior versions. Industry in the collection of copies,
-and taste in the selection of readings, had enabled the editor to
-present this branch of popular literature with attractions it never
-possessed before; while the graceful and intelligent prose interspersed
-throughout, rich with curious learning, and enlivened by many a
-pleasant traditionary anecdote, served to constitute the whole as a
-most agreeable mélange. The work gave Scott at once a respectable
-place in the literary republic, more indeed as an editor than as an
-author, though one would suppose few could be altogether insensible
-to the spirit and graphic power displayed in the ballads of his own
-composition.
-
-The public generally, and the booksellers in particular, were agreeably
-surprised to find the _Minstrelsy_, while bearing the unwonted imprint
-of ‘Kelso,’ a marvel of beautiful typography; a circumstance owing to
-the good taste of James Ballantyne, and which was of some avail in
-increasing the popularity of the work. It appears that Scott, besides
-some gains from the first edition, obtained soon after £500 for the
-copyright.
-
-About this time he inherited between five and six thousand pounds
-from a paternal uncle. This, with his share of his deceased father’s
-property, his sheriffship, and his wife’s allowance from her brother,
-now advancing to fortune in India, made his income altogether about a
-thousand a year. He had been ten years at the bar with little success;
-his gains seldom reaching two hundred a year, and these from the merest
-drudgeries of the profession. It began, therefore, to appear to him
-that, in as far as any further income might be required to support his
-station in life, and advance the prospects of his children, it would be
-well to look for it rather to some post in the Court of Session, such
-as one of the principal clerkships, than to practice as a barrister.
-Assured in the meantime against want, and trusting to such a prospect
-being realisable by his friends the Buccleuchs and Melvilles, he
-gradually became disposed to give more of his regards to literature.
-As to income from this source, he had little hope or faith. Literary
-research and composition were as yet their own reward with him; if
-any more solid remuneration accrued, he was happy to receive it; but
-he would not depend on such gains. Let literature, he said, be at the
-utmost a staff--not a crutch. It was natural for a prudent man of the
-world to form these ideas at that time, when literary biography was
-little besides a record of privation and sorrow. But it would have,
-nevertheless, been well for Scott if he had been content with his
-secured income, and the prospect of only such contingent additions to
-it as a fixed post or the profits of literature might hold out. To his
-over-anxious mind, when the temptation came, it appeared different, as
-we shall presently see.
-
-It was about the time when the _Minstrelsy_ was issuing from the press,
-that Scott was asked by the lovely and amiable Countess of Dalkeith
-to write a ballad upon a traditionary goblin story respecting the
-Buccleuch family. He commenced such a composition accordingly, adopting
-for its measure that of a recent poem of Coleridge; but it grew upon
-his hands far beyond ballad size. It became, in short, a long romantic
-narrative, divided into cantos, and _set_ in a subordinate narrative,
-wherein the author represented it as a recitation by the last survivor
-of the fraternity of minstrels. This was published in January 1805, as
-_The Lay of the Last Minstrel_, and at once placed Scott in the first
-rank as an original poet, besides determining his fate as henceforth
-chiefly that of a man of letters. Immediately on the first edition
-proving successful, the publishers gave £600 for the copyright.
-
-Before this time, Mr Ballantyne had set up a printing-office in
-Edinburgh, partly by the assistance of a loan from his old friend.
-Getting rapidly into a considerable business, which his skill and
-taste amply justified, he came to require additional capital, and
-Scott at length agreed to advance the needful sum, on condition of his
-being made a partner, but a secret one, in the concern. His dread of
-dependence on literary gains seems to have blinded him to the fact,
-that mercantile gains are also precarious, and usually attended by
-risks.
-
-By the interest of his titled friends, he soon after obtained an
-appointment to the duties of a clerkship in the Court of Session;
-the salary, however, which afterwards was fixed at £1300 a year, was
-not to be realised till the death of a superannuated predecessor in
-office, and, in fact, Scott touched nothing of it till 1812. With
-such an addition to his solid prospects, one cannot but wonder at the
-eagerness and assiduity with which he commenced and pursued literary
-labours of a severely tasking kind; such as an edition of the works
-of Dryden, a publication of Sadler’s State Papers, and a reprint of
-Somers’s collection of Tracts. It seems as if a naturally ambitious
-and ardent spirit had at length found a vent for its energies, and
-felt a self-rewarding pleasure in their exercise. At the same time, he
-gave much of his time to volunteer soldiering, to politics, and to the
-affairs of literary men less fortunate than himself. The recollections
-of his friends present a charming picture of his ordinary life at
-his summer retreat of Ashestiel on the Tweed, where he had found it
-necessary to establish himself on account of his duties as sheriff of
-Selkirkshire. His household, enlivened by four healthy children, and
-superintended by Mrs Scott, was marked by simple elegance. On Sundays,
-being far from church, he read prayers and a sermon to his family;
-then, if the weather was good, he would walk with them, servants
-and all, to some favourite spot at a convenient distance, and dine
-with them in the open air. Frequent excursions on horseback, and
-coursing-matches, varied the tenor of common domestic life. Friends
-coming to pay visits found him in constant good-humour, and at all
-times willing to introduce them to the fine scenery and interesting
-antiquities of the district. In the evenings, his conversation, in
-which stories and anecdotes formed a large part, was a sure resource
-against ennui. As a husband and father, he was most kind and indulgent.
-His children had access to his room at all times; and when they
-came--unconscious of the nature of his studies--and asked for a story,
-he would take them on his knee, repeat a tale or a ballad, kiss them,
-and then set them down again to their sports, never apparently feeling
-the least annoyance at the interruption. His dogs, of which he always
-had two or three, were even more privileged, for he kept his window
-open in nearly all weathers, that they might leap out and in as they
-pleased.
-
-These were the happiest days of Scott’s life, when as yet in the
-enjoyment of full vigour of body and mind, rather acquiring than
-reposing upon fame, and unembarrassed by possessions and dignities
-which afterwards made his position false and dangerous. He occasionally
-visited London, and allowed himself to go through that kind of
-exhibition called _lionising_, to which everything famous, or even
-notorious, is liable to be subjected in the metropolis; but he never
-was in the slightest degree spoiled by such idolatry. He fully shewed
-that he estimated it at its real worth, and, after good-naturedly
-submitting to it, could laugh at its absurdity. It is less pleasant
-to record a change in his arrangements for study which took place
-about this time. Finding the day apt to be broken in upon by little
-duties and by visitors, he adopted the habit of rising and commencing
-his literary toils at six in the morning, usually finishing them at
-twelve, after the interruption of breakfast at ten. His biographer, Mr
-Lockhart, tells us how careful he was to dress neatly before sitting
-down, but he says nothing of his preparing for the duty before him by
-taking food. We have come to understand such things better now, and can
-easily see what fatal effects might arise in a few years from a habit
-of performing the principal duties of life with an exhausted system.
-
-The year 1808 saw his poetical reputation brought to its zenith by the
-publication of the admirable romantic tale of _Marmion_, for which, to
-the astonishment of the public, Mr Constable undertook beforehand to
-pay a thousand guineas. Not long after, his zeal in Tory politics, or,
-as he thought it, solicitude for the honour and safety of his country,
-then harassed by the Bonaparte wars, led to his quarrelling with this
-eminent publisher, and to his taking an interest in the establishment
-of the _Quarterly_, as an opposition to the _Edinburgh Review_. It
-would have been well if he had stopped here; but the same feelings,
-helped, perhaps, by that trafficking spirit which had entered into him
-since he lost hopes at the bar, induced the false step of his setting
-up a publishing-house in Edinburgh, under the _firm_ of John Ballantyne
-and Company, the ostensible manager being a younger brother of the
-printer, a clever comical being, not overstocked with worldly prudence,
-and possessed of few qualifications for business beyond a knowledge of
-accounts.
-
-From this house issued, in May 1810, his most pleasing poem, the _Lady
-of the Lake_, which experienced even greater popularity than either
-of its two predecessors, and might, if anything could, have made its
-author a vain man. In this and his two preceding poems, the chief charm
-lay in the vividness with which the author brought the past before the
-minds of his readers. He gave the grace, the dignity, the gallantry
-of old times, free from all their rudeness and grossness. All was
-done, too, in such an easy and fluent style, that the reader was never
-wearied. The singular fascination of these writings shewed itself in
-numberless ways; for one thing, there was a rush of tourists to the
-scene of the _Lady of the Lake_, so great, as to produce a marked
-rise of the amount of post-horse duty raised in Scotland. Scott’s
-own firm, in connection with another, undertook to pay two thousand
-guineas for the _Lady of the Lake_, a fact in authorship at that time
-without anything approaching to a parallel. Meanwhile, he was urging
-into print, as a publisher, an _Annual Register_ (to commence with the
-year 1808); an edition of Beaumont and Fletcher, under the care of a
-drudging German of the name of Weber; a huge quarto, under the title
-of _Tixall Poetry_; an edition of Defoe’s novels; the _Secret Memoirs
-of the Court of James I._; and some other books agreeable to his own
-taste, but hardly to that of the public.
-
-These huge indigestible masses of paper and print had brought his
-outlay in the printing and publishing concerns up to £9000 before
-the end of this year. Scarcely ever did the most thoughtless of the
-tuneful tribe make a more unfortunate adventure than this publishing
-affair was destined to prove itself. If Scott had instituted some safe
-and modest copartnery, to give himself the publishing profits of his
-own writings, diminished only by expenses and the small profits due
-to his acting associates, he would have been doing what perhaps it
-will yet be seen all authors of decided popularity may rightly do. But
-he had an antiquarian taste, and a disposition to over-estimate all
-literary productions save his own--he indulged these tendencies in his
-firm of John Ballantyne and Company, and unavoidably became a great
-loser. Before it was fully seen that such was to be his fate as a man
-of business--namely, in the summer of 1811--he had thought so well of
-his means and prospects--the clerkship salary being now on the eve of
-realisation--as to resolve on purchasing a hundred acres of land on
-Tweedside, in order to build a cottage residence for himself, and this
-notwithstanding that the £4000 requisite in the very first place had to
-be borrowed, the one half as a permanent burden on the property. Such
-was the origin of his estate of Abbotsford, where ultimately he reared
-a castle. The purchase would have been perfectly a right one, if he had
-not involved his superfluous fortune in business: as things actually
-stood, it was only preparing for himself needless embarrassments.
-
-His removal to the little estate which he had purchased took place
-in May 1812, and he soon became involved in the pleasant but costly
-labours attendant on building, planting, and what is called _making
-a place_. At the same time, besides attending to other literary
-avocations, he was composing a fourth romance in verse, which appeared
-just before the close of the year under the title of _Rokeby_, but in
-point of popularity proved a comparative failure. Ere this time, the
-concerns of John Ballantyne and Company were seriously embarrassed,
-insomuch that Scott was glad to accept of a little credit from his
-friend Mr Morritt of Rokeby Park. The difficulties had only increased
-during the early months of 1813, and it then became necessary for
-those who had begun in rivalry to Mr Constable, to resort to that
-publisher for his friendly aid. To give an idea of the fatality of the
-whole adventure, it appears that the single publication of _Tixall
-Poetry_, which proved a dead failure, involved an outlay of £2500,
-while the _Edinburgh Annual Register_ was attended by an annual loss
-of £1000. At the same time, all the parties concerned were living in a
-style rather suited to their hopes than to their realised profits. To
-sustain so severe a drainage, the private fortune of Scott, and even
-his unprecedented literary gains, were inadequate. Fortunately, the
-hope of regaining the author of _Marmion_ as an adherent of his house,
-induced Mr Constable to grant relief to some extent by the purchase
-of stock, trusting that the rival house would as soon as possible be
-extinguished. The Duke of Buccleuch also extended the favour of his
-credit for the sum of £4000, by means of which, and of further sales
-of stock to other publishers, the principal difficulties were passed,
-though not without the most serious vexation to Scott for the greater
-part of a year. In the midst of his worst perplexities, he resigned an
-offer of the laureateship to Mr Southey, and was liberal as usual to
-unfortunate men of letters, sending, for one thing, fifty pounds to Mr
-Maturin, the Irish novelist.
-
-
-
-
-WAVERLEY NOVELS.
-
-
-Scott had, so early as 1805, commenced a prose fiction on the manners
-of the Highlanders, which he designated _Waverley, or, ’Tis Sixty
-Years Since_. Discouraged by the unfavourable opinion of his friends
-regarding the first few chapters, he threw aside the manuscript, which
-lay accordingly unthought of in an old desk for nine years. Happening
-to find it while rummaging for fishing-tackle, he bethought him of
-completing the story, and seriously trying his fortune in a new walk of
-literature. Three weeks of June 1814 enabled him to add the second and
-third volumes, and the tale appeared anonymously in the ensuing month.
-The public almost immediately appreciated its merits, and the first
-edition of a thousand copies meeting with a quick sale, was speedily
-followed by a second and a third. The lifelike representation here
-given of times not too remote for sympathy, and yet sufficiently so in
-character to tell as eminently romantic, joined to the wonderful ease,
-spirit, and mingled humour and pathos of the narrative, gave _Waverley_
-at once a place far above all contemporary novels, and awakened great
-curiosity regarding the unknown author.
-
-Always unconcerned about the fate of his works, Scott immediately set
-out on a six weeks’ yachting excursion round the north of Scotland,
-with hardly a chance of hearing news from the world of letters
-during that time. The excursion was performed in company with the
-Commissioners of Northern Light-houses, of whom he was the guest. As
-yet, the Commissioners had no steam-vessel for their annual trips,
-but used a sailing yacht, provided with arms for defence, in case of
-attack, against French privateers or other marauders. Sailing from
-Leith on the 29th July 1814, the party first visited the Isle of May,
-and thence proceeded northward. In passing, they landed on the Bell
-Rock, and inspected the recently erected light-house on that dangerous
-reef. In the album of the keepers, it is customary for visitors
-to inscribe their name, along with any passing remark. Sir Walter
-inscribed the following impromptu lines:
-
-
- ‘PHAROS LOQUITUR.
-
- Far on the bosom of the deep,
- O’er these wild shelves my watch I keep;
- A ruddy gem of changeful light,
- Bound on the dusky brow of night:
- The seaman bids my lustre hail,
- And scorns to strike his timorous sail.’
-
-It was in this northern maritime excursion that Sir Walter visited
-Shetland, and stored his mind with those materials which afterwards
-were so charmingly developed in the romance of the _Pirate_.
-
-The secrecy which was maintained regarding the authorship of _Waverley_
-and the succeeding novels, helped to give them a certain piquancy,
-independently of their intrinsic merits. At the same time, many
-reflecting persons were at no loss to see that only the same mind which
-had reproduced the times of the Jameses in _Marmion_ and the _Lady of
-the Lake_, could have resuscitated the court and camp of the Chevalier
-in 1745; but with the mass of the public the mystery was successful.
-Some thought it most likely that Scott’s brother, Thomas, had produced
-this romance; there were even some who attributed it to Mr Jeffrey.
-Of Thomas he had himself so high an opinion, that he about this time
-offered him money from his own pocket for any novel he might produce.
-But the opinion of Walter Scott regarding the literary powers of his
-contemporaries was of absolutely not the least value, in consequence
-of the peculiar generosity of his nature. Thomas Scott and many others
-whom he stimulated, and helped to become authors, were in the eyes of
-the world very ordinary persons, and can only be remembered because
-they were the objects of this great man’s love and esteem.
-
-The success of _Waverley_, and the necessity of money to relieve the
-Ballantyne concern, quickly urged Scott to a new effort in the same
-walk. During the short vacation at the Christmas of this year (1814),
-he produced his tale of _Guy Mannering_, which, being published in
-the ensuing February, was received with transports of delight (more
-sober language would be quite inappropriate) by both the Scottish
-and English public. The author had, only a month before, brought
-out his last great poem, _The Lord of the Isles_, which met with a
-reception so cool as to convince him that he must now resign the top
-of the poetical walk to his young rival, Lord Byron. He heard the
-report of the public decision on this point from James Ballantyne, was
-disconcerted for a few minutes, and then, recovering his usual spirits,
-tranquilly resumed the writing of his novel. How much it would tell to
-the happiness of literary men in general, if they had but a tithe of
-the equanimity of Scott about the success of their exertions! In the
-summer of this memorable year he visited the field of Waterloo, and
-wrote on that subject a descriptive work, entitled _Paul’s Letters to
-his Kinsfolk_, and also a poem, which proved a failure in respect of
-popular approbation. The results of these various labours, with his
-professional income, not only set him free of the immediate pressure
-of the publishing encumbrances, but enabled him to add somewhat to his
-domains on Tweedside. This year was also memorable to him as that
-which introduced him to the personal notice of the Prince Regent, who,
-after greatly enjoying his society at Carlton House, sent him a present
-of a gold snuff-box set in brilliants.
-
-Scott was now at ease in his circumstances. He had a pleasant house in
-Edinburgh, No. 39 Castle Street--‘dear 39,’ as he affectionately called
-it--where he enjoyed the best society in the Scottish capital. Then,
-for recreation, he had that fanciful but costly domain on the Tweed.
-His ordinary and assured income sufficed for any domestic expenditure
-he chose to indulge in; the recent embarrassments were at an end; and
-he might calculate on easily adding a few occasional thousands, for
-the sake of posterity, by no very great exertion of his ever-fertile
-brain. But who of mortal mould can ever say ‘enough,’ especially when
-the temptation of great facility in acquiring is before him. For
-Scott at this time to grow from the idea of a cottage retreat in the
-country, to that of a little lairdship and a good sort of mansion, was
-certainly very natural, when he found that the work of little more
-than a month at any time could secure him enough of money to buy from
-fifty to a hundred acres of ground. It was the more so in his case,
-as his education, and the original bent of his own feelings, alike
-tended to create in him a veneration for the possession of land. Add
-to this, that he had a taste for planting and decoration, and felt a
-genial joy in being bread-giver to a retinue of that kindly peasantry
-whose virtues he has himself depicted in such lively colours. Of vulgar
-ambition for wealth and state, there was in Scott not one particle: to
-be a chief of the soil and its people, and contemplate his children as
-succeeding him in the same character, was only, with him, to realise,
-or set forth in substance, one of the poetical dreams which haunted his
-mind. It is therefore not surprising at this period to find him far
-from being disposed to suspend his energies, even although he might
-have done so under the excuse of somewhat broken health, for he now had
-frequent visits of stomach-cramp--in no small degree a consequence of
-some of his literary habits.
-
-The spring of 1816 saw the public in possession of his novel of _The
-Antiquary_, perhaps, of all his works, the one in which there is most
-of the current matter of his own mind. It was scarcely published
-before he had designed his _Tales of My Landlord_, the first series
-of which came out, as by a new author, in December, and was at once
-hailed with all the applause accorded to its predecessors, and set down
-as another offshoot of the same tree. Early in 1817 appeared _Harold
-the Dauntless_, which, not bearing his name, and being even a greater
-failure than any of his recent poems, formed the last of that class
-of his publications. The public might now, perhaps, have had a more
-rapid succession of novels from his pen, if he had not thought proper
-to write the historical part of his _Annual Register_, in a vain hope
-to float that unfortunate work into popularity. As it was, he produced
-this year his novel of _Rob Roy_, which came out at New Year 1818,
-and experienced a brilliant reception. So great was his sense of the
-encouragement extended to these novels, that in 1817 he made purchase
-of an addition to his property, involving an outlay of no less than
-£10,000. Just to shew, however, how much generosity towards others was
-mixed with the no way mean ambition of Scott, his prime object here was
-to secure a residence for his old school-friend, Adam Ferguson, and
-his sisters, whom he was eager to plant near his own fireside. On his
-concluding a rather hasty bargain for this estate, Ferguson expressed
-his surprise and concern at seeing him exert so little pains to cheapen
-it. ‘Never say a word about it,’ said Scott; ‘it will just answer you
-and the ladies exactly; and it’s only scribbling a little more nonsense
-some of these mornings, to pay anything it costs me more than enough.’
-From calculations of this kind, Scott is understood to have bought
-nearly the whole of his landed property at a very large percentage
-above its actual value.
-
-From this time till the close of 1825--a space of eight
-years--prosperity reigned unchecked over the life of Scott. His novels
-of _The Heart of Mid-Lothian_, _The Bride of Lammermoor_, _The Legend
-of Montrose_, _Ivanhoe_, _The Monastery_, _The Abbot_, _The Pirate_,
-_Kenilworth_, _The Fortunes of Nigel_, _Peveril of the Peak_, _Quentin
-Durward_, _St Ronan’s Well_, _Redgauntlet_, and the _Tales of the
-Crusaders_, streamed from his pen with a rapidity as wonderful as their
-general merits were great. The public read with delight, and Scott was
-happy to pipe to a dance which led to such solid results for his own
-benefit. Generally, the first burst of sale called for ten thousand
-copies, after which the books continued to go off in large numbers in
-handsome collective reprints. It is odd after all, since Scott had
-shewed a desire to increase his gains by being his own printer and
-publisher, that he gave these books to be published by Constable, or
-whatever other person, on the principle of a division of the profits--a
-plan far too favourable to the tradesman, considering that the works
-were sure to sell with little aid from that quarter. A more grasping
-author would have given them to be published on commission, and thus
-realised the whole profit excepting a fraction. The only deduction
-he made from this liberality to the actual publisher consisted in
-its being a point with him that the Ballantynes should have a share
-of that portion of the profits--a mere grace on his part towards men
-for whom he entertained a friendship. In 1819, Messrs Constable and
-Company agreed to give him, for the copyright of the novels published
-up to that time, and certain shares of poetical copyrights, the sum
-of £12,000. Two years later, the same booksellers purchased for £5000
-the copyright of four succeeding novels--little more than a year’s
-work--from which the author had already drawn £10,000. After another
-similar interval, the author received five thousand guineas for other
-four novels, which likewise had previously yielded him half-profits.
-Scott spoke of these sums with triumph and pleasure, as wonderful
-prices for what he was pleased to call his _yeld kye_--that is, cows
-which have ceased to give milk. Such a result of successful authorship
-was a surprising novelty in its day. Nor was the author alone blessed
-by the pecuniary productiveness of the Waverley Novels. We find the
-Edinburgh theatrical manager realising £3000 by the brilliant run of
-the drama formed from _Rob Roy_. A painter gets £300 for sketches to
-illustrate a section of the tales.
-
-If we reflect on the facility with which Scott could write these
-inimitable novels--devoting to them merely the mornings of a life full
-of other business and of amusement--we can hardly be surprised to learn
-that he thought nothing of entering into engagements with Constable and
-Company for producing four novels, not one line of which had then been
-written, nor even the leading theme determined on. Nor was it wonderful
-that he should have gradually been tempted to build additions to his
-house on Tweedside till it became the architectural romance which it
-now is, and fitted to receive and entertain a large assortment of
-company.
-
-The house of Abbotsford, where Sir Walter Scott chiefly spent the last
-twenty years of his life, may be assumed as the centre of a great part
-of that region which we have styled _his_. This ‘romance in stone and
-lime,’ as some Frenchman termed it, is situated on the south bank of
-the Tweed, at that part of its course where the river bursts forth
-from the mountainous region of the forest into the more open country
-of Roxburghshire, two or three miles above the abbey of Melrose, and
-six-and-thirty from Edinburgh. Though upon a small scale, the Gothic
-battlements and turrets have a good effect, and would have a still
-better, if the site of the house were not somewhat straitened by the
-bank rising above it, and by the too close neighbourhood of the public
-road. Descriptions of the house, with its armoury, its library, its
-curiosities, and other particular features, have been given in so many
-different publications, that no repetition here is necessary. The
-house, if it be properly preserved, will certainly be perused by future
-generations as only a different kind of emanation of the genius of this
-wonderful man; though, preserve it as you will, it will probably be, of
-all his works, the soonest to perish.
-
-All around Abbotsford, and what gave it a great part of its value in
-his eyes, are the scenes commemorated in Border history, and tradition,
-and song. The property itself comprises the spot on which the last
-feudal battle was fought in this part of the country. The abbeys of
-Melrose and Dryburgh, the latter of which now contains the revered
-dust of the minstrel; the Eildon Hills, renowned in the annals of
-superstition; Selkirk, whose brave burghers won glory in the field
-where so much was lost by others, namely, at Flodden; Ettrick Forest,
-with its lone and storied dales; and Yarrow, whose stream and ‘dowie
-dens’ are not to be surveyed without involuntary poetry--are all in
-the near neighbourhood of the spot. The love, the deep, heartfelt love
-which Scott bore to the land which contains these places, was such as
-no stranger can appreciate. It was a passion absorbing many others
-which might have been expected to hold sway over him, and it survived
-to the last.
-
-Scott was social and good-natured; to see him and his mansion was an
-object of ambition to half the public, including the highest persons in
-the land. He was thus led, during the seven months of the year which
-he spent in the country, to be the host of so many persons of every
-kind, that his wife spoke of the house as a hotel in all but the name.
-Not that he would have voluntarily indulged in any undue expense on
-this account, if he had been in limited circumstances; but believing
-himself to be able to afford it, benevolence gave her irresistible
-dictate that he should thus make himself the servant of the public,
-even at the expense of much personal inconvenience to himself and his
-family. It is stated in Mr Lockhart’s biography that sixteen uninvited
-parties came in one day to Abbotsford. These would pass quickly away;
-but fashionable tourists, some of them of high rank, came in scarcely
-smaller shoals, to stay one or two days. A lady reports to us, from the
-conversation of Miss Anne Scott, the younger daughter of Sir Walter,
-that on one occasion there were _thirteen ladies’-maids_ in the house.
-
-In 1820, Scott was made a baronet. The honour was unsolicited, and he
-considered himself as accepting it, partly because it was gratifying
-to his family, and partly with a view to the interests of his eldest
-son, who had entered a hussar regiment. If he had any enjoyment of the
-honour in his own breast, it probably arose from no common worldly
-vanity, but from its touching on some string of romantic feeling
-amongst those to which we owe his delightful works. Though now a
-_laird_ and a man of title, as well as the head idol in the temple of
-the intellect-worshippers of his time, he was no whit different from
-what he had been in his younger days, when content with love and a
-cottage at Lasswade. His personal tastes and habits, his bearing to his
-friends, his familiarity with the poor and lowly, remained the same.
-As Wilkes is said to have never been a Wilkite, so Scott never, to
-any appearance, joined the opinion which the world entertained about
-him as an author. He spoke of his labours in this manner to Southey:
-‘Dallying with time--tossing my ball and driving my hoop.’ Such men as
-Davy and Watt he considered as the true honour of his age and country.
-At home, in the bosom of his family, when the world would let him
-alone, he was the most simple and kindly of associates. As he walked
-about his grounds, he conversed freely and easily with his servants and
-the peasantry, amongst whom he was an object of the deepest reverence
-and affection. Often would this illustrious man work half a day at the
-felling of trees in his woods, beside several workmen, trying which
-could cut down one with the fewest blows, and laughing heartily when
-he was victor. He delighted to walk in the evening towards the house
-of an aged servant, that he might hear the psalm which the old man
-was raising with his wife, as they conducted their evening devotions.
-One of his retinue said to a visitor one day: ‘Sir Walter speaks to
-every man as if they were blood-relations.’ It was not a condescending
-kind of talk he indulged in with these people. He entered into their
-feelings and tastes, and, speaking their own homely dialect, witched
-them out of the idea that a master or a laird was before them.
-
-The year 1822 was a somewhat memorable one in Scott’s life, on account
-of the concern he had to take in the arrangements necessary on the
-occasion of the king’s visit to Scotland. The external character of
-this piece of pageantry was much determined by that revival of national
-and medieval associations which the novels had effected. Everywhere we
-were reminded of the Stuarts in Holyrood, and the plaided clansmen on
-their mountains. Feelings due towards the romantic kings of an elder
-day were expended, often ludicrously, on the battered beau of Carlton
-House and St James’s Street. Amidst the delirium of the time, the man
-chiefly concerned in giving it a peculiar character, moved in perfect
-possession of his wonderful powers of management, dictating or advising
-in the principal doings, and attending to the minutest details of many
-of them. The king afterwards expressed, both formally and in private,
-his deep sense of obligation to Scott for what he had done to make this
-visit pass off well. The affair is interesting for the proof it gives
-of the business genius of Scott, and his qualifications for the affairs
-of the world. Assuredly never was high imagination united with so many
-of the soberest mental qualities as in his instance.
-
-His qualifications as a man of the world shone in various functions
-which he consented to assume about this time, as the presidency of
-the Royal Society of Edinburgh, that of an antiquarian book-printing
-association called the Bannatyne Club, the chairmanship of an oil-gas
-factory, and so forth. He had no inclination to thrust himself into
-such situations, but having been drawn into them, he set about the
-business which they involved with all the requisite zeal, and with a
-marvellous amount of skill, good temper, and judgment. The common-sense
-and sagacity which he exhibited in the performance of these duties,
-form, perhaps, a greater distinction between Scott and the generality
-of literary men than even his transcendent genius.
-
-Sir Walter, as has been stated, had strong Conservative leanings, in
-which respect he sometimes unfortunately went beyond the dictates
-of prudence. In 1820, he endeavoured to prove the absurdity of the
-popular excitement in favour of a more extended kind of parliamentary
-representation, by three papers which he inserted in the _Edinburgh
-Weekly Journal_ newspaper, under the title of ‘The Visionary.’ However
-well intended, these were not by any means happy specimens of political
-disquisition. The truth is, Sir Walter, with all his high literary
-gifts, did not possess the art of concocting a short essay, either on
-politics or on any moral or general topic. He appears, moreover, to
-have been in a great measure ignorant of the arguments and strength
-of his political opponents. He treats them as if they were in the
-mass a set of simple and uninformed people, led away by a few raving
-demagogues; and his attempt, accordingly, appears nearly as ridiculous
-as it might be to address grown men with the arguments which prevail
-only with children. Some months afterwards, it was deemed necessary
-by a few of the Tory gentlemen and lawyers, to establish a newspaper
-in which the more violent of the radical prints should be met upon
-their own grounds, and reprisals made for a long course of insults
-which had hitherto been endured with patience. To this association Sir
-Walter subscribed, and, by means partly furnished upon his credit, a
-weekly journal was commenced under the title of _The Beacon_. As the
-scurrilities of this print inflicted much pain in very respectable
-quarters, and finally led to the death of one of the writers in a
-duel, it sunk, after an existence of a few months, amidst the general
-execrations of the community. Sir Walter Scott, though he probably
-never contemplated, and perhaps was hardly aware of the guilt of
-_The Beacon_, was loudly blamed for his connection with it. It must
-be allowed, in extenuation of his offence, that the whole affair was
-only an experiment, to try the effect of violent argument on the Tory
-side, and that, if it did not exceed the warmth of the radical prints,
-there was nothing abstractly unfair in the attempt. On the other hand,
-a party who stand in the light of governors, and who, in general,
-are placed in comfortable circumstances, assume violence with a much
-worse grace than the multitudinous plebeians, who are confessedly in a
-situation from which complaint and irritation are almost inseparable.
-
-
-
-
-[SIR WALTER AND MR R. CHAMBERS.
-
-
-In his preface to the new edition of the _Traditions of Edinburgh_
-(1869), Mr R. Chambers gives the following account of the manner in
-which he became acquainted with Scott. ‘When not out of my teens,
-I attracted some attention from Sir Walter Scott, by writing for
-him and presenting him (through Mr Constable) a transcript of the
-songs of the _Lady of the Lake_, in a style of peculiar caligraphy’
-[resembling small print], ‘which I practised for want of any way of
-attracting the notice of people superior to myself. When George IV.,
-some months afterwards, came to Edinburgh’ [August 1822], ‘good Sir
-Walter remembered me, and procured for me the business of writing the
-address of the Royal Society of Edinburgh to His Majesty, for which I
-was handsomely paid. Several other learned bodies followed the example,
-for Sir Walter was the arbiter of everything during that frantic time,
-and thus I was substantially benefited by his means.
-
-‘According to what Mr Constable told me, the great man liked me, in
-part, because he understood I was from Tweedside. On seeing the earlier
-numbers of the _Traditions_’ [1823] ‘he expressed astonishment as to
-“where a boy got all the information.” But I did not see or hear from
-him till the first volume had been completed. He then called upon me
-one day, along with Mr Lockhart. I was overwhelmed with the honour,
-for Sir Walter was almost an object of worship to me. I literally
-could not utter a word. While I stood silent, I heard him tell his
-companion that Charles Sharpe was a writer in the _Traditions_. A few
-days after this visit, Sir Walter sent me, along with a kind letter, a
-packet of manuscript, consisting of sixteen folio pages, in his usual
-close hand-writing, and containing all the reminiscences he could at
-that time summon up of old persons and things in Edinburgh. Such a
-treasure to me! And such a gift from the greatest literary man of the
-age to the humblest! Is there a literary man of the present age who
-would scribble as much for any humble aspirant? Nor was this the only
-act of liberality of Scott to me. When I was preparing a subsequent
-work, _The Popular Rhymes of Scotland_, he sent me whole sheets of his
-recollections, with appropriate explanations. For years thereafter, he
-allowed me to join him in his walks home from the Parliament House, in
-the course of which he freely poured into my greedy ears anything he
-knew regarding the subjects of my studies. His kindness and good-humour
-on these occasions were untiring. I have since found, from his journal,
-that I had met him on certain days when his heart was overladen with
-woe. Yet, his welcome to me was the same. After 1826, however, I saw
-him much less frequently than before, for I knew he grudged every
-moment not spent in thinking and working on the fatal tasks he had
-assigned to himself for the redemption of his debts.’
-
-It was in one of their walks through the Old Town that Scott pointed
-out the place of his birth to my brother; also the little old school
-in Hamilton’s Entry, where he had received some of his rudimentary
-instruction. On another occasion, he shewed him the house once occupied
-by Dr Daniel Rutherford at the foot of Hyndford’s Close, where he
-had often been when a boy. It is a fine antique edifice, reputed to
-have been the residence of the Earl of Selkirk in 1742. Latterly, it
-has undergone some changes, with a new entrance from the Mint Close,
-and forms the residence of a Roman Catholic clergyman, in connection
-with a neighbouring chapel. Sir Walter communicated to Robert a
-curious circumstance connected with this old mansion. ‘It appears
-that the house immediately adjacent was not furnished with a stair
-wide enough to allow a coffin being carried down in decent fashion.
-It had, therefore, what the Scottish law calls a _servitude_ upon Dr
-Rutherford’s house, conferring the perpetual liberty of bringing the
-deceased inmates through a passage into that house, and down its stair
-into the lane.’]
-
-
-
-
-LATER NOVELS, AND LIFE OF NAPOLEON.
-
-
-Scott had at this time the appearance of a respectable elderly
-country-gentleman. Tall, robust, and rather handsome in person, he was
-deformed by the shortness of his right limb, the foot of which only
-touched the ground at the toes, while he rocked from side to side on
-the support of a stout walking-cane, which he moved along with the
-foot, and put down at the same time. While living in town, he wore
-a common black suit; in the country, he had gray trousers, a short
-green jacket, and a white hat. The public is made familiar with his
-face by numberless portraits; it is only necessary to mention, that at
-this time it was ruddy with the glow of health, and at the same time
-somewhat venerable from his thin gray hair. The countenance and quick
-gray eye usually had a common-world expression, but of a benevolent
-kind. All was changed, however, when he told anything serious, or
-recited a piece of ballad poetry; he then seemed to become a being of a
-totally different grade and sphere.
-
-It has been hinted that Scott’s eldest son, Walter, had become an
-officer in a hussar regiment. This youth, in 1825, wedded a young
-heiress, Miss Jobson, much to the satisfaction of his father, who,
-in the marriage-contract, placed against the young lady’s fortune a
-settlement of the estate of Abbotsford upon his son, reserving only his
-own liferent. He declared that he thus parted with the property of his
-lands with more pleasure than he ever derived from the acquisition or
-possession of them. He at the same time expended £3500 in purchasing a
-company for his son. It was now that the great poet might be considered
-as at the height of his fortunes. His career had hitherto been an
-almost uninterrupted series of prosperous and happy events; he had
-risen from the briefless barrister to the head of the literary world,
-a title, and the possession of a landed fortune, with the prospect
-of leaving a race of gentry to follow him. Alas! even while thus
-triumphantly exalted, the ground was hollow beneath his feet, and a sad
-prostration was approaching.
-
-Keeping this reverse for its proper place, it is proper here to
-mention that the novels had fallen off somewhat in popularity since
-_The Monastery_. The author was not made aware of this fact; but he
-nevertheless felt the necessity of varying his themes as much as
-possible, in order to preserve the public favour. Hence his shifting
-ground to England and France, and his attempt, in _St Ronan’s Well_,
-to depict the society of the modern world. Latterly, he bethought him
-that history was a field of some promise, and he was disposed to enter
-it. It was now (June 1825) that Mr Constable, moved by some examples
-of popular publishing in London, adopted the idea that that trade
-had never been conducted on right principles, seeing that it sought
-customers only in the more affluent classes, while the masses were
-left to regard books as luxuries beyond their reach. He projected a
-periodical issue of volumes, at a comparatively low price, to consist
-of reprints of approved copyright works belonging to his house, mingled
-with original works; and claiming and obtaining the support of Scott,
-it was arranged that the Waverley Novels should reappear in this cheap
-form, alternated at starting with the volumes of a _Life of Napoleon
-Bonaparte_, to be composed for the purpose by the same author. Thus
-was Scott set down, in 1825, to the history of one whose career he had
-beheld, while it lasted, with the strongest sentiments of reprobation
-and hatred, feeling, as he did, that the French emperor was the public
-enemy of England in the first place, and all Europe in the second. It
-was at first intended that the work should consist of four volumes, or
-less than a half of what it ultimately became.
-
-Just before going seriously into his task, he paid a visit to his son
-in Ireland, where he was received and entertained with the greatest
-enthusiasm by all classes--to his own surprise, as he had regarded
-the Irish as not a reading people. He had not reflected that there
-is such a thing as lionising great authors on the strength of their
-fame, and without any but a superficial acquaintance, if so much,
-with their writings. The contrast between the elegant mansions of the
-gentry in which he lived, with the misery of the houses of the general
-population, awoke painful feelings in his mind; but, upon the whole,
-he much enjoyed his tour in Ireland. In the latter part of this year,
-a second domestic change took place. His eldest daughter, Sophia, had
-been married in 1820 to Mr J. G. Lockhart, a young barrister, whose
-talents in literature have been fully acknowledged by the public.
-Hitherto, the young couple had lived in his immediate neighbourhood,
-both in town and country. He delighted in the ballads which Mrs
-Lockhart sang to him with the accompaniment of her harp; he found Mr
-Lockhart a useful adviser in literary matters, and a most agreeable
-companion; and he felt the tenderest interest in their eldest child,
-called John Hugh, or, familiarly, ‘Hugh Littlejohn,’ whose fatal
-delicacy of constitution only heightened the affection he was otherwise
-fitted to excite. In consequence of an offer of the editorship of the
-_Quarterly Review,_ Mr Lockhart removed to London with his family,
-by which Scott’s family circle was of course much contracted. This,
-however, was but a trifling evil compared with others which were about
-to befall the hitherto fortunate author of _Waverley_.
-
-
-
-
-PECUNIARY MISFORTUNES.
-
-
-The years 1824 and 1825 were distinguished by an extraordinary mania
-for speculation, the consequence of which was, that, towards the close
-of the latter year, a scarcity of money began to be generally felt. A
-tightening of this kind always of course tells severely upon men who
-have been keeping up their trade by means of fictitious bills; and of
-this class it now appeared were Archibald Constable and Company. The
-leading member of this firm had been fortunate in the proprietorship
-of the _Edinburgh Review,_ and the publishing of many of the works of
-Scott. Naturally grand in his ideas, and of an aspiring temper, at the
-same time that he despised, and in practice wholly overlooked, common
-mercantile calculations, he had come to conduct business in a manner
-which usually leads to ruin. We have seen that the bookselling concern
-of Scott (John Ballantyne and Company) was indebted to him for some
-important assistance in enabling it to wind up; the printing concern
-(James Ballantyne and Company) was also indebted to him for a vast
-amount of business; while Scott, more personally, was so imprudent as
-to take bill payments from him for works as yet unwritten, that he
-might help out his equally imprudent purchases of land. By these means,
-it came about very naturally that the name of James Ballantyne and
-Company--that is, Sir Walter Scott--was lent to Constable and Company
-for the raising of large sums amongst the banks. Scott, venerating
-the supposed sagacity of Constable, recked not of the danger of
-this traffic. Constable himself, inflated with a high sense of the
-literary property and stock which he held, regarded himself as a rich
-man, notwithstanding the large borrowings to which he condescended.
-James Ballantyne, venerating both, easy of nature, and unprepared by
-education or habit to keep a rigid supervision over business matters,
-gave no alarm regarding the immense compromise of his own and his
-friend’s name.
-
-These explanations serve so far; for what more is necessary, it must,
-we fear, be admitted that the whole group of persons concerned in
-the poems and novels, including the mighty Magician himself, were
-naturally enough intoxicated to a certain degree by a literary success
-so infinitely exceeding all precedent. All of them, excepting James
-Ballantyne, had lived in an expensive manner. Scott himself had gone
-in this respect a good way beyond what prudence dictated, though it
-is also very certain that if his writings had been published under
-reasonably favourable circumstances for the realisation of profit, he
-might have bought land, and kept house as he did, without injury to
-anybody. All, moreover, had been culpably negligent about accounts
-and bargainings--Scott ridiculously so, to his own injury, as there
-appears no good reason for his dividing the six or eight thousand
-pounds realised by the first issues of his novels with his booksellers,
-to whom a commission on sales would have been remuneration sufficient.
-There was, however, at that time a much more loose and heedless fashion
-in most business affairs than now prevails, and this requires that
-some allowance should be made with regard to individual cases. So it
-was that one of the firmest, and, generally speaking, most sagacious
-men of his time, discovered, in the course of January 1826, that he
-was involved in obligations far exceeding the extent of his whole
-fortune--was, in short, a ruined man.
-
-On the 18th December 1825, fearing bad news of Constable’s affairs, he
-says, in a diary which he kept, and surely few more touching words have
-ever fallen from any man’s pen: ‘Men will think pride has had a fall.
-Let them indulge their own pride in thinking that my fall will make
-them higher, or seem so at least. I have the satisfaction to recollect
-that my prosperity has been of advantage to many, and to hope that some
-at least will forgive my transient wealth, on account of the innocence
-of my intentions, and my real wish to do good to the poor. Sad hearts,
-too, at Darnick and in the cottages of Abbotsford. I have half resolved
-never to see the place again. How could I tread my hall with such a
-diminished crest?--how live a poor indebted man, where I was once the
-wealthy, the honoured? I was to have gone there on Saturday, in joy and
-prosperity, to receive my friends. My dogs will wait for me in vain.
-It is foolish--but the thoughts of parting from these dumb creatures
-have moved me more than any of the painful reflections I have put down.
-Poor things! I must get them kind masters. There may be yet those who,
-loving me, may love my dog, because it has been mine. I must end these
-gloomy forebodings, or I shall lose the tone of mind with which men
-should meet distress. I feel my dogs’ feet on my knees--I hear them
-whining and seeking me everywhere. This is nonsense, but it is what
-they would do could they know how things may be.’
-
-The evil day had not yet come in all its reality. Mr Constable went to
-London, to endeavour to raise money on the copyrights he possessed, in
-order to put over the difficulties. Moderate-minded men of the present
-day read, as of something belonging to a different state of society,
-of this ‘Napoleon of the realms of print’ seriously expecting to raise
-one or two hundred thousand pounds on the pledge of his copyrights,
-one large section of which afterwards, at a fair auction, brought only
-£8500; his whole property being such as only in the long-run to pay 2s.
-9d. a pound upon debts amounting to £256,000. Having utterly failed in
-raising money on any terms amongst those who deal in it, he induced
-Scott to advance him ten thousand, which the Laird of Abbotsford was
-only able to do by acting upon a right he had reserved in his son’s
-marriage-contract to borrow that sum on the security of his estate,
-for the benefit of his younger children. And this last sacrifice for
-Mr Constable he afterwards, very naturally, grudged more than all the
-rest. It was on the 17th of January that Scott finally ascertained the
-ruin of his affairs. ‘It was hard, after having fought such a battle,’
-as he says in his diary; but he sustained the first shock with Roman
-firmness. His resolution was immediately taken, to accept of no grace
-from his creditors beyond time. ‘God grant me health and strength,’
-he said in deep solemnity to his several friends, ‘and I will yet pay
-every man his due.’ To those marvellous powers which he had exerted for
-the purpose of buying land and keeping state, he trusted for the means
-of clearing off the tremendous encumbrance which had fallen upon him.
-At the same time, _state_ was to be given wholly up. He resolved to
-sell his house in Edinburgh--‘dear 39’--and use a common lodging while
-obliged to attend his duties in the Court of Session. At other times
-he would join his family in strict retirement at Abbotsford, which
-obviously could have been put to no better use. There was no bravado in
-all this--nothing but a good, sound, honest resolution to redeem the
-painful obligations into which his imprudence had hurried him. In the
-same frame of mind, he declined many offers of money made to him by
-friends.
-
-He was engaged at the time of his misfortunes in writing the _Life of
-Bonaparte_, taking up his new novel of _Woodstock_ at intervals, by
-way of relief. These tasks he continued with steady perseverance in
-the midst of all his distresses. Even on the day which brought him
-assurance of the grand catastrophe, he resumed in the afternoon the
-task which had engaged him in the morning. There was more triumph over
-circumstances here than might be supposed, for he had lately begun to
-feel the first touches of the infirmities of age--age, to which ease,
-not hard work, is naturally appropriate. His sleep was now less sound
-than it had been; his eyesight was failing; and, above all, he felt
-that backwardness of the intellectual power which is inseparable from
-years. The will, however, was green as ever, and, under the prompting
-of an honourable spirit, it did its work nobly. Doggedly, doggedly did
-this glorious old man rouse himself from his melancholy couch, and set
-to his task at an hour when gaiety has little more than sought his.
-Firmly did he keep to his desk during long hours, till he could satisfy
-himself that he had done his utmost. The temptations of society, the
-more insinuating claims of an overworked system for rest, were alike
-resolutely rejected. The world must ever hear with wonder, that between
-the third day after his bankruptcy and the fifteenth day thereafter,
-he had written a volume of _Woodstock_, although several of these days
-had been spent in comparative vacancy, to allow the imagination time
-for brooding. He believed that, for a bet, he could have written this
-volume _in ten days_! Just a fortnight after his final breach with
-fortune, he says in his journal: ‘I have now no pecuniary provisions
-to embarrass me, and I think, now the shock of the discovery is past
-and over, I am much better off on the whole.... I shall be free of a
-hundred petty public duties imposed on me as a man of consideration--of
-the expense of a great hospitality--and, what is better, of the waste
-of time connected with it. I have known in my day all kinds of society,
-and can pretty well estimate how much or how little one loses by
-retiring from all but that which is very intimate.... If I could see
-those about me as indifferent to the loss of rank as I am, I should
-be completely happy. As it is, time must salve that sore, and to time
-I trust it.’ With such philosophy could Scott regard his reverses,
-even in the very crisis of their occurrence, and yet from many other
-passages we find a keen sensibility to the circumstances of his
-downfall. It was rectitude of mind, and not stoicism, which enabled him
-to rise above his misfortunes. Nothing, indeed, of sensibility appeared
-in his external demeanour, even to his children. To them, as to the
-world, it must have been a lost secret, but for his diary.
-
-The obligations of James Ballantyne and Company--that is, of Sir Walter
-Scott--were finally ascertained to amount to £117,000, of which only
-£46,000 were the proper liabilities of his company.
-
-Early in spring, the ministry made an effort to correct the unsound
-state of things which had led to the late fatal mania, by attempting to
-pass a bill for the limitation of bank circulation. It was determined
-to suppress all notes under five pounds. In Scotland, where there is
-a vast faith in the utility of one-pound bank-notes, and no other
-circulation is so much liked, this measure was very unpopular. By the
-banks, it was regarded as fraught with ruin to their interests. Scott,
-who had disapproved of some recent changes affecting old Scottish
-institutions, and whose mind, serene as it was, perhaps required some
-kind of vent for its own vexations, was led to take a strong, perhaps
-exaggerated view of this question, under which he wrote three letters,
-in the character of Malachi Malagrowther, originally published in a
-newspaper, afterwards as a pamphlet. His great humour and fund of
-droll anecdote gave wings to this production, and helped to rouse
-the Scottish people to an attitude of resistance, to which, in the
-long-run, the ministry gave way. The affair presented Scott in a
-new light--namely, as one setting himself up against authority, and
-appealing to popular sentiment on the adverse side. The public was
-somewhat surprised; the ministers, some of whom were his friends, felt
-hurt at opposition from such a quarter; and there was actually some
-dryness between him and Lord Melville for a short time. The explanation
-is, that Scott never was a servile friend of power, but one only as
-far as his view of what was good for the country led him; and there
-was a manliness and independence in his character which admitted of
-no hesitation about a course, when he saw only men on the one side,
-and the land of his birth on the other. It is gratifying to think that
-Scott lost no friendship by his conduct on this occasion, beyond a
-temporary coldness on the part of a few persons.
-
-The novel of _Woodstock_ came rapidly to completion, and, early in
-April, the first edition of it was sold in the printed sheets for
-£8228, in itself a proof that the author might have all along had a
-better market for his works if he had chosen. This was a cheering
-omen of what he was to do for his creditors. Removing at the close
-of the winter session to Abbotsford, he continued there his habits
-of application with unabated vigour, although, as appears from the
-diary, not without some battlings between duty and inclination. The
-daily amount of work he set to himself in the writing of Napoleon’s
-life was four sheets of manuscript a day, making about twenty-four
-of the printed pages. We find him on one occasion finishing this
-before noon--a surprising effort, considering that reference to his
-authorities or materials must have often been necessary during the
-progress of the work. At the same time he commenced another work of
-fiction, a series of tales entitled _Chronicles of the Canongate_, for
-he felt the one task as a relief to the other.
-
-He now of course received no company at his rural retreat. Only a few
-intimate friends of his neighbourhood occasionally joined the family
-circle. It was a melancholy spring to one whose life in the country
-had hitherto been a constant holiday. To add to his griefs, the health
-of his wife had sunk to a low pitch. His kind-hearted Charlotte died
-on the 16th of May, of water in the chest, the end being somewhat
-accelerated by the late disasters. Scott, absent at the moment on duty
-in Edinburgh, quickly hurried home. The event itself, and the grief of
-his younger daughter on the occasion, powerfully affected him. He thus
-communes with himself in his journal: ‘It would have been inexpressibly
-moving to me as a stranger--what was it, then, to the father and the
-husband! For myself, I scarce know how I feel--sometimes as firm as the
-Bass Rock, sometimes as weak as the water that breaks on it. I am as
-alert at thinking and deciding as I ever was in my life. Yet, when I
-contrast what this place now is with what it has been not long since, I
-think my heart will break. Lonely, aged, deprived of my family--all but
-poor Anne; an impoverished, an embarrassed man, deprived of the sharer
-of my thoughts and counsels, who could always talk down my sense of
-the calamitous apprehensions which break the heart that must bear them
-alone. Even her foibles were of service to me, by giving me things to
-think of beyond my weary self-reflections.’
-
-Allowing himself little rest for the indulgence of grief, he quickly
-resumed, or rather hardly interrupted his usual employments. Between
-the 12th of June and the 12th of August he wrote the fourth volume of
-_Napoleon_, besides a portion of his novel. Thus he wrought all the
-summer, and part of the autumn, till it was found necessary that he
-should pay a visit to London and Paris, in order to consult documents
-necessary for _Napoleon_. This journey occupied six weeks, and
-perhaps was useful as a rally to his spirits. It is hardly necessary
-to say that, with high and low, wherever he went, he was an object
-of as cordial admiration and interest as ever. The king, the Duke of
-Wellington, and many other eminent persons, paid him marked attentions.
-In France, he was treated with no less distinction. Public papers in
-both countries were placed at his disposal without reserve; and in
-London he obtained an assurance that his second son, Charles, would be
-employed in the diplomatic department.
-
-Till the failure of Messrs Constable and Company, the Waverley secret
-was kept inviolate, though intrusted, as he has himself acknowledged,
-to a considerable number of persons. The inquiries which took place
-into the affairs of the house rendered it no longer possible to
-conceal the nature of its connection with Sir Walter Scott; and he now
-accordingly stood fully detected as the Author of _Waverley_, though he
-did not himself think proper to make any overt claim to the honour. It
-may be mentioned that, at the time of the failure, Sir Walter was in
-possession of bills for the novel of _Woodstock_, of which but a small
-part had as yet been written. A demand was made by the creditors of
-Messrs Constable and Company upon the creditors of Sir Walter Scott,
-for the benefits of this work, when it should be made public. But the
-author, not reckoning this either just or legal, was resolved not to
-comply. The bills, he said, were a mere promise to pay; since, then,
-he had only promised to write, and they to pay, he would simply not
-write, and then the transaction would fall to the ground. On the claim
-being farther pressed, he said: ‘The work is in my head, and there
-it shall remain.’ The question, however, was eventually submitted to
-arbitration, and decided in favour of the creditors of the author, for
-whose behoof the work was soon after published.
-
-The fact of the authorship continued to waver between secrecy and
-divulgement till the 23d of February 1827, when Sir Walter presided at
-the first annual dinner of the Edinburgh Theatrical Fund Association,
-in the Assembly Rooms. There Lord Meadowbank, in proposing the health
-of the chairman, used language to the following effect: ‘It was no
-longer possible, consistently with the respect to one’s auditors, to
-use upon this subject terms either of mystification, or of obscure
-or indirect allusion. The clouds have been dispelled; the _darkness
-visible_ has been cleared away; and the Great Unknown--the Minstrel
-of our native land--the mighty Magician who has rolled back the
-current of time, and conjured up before our living senses the men and
-manners of days which have long passed away, stands revealed to the
-hearts and the eyes of his affectionate and admiring countrymen.’ Sir
-Walter, though somewhat taken by surprise, immediately resolved to
-throw off the mantle, which was getting somewhat tattered. ‘He did
-not think,’ he said, ‘that, in coming here to-day, he would have the
-task of acknowledging before three hundred gentlemen a secret which,
-considering that it was communicated to more than twenty people, had
-been remarkably well kept. He was now before the bar of his country,
-and might be understood to be on trial before Lord Meadowbank as an
-offender; yet he was sure that every impartial jury would bring in a
-verdict of _Not Proven_. He did not now think it necessary to enter
-into the reasons of his long silence. Perhaps caprice had a great
-share in it. He had now to say, however, that the merits of these
-works, if they had any, and their faults were entirely imputable to
-himself.’ [Here the audience broke into an absolute shout of surprise
-and delight.] ‘He was afraid to think on what he had done. “Look on’t
-again I dare not.” He had thus far unbosomed himself, and he knew that
-it would be reported to the public. He meant, then, seriously to state
-that, when he said he was the author, he was the total and undivided
-author. With the exception of quotations, there was not a single word
-written that was not derived from himself, or suggested in the course
-of his reading. The wand was now broken, and the rod buried. His
-audience would allow him further to say, with Prospero: “Your breath
-has filled my sails.”’
-
-The spring of 1827 was past, and summer had gone to June, ere Scott’s
-great task was completed. He then finished the last volume of his _Life
-of Napoleon_, which he had been engaged upon for about two years, but
-had actually written in scarcely more than a twelvemonth of continuous
-time. The paper and print of the first and second editions, in nine
-volumes, brought the creditors £18,000--an amount of gain, in relation
-to amount of labour, unexampled in the history of literature, and
-which will probably have no parallel for ages to come. The book was
-unfortunate in its excessive length; and, written in such haste, it
-could not be expected to be very perfect, either in style or in facts.
-Yet it made a tolerably fair impression on the public, and it has
-since rather advanced than receded in public esteem. The contrast
-between the manner of its composition and that of Hume, Robertson,
-and Gibbon’s works, is startling. All of these narratives were the
-study and the production of years. It had never till now entered the
-head of man to think of a great historical task being executed in a
-twelvemonth. The last-century historians filed and polished their
-writings sentence by sentence--Scott did not once reperuse the matter
-which had flowed from his pen. And all this labour had been performed
-in the midst of grief and shaken health, and without interfering with
-official duties, one of which called for several hours a day during
-five months of the twelve.
-
-
-
-
-LATER EXERTIONS.
-
-
-Immediately on concluding _Napoleon_, he commenced another historical
-work, his delightful _Tales of a Grandfather_; presenting a selection
-of the most striking points from the Scottish chroniclers, in a style
-designed to suit the intelligence of his descendant, ‘Hugh Littlejohn.’
-This he carried on alternately with his _Chronicles of the Canongate_,
-the first series of which appeared early in the ensuing winter, and
-was well, though not brilliantly received. He underwent at this period
-some harassment from a Jewish London house, holding one of Constable
-and Company’s bills for £2000. With a view to forcing payment by some
-means, they threatened Scott with arrest; and he actually contemplated
-at one moment resorting to that sanctuary (Holyrood), in which he
-placed his imaginary hero, Chrystal Croftangry. At length the vexation
-was taken off his head by Sir William Forbes, the leading member of a
-banking company who were amongst his chief creditors. This generous
-man paid the sum out of his own pocket, without letting Scott suppose
-but that it was arranged for by the body of creditors. It is pleasant
-to know that Scott unconsciously underwent several obligations of
-this nature on the part of other old friends. The first series of
-the _Tales of a Grandfather_ appeared before the end of 1827, and
-was hailed with more rapture than any work of his for several years.
-This was the date of another happy circumstance of a more important
-kind. The copyrights of his novels and of a large proportion of his
-poetical writings being presented for sale by Constable and Company’s
-creditors, a purchase of them was made for £8500, on the part of his
-own creditors as half-sharers, while the other half belonged to Mr
-Robert Cadell, a member of Constable’s late house, now independently
-in business. It was designed that the novels should be republished
-by Cadell in a comparatively cheap form, with notes and prefaces by
-the author, and certain trinkets of embellishment, such as--according
-to his own phrase--elderly beauties are supposed to require. It was
-hoped that the share of profits due to his creditors would tell
-materially to the reduction of the debts; and this hope was more than
-realised. Meanwhile, a first dividend was paid to these gentlemen
-from the aggregate gains of Scott’s pen during the two past years,
-amounting very nearly to the unheard-of sum of £40,000. Such were the
-first-fruits of that hardy industry which he had determined to exert
-for the redemption of his credit and good name.
-
-Scott’s conduct and demeanour towards his old associates in business
-affairs become a matter of some importance, as it too often happens
-that commercial adversity introduces wrath into such fraternities. It
-is pleasant to relate, that even towards Mr Constable, who had been the
-cause of so much loss, he maintained a friendly bearing. He did not,
-indeed, shut his eyes to the new view he had obtained of Mr Constable’s
-character as a man of business; but though he could trust no longer, he
-was far from hardening his heart. One thing he felt sorely--his last
-advance for Constable when in the jaws of ruin. Nor was it a soothing
-circumstance that the bookseller had endeavoured to get his credit for
-£20,000 more, which would have only been an additional loss at the
-speedy and inevitable day of reckoning. Still, he was willing to regard
-all this as only the effect of sanguine calculations; and accordingly
-all his expressions regarding the fallen publisher, both in his diary
-and his letters, are of a mild and even kindly tenor. Mr Cadell, on
-the other hand, had secured Sir Walter’s esteem and confidence by an
-honest warning which he gave as to the above £20,000. From the first,
-he determined to befriend this member of the late house in preference
-to the other. With regard to James Ballantyne, Scott told him, on the
-very day when ruin was declared, that he would never forsake him. Mr
-Ballantyne now conducted business on his own account, and was honoured
-with the steady friendship and patronage of his old schoolfellow, as of
-yore.
-
-On the other hand, the conduct of Scott’s immediate dependants had been
-highly creditable. Deeply attached, in consequence of his long-enduring
-kindness, all were anxious to remain, if possible, about his person.
-His butler, Dalgleish, said he would take any or no wages, but go he
-would not. His coachman, Peter Matheson, went to work with his horses
-at the plough, glad to the core that he was allowed to remain at
-Abbotsford on such terms.
-
-The spring of 1828 gave the world _The Fair Maid of Perth_, his last
-popular novel. He then indulged in a little relaxation, by spending
-a few weeks in London, in the enjoyment of Mr and Mrs Lockhart’s
-society, as well as that of many attached friends. We have at this
-time a valuable addition to that testimony to his temper which the
-second last paragraph affords. He had some years before engaged his
-credit for £1200 in favour of his friend Daniel Terry the actor, who
-was then undertaking the management of the Adelphi Theatre. Being now
-informed of the ruin of Mr Terry’s affairs, he wrote him a letter, in
-which the following passage occurs: ‘For my part, I feel as little
-title, as God knows I have the wish, to make any reflections on the
-matter, beyond the most sincere regret on your own account. The sum
-for which I stand noted in the schedule is of no consequence in the
-now more favourable condition of my affairs.... I told your solicitor
-that I desired he would consider me as a friend of yours, desirous to
-take, as a creditor, the measures which seemed best to forward your
-interest.’ These are precious things to put into a biography; but they
-do not exhaust the list. Even while drudging so hard for the means
-of diminishing his own encumbrances, he is found pretty frequently
-composing and giving away a paper for the benefit of some unfortunate
-man of letters, little regarding, perhaps, the strict merits of the
-object of his bounty. One of the most remarkable of these benefactions
-consisted in his allowing the publication of two religious discourses
-for the benefit of a young man endeared to him by misfortune as well
-as merit. This publication yielded £250, a sum which few other literary
-men would allow to pass from their own pockets in such a manner.
-
-A great part of his time was now taken up with the new writing
-connected with the popular edition of his works; yet before the end of
-1828 he had advanced a good way with a new novel, the ground of which
-he laid in Switzerland, notwithstanding his being acquainted with the
-scenery of that country only by description and engravings. His mind
-was now in a more cheerful mood regarding his affairs than it had been
-since the dreadful January 1826; and if he had been free of various
-ailments, inclusive of rheumatism, caught from a damp bed in France, he
-might have enjoyed his life in the country almost as heartily as ever.
-Suffer as he might, perseverance at his desk was a fixed principle
-with him. Of this we have a striking trait in his finishing _Anne of
-Geierstein_ before breakfast one morning, and commencing, as soon as
-the meal was over, a new work, a _History of Scotland_, for Lardner’s
-_Cabinet Cyclopædia_.
-
-The prospectus of what he called his _opus magnum_--namely, the
-re-issue of the Waverley Novels--came out in February 1829, and was so
-exceedingly well received that an edition of 10,000 seemed the least he
-could throw off, a number which in those days appeared immense. When
-the book was published, it was quickly found that this edition would be
-quite insufficient to supply the public demand. In short, the sale of
-the early volumes was not under 35,000. This was of course magnificent
-success, and afforded the prognostic of a much quicker and more easy
-settlement of the debts than had been anticipated. The volumes were
-sold at five shillings. It was easy to see that, when a certain section
-of the public had been supplied at that rate, a still cheaper edition
-might be issued with benefit to all concerned. Thus it might be hoped
-that Sir Walter would in time rest a free man, with little help from
-his own immediate exertions. His heart rebounded at the prospect; and
-he even glanced at the possibility of adding to his son’s estate before
-he died. The public, too, had their visions on the subject, and, under
-the idea that his embarrassments were, comparatively speaking, at an
-end, the old stream of tourists and friend-visitors began once more to
-pour into Abbotsford. The only drawback was in the infirm and failing
-health.
-
-
-
-
-CONCLUDING YEARS--DECEASE.
-
-
-In February 1830, Scott experienced the first decidedly bad symptom, in
-an attack of an apoplectic nature, which caused him to fall speechless
-and insensible on the floor. This, it seems, was a hereditary affection
-in his family, and it therefore gave him the greater apprehension,
-though his physicians were of opinion that the attack proceeded from
-the stomach. On still went the pen of the ready-writer, now engaged
-on a volume of _Demonology_ for Murray’s _Family Library_. To obtain
-even more time for literary task-work, he now resigned his clerkship
-on a retiring allowance of £800 a year, and went to fix himself at
-Abbotsford as a permanent residence. It was an injudicious step, as it
-deprived him of the society of most of his old friends, and threw him
-more and more upon that task-work which had already been prosecuted
-only too zealously. His friends, Cadell and Ballantyne, were now
-sensible that he had carried his zeal for the discharge of his debts
-too far, and would have fain restricted him to lighter duty; but it
-was difficult to deal with a mind acting under such powerful impulses.
-Greatly against their wishes, he commenced a new novel, styled _Count
-Robert of Paris_, which, when it appeared, shewed very clearly how
-glory had departed from him. He also embroiled his mind in the politics
-of the crisis then passing, and wrote a long pamphlet against the
-reforming measures of the day, which afterwards he was induced to
-suppress. The exaggerated view which he took of the reform cause is a
-painful chapter in his history, not merely as shewing him unusually ill
-informed and weak of judgment on passing events, but because it gave a
-needless addition to anxieties of a real kind which were now pressing
-severely on the springs of life. Amidst the vexations arising to him
-from public affairs, one ray of pleasure visited him when his creditors
-(December 1830) presented him with his library, furniture, plate, and
-articles of virtù, considered as equivalent to £10,000, thus enabling
-him to make a provision for the younger branches of his family. These
-gentlemen were led to this act of generosity by their sense of his
-unparalleled exertions in their behalf. Their claims against Scott
-had now been reduced to £54,000, and as he had insured £22,000 upon
-his life in their favour, and the Waverley Novels were continuing to
-produce large returns, all doubt of the ultimate discharge of the
-claims had ceased. About this time, the honour of being made a member
-of the Privy Council was offered to him, but peremptorily declined, as
-unsuitable to his circumstances.
-
-In November of the past year, Scott had had another slight stroke
-of apoplexy. He lived in the most sparing manner, yet this did not
-prevent a distinct paralytic affection befalling him in April 1831.
-From this he recovered, by the care of a good surgeon, in a few days,
-and was then placed, by way of caution, upon extremely low diet, which,
-however, he did not always adhere to. He was now extremely infirm
-in walking, and, from heedlessness, often tumbled over articles of
-furniture or other impediments. The desire to be writing continued,
-nevertheless, in full vigour as a ruling passion. Here, however, he
-was destined to receive a shock more terrible to him than bodily
-illness, when his friends, Cadell and Ballantyne, felt it right to tell
-him that his tale of _Count Robert of Paris_ was, in their opinion,
-an entire failure. ‘The blow is a stunning one, I suppose’--thus he
-speaks in his diary--‘for I scarcely feel it.... I am at sea in the
-dark, and the vessel leaky, I think, into the bargain. I have suffered
-terribly, that is the truth, rather in body than in mind, and I often
-wish I could lie down and sleep without waking. But I will fight it
-out if I can.’ His friends and medical attendants strongly advised
-him to intermit these severe exertions, which evidently were only
-a gentle form of self-murder; but they preached to deaf ears. They
-were equally unsuccessful in their endeavours to keep him back from a
-county election in which he felt interested. He went--took part in the
-proceedings--and came to a collision with the populace, which could
-not but leave distressing effects on one who, on all other points,
-delighted to stand in kindly relations towards the humbler classes.
-In the very depth of this dark crisis he began a tale, called _Castle
-Dangerous_, in which the failing powers of his mind became even
-more painfully conspicuous. He was now fully sensible that, in all
-probability, he had but a short time to live; but it only made him the
-more eager to work for the acquittance of his great obligations. So
-much was this the case, that, being at a country-house in Lanarkshire
-on a short visit, the intelligence of a friend having fallen down
-suddenly in a fit, from which it was not expected he would recover,
-caused him instantly to break up his engagement, and go home; answering
-to all remonstrances on the subject: ‘The night cometh when no man may
-work.’
-
-He was now advised to spend the ensuing winter in Italy; and the
-government having handsomely placed a ship at his disposal, he sailed
-for Naples in October, attended by his eldest son and younger daughter.
-He was most unwilling to leave home, but a long-entertained wish to see
-some of the continental countries besides France served to reconcile
-him to the change. The voyage was a pleasant one: he enjoyed the
-objects to be seen at Malta, so full of middle-age associations, and
-thought of fictions he could found upon them. On the 17th December,
-he reached Naples, where everything was done by the king and the best
-society of the place, including many English, to render his residence
-happy. His chief companion here was Sir William Gell, an invalid
-English gentleman, who wrote upon the antiquities of Italy, and with
-whom Scott at once became extremely intimate. He beheld most of the
-classical antiquities with indifference--saying only at Pompeii: ‘The
-city of the dead!’--but was keenly interested in any object or document
-which took his mind into the middle ages. Here he actually wrote a new
-tale (entitled _The Siege of Malta_), and commenced a second, neither
-of which was deemed by his friends as fit to see the light. For some
-time he entertained cheerful views about his health; he was also under
-an impression that his debts were all discharged: it is needless to say
-that in both particulars he was deceived. Thus about four months rolled
-on. He then became anxious to return home, and, as he would not obey
-rule either as to writing or his diet, it was thought best to gratify
-him, in the hope that a more effectual control might there be exercised.
-
-Attended by his younger son, who had been placed at Naples as an
-attaché to the embassy there, and by his younger daughter as before,
-Scott left Naples for Tweedside on the 16th of April. He paused a few
-weeks at Rome, chiefly to gratify his daughter with the sights, of
-which, however, he himself also partook, beholding, as before, the
-medieval antiquities with the greater share of interest. The houses
-occupied by the dethroned Stuarts, and their tombs in St Peter’s,
-were objects of peculiar interest in his eyes. Here, as at Naples, he
-was treated by persons of the highest rank, native and foreign, with
-the greatest respect. Leaving Rome on the 11th of May, he proceeded
-by Venice, through the Tyrol, to Frankfort, with a haste which must
-have been unfavourable to him, but which nothing could control. It
-was soon after necessary for him to have blood let by his servant
-Nicolson, who had been instructed for that purpose. On the 13th of
-June he reached London, totally exhausted. It was now evident that
-this illustrious man was drawing near to the end of a greater journey.
-He was kept three weeks in London, during which his friends saw in
-him but occasional gleams of sense. He never knew distinctly where
-he was: he knew, however, that he was not at Abbotsford, and there he
-yearned to be. To gratify him, he was taken to Scotland by sea, and
-from Edinburgh, as soon as possible, to his own house. As he approached
-it, he began faintly to recognise familiar objects, and by and by it
-was found difficult to keep him in the carriage, so greatly was he
-excited. At length, alighting at the porch, and seeing his steward
-and friend, he exclaimed: ‘Ha, Willie Laidlaw! O man, how often have
-I thought of you!’ His dogs came about his knees, and he sobbed over
-them until stupor fell again upon him. He remained in the sad state to
-which he was now reduced for two months. Sometimes the mind cleared a
-little, and on one occasion he caused himself to be placed at his desk
-to write, where, however, the fingers failed to grasp the pen, and he
-sunk back weeping in his chair. More generally he was in a state of
-slumber. When sensible, he caused the Bible and church services to
-be read to him. At length, on the 21st of September 1832, the scene
-was gently closed. Sir Walter died in the sixty-second year of his
-age--years undoubtedly being cut off from the sum of his existence by
-that terrible exhaustion consequent on his later literary task-work.
-
-The funeral of this illustrious Scotsman was appointed to take place
-on Wednesday the 26th; and, preparatory to that melancholy ceremony,
-about three hundred gentlemen were invited by Major Sir Walter Scott,
-the eldest son of the deceased. Among the persons thus called upon
-were many individuals whose acquaintance of Sir Walter Scott was
-simply of a local character. On an occasion like this, when the most
-honoured head in the country was to be laid in the grave, it might
-have been expected that many individuals would have come of their own
-accord, especially from the neighbouring capital, to form part in a
-procession, which, however melancholy, was altogether of a historical
-character. Considering what the deceased had done for literature--what,
-more specially, he had done to popularise Scotland, its scenery,
-traditions, and character--we might not unnaturally have looked for
-some very marked demonstration of respect, gratitude, and affection.
-But great events sometimes make less impression at the time than they
-do many years after: and such was the apathy towards this extraordinary
-solemnity, that only ten or twelve persons, including the writer of
-this and his brother William, had come from Edinburgh. It is also a
-very remarkable circumstance, that, as in ordinary funerals, not nearly
-the whole of those who had been invited found it convenient to attend.
-
-After a refection in the style usually observed on such occasions, the
-funeral train set forward to Dryburgh, where the family of the deceased
-possess a small piece of sepulchral ground, amidst the ruins of the
-abbey. The spot originally belonged to the Halyburtons of Merton,
-an ancient and respectable baronial family, of which Sir Walter’s
-paternal grandmother was a member. It is composed simply of the area
-comprehended by four pillars, in one of the aisles of the ruined
-building. On a side-wall is the following inscription: ‘Sub hoc tumulo
-jacet JOANNES HALIBURTONUS, Barro de Mertoun, vir religione et virtute
-clarus, qui obiit 17 die Augusti, 1640;’ below which there is a coat
-of arms. On the back wall, the latter history of the spot is expressed
-on a small tablet, as follows: ‘Hunc locum sepulturæ D. Seneschallus,
-Buchaniæ comes, GUALTERO, HOMÆ, et ROBERTO SCOTT, nepotibus
-Haliburtoni, concessit, 1791.’--That is to say, the Earl of Buchan
-(lately proprietor of the ruins and adjacent ground) granted this place
-of sepulture, in 1791, to Walter, Thomas, and Robert Scott, descendants
-of the Laird of Halyburton. The persons indicated were the father and
-uncles of Sir Walter Scott; but though all are dead, no other member
-of the family lies there, besides his uncle Robert and his deceased
-lady. From the limited dimensions of the place, the body of the author
-of _Waverley_ was placed in a direction north and south, instead of
-the usual fashion; and thus, in death at least, he has resembled the
-Cameronians, of whose character he was supposed to have given such an
-unfavourable picture in one of his tales.
-
-The funeral procession consisted of about sixty vehicles of different
-kinds, and a few horsemen. It was melancholy at the very first to see
-the deceased carried out of a house which bore so many marks of his
-taste, and of which every point, and almost every article of furniture,
-was so identified with himself. But it was doubly touching to see him
-carried insensible and inurned through the beautiful scenery, which he
-has in different ways rendered, from its most majestic to its minutest
-features, a matter of interest unto all time. There lay the gray and
-august ruin of Melrose Abbey, whose broken arches he has rebuilt in
-fancy, and whose deserted aisles he has repeopled with all their former
-tenants--as lovely in its decay as ever; while he who had given it all
-its charm was passing by, unconscious of its existence, and never more
-to behold it. At every successive turn of the way appeared some object
-which he had either loved because it was the subject of former song,
-or rendered delightful by his own--from the Eildon Hills, renowned in
-the legendary history of Michael Scott--to
-
- ‘Drygrange, with the milk-white yowes,
- ’Twixt Tweed and Leader standing;’
-
-to Cowdenknows, where once spear and helm
-
- ‘Glanced gaily through the broom;’
-
-and so on to the heights above Gladswood, where Smailholm Castle
-appeared in sight--the scene of his childhood being thus brought, after
-all the transactions of a mighty and glorious life, into the same
-prospect with his grave.
-
-During the time of the funeral, all business was suspended at the
-burgh of Selkirk and the villages of Darnick and Melrose; and in the
-former of these hamlets several of the signs of the traders were
-covered with black cloth, while a flag of crape was mounted on the
-old tower of Darnick, which rears itself in the midst of the inferior
-buildings. At every side avenue and opening, stood a group of villagers
-at gaze--few of them bearing the external signs of mourning, but all
-apparently impressed with a proper sense of the occasion. The village
-matrons and children, clustered in windows or in lanes, displayed a
-mingled feeling of sorrow for the loss, and curiosity and wonder for
-the show. The husbandmen suspended their labour, and leaned pensively
-over the enclosures. Old infirm people sat out of doors, where some of
-them, perhaps, were little accustomed to sit, surveying the passing
-cavalcade. And though the feelings of the gazers had, perhaps, as much
-reference to the local judge--‘the _Shirra_’--as to the poet of the
-world and of time, the whole had a striking effect. Those forming the
-procession, so far as they could abstract themselves from the feeling
-of the occasion, were also impressed with the extraordinary appearance
-which it bore, as it dragged its enormous length through the long
-reaches of the road--the hearse sometimes appearing on a far height,
-while the rear vehicles were stealing their way through a profound
-valley or chasm. The sky was appropriately hung, during the whole time
-of the ceremony, with a thick mass of cloud, which canopied the vale
-from one end to the other like a pall.
-
-Towards nightfall the procession arrived within the umbrageous
-precincts of Dryburgh; and the coffin, being taken from the hearse,
-was borne along in slow and solemn wise through the shady walks,
-the mourners following to the amount of about three hundred. Before
-leaving Abbotsford, homage had been done to the religious customs of
-the country by the pronunciation of a prayer by Dr Baird; the funeral
-service of the Episcopal Church (to which the deceased belonged)
-was now read in the usual manner by the Rev. John Williams, Rector
-of the Edinburgh Academy, and Vicar of Lampeter, whose distinction
-in literature and in scholarship eminently entitled him to this
-honour. The scene was at this time worthy of the occasion. In a
-small green space, surrounded by the broken but picturesque ruins of
-a Gothic abbey, and overshadowed by wild foliage, just tinged with
-the melancholy hues of autumn, with mouldering statuary, and broken
-monuments meeting the eye wherever it attempted to pierce, stood the
-uncovered group of mourners, amongst whom could be detected but one
-feeling--a consciousness that the greatest man their country ever
-produced was here receiving from them the last attentions that man
-can pay to his brother man--which, however, in this case, reflected
-honour, not from the living to the dead, but (and to such a degree!)
-from the dead to the living. In this scene, where the efforts of man
-seemed struck with desolation, and those of nature crowned with beauty
-and triumph, the voice of prayer sounded with peculiar effect; for it
-is rare that the words of Holy Writ are pronounced in such a scene;
-and it must be confessed that they can seldom be pronounced over such
-a ‘departed brother.’ The grave was worthy of a poet--was worthy of
-Scott.--And so there he lies, amidst his own loved scenes, awaiting
-throughout the duration of time the visits of yearly thousands, after
-which the awakening of eternity, when alone can he be reduced to a
-level with other men.
-
-
-
-
-PERSONAL APPEARANCE.
-
-
-In stature, Sir Walter Scott was upwards of six feet, bulky in the
-upper part of the body, but never inclining in the least to what is
-called corpulency. His right limb was shrunk from an early period of
-boyhood, and required to be supported by a staff, which he carried
-close to the toes, the heel turning a little inwards. The other limb
-was perfectly sound, but the foot was too long to bring it within the
-description of handsome. The chest, arms, and shoulders were those of
-a strong man; but the frame, in its general movements, must have been
-much enfeebled by his lameness, which was such as to give an ungainly,
-though not inactive appearance to the figure. The most remarkable
-part of Sir Walter’s person was his head, which was so very tall and
-cylindrical as to be quite unique. The measurement of the part below
-the eyes was fully an inch and a half less than that above, which,
-both upon the old and the new systems of phrenology, must be held as
-a striking mark of the intellectuality of his character. In early
-life, the hair was of a sandy pale colour; but it was changed by his
-illness in 1819 to a light gray, and latterly had become rather thin.
-The eyebrows, of the same hue, were so shaggy and prominent, that,
-when he was reading or writing at a table, they completely shrouded
-the eyes beneath. The eyes were gray, and somewhat small, surrounded
-by humorous diverging lines, and possessing the extraordinary property
-of shutting as much from below as from above, when their possessor was
-excited by a ludicrous idea. The nose was the least elegant feature,
-though its effect in a front view was by no means unpleasing. The
-cheeks were firm and close; and the chin small and undistinguished.
-The mouth was straight in its general shape, and the lips rather thin.
-Between the nose and mouth was a considerable space, intersected by
-a hollow, which gave an air of firmness to the visage. When walking
-alone, Sir Walter generally kept his eyes bent upon the ground, and had
-a somewhat abstracted and even repulsive aspect. But when animated by
-conversation, his countenance became full of pleasant expression. He
-may be said to have had three principal kinds of aspects: _First_, when
-totally unexcited, the face was heavy, with sometimes an appearance
-of vacancy, arising from a habit of drawing the under-lip far into
-his mouth, as if to facilitate breathing. _Second_, when stirred with
-some lively thought, the face broke into an agreeable smile, and the
-eyes twinkled with a peculiarly droll expression, the result of
-that elevation of the lower eyelids which has been just noticed. In
-no portrait is this aspect caught so happily as in that painted near
-the close of his life by Watson Gordon, no other painter, apparently,
-having detected the extraordinary muscular movement which occasions the
-expression. The _third_ aspect of Sir Walter Scott was one of a solemn
-kind, always assumed when he talked of anything which he respected,
-or for which his good sense informed him that a solemn expression
-was appropriate. For example, if he had occasion to recite but a
-single verse of romantic ballad poetry, or if he were informed of any
-unfortunate occurrence in the least degree concerning the individual
-addressing him, his visage altered in a moment to an expression of deep
-veneration or of grave sympathy. The general tone of his mind, however,
-being decidedly cheerful, the humorous aspect was that in which he most
-frequently appeared. It remains only to be mentioned, in an account of
-his personal peculiarities, that his voice was slightly affected by the
-indistinctness which is so general in the county of Northumberland in
-pronouncing the letter _r_, and that this was more observable when he
-spoke in a solemn manner, than on other occasions.
-
-
-
-
-CHARACTER.
-
-
-The character of Scott has already been indicated in the tenor of his
-life, and it is not necessary to say much in addition. It certainly
-included a wonderful amount of the very noblest and most lovable of
-the qualities of humanity--rarely, perhaps, have so many been combined
-in one person. The public had a stronger sense of this in Scott’s
-lifetime than even now, for the revelations made by Mr Lockhart
-and others regarding his commercial affairs have had the effect of
-derogating considerably from his reputation. But we venture to predict
-that this is only a temporary effect. It has damaged the ideal image
-only; it has not injured the real man. Far better, we would say, to
-look the actual character in the face, and judge of it from its shadows
-as well as its lights; then only can we truly appreciate even the
-worth and goodness of Scott, for then only do we see a bearer of our
-own nature, charged with a share of its infirmities, as well as of its
-glories. Admit, for instance, that he erred in his anxiety for wealth;
-see, on the other hand, what objects he had here in view! There was
-nothing sordid in this passion of his--the results were mainly used to
-realise a poetic dream from which others were to derive the substantial
-benefits. A large share was also devoted without a grudge to solace
-the unfortunate. Grant, again, that he venerated rank; the feeling was
-essentially connected with his historic taste. He worshipped not the
-title or its living bearer; his idol was constituted by the romantic
-associations which it awoke--and thus he has been known to pay far more
-practical respect to a poor Highland chieftain than to a modern English
-peer. It may, in like manner, be admitted that his judgments on passing
-affairs were obsolete, and they may be excused by a similar reference
-to his poetic habits. It was the same romance of the brain from which
-we derived his novels, that misled him on these points.
-
-Sir Walter Scott possessed, in an eminent degree, the power of
-imagination, with the gift of memory. If to this be added his strong
-tendency to venerate past things, we at once have the most obvious
-features of his intellectual character. A desultory course of reading
-had brought him into acquaintance with almost all the fictitious
-literature that existed before his own day, as well as the minutest
-points of British, and more particularly Scottish history. His easy and
-familiar habits had also introduced him to an extensive observation
-of the varieties of human character. His immense memory retained the
-ideas thus acquired, and his splendid imagination gave them new shape
-and colour. Thus, his literary character rests almost exclusively upon
-his power of combining and embellishing past events, and his skill
-in delineating natural character. In early life, accident threw his
-exertions into the shape of verse--in later life, into prose; but, in
-whatever form they appear, the powers are not much different. The same
-magician is still at work, reawaking the figures and events of history,
-or sketching the characters which we every day see around us, and
-investing the whole with the light of a most extraordinary fancy. His
-versified writings, though replete with good feeling, display neither
-the high imaginings nor the profound sympathies which are expected
-in poetry; their charm lies almost entirely in the re-creation of
-beings long since passed away, or the conception of others who might
-be supposed to have once existed. As some of the material elements of
-poetry were thus wanting, it was fortunate that he at last preferred
-prose as a vehicle for his ideas--a medium of communication in which no
-more was expected than what he was able or inclined to give, while it
-afforded a scope for the delineation of familiar character, which was
-nearly denied in poetry. As the discoverer and successful cultivator of
-this kind of fictitious writing, Sir Walter Scott must rank among the
-very highest names in British literature--Shakspeare, Milton, and Byron
-being the only others who can be said to stand on the same level.
-
-Among the minor powers of his mind, humour was one of the most
-prominent. Both in his prose writings and in private conversation,
-he was perpetually making droll application of some ancient adage,
-or some snatch of popular literature, or some whimsical anecdote of
-real life, which he happened to think appropriate to the occasion.[2]
-A strong feeling of nationality was another of the features of his
-character, though perhaps it ought, in some measure, to be identified
-with his tendency to admire whatever belonged to the past. He loved
-Scotland and Scotchmen, but, it may be remarked, fully as much with
-a view to what they were, and what they did long ago, as to their
-later or present condition. Of the common people, when they came
-individually before him, it cannot be said that he was a despiser:
-to them, as to all who came in his way, he was invariably kind and
-affable. Nevertheless, from the highly aristocratic tone of his mind,
-he had no affection for the people as a body. He seems to have never
-conceived the idea of a manly and independent character in middle or
-humble life; and in his novels, where an individual of these classes is
-introduced, he is never invested with any virtues, unless obedience, or
-even servility to superiors, be of the number. Among the features of
-his character, it would be improper to omit noticing his passion for
-field-sports, and for all the machinery by which they are carried on.
-He was so fond of a good horse, that the present writer has seen him
-turn the most serious conversation, in order to remark the strength
-and speed of one of these animals which he saw passing. He has also
-recorded his attachment to dogs, by being frequently drawn with one by
-his side.
-
-The gravest charge against Sir Walter Scott lies undeniably in
-his heedlessness regarding his affairs. Apart altogether from his
-accommodations to Constable and Company, he had entered deeply into
-a false system of credit on his own account; and while much debt was
-consequently hanging over him, he is found transferring the only solid
-security for it--his estate--to his son. This, however, should be
-contemplated in connection with all the circumstances which we can
-suppose to have justified it in his own mind. To one who was producing
-ten thousand a year by his pen, and who had done so for years, who,
-moreover, saw large possessions in his own hands, there might appear
-no pressing reason for looking anxiously into the accounts concerning
-even so large a sum of floating debt as forty-six thousand pounds; at
-least to one whose temperament, we now see, was sanguine and ideal as
-ever poet manifested, though in his case usually veiled under an air
-of worldly seeming. When this is considered, the weight of the charge
-will, we think, appear much lessened, though it cannot be altogether
-done away. For what remains, let us reflect on the latter days of
-Scott, and surely we must own that never was fault more nobly expiated,
-or punishment more nobly borne, than by the great Minstrel.
-
-It is by far the greatest glory of Sir Walter Scott, that he shone
-equally as a good and virtuous man, as he did in his capacity of the
-first fictitious writer of the age. His behaviour through life was
-marked by undeviating integrity and purity, insomuch that no scandalous
-whisper was ever yet circulated against him. The traditionary
-recollection of his early life is burdened with no stain of any sort.
-His character as a husband and father is altogether irreproachable.
-Indeed, in no single relation of life does it appear that he ever
-incurred the least blame. His good sense, and good feeling united,
-appear to have guided him aright through all the difficulties and
-temptations of life; and, even as a politician, though blamed by many
-for his exclusive sympathy with the cause of established rule, he was
-always acknowledged to be too benevolent and too unobtrusive to call
-for severe censure. Along with the most perfect uprightness of conduct,
-he was characterised by extraordinary simplicity of manners. He was
-invariably gracious and kind, and it was impossible ever to detect in
-his conversation a symptom of his grounding the slightest title to
-consideration upon his literary fame, or of his even being conscious of
-it. Of all men living, the most modest, as likewise the greatest and
-most virtuous, was Sir Walter Scott.
-
-
-
-
-[CONCLUSION.
-
-
-The vast exertions made by Scott in his latter years to redeem his
-financial blunders were happily successful. Since his death, the whole
-of his debts have been cleared off by the profits of his writings. More
-than a generation has elapsed since his decease, yet the popularity of
-his works remains unabated. Written to satisfy no temporary feeling,
-but founded on a knowledge of human character, and ever enduring
-and elevating in their tendency, the fictions of Scott do not seem
-destined to grow old or out of date. From the frantic novel-writing of
-the period, too commonly the mere rack of invention, with characters
-and incidents in violation of all known experience, one turns to the
-fictions of Sir Walter with undiminished, if not increasing, delight
-and admiration. Mr Cadell’s interest in the Waverley Novels having been
-transferred in 1851 to Messrs A. & C. Black, innumerable editions have
-since testified the lasting appreciation of these interesting works,
-to which much justice has certainly been done as regards the method of
-publication; though, like some others among the original readers of the
-fictions, we could have spared the explanatory notes of the author,
-which, with all their merits, are somewhat calculated to destroy the
-vraisemblance of the respective narratives. A few years after the
-death of Sir Walter, the citizens of Edinburgh resolved to erect a
-monument to his memory, and the device adopted was that magnificent
-Norman cross, from plans of Mr George M. Kemp, placed in so conspicuous
-a situation in Princes Street as to strike the eye of every passing
-traveller. It encloses, under open Gothic arches, a marble statue
-(life-size) of the poet in a sitting posture, by a native artist, Mr
-John Steell. The monument, which was completed in 1846, is open daily
-for the inspection of strangers. The cost of the structure has been
-upwards of £15,000.
-
-There is something sorrowful in the failure of Scott’s high hopes of
-founding a family. The fond dream of his life may be said to have come
-to nought. He left two sons and two daughters, who did not long survive
-him. Miss Anne Scott died in London, 25th June 1833. Sophia, who was
-married to John Gibson Lockhart, and who, in appearance and character,
-most resembled her father, died 17th May 1837. Charles Scott, the
-second son, died, unmarried, while acting as an attaché to a diplomatic
-embassy to Persia, 28th October 1841. Walter, the eldest son, who
-succeeded to the baronetcy, and rose to be lieutenant-colonel in the
-15th Hussars, died on his passage home from India, 8th February 1847.
-He was married, but left no issue, and the baronetcy is extinct. Mrs
-Lockhart had three children, John Hugh Lockhart--the ‘Hugh Littlejohn’
-for whom Scott so lovingly wrote the _Tales of a Grandfather_--who died
-15th December 1831; Walter Scott Lockhart, an officer in the army,
-who died at Versailles, 10th January 1853; and Charlotte Harriet Jane
-Lockhart, who was married in 1847 to James Robert Hope, barrister,
-grandson of the Earl of Hopetoun. This lady, the last surviving child
-of the novelist, died at Edinburgh 26th October 1858. She had three
-children, two of whom died young, the only survivor being Mary Monica,
-born 2d October 1852, who is now the only living descendant of Sir
-Walter Scott. Mrs Hope having, in virtue of inheritance, succeeded to
-the estate of Abbotsford, assumed with her husband the surname Scott,
-in addition to that of Hope. Their daughter is accordingly known as
-Miss Hope-Scott. Mr Hope-Scott, who occupies Abbotsford, was by a
-second marriage united to a sister of the present Duke of Norfolk,
-1861. All Sir Walter Scott’s brothers pre-deceased him. The only one of
-them who was married was Thomas, who left a son and three daughters.
-
-In the occupancy of Mr Hope-Scott, Abbotsford remains a central point
-of attraction to tourists, who, for the purpose of visiting it, and
-also the mausoleum at Dryburgh, make the village of Melrose the spot
-to which they first direct their pilgrimage. Carefully preserved in
-every respect, the mansion of Abbotsford will be found almost in
-the condition in which it was left by the great Scottish novelist.
-The lapse of forty years, however, has effected great changes on
-the grounds. The belts and clumps of plantation, the laying out and
-thinning of which afforded so much delight to Sir Walter in the days
-of his prosperity, when accompanied by Tom Purdie or William Laidlaw,
-have become thick, umbrageous woods, clothing with beauty the once
-bare hill-sides, and otherwise realising the anticipations of one who
-fondly watched over their early development. The scene, one of the
-most admired in the south of Scotland, ought not to be passed over
-hurriedly. Here, within the murmuring sound of the Tweed, Sir Walter
-Scott breathed his last, and here is the memorable shrine of his
-affections.]
-
-
-
-
- ABBOTSFORD NOTANDA
-
- OR
-
- SIR WALTER SCOTT AND HIS FACTOR
-
- BY
-
- ROBERT CARRUTHERS. LL.D.
-
-
-Looking over the correspondence and other papers of my old friend,
-William Laidlaw, long since deceased, and sleeping at the foot of a
-Highland hill, far from his beloved Tweedside, it occurred to me that
-certain portions of the letters and memoranda might possess interest
-to some readers, and not be without value to future biographers. Mr
-Laidlaw, it is well known, was factor or steward to Sir Walter Scott at
-Abbotsford, and also occasional amanuensis. Lockhart has done justice
-to his gentle, unassuming character, and merits, and to his familiar
-intercourse with the Great Minstrel. Still, there are domestic details
-and incidents unrecorded, such as we should rejoice to have concerning
-Shakspeare at New Place, with his one hundred and seven acres of land
-in the neighbourhood, or from Horace addressing the bailiff on his
-Sabine farm. Such personal memorials of great men, if genuine and
-correct, are seldom complained of, as Gibbon has observed, for their
-minuteness or prolixity.
-
-The following pages are reprinted partly from _Chambers’s Journal_, and
-partly from the _Gentleman’s Magazine_, the proprietors of which kindly
-permitted their republication.
-
- R. C.
-
-INVERNESS.
-
-
-
-
-ABBOTSFORD NOTANDA.
-
-
-The death of Mr William Laidlaw, a man of fine natural powers, and
-of most estimable character, removed another of the few individuals
-connected directly and confidentially with the daily life and literary
-history of Sir Walter Scott, and also with the revival of the antique
-Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border. The loss of Hogg, while the
-twilight from Scott’s departed greatness still shone on the land, was
-universally regretted; and by the death of Laidlaw, another ‘flower of
-the forest,’ less bright, but a genuine product of the soil, was ‘wede
-away.’ As the author of one of our sweetest and most characteristic
-Scottish ballads, _Lucy’s Flittin’_, and as a collaborateur with Scott
-in the collection of the ancient minstrelsy, Laidlaw is entitled to
-honourable remembrance. Let us never forget those who have added even
-one wild-rose to the chaplet of Scottish song! It is chiefly, however,
-as the companion and factor or land-steward of Scott, that William
-Laidlaw will be known in after-times. During most of those busy and
-glorious years when Scott was pouring out so prodigally the treasures
-of his prose fictions, and building up his baronial romance of
-Abbotsford, Laidlaw was his confidential adviser and assistant. From
-1817 to 1832, he was resident on the poet’s estate, and emphatically
-one of his household friends. Not a shade of distrust or estrangement
-came between them; and this close connection, notwithstanding
-a disparity in circumstances and opinions, in fame and worldly
-consequence, is too honourable to both parties to be readily forgotten.
-The manly kindness and consideration of one noble nature was paralleled
-by the affectionate devotion and admiration of another; and literary
-history is brightened by the rare conjunction.
-
-Scott’s early excursions to Liddesdale and Ettrick form one of the
-most interesting epochs of his life. He was then young, not great,
-but prosperous, high-spirited, and overflowing with enthusiasm. His
-appointment as sheriff had procured him confidence and respect. He had
-given hostages to fortune as a husband and a father, and no one felt
-more strongly the force and tenderness of those ties. Friends were
-daily gathering round him; his German studies and ballads inspired
-visions of literary distinction; and he was full of hope and ambition.
-In his Border raids, he revelled among the choice and curious stores
-of Scottish poetry and antiquities. Almost every step in his progress
-was marked by some memorable deed or plaintive ballad--some martial
-achievement or fairy superstition. Every tragic tale and family
-tradition was known to him. The old _peels_, or castles, the bare
-hills and treeless forest, and solitary streams were all sacred in his
-eyes. They told of times long past--of warlike feuds and forays--of
-knights and freebooters, and of primitive manners and customs, fast
-disappearing, yet embalmed in songs, often rude and imperfect, but
-always energetic or tender. Thus, the Border towers, and streams, and
-rocks were equally dear to him as memorials of feudal valour, and as
-the scenes of lyric poetry and pastoral tranquillity. He contrasted
-the strife and violence of the warlike Douglases, the Elliots, and
-Armstrongs, with the peace and security of later times, when shepherds
-ranged the silent hill, or Scottish maidens sang ancient songs, and,
-like the Trojan dames,
-
- ‘Washed their fair garments in the days of peace.’
-
-Much of this romance was in the scene, but more was in the mind of the
-beholder.
-
-William Laidlaw’s acquaintance with Scott commenced in the autumn
-of 1802, after two volumes of the _Minstrelsy_ had been published,
-and the editor was making collections for a third. The eldest son
-of a respectable sheep-farmer, Mr Laidlaw was born at Blackhouse,
-Selkirkshire, in November 1780. He had received a good education,
-had a strong bias towards natural history and poetry, was modest and
-retiring, and of remarkably mild and agreeable manners. The scheme of
-collecting the old ballads of the Forest was exactly suited to his
-taste. Burns had filled the whole land with a love of song and poetry,
-James Hogg was his intimate friend and companion. Hogg had been ten
-years a shepherd with Mr Laidlaw’s father, had taught the younger
-members of the family their letters, and recited poetry to the old, and
-was engaged in every _ploy_ and pursuit at Blackhouse, the name of the
-elder Laidlaw’s farm.
-
-A solitary and interesting spot is Blackhouse!--a wild extensive
-sheep-walk, with its complement of traditional story, and the suitable
-accompaniment of a ruined tower. The farm lies along the Douglas
-Burn, a small mountain-stream which falls into the Yarrow about two
-miles from St Mary’s Loch. Near the house, at the foot of a steep,
-green hill, and surrounded with a belting of trees, is Blackhouse
-Tower, or the Tower of Douglas, so called, according to tradition,
-after the Black Douglas, one of whose ancestors, Sir John Douglas of
-Douglas-burn, as appears from Godscroft’s history of the family, sat
-in Malcolm Canmore’s first parliament. The tower has in one corner the
-remains of a round turret, which contained the stair, and the walls
-rise in high broken points, which altogether give the ruin a singular
-and picturesque appearance. It is also the scene of a popular ballad,
-_The Douglas Tragedy_, in which, as in the old Elizabethan dramas,
-blood is shed and horrors are accumulated with no sparing hand. A
-knightly lover, the ‘Lord William’ of so many ballads, carries off
-a daughter of Lord Douglas, and is pursued by this puissant noble
-and his seven sons. All these are slain by Lord William, while the
-fair betrothed looks on, holding his steed; and the lover himself is
-mortally wounded in the combat, and dies ere morn. The lady also falls
-a prey to her grief; and, in the true vein of antique story and legend,
-we are told
-
- ‘Lord William was buried in St Mary’s kirk,
- Lady Margaret in Mary’s quire;
- Out o’ the lady’s grave grew a bonny red rose,
- And out o’ the knight’s a brier.’
-
-The tower and legend interested Scott as they had done Laidlaw. He
-listened attentively to the traditionary narrative, and, like the
-lovers in the ballad,
-
- ‘He lighted down to take a drink
- Of the spring that ran sae clear,’
-
-and visited the seven large stones erected upon the neighbouring
-heights of Blackhouse to mark the spot where the seven brethren were
-slain.
-
-Mr Laidlaw was prepared for Scott’s mission. He had heard from a
-Selkirk man in Edinburgh, Mr Andrew Mercer--a Border rhymester,
-and connected with the _Edinburgh Magazine_--that the sheriff was
-meditating a poetical raid into Ettrick, accompanied by John Leyden,
-and he had written down various ballads from the recitation of old
-women and the singing of the servant-girls. He had also enlisted the
-Ettrick Shepherd into this special service. The following is one of
-Hogg’s rambling bizarre epistles, which relates chiefly to the ballad
-of the Outlaw Murray:
-
- ‘DEAR SIR--I received yours, with the transcript, on the day before
- St Boswell’s Fair’ [17th of July], ‘and am sorry to say it will not
- be in my power to procure you manuscripts of the two old ballads,
- especially as they which Mr Scott hath already collected are so
- near being published. I was talking to my uncle concerning them,
- and he tells me they are mostly escaped his memory, and they really
- are so--in so much, that of the whole long transactions betwixt
- the Scottish king and Murray, he cannot make above half-a-dozen
- of stanzas to metre, and these are wretched. He attributed it to
- James V., but as he can mention no part of the song or tale from
- whence this is proven, I apprehend, from some expressions, it
- is much ancienter. Upon the whole, I think the thing worthy of
- investigation--the more so as he’ [Murray of the ballad] ‘was the
- progenitor of a very respectable family, and seems to have been
- a man of the utmost boldness and magnanimity. What way he became
- possessed of Ettrick Forest, or from whom he conquered it, remains
- to me a mystery. When taken prisoner by the king at Permanscore,
- above Hanginshaw, where the traces of the encampments are still
- visible, and pleading the justice of his claim to Ettrick Forest,
- he hath this remarkable expression:
-
- “I took it from the Soudan Turk
- When you and your men durstna come see.”[3]
-
- Who the devil was this Soudan Turk? I would be very happy in
- contributing any assistance in my power to the elucidating the
- annals of that illustrious and beloved though now decayed house,
- but I have no means of accession to any information. I imagine the
- whole manuscript might be procured from some of the connections of
- the family. Is it not in the library at Philiphaugh?[4] As to the
- death of the Baron of Oakwood and his brother-in-law on Yarrow,
- if Mr Mercer or Mr Scott, or either of them, wisheth to see it
- poetically described, they might wait until my tragedy is performed
- at the Theatre-royal; and if that shall never take place, they must
- sit in darkness and the shadow of death for what light the poets
- of Bruce’s time can afford them!
-
- ‘I believe I could get as much from these traditions as to make
- good songs out of them myself. But without Mr Scott’s permission
- this would be an imposition; neither would I undertake it without
- an order from him in his own handwriting, as I could not bring my
- language to bear with my date. As a supplement to his songs, if
- you please, you may send him the one I sent last to you: it will
- satisfy him, yea or nay, as to my abilities. Haste; communicate
- this to him; and ask him if, in his researches, he hath lighted on
- that of John Armstrong of Gilnockie Hall, as I can procure him a
- copy of that. My uncle says it happened in the same reign with that
- of Murray, and if so, I am certain it has been written by the same
- bard. I could procure Mercer some stories--such as the tragical,
- though well-authenticated one of the unnatural murder of the son
- and heir of Sir Robert Scott of Thirlstane, the downfall of the
- family of Tushilaw, and the horrid spirit that still haunts the
- Alders. And we might give him that of John Thomson’s Aumrie, and
- the Bogle of Bell’s Lakes.
-
- ‘My muse still lies dormant, and with me must sleep for ever, since
- a liberal public hath not given me what my sins and mine iniquities
- deserved.--I am yours for ever.
-
- JAMES HOGG.
-
- ‘_July 20th, 1801._’
-
-The ‘liberal public’ had given a reception ‘the north side of
-friendly,’ as Bailie Nicol Jarvie says, to a small publication which
-made its appearance about six months before the date of the above
-letter, entitled ‘_Scottish Pastorals, Poems_, &c., by James Hogg,
-Farmer at Ettrick’--a most unlucky speculation.
-
-Mr Laidlaw was constantly annoyed, he said, to find how much the
-affectation and false taste of Allan Ramsay had spoiled or superseded
-many striking and beautiful old strains of which he got traces and
-fragments, and how much Scott was too late in beginning his researches,
-as many aged persons, who had been the bards and depositaries of a
-former generation, were then gone.
-
-‘I heard,’ he says, ‘from one of our servant-girls, who had all the
-turn and qualifications for a collector, of a ballad called _Auld
-Maitland_, that a grandfather of Hogg’s could repeat, and she herself
-had several of the first stanzas (which I took a note of, and have
-still the copy). This greatly aroused my anxiety to procure the whole,
-for this was a ballad not even hinted at by Mercer in his list of
-desiderata received from Mr Scott. I forthwith wrote to Hogg himself,
-requesting him to endeavour to procure the whole ballad. In a week
-or two, I received his reply, containing _Auld Maitland_ exactly as
-he had copied it from the recitation of his uncle, Will Laidlaw of
-Phawhope, corroborated by his mother, who both said they learned it
-from their father, a still older Will of Phawhope, and an old man
-called Andrew Muir, who had been servant to the famous Mr Boston,
-minister of Ettrick.’[5] These services of the olden time were marked
-by reciprocal kindness and attachment, not unworthy of the patriarchal
-age. Son succeeded father in tending the _hirsel_ or herding the cows,
-while in the case of ‘the master,’ the same hereditary or family
-succession was often preserved.
-
-The person of the sheriff was not unknown to the new friend with whom
-he was afterwards destined to form so intimate a connection. ‘I first
-saw Walter Scott,’ Laidlaw used to relate, ‘when the Selkirk troop of
-yeomanry met to receive their sheriff shortly after his appointment. I
-was on the right of the rear rank, and my front-rank man was _Archie
-Park_, a brother of the traveller. Our new sheriff was accompanied by
-a friend, and as they retired to the usual station of the inspecting
-officer previous to the charges, the wonderful _springs_ and bounds
-which Scott made, seemingly in the excitation and gaiety of his heart,
-joined to the effect of his fine fair face and athletic appearance,
-were the cause of a general murmur of satisfaction, bordering on
-applause, which ran through the troop. Archie Park looked over his
-shoulder to me, and growled, in his deep rough voice: “Will, what a
-strong chield that would have been if his right leg had been like his
-left ane!”’
-
-Scott and Leyden duly appeared at Blackhouse, carrying letters of
-introduction. They put up their horses, and experienced a homely
-unostentatious hospitality, which afterwards served to heighten the
-delightful traits of rustic character in the delineation of Dandie
-Dinmont’s home at Charlies-Hope. If the sheriff did not ‘shoot
-a blackcock and eat a blackcock too,’ the fault was not in his
-entertainers. After the party had explored the scenery of the burn,
-and inspected Douglas Tower, Laidlaw produced his treasure of _Auld
-Maitland_. Leyden seemed inclined to lay hands on the manuscript, but
-the sheriff said gravely that _he_ would read it. Instantly both Scott
-and Leyden, from their knowledge of the subject, saw and felt that
-the ballad was undoubtedly ancient, and their eyes sparkled as they
-exchanged looks. Scott read with great fluency and emphasis. Leyden was
-like a roused lion. He paced the room from side to side, clapped his
-hands, and repeated such expressions as echoed the spirit of hatred to
-King Edward and the Southrons, or as otherwise struck his fancy. ‘I had
-never before seen anything like this,’ said the quiet Laidlaw; ‘and,
-though the sheriff kept his feelings under, he, too, was excited, so
-that his _burr_ became very perceptible.’ The wild Border energy and
-abruptness are certainly seen in such verses as these:
-
- ‘As they fared up o’er Lammermore,
- They burned baith up and down,
- Until they came to a darksome house;
- Some call it Leader-Town.
-
- “Wha hauds this house?” young Edward cried,
- “Or wha gies’t ower to me?”
- A gray-haired knight set up his head,
- And crackit right crousely:
-
- “Of Scotland’s king I haud my house;
- He pays me meat and fee;
- And I will keep my gude auld house
- While my house will keep me.”
-
- They laid their sowies to the wall,
- Wi’ mony a heavy peal;
- But he threw ower to them agen
- Baith pitch and tar barrel.
-
- With springalds, stanes, and gads of airn,
- Among them fast he threw;
- Till mony of the Englishmen
- About the wall he slew.
-
- Full fifteen days that braid host lay,
- Sieging auld Maitland keen,
- Syne they hae left him, hail and fair,
- Within his strength of stane.’
-
-Scott valued this ballad and his other lyrical acquisitions highly.
-In a letter to Mr Laidlaw, dated 21st January 1803, he remarks as
-follows: ‘_Auld Maitland_, laced and embroidered with antique notes
-and illustrations, makes a most superb figure. I have got, through the
-intervention of Lady Dalkeith, a copy of Mr Beattie of Meikledale’s
-_Tamlane_. It contains some highly poetical stanzas descriptive of
-fairy-land, which, after some hesitation, I have adopted, though they
-have a very refined and modern cast. I do not suspect Mr Beattie of
-writing ballads himself; but pray, will you inquire whether, within the
-memory of man, there has been any poetical clergyman or schoolmaster
-whom one could suppose capable of giving a coat of modern varnish to
-this old ballad. What say you to this, for example?
-
- “We sleep on rose-buds soft and sweet,
- We revel in the stream,
- We wanton lightly on the wind,
- Or glide on a sunbeam.”
-
-This seems quite modern, yet I have retained it.’
-
-Laidlaw had procured a version of another ballad, _The Demon Lover_,
-which he took down from the recitation of Mr Walter Grieve, then in
-Craik, on Borthwick Water. Grieve sung it well to a singularly wild
-tune; and the song embodies a popular but striking superstition, such
-as Lewis introduced into his romance of _The Monk_. To complete the
-fragment, Laidlaw added the 6th, 12th, 17th, and 18th stanzas; and
-those who consult the ballad in Scott’s _Minstrelsy_ will see how well
-our friend was qualified to excel in the imitation of these strains of
-the elder muse. After the party had ‘quaffed their fill’ of old songs
-and legendary story, they all took horse, and went to dine with Mr
-Ballantyne of Whitehope, the uncle of Laidlaw.
-
-‘There was not a minute of silence,’ says Mr Laidlaw’s memorandum,
-‘as we rode down the narrow glen, and over by the way of Dryhope,
-to get a view of St Mary’s Loch and of the Peel or Tower. When we
-entered the Hawkshaw-doors, a pass between Blackhouse and Dryhope,
-where a beautiful view of the lake opens, Leyden, as I expected, was
-so struck with the scene that he suddenly stopped, sprung from his
-horse (which he gave to Mr Scott’s servant), and stood admiring the
-fine Alpine prospect. Mr Scott said little; but as this was the first
-time he had seen St Mary’s Loch, doubtless more was passing in his mind
-than appeared. Often, when returning home with my fishing-rod, had I
-stopped at this place, and admired the effect of the setting sun and
-the approaching twilight; and now when I found it admired by those whom
-I thought likely to judge of and be affected with its beauty, I felt
-the same sort of pleasure that I experienced when I found that Walter
-Scott was delighted with Hogg. Had I at that time been gifted with a
-glimpse--a very slight glimpse--of the second-sight, every word that
-passed, and they were not few, until we reached Whitehope or Yarrow
-Church, I should have endeavoured to record. Scott, as all the world
-knows, was great in conversation; and Leyden was by no means a common
-person. He had about him that unconquerable energy and restlessness
-of mind that would have raised him, had he lived, very high among
-the remarkable men of his native country. I cannot forget the fire
-with which he repeated, on the Craig-bents, a half-stanza of an
-irrecoverable ballad--
-
- “Oh swiftly gar speed the berry-brown steed
- That drinks o’ the Teviot clear!”--
-
-which his friend, when finally no brother to it could be found, adopted
-in the reply of William of Deloraine to the Lady of Branksome.’
-
-The regret that Laidlaw here expresses at having omitted to note down
-the conversation of his friends is extremely natural, but few men
-could be less fitted for such a task. He had nothing of Boswell in his
-mind or character. He wanted both the concentration of purpose and the
-pliant readiness of talent and power of retention. At Abbotsford he
-had ample opportunities for keeping such a record, and he was often
-urged to undertake it. Scott himself on one occasion, after some
-brilliant company had left the room, remarked half jocularly, that
-many a one meeting such people, and hearing such talk, would make a
-very lively and entertaining book of the whole, which might some day
-be read with interest. Laidlaw instantly felt it necessary to put
-in a disclaimer. He said he would consider it disreputable in him
-to take advantage of his position, or of the confidence of private
-society, and make a journal of the statements and opinions uttered
-in free and familiar conversation. We may respect the delicacy and
-sensitiveness of his feelings, but society, collectively, would lose
-much by the rigid observance of such a rule. The question, we think,
-should be determined by the nature and quality of the circumstances
-recorded. It must be a special, not a general case. There is nothing
-more discreditable in noting down a brilliant thought or interesting
-fact, than in repeating it in conversation; while to play the part of a
-gossiping and malicious eavesdropper, is equally a degradation in life
-and in literature. It would have been detestable (if the idea could
-for a moment be entertained) for Mr Laidlaw to pry into the domestic
-details and personal feelings or failings of his illustrious friend
-at Abbotsford; but we may wish that his pen had been as ready as his
-ear when Scott ran over the story of his literary life and opinions,
-or discriminated the merits of his great contemporaries--when Davy
-expatiated on the discoveries and delights of natural philosophy--when
-Miss Edgeworth painted Irish scenes and character--when Moore
-discoursed of poetry, music, and Byron--when Irving kindled up like
-a poet in his recollections of American lakes, and woods, and old
-traditions--when Mackintosh began with the Roman law, and ended in
-Lochaber--when some septuagenarian related anecdotes of the past--when
-artists and architects talked of pictures, sculpture, and buildings--or
-when some accomplished traveller and _savant_ opened up the interior of
-foreign courts and the peculiarities of national manners. Many a wise
-and witty saying and memorable illustration--the life-blood of the best
-books--might thus have been preserved, though with occasional _lacunæ_
-and mistakes; and all are now lost--
-
- ‘Gone glittering through the dream of things that were’--
-
-and cannot be recalled. Surely society is the worse for the loss of
-these racy, spontaneous fruits of intellect, study, and observation.
-
-While dinner was getting ready at Whitehope, Laidlaw and Leyden
-strolled into the neighbouring churchyard of Yarrow, and saw the
-tomb of Mr Rutherford, the first minister of that parish after the
-Revolution, and the maternal great-grandfather of Scott. Leyden recited
-to his companion the ballads of _The Eve of St John_ and _Glenfinlas_,
-which naturally impressed on the hearer a vivid idea of the poetical
-talents of the sheriff, and Laidlaw felt towards him as towards an
-old friend. This was increased by Scott’s partiality for dogs. He was
-struck with a very beautiful and powerful greyhound which followed
-Laidlaw, and he begged to have a brace of pups from the same dog,
-saying he had now become a forester, as sheriff of Ettrick, and must
-have dogs of the true mountain breed. ‘This request,’ said the other,
-‘I took no little pains to fulfil. I kept the puppies till they were
-nearly a year old. My youngest brother, then a boy, took great delight
-in training them; and the way was this: he took a long pole having a
-string and a piece of meat fastened to it, and made the dogs run in a
-circular or oval course. Their eagerness to get the meat gave them, by
-much practice, great strength in the loins, and singular expertness
-in turning, besides singular alertness in _mouthing_, for which they
-were afterwards famous. Scott hunted with them for two years over the
-mountains of Tweedside and Yarrow, and never dreamed that a hare could
-escape them. He mentions them in the Introduction to the second canto
-of _Marmion_--
-
- “Remember’st thou my greyhounds true?
- O’er holt or hill there never flew,
- From slip or leash there never sprang,
- More fleet of foot, or sure of fang.”’
-
-After this visit, Laidlaw doubled his diligence in gathering
-up fragments of the elder Muse, and the sheriff was profuse in
-acknowledgments:
-
- ‘MY DEAR SIR--I am very much obliged to you for your letter and
- the enclosure. The _Laird o’ Logie_ is particularly acceptable, as
- coming near the real history. Carmichael, mentioned in the ballad,
- was the ancestor of the Earl of Hyndford, and captain of James
- VI.’s guard, so that the circumstance of the prisoner’s being in
- his custody is highly probable. I will adopt the whole of this
- ballad instead of the common one called _Ochiltree_. _Geordie_ I
- have seen before: the ballad is curious, though very rude. _Ormond_
- may be curious, but is modern. The story of _Confessing the Queen
- of England_ is published by Bishop Percy, so I will neither trouble
- you about that nor about _Dundee_. “Glendinning” is a wrong
- reading: the name of the Highland chief who carries off the lady is
- Glenlyon, one of the Menzieses. Among Hogg’s ballads is a curious
- set of _Lamington_ or _Lochinvar_, which I incline to adopt as
- better than that in the _Minstrelsy_. Who was Katherine Janfarie,
- the heroine? She could hardly be a damsel of rank, as the estate
- of Whitebank is an ancient patrimony of the Pringles. I don’t know
- what to make of Cockburn’s name, unless it be Perys, the modern
- Pierce, which is not a common name in Scotland. I am very much
- interested about the Tushilaw lines, which, from what you mention,
- must be worth recovering. I forgot to bring with me from Blackhouse
- your edition of the _Goshawk_, in which were some excellent various
- readings. I am so anxious to have a complete Scottish _Otterburn_,
- that I will omit the ballad entirely in the first volume, hoping
- to recover it in time for insertion in the third. I would myself
- be well pleased to delay the publication of all three for some
- time, but the booksellers are mutinous and impatient, as a book is
- always injured by being long out of print. As to the Liddesdale
- traditions, I think I am pretty correct, although doubtless much
- more may be recovered. The truth is that, in these traditions, as
- you must have observed, old people are usually very positive about
- their own mode of telling a story, and as uncharitably critical in
- their observations on those who differ from them.--Yours faithfully,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.’
-
-Before the friends parted, Scott made a note of Hogg’s address, and
-from that time never ceased to take a warm interest in his fortunes.
-He corresponded with him, and becoming curious to see the poetical
-Shepherd, made another visit to Blackhouse, for the purpose of
-getting Laidlaw along with him as guide to Ettrick. The visit was
-highly agreeable. The sheriff’s _bonhomie_ and lively conversation
-had deeply interested his companion, and he rode by his side in a
-sort of ecstasy as they journeyed again by St Mary’s Loch and the
-green hills of Dryhope, which rise beyond the wide expanse of smooth
-water. It was a fine summer morning, and the impressions of the day
-and the scene have been recorded in imperishable verse.[6] Dryhope
-Tower, so intimately associated with the memory of Mary Scott, the
-‘Flower of Yarrow,’ made the travellers stop for a brief space; and
-_Dhu Linn_ (where Marjory, the wife of Percy de Cockburn, sat while
-men were hanging her husband), with Chapelhope and other scenes and
-ruins famous in Border tradition, deeply interested Scott. At the west
-end of the Loch of the Lowes, the surrounding mountains close in, in
-the face of the traveller, apparently preventing all farther egress.
-At this spot, as Laidlaw was trying to find a safe place where they
-might cross the marsh through which the infant Yarrow finds its way
-to the loch, Scott’s servant, an English boy, rode up, and, touching
-his hat, respectfully inquired, with much interest, where the people
-got their necessaries! This unromantic question, and the _naïveté_ of
-the lad’s manner, was a source of great amusement to the sheriff. The
-day’s journey was a favourite theme with Laidlaw. First, after passing
-the spots we have described, the horsemen crossed the ridge of hills
-that separates the Yarrow from her sister stream. These hills are high
-and green, but the more lofty parts of the ridge are soft and boggy,
-and they had often to pick their way, and proceed in single file. Then
-they followed a foot-track on the side of a long _cleugh_ or _hope_,
-and at last descended towards the Ettrick, where they had in view the
-level green valley, walled in by high hills of dark green, with here
-and there gray crags, the church and the old _place_ of Ettrick Hall
-in ruins, embosomed in trees. Scott was somewhat chafed by having
-left in his bedroom that morning his watch--a valuable gold repeater,
-presented to him on the occasion of his marriage--and to Laidlaw’s
-ejaculations of delight he sometimes replied quickly: ‘A savage enough
-place--a very savage place.’ His good-humour, however, was restored
-by the novelty of the scenes and the fine clear day, and he broke out
-with snatches of song, and told endless anecdotes, either new, or
-better told than ever they were before. The travellers went to dine at
-Ramsey-cleugh, where they were sure of a cordial welcome and a good
-farmer’s dinner; and Laidlaw sent off to Blackhouse for the sheriff’s
-watch (which he received next morning), and to Ettrick House for Hogg,
-that he might come and spend the evening with them. The Shepherd (who
-then retained all his original simplicity of character) came _to tea_,
-and he brought with him a bundle of manuscripts, of size enough at
-least to shew his industry--all of course ballads, and fragments of
-ballads. The penmanship was executed with more care than Hogg had ever
-bestowed on anything before. Scott was surprised and pleased with
-Hogg’s appearance, and with the hearty familiarity with which _Jamie_,
-as he was called, was received by Laidlaw and the Messrs Bryden of
-Ramsey-cleugh. Hogg was no less gratified. ‘The sheriff of a county
-in those days,’ said Laidlaw, ‘was regarded by the class to whom Hogg
-belonged with much of the fear and respect that their _forbears_
-looked up to the ancient hereditary sheriffs, who had the power of
-pit and gallows in their hands; and here Jamie found himself all at
-once not only the chief object of the sheriff’s notice and flattering
-attention, but actually seated at the same table with him.’ Hogg’s
-genius was sufficient passport to the best society. His appearance was
-also prepossessing. His clear ruddy cheek and sparkling eye spoke of
-health and vivacity, and he was light and agile in his figure. When a
-youth, he had a remarkably fine head of long curling brown hair, which
-he wore coiled up under his bonnet; and on Sundays, when he entered
-the church and let down his locks, the _lasses_ (on whom Jamie always
-turned an expressive _espiègle_ glance) looked towards him with envy
-and admiration. He doubtless thought of himself as the Gaelic bard did
-of Allan of Muidart--
-
- ‘And when to old Kilphedar’s church
- Came troops of damsels gay,
- Say, came they there for Allan’s fame,
- Or came they there to pray?’
-
-Mr Laidlaw thus speaks of the evening at Ramsey-cleugh: ‘It required
-very little of that tact or address in social intercourse for which Mr
-Scott was afterwards so much distinguished, to put himself and those
-around him entirely at their ease. In truth, I never afterwards saw
-him at any time apparently enjoy company so much, or exert himself
-so greatly--or probably there was no effort at all--in rendering
-himself actually fascinating; nor did I ever again spend such a night
-of merriment. The qualities of Hogg came out every instant, and his
-unaffected simplicity and fearless frankness both surprised and charmed
-the sheriff. They were both very good mimics and story-tellers born and
-bred; and when Scott took to employ his dramatic talent, he soon found
-he had us all in his power; for every one of us possessed a quick sense
-of the ludicrous, and perhaps of humour of all kinds. I well recollect
-how the tears ran down the cheeks of my cousin, George Bryden; and
-although his brother was more quiet, it was easy to see that he too
-was delighted. Hogg and I were unbounded laughers when the occasion
-was good. The best proof of Jamie’s enjoyment was, that he never sung
-a song that blessed night, and it was between two and three o’clock
-before we parted.’
-
-Next morning, Scott and Laidlaw went, according to promise, to visit
-Hogg in his low thatched cottage. The situation is fine, and the
-opposite mountains, from the grand simplicity of their character,
-may almost be termed sublime. The Shepherd and his aged mother--‘Old
-Margaret Laidlaw,’ for she generally went by her maiden name--gave
-the visitors a hearty welcome. James had sent for a bottle of wine,
-of which each had to take a glass; and as the exhilarating effects
-of the previous night had not quite departed, he insisted that they
-should help him in drinking every drop in the bottle. Had it been
-a few years earlier in Scott’s life, and before he was sheriff of
-the county, the request would probably have been complied with; but
-on this occasion the bottle was set aside. The scene was curious
-and interesting. ‘Hogg may be a great poet,’ said Scott, ‘and, like
-Allan Ramsay, come to be the founder of a sort of family.’ Hogg’s
-familiarity of address, mingled with fits of deference and respect
-towards the sheriff, was curiously characteristic. Many years after
-this, we recollect a gentleman asking Laidlaw about an amusing anecdote
-told of the Shepherd. Hogg had sagacity enough to detect the authorship
-of the Waverley novels long before the secret was divulged, and had
-the volumes as they appeared bound and lettered on the back ‘SCOTT’S
-NOVELS.’ His friend discovered this one day when visiting Hogg at
-Altrive, and, in a dry humorous tone of voice, remarked: ‘Jamie, your
-bookseller must be a stupid fellow to spell _Scots_ with two _t_s.’
-Hogg is said to have rejoined: ‘Ah, Watty, I am ower auld a cat to
-draw that strae before.’ Laidlaw laughed immoderately at the story,
-but observed: ‘Jamie never came lower down than _Walter_.’ Lockhart,
-however, appears to think he did occasionally venture on such a descent.
-
-From Hogg’s cottage the party proceeded up Rankleburn to see Buccleuch,
-and inspect the old chapel and mill. They found nothing at the kirk of
-Buccleuch, and saw only the foundations of the chapel. Scott, however,
-was in high spirits, and, being a member of the Edinburgh Light
-Cavalry, and Laidlaw one of the Selkirkshire Yeomanry, they sometimes
-set off at a gallop--the sheriff leading as in a mimic charge, and
-shouting: ‘Schlachten, meine kinder, schlachten!’ Hogg trotted up
-behind, marvelling at the versatile powers of the ‘wonderful _shirra_.’
-They all dined together with a ‘lady of the glen,’ Mrs Bryden,
-Crosslee; and next morning Scott returned to Clovenford Inn, where he
-resided till he took a lease of the house of Ashestiel.
-
-Amidst these and similar scenes, Walter Scott inhaled inspiration, and
-nursed those powers which afterwards astonished the world. The healthy
-vigour of his mind, and his clear understanding, grew up under such
-training, and his imagination was thence quickened and moulded. Byron
-studied amidst the classic scenes of Greece and Italy--Southey and
-Moore in their libraries, intent on varied knowledge. All the ‘shadowy
-tribes of mind’ were known to the metaphysical Coleridge. Wordsworth
-wandered among the lakes and mountains of Westmoreland, brooding over
-his poetical and philosophical theories, from which his better genius,
-in the hour of composition, often extricated him. Scott was in all
-things the simple, unaffected worshipper of nature and of Scotland. His
-chivalrous romances sprung from his national predilections; for the
-warlike deeds of the Border chiefs first fired his fancy, and directed
-his researches. In these mountain excursions he imbibed that love and
-veneration of past times which coloured most of his compositions; and
-human sympathies and solemn reflections were forced upon him by his
-intercourse with the natives of the hills, and the simple and lonely
-majesty of the scenes that he visited. These early impressions were
-never forgotten. Nor could there have been a better nursery for a
-romantic and national poet. Scholastic and critical studies would have
-polished his taste and refined his verse; but we might have wanted the
-strong picturesque vigour--the simple direct energy of the old ballad
-style--the truth, nature, and observation of a stirring life--all
-that characterises and endears old Scotland. Scott’s destiny was on
-the whole pre-eminently happy; and when we think of the fate of other
-great authors--of Spenser composing amidst the savage turbulence of
-Ireland--of Shakspeare following a profession which he disliked--of
-Milton, blind and in danger--Dante in exile--and Tasso and Cervantes
-in prison--we feel how immeasurably superior was the lot of this noble
-free-hearted Scotsman, whose genius was the proudest inheritance of his
-country. ‘Think no man happy till he dies,’ said the sage. Scott’s star
-became dim, but there was only a short period of darkness, and he never
-‘bated one jot of heart or hope,’ nor lost the friendly and soothing
-attentions of those he loved. The world’s respect and admiration he
-always possessed.
-
-The _Minstrelsy_ appeared complete in the spring of 1803--the first
-two volumes being then reprinted, and a third volume added, containing
-the editor’s more recent collections. The work was very favourably
-received: indeed, so valuable a contribution to our native literature
-had not appeared since the publication of Percy’s _Reliques_. And the
-Introduction is an admirable historical summary, foreshadowing Scott’s
-future triumphs as a prose writer.[7]
-
-The sheriff made four visits to Blackhouse, the fourth time in company
-with his attached friend, Mr Skene of Rubislaw. All the party turned
-out to visit a fox-hunt, a successful one, for the fox was killed; and
-Mr Skene made a spirited drawing of the scene, including a portrait
-of old Will Tweedie, the fox-hunter. The visit was closed by the whole
-party riding to see the wild scenery of the Grey Mare’s Tail and Loch
-Skene, Hogg and Adam Ferguson being of the party. Laidlaw thus writes
-of the expedition to Moffatdale:
-
-‘We proceeded with difficulty up the rocky chasm to reach the foot
-of the waterfall. The passage which the stream has worn by cutting
-the opposing rocks of grey-wacke, is rough and dangerous. My brother
-George and I, both in the prime of youth, and constantly in the habit
-of climbing, had difficulty in forcing our way, and we felt for Scott’s
-lameness. This, however, was unnecessary. He said he could not perhaps
-climb so fast as we did, but he advised us to go on, and leave him.
-This we did, but halted on a projecting point before we descended to
-the foot of the fall, and looking back, we were struck at seeing the
-motions of the sheriff’s dog _Camp_. The dog was attending anxiously on
-his master; and when the latter came to a difficult part of the rock,
-_Camp_ would jump down, look up to his master’s face, then spring up,
-lick his master’s hand and cheek, jump down again, and look upwards, as
-if to shew him the way, and encourage him. We were greatly interested
-with the scene. Mr Scott seemed to depend much on his hands and the
-great strength of his powerful arms; and he soon fought his way over
-all obstacles, and joined us at the foot of the Grey Mare’s Tail, the
-name of the cataract.’
-
-This excursion, like most of the others, Scott described in _Marmion_
-(Introd. to Canto II.) He was apt, on a journey among the hills,
-especially if the district was new to him, to fall at times into fits
-of silence, revolving in his mind, and perhaps throwing into language,
-the ideas that were suggested at the moment by the landscape; and
-hence those who had often been his companions knew the origin of many
-of the beautiful passages in his future works. Of this Laidlaw used
-to relate one instance. About a mile down Douglas-burn, a small brook
-falls into it from the Whitehope hills; and at the junction of the
-streams, at the foot of a bank celebrated in traditionary story, stood
-the withered remains of what had been a very large old hawthorn tree,
-that had often engaged the attention of the young men at Blackhouse.
-Laidlaw on one occasion pointed out to the sheriff its beautiful site
-and venerable appearance, and asked him if he did not think it might
-be centuries old, and once a leading object in the landscape. As the
-district had been famous for game and wild animals, he said there
-could be little doubt that the red deer had often lain under the shade
-of the tree, before they ascended to feed on the open hill-tops in
-the evening. Scott looked on the tree and the green hills, but said
-nothing. The enthusiastic guide repeated his admiration, and added,
-that Whitehope-tree was famous for miles around; but still Scott was
-silent. The subject was then dropped; ‘but some years afterwards,’ said
-Laidlaw, ‘when the sheriff read to me his manuscript of _Marmion_, I
-found that Whitehope-tree was not forgotten, and that he had felt all
-the associations it was calculated to excite.’ The description of the
-thorn is eminently suggestive and beautiful:
-
- ‘The scenes are desert now and bare,
- Where flourished once a Forest fair,
- When these waste glens with copse were lined,
- And peopled with the hart and hind.
- Yon Thorn, perchance, whose prickly spears
- Have fenced him for three hundred years,
- While fell around his green compeers--
- Yon lonely Thorn, would he could tell
- The changes of his parent dell.’[8]
-
-We may here notice another poetical scene, the _Bush aboon Traquair_,
-celebrated in the well-known popular song by Crawford. Burns says that
-when he saw the old bush in 1787, it was composed of eight or nine
-ragged birches, and that the Earl of Traquair had planted a clump
-of trees near the place, which he called ‘The New Bush.’ Laidlaw
-maintained that the new bush was in reality the old bush of the song.
-One of the sons of Murray of Philiphaugh used to come over often on
-foot, and meet one of the ladies of Traquair at the _Cless_, a green
-hollow at the foot of the hill that overhangs Traquair House. This
-was the scene of the song. The straggling birches that Burns saw are
-half a mile up the water, the remains of a wooded bog--out of sight of
-Traquair House, to be sure, but far out of the way between Hanginshaw,
-on the Yarrow, and Traquair.
-
-One morning in autumn 1804 was vividly impressed on the recollection of
-Laidlaw; for Scott then recited to him nearly the whole of the _Lay of
-the Last Minstrel_, as they journeyed together in the sheriff’s gig up
-Gala Water. The wild, irregular structure of the poem, the description
-of the old minstrel, the goblin machinery, the ballads interspersed
-throughout the tale, and the exquisite forest scenes (the Paradise
-of Ettrick), all entranced the listener. Now and then, Scott would
-stop to tell an anecdote of the country they were passing through,
-and afterwards, in his deep _serious_ voice, resume his recitation of
-the poem. Laidlaw had, the night before, gone to Lasswade, where the
-sheriff then resided in a beautiful cottage on the banks of the Esk;
-and on the following morning, after breakfast, they went up the Gala,
-when Scott poured forth what truly seemed to be an unpremeditated lay.
-They returned about sunset, and found the sheriff’s young and beautiful
-wife looking on at the few shearers engaged in cutting down their crop
-in a field adjoining the cottage. Mrs Scott seemed to Laidlaw a ‘lovely
-and interesting creature,’ and the sheriff met her with undisguised
-tenderness and affection. This was indeed his golden prime:
-
- ‘How happily the days of Thalaba went by!’
-
-After this period, Laidlaw commenced householder, entering on extensive
-farming experiments; and, so long as the war lasted and high prices
-prevailed, his schemes promised to be ultimately successful. But with
-peace came a sudden fall in the market value of corn. He struggled on
-with adverse circumstances for a twelvemonth, till capital and credit
-failed, and he was obliged to abandon his lease.
-
-In the summer of 1817, we find him at Kaeside, on the estate of
-Abbotsford. At first, this seemed a temporary arrangement. The two
-friends had kept up a constant intercourse after Scott’s visit to the
-Yarrow in 1802. Presents of trout and blackcock from the country,
-and return presents of books from Castle Street, in Edinburgh, were
-interchanged; and, when Laidlaw’s evil day was at hand, Scott said:
-‘Come to Abbotsford, and help me with my improvements. I can put you
-into a house on the estate--Kaeside--and get you some literary work
-from the Edinburgh publishers.’ The offer was cheerfully accepted, and
-the connection became permanent. Scott had then commenced building and
-planting on a large scale; and the same year he made his most extensive
-purchase--the lands of Toftfield, for which he gave £10,000.
-
-‘I have more than once--such was his modesty’--said Laidlaw, ‘heard
-Sir Walter assert that had his father left him an estate of £500 or
-£600 a year, he would have spent his time in miscellaneous reading,
-not writing. This, to a certain extent, might have been the case; and
-had he purchased the property of Broadmeadows, in Yarrow, as he at one
-time was very anxious to do, and when the neighbourhood was in the
-possession of independent proprietors, the effect might have been the
-same. At Abbotsford, surrounded by little lairds, most of them ready
-to sell their lands as soon as he had money to advance, the impulse to
-exertion was incessant; for the desire to possess and to add increased
-with every new acquisition, until it became a passion of no small
-power. Then came the hope to be a large landed proprietor, and to found
-a family.’
-
-When the poet was in Edinburgh attending to his official duties as
-Clerk of Session, he sighed for Abbotsford and the country, and
-took the liveliest interest in all that was going on under the
-superintendence of his friend. Passages like the following remind us of
-the writings of Gilpin and Price on forest and picturesque scenery:
-
-‘George must stick in a few wild-roses, honeysuckles, and sweet-briers
-in suitable places, so as to produce the luxuriance we see in the
-woods which Nature plants herself. We injure the effect of our
-plantings, so far as beauty is concerned, very much by neglecting
-underwood.... I want to know how you are forming your glades of hard
-wood. Try to make them come handsomely in contact with each other,
-which you can only do by looking at a distance on the spot, then and
-there shutting your eyes as you have done when a child looking at the
-fire, and forming an idea of the same landscape with glades of woodland
-crossing it. Get out of your ideas about expense. It is, after all, but
-throwing away the price of the planting. If I were to buy a picture
-worth £500, nobody would wonder much. Now, if I choose to lay out £100
-or £200 to make a landscape of my estate hereafter, and add so much
-more to its value, I certainly don’t do a more foolish thing. I mention
-this, that you may not feel limited so much as you might in other cases
-by the exact attention to pounds, shillings, and pence, but consider
-the whole on a liberal scale. We are too apt to consider plantations as
-a subject of the closest economy, whereas beauty and taste have even a
-marketable value after the effects come to be visible. Don’t dot the
-plantations with small patches of hard wood, and always consider the
-ultimate effect.’
-
-It is pleasant to see from the Laidlaw manuscripts with what alacrity
-and zeal the noble friends of the poet came forward with kindly
-contributions. The Duke of Buccleuch sent bushels of acorns; the Earl
-of Fife presented seed of Norway pines; Lord Montagu forwarded a box
-of acorns and a packet of lime-seed. One arboricultural missive to the
-factor says: ‘I send the seeds of the Corsican pine, got with great
-difficulty, and also two or three of an unknown species which grows to
-a great height on the Apennines. Dr Graham says they should be raised
-in mould, finely prepared, under glass, but without artificial heat.’
-A box of fine chestnuts came from Lisbon: the box was sent on from
-Edinburgh to Abbotsford unopened, and before Laidlaw heard of them, the
-chestnuts were peeled, and rendered useless for planting. ‘Confound the
-chestnuts, and those who peeled them!’ exclaimed Scott; ‘the officious
-blockheads did it by way of special favour.’ One object was to form
-at the top of the dikes an impenetrable copse or natural hedge or
-verdurous screen--the poet uses all the epithets (Milton has ‘verdurous
-wall’); and for this purpose there were sent from Edinburgh 3000
-laburnums, 2000 sweet-briers, 3000 Scotch elms, 3000 horse-chestnuts,
-loads of hollies, poplars for the marshy ground, and filberts for the
-glen. The graceful birch-tree, ‘the lady of the wood,’ was not, of
-course, neglected. ‘I am so fond of the birch,’ writes the poet; ‘and
-it makes such a beautiful and characteristic underwood, that I think
-we can hardly have too many. Besides, we may plant them as hedges.’
-He purchased at this time about 100,000 birches. Mr Morritt of Rokeby
-writes to a friend: ‘He (Scott) tells me he never was so happy in his
-life as in having a place of his own to create. In this Caledonian
-Eden, he labours all day with his own hands; though, since the Fall, he
-and his wife will not find many luxuriant branches to prune in Ettrick
-Forest I sent him a bushel of Yorkshire acorns, which, except docks
-and thistles, are, I believe, likely to be in three years the largest
-vegetables upon the domain.’[9]
-
-‘There are many little jobs about the walks,’ writes the busy and
-happy laird, ‘which, though Tom Purdie contemns them, are not less
-necessary towards comfort: a seat or two, for example, and covering any
-drains, so as to let the pony pass. In the front of the old Rispylaw
-(now Anne’s Hill) is an old quarry, which, a little made up and
-accommodated with stone seats and some earth to grow a few honeysuckles
-and sweet-briers, would make a very sweet place. Many of the walks will
-_thole_’ [bear] ‘a mending; for instance, that to the thicket might be
-completely gravelled, as Mrs Scott uses it so much.’
-
-Here the kindly, loving nature of the man peeps out. To Tom himself,
-Scott writes in a big, plain, round hand:
-
-‘As Mrs Scott comes out on the 22d, and brings some plants to cover the
-paling of the court, you must have a border of about a spade’s breadth
-and a spade’s depth dug nicely, and made up with good earth and a
-little dung, all along in front of the paling, and along the east end
-of it. She will bring the plants from Edinburgh, so they can be put
-into the ground the evening she arrives.’
-
-Afterwards, as years ran on, a thread of business was intermixed with
-the rural pleasure. The poet began to calculate on the probable return
-from the woods, not omitting the value of the bark used for tanning
-purposes.
-
- ‘DEAR WILLIE--How could you be such a gowk’ [fool] ‘as to suppose
- I meant to start a hare upon you by my special inquiries about the
- bark? I am perfectly sensible you take more care of my affairs
- than you would of your own; but anything about wood or trees
- amuses me, and I like to enter into it more particularly than
- into ordinary farming operations. In particular, this of drying
- and selling our bark--at present a trifle--is a thing which will
- one day be of great consequence, and I wish to attend to the
- details myself. I think it should not be laid on the ground, but
- dried upon stools made of the felled wood; and if you lay along
- these stools the peeled trees, and pile the bark on them, it will
- hide the former from the sun, and suffer them to dry gradually.
- I have been observing this at Blair-Adam. I have got a new light
- on larch-planting from the Duke of Athole’s operations. He never
- plants closer than eight feet, and says they answer admirably. If
- this be so, it will be easy to plant our hill-ground. Respecting
- the grass in the plantations, I have some fears of the scythe, and
- should prefer getting a host of women with their hooks, which would
- also be a good thing for the poor folks.’ [Another touch of the
- poet’s kindly nature.] ‘Tom must set about it instantly. He is too
- much frightened for the expense of doing things rapidly, as if it
- were not as cheap to employ twelve men for a week as six men for a
- fortnight.--Yours,
-
- W. S.’
-
-In the matter of dwellings for the small tenants and labourers, the
-laird of Abbotsford was equally careful and considerate. ‘I think
-stone partitions would be desirable on account of vermin, &c. If
-their houses are not comfortable, the people will never be cleanly.
-For windows I would much prefer the cast-iron lattices, turning on a
-centre, and not made too large. These windows being in small quarrels,
-or panes, a little breach is easily repaired, and saves the substitute
-of a hat or clout through a large hole. Certainly the cottages should
-be rough-plastered.’ Perhaps the little iron lattices were as much
-preferred for their antique, picturesque associations as for their
-utility--‘something poetical,’ as Pope’s old gardener said of the
-drooping willow; and the aged minstrel’s hut near Newark Tower, it will
-be recollected, had such a window:
-
- ‘The little garden hedged with green,
- A cheerful hearth and lattice clean.’
-
-When times were hard and winter severe, he thought of the firesides of
-the labourers:
-
- ‘DEAR SIR--I have your letter, and have no doubt in my own mind
- that a voluntary assessment is the best mode of raising money to
- procure work for the present sufferers, because I see no other way
- of making this necessary tax fall equally upon the heritors.... I
- shall soon have money, so that if you can devise any mode by which
- hands can be beneficially employed at Abbotsford, I could turn £50
- or £100 extra into that service in the course of a fortnight. In
- fact, if it made the poor and industrious people a little easier, I
- should have more pleasure in it than in any money I ever spent in
- my life.--Yours, very truly,
-
- W. S.’
-
-The same year, which was a period of some excitement and discontent, he
-writes to Laidlaw:
-
-‘I am glad you have got some provision for the poor. They are the
-minors of the state, and especially to be looked after; and I believe
-the best way to prevent discontent is to keep their minds moderately
-easy as to their own provision. The sensible part of them may probably
-have judgment enough to see that they could get nothing much better for
-their class in general by an appeal to force, by which, indeed, if
-successful, ambitious individuals might rise to distinction, but which
-would, after much misery, leave the body of the people just where it
-found them, or rather much worse.... Political publications must always
-be caricatures. As for the mob of great cities, whom you accuse me of
-despising too much, I think it is impossible to err on that side. They
-are the very _riddlings_ of society, in which every useful cinder is,
-by various processes, withdrawn, and nothing left but dust, ashes,
-and filth. Mind, I mean the mob of cities, not the lowest people in
-the country, who often, and, indeed, usually, have both character and
-intelligence.’
-
-Again:
-
-‘I think of my books amongst this snow-storm; also of the birds, and
-not a little of the poor. For benefit of the former, I hope Peggy
-throws out the crumbs; and a corn-sheaf or two for the game would be
-to purpose, if placed where poachers could not come at them. For the
-poor people, I wish you to distribute five pounds or so among the
-neighbouring poor who may be in distress, and see that our own folks
-are tolerably off.’
-
-Scott introduced his friendly factor to _Blackwood’s Magazine_, and
-Laidlaw used to compile for it a monthly chronicle of events, besides
-occasionally contributing a descriptive article, which the ‘Great
-Magician’ overhauled previous to its transmission. There was, in the
-autumn of 1817, a great combustion in Edinburgh about the _Chaldee
-Manuscript_, inserted in the magazine for October. An edition of two
-thousand copies was soon sold, and fifteen hundred more were printed;
-so Blackwood writes to Scott. ‘He was dreadfully afraid,’ says Laidlaw,
-‘that Mr Scott would be offended; and so he would, he says, were
-it not on my account.’ The Ettrick Shepherd (who was the original
-concocter of the satire) was also alarmed. ‘For the love of God, open
-not your mouth about the _Chaldee Manuscript_,’ he writes to Laidlaw.
-‘There have been meetings and proposals, and an express has arrived
-from Edinburgh to me. Deny all knowledge, else, they say, I am ruined,’
-&c. This once famous production is so local and personal that, although
-it is now included in Professor Wilson’s works, it is almost unknown
-to the present generation. The subject is a bookseller’s quarrel, a
-contest between the rival magazines of Blackwood and Constable, and it
-is one of the most harmless of all the parodies couched in Scriptural
-phraseology. Professor Ferrier, the editor of Wilson’s works, says
-it is quite as good, in its way, as Swift’s _Battle of the Books_;
-but this is a monstrous delusion. There are some quaint touches of
-character in the piece. It may be compared to the parodies by Hone; but
-it is a sort of profanation to place it on a level with the classic
-satire of Swift.
-
-It is never too late to do justice. In one of these magazine missives,
-written in January 1818, Blackwood refers to the Ettrick Shepherd.
-‘If you see Hogg, I hope you will press him to send me instantly his
-_Shepherd’s Dog_, and anything else. I received his _Andrew Gemmells_;
-but the editor is not going to insert it in this number.’ [Had Ebony
-really an editor, or was he not himself the great sublime?] ‘I expected
-to have received from him the conclusion of the _Brownie of Bodsbeck_;
-there are six sheets of it already printed.’
-
-Now, the latter part of this extract seems distinctly to disprove
-a charge which Hogg thoughtlessly brought against Mr Blackwood.
-His novel, the _Brownie of Bodsbeck_, was published in 1818, and he
-suffered unjustly, as he states in his autobiography, with regard
-to that tale, as it was looked upon as an imitation of Scott’s _Old
-Mortality_. It was wholly owing to Blackwood, he asserts, that his
-story was not published a year sooner; and he relates the case as a
-warning to authors never to intrust booksellers with their manuscripts.
-But the fact is, _Old Mortality_ was published in December 1816; and
-we have Blackwood, in the above letter to Laidlaw, stating that he had
-not, in January 1818--more than a twelvemonth afterwards--received
-the whole of the ‘copy’ of the _Brownie of Bodsbeck_. How could he go
-to press with an unfinished story? How make bricks without straw? The
-accusation is altogether a myth, or, to use one of the Shepherd’s own
-expressions, ‘a mere shimmera’ [chimera] ‘of the brain.’
-
-Of Hogg’s prose works, Scott writes: ‘Truly, they are sad daubing,
-with, here and there, fine dashes of genius.’ The _daubing_ is chiefly
-seen in the dialogues and attempts at humour; the _genius_ appears
-in the descriptions of pastoral or wild scenery, as in the account
-of the ‘Storms,’ and in the fine introduction to the _Brownie of
-Bodsbeck_, and in some of the delineations of humble Scottish life
-and superstition. Hogg is as true and literal as Crabbe. His peasants
-always speak and think as peasants; but he gives us, sometimes, coarse
-and poor specimens. It is certain, however, that, even in the worst of
-his stories, there are gleams of fancy--‘fairy blinks of the sun’--far
-above the reach of writers immensely his superiors in taste and
-acquirements.
-
-There was another person in whom Scott was interested with
-reference to the slashing articles in _Blackwood’s Magazine_. He
-writes to Laidlaw: ‘So they let poor Charles Sharpe alone, they
-may satirise all Edinburgh, your humble servant not excepted.’
-Charles Kirkpatrick Sharpe, with his antiquarian tastes, personal
-oddities, and aristocratic leanings, was a special favourite with
-Scott. He was a kind of Scotch Horace Walpole (so considered by his
-illustrious friend), but much feebler; perhaps stronger with the
-pencil, but infinitely weaker with the pen. His celebrated sketch of
-the ‘Inimitable Virago,’ or Queen Elizabeth dancing _disposedly_, as
-described by the Scotch ambassador, Sir James Melville, was esteemed
-by Scott as an unrivalled production. It is highly ludicrous and
-effective as a picture, but is too extravagant to serve even as a
-caricature representation of Elizabeth. Neither face nor figure has any
-resemblance. Hogarth, in his etching of old Simon Lord Lovat of the
-’45, seems, by a happy stroke of genius, to have hit the true medium
-in works of this class. He preserved the strong points in personal
-appearance and character--combining them with irresistible humour and
-drollery of expression.
-
-Here is another scrap:
-
-‘I am glad to send you Maga, which continues to be clever. I hope for
-two or three happy days on the brae-sides about the birthday’ [the
-king’s birthday, June 4]. ‘Blackwood has been assaulted by a fellow who
-came from Glasgow on purpose, and returned second-best. The bibliopole
-is like the little French lawyer, who never found out he could fight
-till he was put to it, and was then for cudgelling all and sundry. You
-never saw anything so whimsical.
-
-‘I think often, of course, about my walks; and I am sickening to
-descend into the glen at the little waterfall by steps. We could cut
-excellent ones out where the quarry has been. It is the only way we
-shall ever make what Tom Purdie calls a _neat job_; for a deep descent
-will be ugly, and difficult to keep. I would plant betwixt the stair
-and the cascade, so as to hide the latter till you came down to the
-bottom.’
-
-Visitors now began to appear at Abbotsford, an increasing stream
-every season from 1817 to 1825. They consisted of persons of rank and
-fashion, literary men and artists of all nations, who travelled to the
-Tweed to pay homage to the poet. There was no envy or jealousy with
-the Great Minstrel. Indeed, with the single exception of Byron, his
-position was such that he had no cause to fear any rival, and he could
-afford to throw largess to the crowd. All were welcome at Abbotsford.
-Washington Irving has described the cordial reception he experienced on
-the occasion of his visit in 1817, and Laidlaw thus notes the event:
-
-‘We had a long walk up by the glen and round by the loch. It was fine
-sunshine when we set out, but we met with tremendous dashing showers.
-Mr Irving told me he had a kind of devotional reverence for Scotland,
-and most of all for its poetry. He looked upon it as fairy-land, and
-he was beyond measure surprised at Mr Scott, his simple manners and
-brotherly frankness. He was very anxious to see Hogg, and said that
-several editions of Hogg’s different poems had been published in
-America.’
-
-Irving always regretted that he had not met with the Shepherd. Such a
-meeting could not have failed to give infinite pleasure to both. The
-gentle manners and literary enthusiasm of the American author would
-at once have attached the Shepherd; while the rustic frankness,
-liveliness, and perfect originality of Hogg possessed an indescribable
-attraction and charm which the other would have fully appreciated.
-Many years after this period, Hogg retained a careless brightness of
-conversation and joyous manner which were seen in no other man. The
-union of the shepherd and the poet formed a combination as rare and
-striking as that of the soldado with the divinity student of Marischal
-College, in the person of the renowned Dugald Dalgetty.
-
-One day, after Hogg had been in London--and ‘The Hogg,’ as Lockhart
-said, ‘was the lion of the season’--Allan Cunningham chanced to meet
-James Smith of the _Rejected Addresses_ at the table of the great
-bibliopole, John Murray. ‘How,’ said Smith, aloud, to Allan, ‘how
-does Hogg like Scotland’s small cheer after the luxury of London?’
-‘Small cheer!’ echoed Allan; ‘he has the finest trout in the Yarrow,
-the finest lambs on its braes, the finest grouse on its hills, and,
-besides, he as good as keeps a _sma’ still_’ [smuggled whisky]. ‘Pray,
-what better luxury can London offer?’ All these sumptuosities the
-Shepherd cheerfully shared with the wayfarers who flocked to Altrive
-Cottage.
-
-Another visitor at Abbotsford during the season of 1817, was Lady
-Byron. ‘I have had the honour,’ says Laidlaw, ‘of dining in the company
-of Lady Byron and Lord Somerville. Her ladyship is a beautiful little
-woman with fair hair, a fine complexion, and rather large blue eyes;
-face not round. She looked steadily grave, and seldom smiled. I thought
-her mouth indicated great firmness, or rather obstinacy. Miss Anne
-Scott and Lady Byron rode to Newark.’ After the date of this visit
-by Lady Byron, Laidlaw says he had many conversations with Scott
-concerning the life and poetry of Byron. ‘He seemed to regret very
-much that Byron and he had not been thrown more together. He felt the
-influence he had over his great contemporary’s mind, and said there was
-so much in it that was very good and very elevated, that any one whom
-he much liked could, as he (Scott) thought, have withdrawn him from
-many of his errors.’
-
-All went on smoothly and gaily at Abbotsford. Every year had added to
-the beauty of the poet’s domain, and to the richness of his various
-collections and library. His opinion of Gothic architecture is thus
-expressed: ‘I have got a very good plan from Atkinson for my addition,
-but I do not like the outside, which is modern Gothic, a style I hold
-to be equally false and foolish. Blore and I have been at work to
-_Scotify_ it, by turning battlements into bartisans, and so on. I think
-we have struck out a picturesque, appropriate, and entirely new line
-of architecture.’ Abbotsford must certainly be considered picturesque,
-but it is a somewhat incongruous, ill-placed pile; and without the
-beautiful garden-screen in front, the general effect would be heavy.
-
-In the Waverley Novels, then appearing in that marvellously rapid
-succession which astonished the world, there was an ample reservoir
-of wealth, if it had been wisely secured, as well as of fame. But an
-alarming interruption was threatened by the illness of the novelist.
-His malady--cramp of the stomach, with jaundice--was attended with
-exquisite pain; but in the intervals of comparative ease his literary
-labours were continued; and it certainly is an extraordinary fact in
-literary history that under such circumstances the greater part of
-the _Bride of Lammermoor_, the whole of the _Legend of Montrose_,
-and almost the whole of _Ivanhoe_ were produced. The novelist lay
-on a sofa, dictating to John Ballantyne or to Laidlaw; chiefly to
-the latter, as he was always at hand, whereas Ballantyne was only an
-occasional visitor at Abbotsford. Sometimes, in his most humorous
-or elevated scenes, Scott would break off with a groan of torture,
-as the cramp seized him, but when the visitation had passed, he was
-ever ready gaily to take up the broken thread of his narrative and
-proceed _currente calamo_. It was evident to Laidlaw that before he
-arrived at Abbotsford (generally about ten o’clock) the novelist had
-arranged his scenes for the day, and settled in his mind the course
-of the narrative. The _language_ was left to the inspiration of the
-moment; there was no picking of words, no studied _curiosa felicitas_
-of expression. Even the imagery seemed spontaneous. Laidlaw abjured
-with some warmth the old-wife exclamations which Lockhart ascribes to
-him--as, ‘Gude keep us a’’--‘The like o’ that!’--‘Eh, sirs! eh, sirs!’
-But he admitted that while he held the pen he was at times so deeply
-interested in the scene or in the development of the plot, that he
-could not help exclaiming: ‘Get on, Mr Scott, get on!’ on which the
-novelist would reply, smiling: ‘Softly, Willie; you know I have to make
-the story,’ or some good-humoured remark of a similar purport. It was
-quite true, he said, that when dictating some of the animated scenes
-and dialogues in _Ivanhoe_, Scott would rise from his seat and act the
-scene with every suitable accompaniment of tone, gesture, and manner.
-Both the military and dramatic spirit were strong in him--too strong
-even for the cramp and calomel! The postscript to a short business
-letter from Edinburgh, June 14, 1819, refers to this business of
-dictation. ‘Put your fingers in order, and buy yourself pens!--I won’t
-_stand_ the expense of your quills, so pluck the goose ’a God’s name!’
-And it was plucked on this occasion to record the sorrows of the Bride
-of Lammermoor.
-
-According to Mr Laidlaw, Scott did not like to speak about his novels
-after they were published, but was fond of canvassing the merits and
-peculiarities of the characters while he was engaged in the composition
-of the story. ‘He was peculiarly anxious,’ says Laidlaw, ‘respecting
-the success of Rebecca in _Ivanhoe_. One morning, as we were walking
-in the woods after our forenoon’s labour, I expressed my admiration
-of the character, and, after a short pause, he broke out with: “Well,
-I think I shall make something of my Jewess.” Latterly, he seemed to
-indulge in a retrospect of the useful effect of his labours. In one of
-these serious moods, I remarked that one circumstance of the highest
-interest might and ought to yield him very great satisfaction--namely,
-that his narratives were the best of all reading for young people.
-I had found that even his friend Miss Edgeworth had not such power
-in engaging attention. His novels had the power, beyond any other
-writings, of arousing the better passions and finer feelings; and the
-moral effect of all this, I added, when one looks forward to several
-generations--every one acting upon another--must be immense. I well
-recollect the place where we were walking at this time--on the road
-returning from the hill towards Abbotsford. Sir Walter was silent
-for a minute or two, but I observed his eyes filled with tears.... I
-never saw him much elated or excited in composition but one morning,
-out of doors, when he was composing that simple but humorous song,
-_Donald Caird_. I watched him limping along at good five miles an hour
-along the ridge or sky-line opposite Kaeside, and when he came in, he
-recited to me the fruits of his walk. His memory was an inexhaustible
-repertory, so that Hogg, in his moments of super-exaltation and vanity,
-used to say that if he had the _shirra’s_ memory he would beat him as a
-poet!’
-
-The memory of Sir Walter Scott was vast, but inexact. In this respect
-he was inferior to Macaulay or Sir James Mackintosh. In quoting poetry,
-Sir Walter was seldom verbally correct, and sometimes the harmony of
-the verse suffered. The two famous lines of Milton’s _Comus_:
-
- ‘The aery tongues that syllable men’s names,
- On sands, and shores, and desert wildernesses,’
-
-are thus given in the _Letters on Demonology_:
-
- ‘The aery tongues that syllable men’s names,
- On shores, in desert sands, and wildernesses.’
-
-Thomas Campbell used to relate, as an instance of Sir Walter’s
-extraordinary memory, that he read to him his poem of _Locheil’s
-Warning_ before it was printed; after which his friend asked permission
-to read it himself. He then perused the manuscript slowly and
-distinctly, and on returning it to its author, said: ‘Campbell, look
-after your copyright, for I have got your poem.’ And he repeated, with
-very few mistakes, the whole sixty lines of which the poem (which was
-subsequently enlarged) then consisted.
-
-Hogg was generally exalted and buoyant enough. On one occasion we
-find him writing to Laidlaw: ‘I rode through the whole of Edinburgh
-yesterday in a barouche by myself, having four horses and two
-postillions! Never was there a poet went through it before in such
-style since the world began!’ We may exclaim with Johnson on the amount
-of Goldsmith’s debts, ‘Was ever poet so trusted before!’
-
-In the midst of his business details and directions, Scott’s peculiar
-humour and felicity of illustration are perpetually breaking out. Of
-a neighbouring county magnate he says: ‘I have heard of a Christian
-being a Jew, but our friend is the essence of a whole synagogue.’ His
-relation of the simplest occurrence is vivid and characteristic. A high
-wind in Edinburgh, in January 1818, he thus notices: ‘I had more than
-an anxious thought about you all during the gale of wind. The Gothic
-pinnacles were blown from the top of Bishop Sandford’s Episcopal chapel
-at the end of Princes Street, and broke through the roof and flooring,
-doing great damage. This was sticking the horns of the mitre into the
-belly of the church. The devil never so well deserved the title of
-Prince of the power of the air, since he has blown down this handsome
-church, and left the ugly mass of new building standing on the North
-Bridge.’ One incidental remark illustrates the deception men often
-practise on themselves: ‘I have not,’ he says, ‘a head for accounts,
-and detest debt. When I find expense too great, I strike sail, and
-diminish future outlay, which is the only principle for careless
-accountants to act upon.’ Happy would it have been for him if his
-practice had corresponded with his theory!
-
-The year 1820 was, in the family calendar of the poet, one of peculiar
-interest and importance. It was the year in which his eldest daughter
-was married; the year in which he received the honour of the baronetcy;
-and the year in which he sat to Chantrey for his bust--that admirable
-work of art which has made his features familiar in every quarter of
-the globe. He sat also this year to Sir Thomas Lawrence. ‘The king,’
-he writes, ‘has commanded me to sit to Sir Thomas Lawrence for a
-portrait, for his most sacred apartment. I want to have in _Maida_’
-[his favourite deer-hound], ‘that there may be one handsome fellow of
-the party.’ Late in life, Sir Walter sat to Lawrence Macdonald the
-sculptor, and Laidlaw says of the artist and his work:
-
-‘We were much pleased with some days of Macdonald the sculptor, who
-modelled Sir Walter while he was dictating to me. Macdonald’s model
-was in a higher style of art than Chantrey’s, and from that cause, had
-not so much character. Macdonald confessed this was not so much his
-object. It was a faithful likeness, nevertheless, but not so familiar.
-For the same reason, he would not take the exact figure of the head,
-which is irregular. Chantrey likewise declined to shew this, which the
-phrenologists will probably regret.’
-
-Mr Lawrence Macdonald still lives to delight his friends, and pursue
-his art in Rome, where he has long resided. He has no recollection
-of the ‘irregularity,’ referred to. Laidlaw knew nothing of art, and
-by ‘high style,’ he probably meant an idealised likeness--a look
-to ‘elevate and surprise.’ The extreme length of the upper lip was
-a personal characteristic of Sir Walter, which he was glad to see
-artists reduce, and which none of the portraits fully represents. It
-is by no means uncommon among the stalwart men of the Border, but is
-unquestionably a defect as respects personal appearance. The Stratford
-bust of Shakspeare, it will be recollected, has the same long upper
-lip, as well as the memorable high forehead, that distinguished Scott.
-Of Chantrey, Laidlaw writes:
-
-‘I met at breakfast Chantrey the sculptor, a real blunt, spirited, fine
-Yorkshireman, with great good-humour, and an energy of character about
-him that would have made his fortune--and a great one--had he gone
-to London as a tailor. He killed a fine salmon in the Tweed, and led
-another a long time, but let it go among the great stones and cut his
-line. Colonel Ferguson said he believed he would rather have given his
-best statue than lost the fish.’
-
-Chantrey was an enthusiastic angler.
-
-The baronetcy was a step of rank which Sir Walter said was the king’s
-own free motion, and none of his seeking. To a lady whom he highly
-esteemed--the late Hon. Mrs Stewart Mackenzie of Seaforth--he wrote:
-
-‘The circumstance of my children being heirs to their uncle’s fortune,
-relieved me in a great degree of the chief objection to accepting with
-gratitude what was so graciously offered, namely, that which arose from
-a more limited income than becomes even the lowest step of hereditary
-rank.... Mr Lockhart, to whom Sophia is now married, is the husband of
-her choice. He is a man of excellent talents, master of his pen and
-of his pencil, handsome in person, and well-mannered, though wanting
-that ease which the _usage du monde_ alone can give. I like him very
-much; for having no son who promises to take a literary turn, it is
-of importance to me, both in point of comfort and otherwise, to have
-some such intimate friend and relation, whose pursuits and habits are
-similar to my own--so that, upon the whole, I trust I have gained a son
-instead of losing a daughter.’[10]
-
-Early next year (1821), Scott was in London, and on February 16, took
-place the unfortunate duel, in which John Scott, editor of the _London
-Magazine_, fell. The antagonist of John Scott was Mr Christie, a
-barrister, the friend of Lockhart. ‘I have had much to plague me here,’
-writes Sir Walter, ‘besides the death of John Scott, who departed last
-night; so much for being slow to take the field!’ And in another letter
-he recurs to the subject: ‘The death of my unlucky namesake, John
-Scott, you will have heard of. The poor man fought a most unnecessary
-duel to regain his lost character, and so lost his life into the
-bargain.’ The loss of life was chiefly owing to the blundering of John
-Scott’s second in the duel, who permitted a second fire to take place
-after Mr Christie had discharged his pistol down the field.
-
-The visit of King George IV. to Scotland in 1822, was an event sure
-to call forth the enthusiastic loyalty of Sir Walter. His Majesty’s
-personal attentions, besides the distinction of the baronetcy, elicited
-his warmest gratitude, and, in addition, all his fervid nationality and
-veneration for the throne were kindled on this occasion. To see the
-king in the ancient palace of Holyrood, was itself an incident like
-the realisation of a dream. The whole city was in a state of frantic
-excitement: ‘Edinburgh is irrecoverably mad,’ said Scott. To Laidlaw,
-the chivalrous poet writes:
-
- ‘DEAR WILLIE--You are quite right in your opinion of Saunders. He
- never shewed himself a more true-blooded gentleman. The extreme
- tact and taste of all ranks has surprised the king and all about
- him. No rushing or roaring, but a devoted attachment, expressed
- by a sort of dignified reverence, which seemed divided betwixt
- a high veneration for their sovereign and a suitable regard for
- themselves. I have seen in my day many a levee and drawing-room,
- but none so august and free from absurdity and ridicule as those
- of Holyrood. The apartments also, desolate and stripped as they
- have been, are worth a hundred of Carlton or Buckingham House; but
- the singular and native good-breeding of the people, who never
- saw a court, is the most remarkable of all. The populace without,
- shew the same propriety as the gentles within. The people that
- our carriages passed amongst to-day were all full of feeling,
- and it was remarkable that, instead of huzzaing, they shewed the
- singular compliment of lifting up their children to see them--the
- most affecting thing you ever witnessed. When Saunders goes wrong,
- it must be from _malice prepense_; for no one knows so well how
- to do right. Mamma (Lady Scott), Sophia, and Anne were dreadfully
- frightened, and I, of course, though an old courtier, in such a
- court as Holyrood, was a good deal uneasy. The king, however, spoke
- to them, and they were all kissed in due form, though they protest
- they are still at a loss how the ceremony was performed. The king
- leaves on Wednesday, to my great joy, for strong emotions cannot
- last. He has lived entirely within doors. To-morrow, I suppose,
- there is a dinner-party at Dalkeith, as I am commanded there, but
- it is the first. I have had, from over-exertion and distress of
- mind, a strong cutaneous eruption in my legs and arms. You would
- think I had adopted the national musical instrument to regale his
- Majesty; but, seriously, I believe I should have been ill but for
- the relief Nature has been pleased to afford me in this ungainly
- way. Fortunately, my hands and face are clear.
-
- W. S.’
-
-And Laidlaw, writing to a friend, gives some further particulars:
-
-‘Sir Walter was very full of the king for a while, but we went up
-Ettrick, and I have seen but little of him since. He had serious work
-with the English noblemen in the king’s train, who did not seem to
-wish that Scotland should shew off as an independent kingdom, which,
-by the articles of the Union, was provided for in the event of the
-king’s coming to Edinburgh. They wanted all to be done according to
-English form, as was the case in Ireland, but he settled them. They
-proposed, too, that the Highland guard (indeed they objected to the
-guard altogether) should have the flints taken from their pistols! A
-deputy, Colonel Stevenson, had the management, and corresponded with
-Sir Walter; and as he was to dine at Castle Street with a number of
-the Highland chiefs, Sir Walter proposed that the colonel should speak
-to them on the subject. After they were a little warmed with wine, Sir
-Walter addressed Stevenson, who sat beside him, saying he had better
-now propose what he had mentioned before. The Highlanders had got to
-telling old stories, and were in high spirits; they were, of course,
-in full dress. Colonel Stevenson said he saw now that he had mistaken
-the sort of people beside him; and on Sir Walter pressing him (rather
-slyly) to proceed, he declared he would rather not.
-
-‘The king was greatly surprised and affected with the behaviour of the
-people on Sunday. They did not cheer as usual, but took off their hats
-and bowed as they passed along. He expressed himself strongly to Sir
-Walter about this. Sir Walter said the verses of the cavalier to his
-mistress might be applied to the people:
-
- “Yet this inconstancy is such
- As you too shall adore;
- I could not love thee, dear, so much,
- Loved I not honour more.”
-
-I found the lines were by Lovelace, addressed to his Lucasta, on his
-going to the wars. The king witnessed an incident that seemed, as Sir
-Walter said, to have made a deep impression on his mind. As he came
-along the Calton Hill road, the crowd made a rush down hill towards the
-royal carriage, and the king saw a child fall. Had it been in London,
-he said, the child would have been trampled to death, and he expected
-nothing else. But in a moment there was a loud cry of “Stop!” and five
-or six men linked themselves together arm-in-arm, and set themselves to
-keep off the crowd, standing like an arch; then a man stepped before
-them and lifted the boy, and held him up above the crowd, to shew that
-he was not hurt. Sir Walter heard the king relate this incident twice.’
-
-In the autumn of 1825, Sir Walter visited Ireland, and thus, in homely
-confidential style, records his impressions:
-
- ‘MY DEAR WILLIE--I conclude you are now returned, with wife and
- bairns, to Kaeside, and not the worse of your tour. I have been
- the better of mine; and Killarney being the extreme point, I am
- just about to commence my return to Dublin, where I only intend to
- remain two or three days at farthest. I should like to find a line
- from you, addressed “Care of David Macculloch, Esq., Cheltenham,”
- letting me know how matters go on at Abbotsford--if you want money
- (as I suppose you do), and so forth.
-
- ‘I have every reason to make a good report of Ireland, having
- been received with distinction, which is flattering, and with
- warm-hearted kindness, which is much better. I am happy to say the
- country is rapidly improving every year, which argues the spirit
- that is afloat, and indicates that British capital is finding its
- way into a country where it can be employed to advantage. The idea
- of security is gaining ground even in those districts which are, or
- rather were, the most unsettled, and plenty has brought her usual
- companion content, in her hand. But the public peace is secured
- chiefly by large bodies of armed police, called by the civil term
- of constables, but very unlike the Dogberries of England, being,
- in fact, soldiers on foot and horse, well armed and mounted, and
- dressed exactly like our yeomen. It is not pleasant to see this,
- but it is absolutely necessary for some time at least; and from all
- I can hear, the men are under strict discipline, and behave well.
- They are commanded by the magistracy, and are very alert.
-
- ‘The soil is in most places extremely rich, but cultivation is
- not as yet well understood. That accursed system of making peats
- interferes with everything; and I have passed through whole
- counties where a very noble harvest, ripe for the sickle, was
- waiting for the next shower of rain; while all the population who
- should cut were up to the midst in bogs. Not a single field of
- turnips have I seen, owing probably to the same reason.
-
- ‘The political disputes are of far less consequence here than we
- think in Britain; but, on the whole, it would be highly desirable
- that the Catholic Bill should pass. It would satisfy most of the
- higher classes of that persuasion, who seem much inclined to form a
- sort of Low Church, differing in ceremonies more than in essential
- points from that of the English Church. I mean they would do this
- tacitly and gradually. The lower class will probably continue for a
- long time bigoted Papists; but education becoming general, it is to
- be supposed that popery, in its violent tenets, will decline even
- amongst them. By the way, education is already far more general
- than in England. I saw in the same village four hundred Catholic
- children attending school, and about two hundred Protestants
- attending another. The peculiar doctrines of neither church were
- permitted to be taught; and there were Protestants amongst the
- Papist children, and Papists among the Protestant.
-
- ‘The general condition of the peasantry requires much improvement.
- Their cabins are wretched, and their dress such a labyrinth of
- rags, that I have often feared some button would give way, and
- shame us all. But this is mending, and the younger people are all
- more decently dressed, and the new huts which are arising are
- greatly better than the old pigsties. In short, all is on the move
- and the mend. But as I must be on the move myself, I must defer the
- rest of my discoveries till we meet. We have in our party, Anne,
- Lockhart, Walter and his wife, and two Miss Edgeworths, so we are a
- jolly party. Will you shew this to Lady Scott? I wrote to her two
- days since.--Always truly yours,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
- ‘KILLARNEY, _8th August_.’
-
-The brilliance of Abbotsford had now reached its culminating point.
-The commercial crisis of 1825–26 was close at hand, and the first
-note of the alarm and confusion in the money-market suspended all
-improvements, and occasioned intense anxiety to Sir Walter. We add two
-letters as supplementing Lockhart’s narrative:
-
- ‘MY DEAR WILLIAM--The money-market in London is in a tremendous
- state, so much so that, whatever good reason I have, and I have
- the best, for knowing that Constable and his allies, Hurst and
- Robinson, are in perfect force, yet I hold it wise and necessary to
- prepare myself for making good my engagements, which come back on
- me suddenly, or by taking up those which I hold good security for.
- For this purpose I have resolved to exercise my reserved faculty
- to burden Abbotsford with £8000 or £10,000. I can easily get the
- money, and having no other debts, and these well secured, I hold it
- better to “put money in my purse,” and be a debtor on my land for a
- year or two, till the credit of the public is restored. I may not
- want the money, in which case I will buy into the funds, and make
- some cash by it. But I think it would be most necessary, and even
- improper not to be fully prepared.
-
- ‘What I want of you is to give me a copy of the rental of
- Abbotsford, as it now stands, mentioning the actual rents of ground
- let, and the probable rents of those in my hand. You gave me one
- last year, but I would rather have the actual rents, and as such
- business is express, I would have you send it immediately, and keep
- it all as much within as you think fair and prudent. Your letter
- need only contain the rental, and you may write your remarks
- separately. I have not the slightest idea of losing a penny, but
- the distrust is so great in London that the best houses refuse the
- best bills of the best tradesmen, and as I have retained such a
- sum in view of protecting my literary commerce, I think it better
- to make use of it, and keep my own mind easy, than to carry about
- bills to unwilling banks, and beg for funds which I can use of my
- own. I have more than £10,000 to receive before Midsummer, but then
- I might be put to vexation before that, which I am determined to
- prevent.
-
- ‘By all I can learn, this is just such an embarrassment as may
- arise when pickpockets cry “Fire!” in a crowd, and honest men
- get trampled to death. Thank God, I can clear myself of the
- _mêlée_, and am not afraid of the slightest injury. If the money
- horizon does not clear up in a month or two, I will abridge my
- farming, &c. I cannot find there is any real cause for this; but
- an imaginary one will do equal mischief. I need not say this is
- confidential.--Yours truly,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
- ‘_16th December_ [1825], EDINBURGH.’
-
-‘The confusion of 1814 is a joke to this. I have no debts of my own. On
-the contrary, £3000 and more lying out on interest, &c. It is a little
-hard that, making about £7000 a year, and working hard for it, I should
-have this botheration. But it arises out of the nature of the same
-connection which gives, and has given me, a fortune, and therefore I am
-not entitled to grumble.’
-
- [EDINBURGH, _January 26, 1826_.]
-
- ‘MY DEAR WILLIE--I wrote to you some days since, but from yours by
- the carrier I see my letter has not reached you. It does not much
- signify, as it was not, and could not be, of any great consequence
- until I see how these untoward matters are to turn up. Of course,
- everything will depend on the way the friends of the great house
- in London, and those of Constable here, shall turn out. Were they
- to be ultimately good, or near it, this would pass over my head
- with little inconvenience. But I think it better to take the worst
- point of view, and suppose that I do not receive from them above
- five shillings in the pound; and even in that case, I am able to
- make a proposal to my creditors, that if they allow me to put my
- affairs into the hands of a private trustee, or trustees, and
- finish the literary engagements I have on hand, there is no great
- chance of their being ultimate losers. This is the course I should
- choose. But if they wish rather to do what they can for themselves,
- they will, in that case, give me a great deal of pain, and make
- a great deal less of the funds. For, it is needless to say, that
- no security can make a man write books, and upon my doing so--I
- mean completing those in hand--depends the instant payment of a
- large sum. I have no reason to apprehend that any of the parties
- concerned are blind to their interest in this matter. I have had
- messages from all the banks, &c., offering what assistance they
- could give, so that I think my offer will be accepted. Indeed, as
- they cannot sell Abbotsford, owing to its being settled in Walter’s
- marriage contract, there can be little doubt they will adopt the
- only way which promises, with a little time, to give them full
- payment, and my life may, in the meanwhile, be insured. My present
- occupations completed, will enable me to lay down, in the course of
- the summer, at least £20,000 of good cash, which, if things had
- remained sound among the booksellers, would have put me on velvet.
-
- ‘The probable result being that we must be accommodated with the
- delay necessary, our plan is to sell the house and furniture
- in Castle Street, and Lady S. and Anne to come to Abbotsford,
- with a view of economising, while I take lodgings in Edinburgh,
- and work hard till the Session permits me to come out. All our
- farming operations must, of course, be stopped so soon as they can
- with least possible loss, and stock, &c., disposed of. In short,
- everything must be done to avoid outlay. At the same time, there
- can be no want of comfort. I must keep Peter and the horses for
- Lady Scott’s sake, though I make sacrifices in my own [case].
- Bogie, I think, we will also keep, but we must sell the produce of
- the garden. As for Tom, he and I go to the grave together. All idle
- horses, &c., must be dispensed with.
-
- ‘For you, my dear friend, we must part--that is, as laird and
- factor--and it rejoices me to think that your patience and
- endurance, which set me so good an example, are like to bring
- round better days. You never flattered my prosperity, and in my
- adversity it is not the least painful consideration that I cannot
- any longer be useful to you. But Kaeside, I hope, will still be
- your residence; and I will have the advantage of your company and
- advice, and probably your services as amanuensis. Observe, I am
- not in indigence, though no longer in affluence; and if I am to
- exert myself in the common behalf, I must have honourable and easy
- means of life, although it will be my inclination to observe the
- most strict privacy, both to save expense and also time; nor do we
- propose to see any one but yourself and the Fergusons.
-
- ‘I will be obliged to you to think over all these matters; also
- whether anything could be done in leasing the saw-mill, or Swanston
- working it for the public. I should like to keep him if I could. I
- imagine they must leave me my official income, which, indeed, is
- not liable to be attached. That will be £1600 a year, but there
- is Charles’s college expenses come to £300 at least. I can add,
- however, £200 or £300 without interrupting serious work. Three or
- four years of my favour with the public, if my health and life
- permit, will make me better off than ever I have been in my life. I
- hope it will not inconvenience the Miss Smiths to be out of their
- money for a little while. It is a most unexpected chance on my part.
-
- ‘All that I have said is for your consideration and making up your
- mind, for nothing can be certain till we hear what the persons
- principally concerned please to say. But then, if they accede to
- the trust, we will expect to have the pleasure of seeing you here
- with a list of stock and a scheme of what you think best to be
- done. My purpose is that everything shall be paid ready money from
- week to week.
-
- ‘I have £180 to send to you, and it is in my hands. Of course it
- will be paid, but I am unwilling to send it until I know the exact
- footing on which I am to stand. The gentleman whom I wish should be
- my trustee--or one of them--is John Gibson, the Duke’s factor.
-
- ‘Lady Scott’s spirits were affected at first, but she is getting
- better. For myself, I feel like the Eildon Hills--quite firm,
- though a little cloudy. I do not dislike the path which lies
- before me. I have seen all that society can shew, and enjoyed
- all that wealth can give me, and I am satisfied much is vanity,
- if not vexation of spirit. I am arranging my affairs, and mean to
- economise a good deal, and I will pay every man his due.--Yours
- truly,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.’
-
-There was some delusion in all this. Sir Walter never fully
-comprehended the state of his pecuniary affairs. It was one of his
-weaknesses, as James Ballantyne has said, to shrink too much from
-looking evil in the face, and he was apt to carry a great deal too far
-‘sufficient for the day is the evil thereof.’ Laidlaw mentions another
-small weakness: ‘he was always in alarm lest the servants should
-suspect he was in want of money.’ This, of course, was subsequent to
-the public declaration of the failure. Laidlaw went to Edinburgh to
-report to the trustees with respect to the best way of closing the farm
-business, and there met Sir Walter.
-
-‘He bears himself wonderfully. Miss Scott does not seem to be quite
-aware or sensible of anything but that they are to reside in retirement
-at Abbotsford. Lady Scott is rather unwilling to believe it, and does
-not see the necessity of such complete retrenchment as Sir Walter tells
-her is absolutely necessary. I have dined three times there, and there
-is not much difference in their manner. Sir W. is often merry, and so
-are they all, but still oftener silent. I think that if they were a
-week or two at Abbotsford they would be more happy than they have been
-for many a day. I am sure this would be the case with Sir Walter, for
-the weight of such an immense system of bills sent for his signature
-every now and then would be off his mind. I heard to-day that the Duke
-of Somerset and another English nobleman have written to Sir Walter,
-offering him £30,000 each, which he has firmly refused; and it is
-reported that the young Duke of Buccleuch has written him, offering to
-take the whole loss on himself, and to pay the interest of Sir Walter’s
-debt until he comes of age. If that is true, Sir Walter should accept
-the offer for the Duke’s own sake--for the glorious moral effect it
-would have upon the truly noble young fellow. But, apart from all
-this, cannot they set up Constable again? He has likewise been a real
-benefactor to his country, and then Sir Walter would, of course, be
-relieved.’
-
-The private grief of Scott was for a short time merged in what he
-considered an important public cause. The Liverpool Administration at
-this time proposed to change the Scotch system of currency, abolishing
-the small bank-notes, and assimilating the monetary system of Scotland
-to that of England. This project was assailed by the wit, humour,
-sound sense, and nationality of Scott, in a series of letters signed
-‘Malachi Malagrowther,’ and the letters of Malachi were as successful
-as those of Swift’s ‘M. B. Drapier’ concerning the currency of Ireland.
-The English government, in both cases, was compelled to abandon the
-denationalising scheme. Scott writes to Laidlaw, March 1, 1826:
-
-‘I enclose a couple of copies of a pamphlet on the currency, which may
-amuse you. The other copy is for Mr Craig, Galashiels. I have got off
-some bile from my stomach which has been disturbing me for some years.
-The Scotch have a fair opportunity now to give battle, if they dare
-avail themselves of it. One would think I had little to do, that I
-should go loose upon politics.’
-
-He had, in fact, entered upon his herculean task of paying off some
-£120,000 of debt by his pen! The _Life of Napoleon_ was commenced, and
-in the autumn the biographer set off for London and Paris to consult
-state-papers and gather information. He succeeded well in his errand.
-‘My collection of information,’ he writes, ‘goes on faster than I
-can take it in; but, then, it is so much coloured by passion and
-party-feeling, that it requires much scouring. I spent a day at the
-Royal Lodge at Windsor, which was a grand affair for John Nicholson, as
-he got an opportunity to see his Majesty.’ And the incident, no doubt,
-afforded as much gratification to the kind, indulgent master as it did
-to the servant.
-
-After the Abbotsford establishment was broken up, Laidlaw was some time
-engaged in cataloguing the large library of Scott of Harden, and at
-times visiting his brothers, sheep-farmers in Ross-shire. The following
-description of a scene he witnessed, a Highland Summer Sacrament out of
-doors, evinces no mean powers of observation and description:
-
-‘The people here gather in thousands to the sacraments, as they did
-in Ettrick in Boston’s time. We set out on Sunday to the communion
-at Ferrintosh, near Dingwall, to which the people resort from fifty
-miles’ distance. Macdonald, the minister who attracts this concourse
-of persons, was the son of a piper in Caithness (but from the Celtic
-population of the mountains there). He preached the sermon in the
-church in English, with a command of language and a justness of tone,
-action, and reasoning--keeping close to the pure metaphysics of
-Calvin--that I have seldom, if ever, heard surpassed. He had great
-energy on all points, but it never touched on extravagance. The
-Highland congregation sat in a _cleugh_, or dell, of a long, hollow,
-oval shape, bordered with hazel and birch and wild roses. It seemed
-to be formed for the purpose. We walked round the outside of the
-congregated thousands, and looked down on the glen from the upper end,
-and the scene was really indescribable. Two-thirds of those present
-were women, dressed mostly in large, high, wide muslin caps, the back
-part standing up like the head of a paper kite, and ornamented with
-ribbons. They had wrapped round them bright-coloured plaid shawls, the
-predominant hue being scarlet.
-
-‘It was a warm, breezy day, one of the most glorious in June. The
-place will be about half a mile from the Frith on the south side, and
-at an elevation of five hundred feet. Dingwall was just opposite at
-the foot of Ben Wyvis, still spotted with wreaths of snow. Over the
-town, with its modern castle, its church, and Lombardy poplars, we
-saw up the richly cultivated valley of Strathpeffer. The tufted rocks
-and woods of Brahan (Mackenzie of Seaforth) were a few miles to the
-south, and fields of wheat and potatoes, separated with hedgerows of
-trees, intervened. Further off, the high-peaked mountains that divide
-the county of Inverness from Ross-shire towered in the distance. I
-never saw such a scene. We sat down on the brae among the people,
-the long white communion tables being conspicuous at the bottom. The
-congregation began singing the psalm to one of the plaintive, wild old
-tunes that I am told are only sung in the Gaelic service. The people
-all sing, but in such an extended multitude they could not sing all
-together. They chanted, as it were, in masses or large groups. I can
-compare the singing to nothing earthly, except it be imagining what
-would be the effect of a gigantic and tremendous Æolian harp with
-hundreds of strings! There was no resisting the impression. After
-coming a little to myself, I went and paced the length and breadth of
-the amphitheatre, taking averages, and carefully noting, as well as I
-could, how the people were sitting together, and I could not, in this
-way, make them less than 9500, besides those in the church, amounting
-perhaps to 1500. Most of the gentlemen of the neighbourhood, with their
-families, were there. I enjoyed the scene as something perfect in its
-way, and of rare beauty and excellence--like Melrose Abbey under a fine
-light, or the back of old Edinburgh during an illumination, or the Loch
-of the Lowes in a fine calm July evening, five minutes after sunset!’
-
-The following brief and pleasant note, without date, must be referred
-to 1827, as it was in June of that year that the _Life of Napoleon_ was
-published:
-
- ‘MY DEAR MR LAIDLAW--I would be happy if you would come down
- at _kail-time_ to-day. _Napoleon_ (6000 copies) is sold for
- £11,000.--Yours truly,
-
- W. S.
-
- ‘_SUNDAY._’
-
-Mr Gibson, W.S., in his _Reminiscences of Sir Walter Scott_ (1871),
-says of the transactions of this period: ‘Of _Woodstock_, 9850 copies
-were sold for £9500; and of the _Life of Napoleon_, 8000 copies were
-sold for £18,200, and these sums, with some other funds realised, were
-speedily divided amongst the creditors.’ Under the date of August 1827,
-Sir Walter writes in the following affectionate strain:
-
-‘Your leaving Kaeside makes a most melancholy blank to us. You, Mrs
-Laidlaw, and the bairns, were objects we met with so much pleasure,
-that it is painful to think of strangers being there. But they do
-not deserve good weather who cannot endure the bad, and so I would
-“set a stout heart to a stey” [steep] “brae;” yet I think the loss of
-our walks, plans, discussions, and debates, does not make the least
-privation that I experience from the loss of world’s gear. But, _sursum
-corda_, and we shall have many happy days yet, and spend some of them
-together. I expect Walter and Jane, and then our long-separated family
-will be all together in peace and happiness. I hope Mrs Laidlaw and
-you will come down and spend a few days with us, and revisit your old
-haunts. I miss you terribly at this moment, being engaged in writing a
-planting article for the _Quarterly_, and not having patience to make
-some necessary calculations.’
-
-Mr Laidlaw has written on the back of the communication: ‘This letter
-lies in the drawer in which the unfinished manuscript of _Waverley_ was
-found, amongst fishing-tackle, &c. which yet remain. I got the desk as
-a present from Sir Walter.’
-
-The death, in the autumn of 1829, of faithful Tom Purdie--forester,
-henchman, and humble friend--was a heavy blow to Sir Walter, then fast
-sinking in vigour and alacrity. The proverbial difficulty of obtaining
-a precisely exact account of any contemporary event, even from parties
-most closely connected with it, is illustrated in this case. Lockhart
-reports the death as follows:
-
-‘Thomas Purdie leaned his head one evening on the table, and dropped
-asleep. This was nothing uncommon in a hard-working man; and his family
-went and came about him for several hours, without taking any notice.
-When supper came, they tried to awaken him, and found that life had
-been for some time extinct.’
-
-Scott’s account is different:
-
- ‘MY DEAR WILLIE--I write to tell you the shocking news of poor
- Tom Purdie’s death, by which I have been greatly affected. He had
- complained, or rather spoken, of a sore throat; and the day before
- yesterday, as it came on a shower of rain, I wanted him to walk
- fast on to Abbotsford before me, but you know well how impossible
- that was. He took some jelly, or trifle of that kind, but made no
- complaint. This morning he rose from bed as usual, and sat down
- by the table with his head on his hand; and when his daughter
- spoke to him, life had passed away without a sigh or groan. Poor
- fellow! There is a heart cold that loved me well, and, I am sure,
- thought of my interest more than his own. I have seldom been so
- much shocked. I wish you would take a ride down and pass the night.
- There is much I have to say, and this loss adds to my wish to see
- you. We dine at four. The day is indifferent, but the sooner the
- better.--Yours very truly,
-
- WALTER SCOTT.
-
- ‘ABBOTSFORD, _31st October_.’
-
-A few days afterwards (November 5), Laidlaw thus relates the story:
-
-‘Tom Purdie, poor fellow! died on Friday night or Saturday morning. He
-had fallen asleep with his head on his hands resting on the table, his
-usual practice. Margaret and Mary’ [his wife and daughter] ‘left him
-to go to bed when he should awaken; and Margaret found him exactly in
-the same situation when she rose, but dead, cold, and stiff. Sir Walter
-wrote to me, in great distress, to come down. I did so on Sunday, and
-on Tuesday I went to poor Tom’s funeral. Sir Walter had my pony put
-in again, and made me stay all day. He was in very great distress
-about Tom, and will miss him continually, and in many ways that come
-nearest to him. Sir Walter wants us to return to Kaeside at Whitsunday.
-_Kindness of heart is positively the reigning quality of Sir Walter’s
-character!_’
-
-A noble eulogium, and pronounced by one better qualified, perhaps, than
-any of his contemporaries, to form the opinion so expressed. Of the
-greatest author of his age it might truly be said:
-
- ‘His highest honours to the heart belong.’
-
-William Laidlaw _did_ return to Kaeside. At Whitsuntide 1830, he
-dropped anchor safely at his old roadstead, which had been suitably
-prepared for his reception. But before doing so, we find him putting in
-a kind word for the Ettrick Shepherd, who was in difficulties. In March
-1830, Laidlaw wrote to Sir Walter:
-
-‘I had your letter from Bowhill, and was much gratified to learn that
-you and Miss Scott had passed so much time with the duke and duchess.
-I have no doubt that His Grace would bring our friend the Shepherd
-and his concerns before you, and I am anxious to know if it is the
-duke’s intention to render him a little more comfortable at Altrive.
-You know that Hogg built the cottage there, at his own expense (with
-an allowance of wood, perhaps), and he likewise built a considerable
-addition to Mount Benger, and a barn--all which cost him a great sum
-of money, quite disproportionate to a holding of £7 a year, even at a
-nominal rent. The cottage was intended for a bachelor’s abode, and is
-very inadequate to what is now required by the bard’s family; and I see
-that if His Grace does not think of giving him some allowance as an
-addition, it will most likely banish him from the district with which
-his poetry and feeling are so closely associated. I mention all this
-because I have observed that there is a prejudice against him among the
-sub-agents since Christie left the service, or rather, since the late
-duke’s death. One of them said to me, when I mentioned Hogg’s genius
-and amiable character, _Cui bono?_ I, too, say, _Cui bono?_ What is the
-use of all his poetry, and the rest? Now, from R.’s usage of him, there
-is every reason to suspect that he is a _cui bono_ man too, and Hogg
-stands a bad chance among them, and I believe the duke knows nothing
-about the truth of the matter.’
-
-Nothing was done. ‘As to the success of an application to the duke,’
-writes Scott, ‘I am doubtful. The duke seemed to have made up his mind
-on the subject, and I saw no chance of being of service.’ Literature
-and the journey to London did something for the Shepherd. He wrote and
-struggled on at Altrive till November 1835, when the ‘world’s poor
-strife’ was over, and he sank to rest.
-
-Among the dearest and most valued of all the visitors at Abbotsford
-were the Fergusons of Huntly Burn. Here is a kindly note sent to
-Kaeside:
-
- ‘Miss Ferrier is to be at Abbotsford this day, being Tuesday, 20th
- October’ [1829], ‘and Mr Wilkie is to be there on Thursday; so, if
- you come, you will have painting, poetry, history, and music--as
- Miss Wilkie is a musician. In short, all the Muses will be there.
- If this does not tempt you, I don’t know what will.--Yours truly,
-
- ISABELLA FERGUSON.’
-
-Ill-health and political agitation brought darker days to Abbotsford.
-The Reform Bill was Sir Walter’s _bête noire_. The neighbouring Tory
-lairds, proud of his co-operation, induced him to join in their local
-movement against the bill, and this still further aggravated his morbid
-feeling. In March 1831, he was present at a meeting of the freeholders
-of Roxburgh, held at Jedburgh, to pass resolutions against the Reform
-Bill. He was dragged to the meeting by the young Duke of Buccleuch and
-Mr Henry Scott of Harden, contrary to his prior resolution, and his
-promise to Miss Scott; for his health was then much shattered. ‘He
-made a confused imaginative speech,’ says Laidlaw, ‘which was full of
-evil forebodings and mistaken views. The people who were auditors,
-in proportion to their love and reverence for him, felt disappointed
-and sore, and, like himself, were carried away by their temporary
-chagrin, to the great regret of the country around.’ At the election in
-Jedburgh, Sir Walter was hooted at, and hissed, and saluted with cries
-of ‘Burke Sir Walter!’ Laidlaw adds: ‘The same people, a few weeks
-afterwards, when Mr Oliver, the sheriff of Roxburgh, was foolishly
-swearing in constables at Melrose, said boldly they need not bring them
-to fight against reform, for they would fight for it; but if any one
-meddled with Sir Walter Scott, they would fight for him.’ Amidst all
-the excitement of politics, and in sinking health, Sir Walter continued
-to write, or rather to dictate, and worked steadily at his novel of
-_Count Robert of Paris_.
-
-‘I am now writing as amanuensis for Sir Walter,’ said Laidlaw; ‘and
-have the satisfaction of finding that I am of essential service to him,
-as he was attacked with chilblains on his hands to such a degree as to
-unfit him for writing long unless with great pain. We go on with almost
-as great spirit as when he dictated _Ivanhoe_. He has become a good
-deal lamer, which prevents him from taking his usual walks; and he gets
-upon a pony with great difficulty. But of late he has been in excellent
-spirits. His memory seems to be as good as ever; at least, it is far
-beyond that of other people. I come down at seven o’clock, and write
-until nine; we are at it again before ten, and continue until one. He
-is impatient and miserable when not employed.’
-
-About this time--the spring of 1831--Joanna Baillie published a thin
-volume of selections from the New Testament ‘regarding the nature and
-dignity of Jesus Christ.’ The tendency of the work was Socinian, or
-at least Arian; and Scott was indignant that his friend should have
-meddled with such a subject. ‘What had _she_ to do with questions of
-that sort?’ He refused to add the book to his library, and gave it to
-Laidlaw. One day Sir Walter was loud in praise of one of the workmen
-engaged at Abbotsford, a native of the neighbouring village of Darnick.
-‘Yes,’ added Laidlaw; ‘and do you know, Sir Walter, he is an excellent
-Burgher preacher.’[11] ‘A preacher, d--n him!’ exclaimed Scott
-jocularly, and wheeling round as if to whistle the Burgher preacher
-down the wind.
-
-In a very manly and interesting letter, addressed to Lockhart (of which
-he had kept a copy), Laidlaw enters into further particulars concerning
-the studies at Abbotsford:
-
-‘Sir Walter is very greatly better. He has given up smoking, and takes
-porridge to his supper instead of the long and hearty pull of brown
-stout. He is full of jokes and glee. Were it possible to prevail upon
-him to wear a greatcoat when he rides out to the hills in a north-west
-wind, and to take champagne and water instead of a monstrous tumbler
-of strong ale after tea, I am positive--and so are the regular medical
-people--that he would get right again. He drinks no wine, and has
-been advised to take gin-toddy instead of whisky. He has given up the
-regular dram out of a _quaich_, but takes a sly taste of the excellent
-hollands before he _coups_ it into the tumbler, thereby satisfying
-his conscience, no doubt, by reducing it to the half-glass which, it
-seems, is the Abercromby law as to strong liquors. Don’t you mind the
-style of his letters; that is all, or nearly all, humbug. What he
-dictates of _Robert of Paris_ is, much of it, as good as anything he
-ever wrote. He does not go on so fast; but I do not see that he is
-much more apt to make blunders--that is, to let his imagination get
-ahead of his speech--than when he wrote _Ivanhoe_. The worst business
-was that accursed nonsensical petition in the name of the magistrates,
-justices of the peace, and freeholders of the extensive, influential,
-and populous county of Selkirk! We were more than three days at it.
-At the beginning of the third day, he walked backwards and forwards,
-enunciating the half-sentences with a deep and awful voice, his
-eyebrows seemingly more shaggy than ever, and his eyes more fierce and
-glaring--altogether, like the royal beast in his cage! It suddenly came
-over me, as politics was always Sir Walter’s weak point, that he was
-crazy, and that I should have to come down to Abbotsford, and write
-on and away at the petition until the crack of doom! I was seized at
-the same moment with an inclination, almost uncontrollable, to burst
-into laughter. But seriously, you know, as well as anybody, his great
-excitability on political matters; and I must say it surprised me not a
-little that a person of your sagacity and acuteness should have thought
-of writing him upon politics at all, the more, because I believe that
-if a magpie were to come and chatter politics, or even that body,
-Lord M., he would believe all they said, if they spoke of change, and
-danger, and rumours of war--_belli servilis_ more than all. (May I
-speak and live!) I felt inclined to doubt whether you had not _gane
-gyte_’ [gone crazy] ‘yourself! Could you not have sent him literary
-chit-chat and amusing anecdotes from London, which would have been the
-very thing for him, as it was of great consequence that his mind should
-be kept calm and cheerful?’
-
-Mental disease and physical infirmity continued to increase, and a
-winter at Naples, with complete abstinence from literary labour, was
-prescribed. Wordsworth prayed for favouring gales:
-
- ‘Be true,
- Ye winds of ocean, and the midland sea,
- Wafting your charge to soft Parthenope!’
-
-Alas! it was all in vain. Before quitting the country, Sir Walter gave
-Laidlaw a mandate, or letter of authority, to represent him at county
-meetings, and a paper of directions as to keeping the house, the books,
-and garden in order. Two items are worth quoting as characteristic:
-
-‘The dogs to be taken care of, especially to shut them up separately
-when there is anything to quarrel about.
-
-‘When Mr Laidlaw thinks it will be well taken, to consult Mr Nicol
-Milne, and not to stop young Mr Nicol when shooting on our side of the
-hedge.’
-
-Having made these arrangements, the invalid thought of taking a
-farewell look of Melrose Abbey. One morning Mr Laidlaw’s family were
-startled to see Sir Walter approaching Kaeside, feeble, and wearing
-his nightcap, which apparently he had forgotten to exchange for a
-hat. No notice was taken of the circumstance. After the usual kindly
-salutations, he said, with a tremulous voice, that he had come to take
-a last look of the abbey. He proceeded to an elevated point commanding
-a view of the spot, and after gazing long and anxiously down on the
-town and abbey, he said slowly: ‘It is a venerable ruin!’ and returned
-to Abbotsford.
-
-The government, as is well known, placed a frigate at his disposal
-for the voyage to the Mediterranean. The reception at Portsmouth, and
-the arrangements on board the _Barham_, were highly gratifying to Sir
-Walter and his family. ‘The ship is magnificent,’ writes Mrs Lockhart,
-‘and carries four hundred and eighty men. The rooms are excellent, and
-everything that could be thought of for papa’s comfort, in every way,
-has been done.’ Hopes of his ultimate recovery were entertained. Cadell
-writes, December 29, 1831: ‘I have two long letters from Sir Walter,
-one dated “Off Trafalgar, 14th November,” and finished at Malta on the
-23d. He is in great glee, and must be much better. He has made some
-progress with a new novel, _The Siege of Malta_.’ At the date of the
-second letter, he had got through thirty of his own pages. Major Scott
-arrived from Naples on the 1st of April 1832, and brought no very
-flattering tidings. ‘From his talk,’ writes Lockhart, ‘and from a huge
-bundle of letters which he conveyed, we draw one inference--namely,
-that though the bodily strength of your friend has improved since he
-left us, there has been rather, if anything, a further dislocation and
-prostration of the better part. Cadell is here, and he and I and the
-major spent a sad enough evening over the budget.’ All hope was soon
-dispelled. The hurried journey home from Italy induced another attack
-of apoplexy. He was struck while in the steamboat on the Rhine at
-Cologne, and fell into Miss Scott’s arms. Nicholson bled him instantly,
-and restored animation. They pushed on for Rotterdam, and got there
-just as the London boat was setting off for England. Laidlaw writes to
-a friend:
-
-‘You will see by the newspapers that Sir Walter is coming home to die,
-I fear, or worse. It has come to what I always feared since he told
-me that Mr Cadell had half the proceeds of the great new edition.
-Sir Walter’s permanent income is, as you know, reduced salary, £840;
-sheriffdom, £300--total, £1140. No person can live at Abbotsford, and
-keep it up, in a country-gentlemanly way, under £2000 a year, for it
-will take nearly £1200 for servants, taxes, coals, garden, horses,
-&c. The run of strangers was immense. Sir Walter wrote for Keepsakes,
-Reviews, &c., and kept things going; but of late this stream dried up,
-and he has been confused in his notions of money matters. He is much
-involved, and will not be able to draw any more than his salaries. He
-has all this winter taken it into his head that his debts are paid
-off, and this was from catching at an idea of Cadell’s of borrowing
-money and paying the creditors all except the interest. He will know
-the truth when he comes to London, and this, with the winter and cold
-weather, will kill him. How can a man with his sensibility, used
-for thirty years to the strongest excitement, and living on popular
-applause, in luxury, glitter, and show, survive when all is gone, and
-nothing but ruin, coldness, and darkness remain?’
-
-Deprived of the use of his right arm and side, weak and depressed, Sir
-Walter reached London on the evening of the 13th of June 1832. Five
-days later, Cadell writes: ‘Our poor friend is still alive, but very
-ill. He took leave of his children to-day, very clearly and distinctly.
-In the morning, he mistook Lockhart for me; and it was some time before
-he could be put right. The doctors doubt his getting over to-night.’ He
-rallied, however, and next month was conveyed to Abbotsford. Laidlaw’s
-account of Sir Walter’s arrival (written the day after) differs in some
-particulars from the narrative of Lockhart--one of the most affecting
-narratives in the language.
-
-‘I was at the door when he’ [Sir Walter], ‘Mr and Mrs Lockhart, and
-Miss Scott arrived. They said he would not know me. He was in a sort
-of long carriage that opened at the back. He had an uncommon stupid
-look, staring straight before him; and assuredly he did not know
-where he was. It was very dismal. I began to feel myself agitated in
-spite of all my resolution. Lockhart ordered away the ladies; and two
-servants, in perfect silence, lifted him out, and carried him into
-the dining-room. I followed, of course. They had placed him in a low
-arm-chair, where he reclined. Mrs Lockhart made a sign for me to step
-forward to see if he would recognise me. She said: “Mr Laidlaw, papa.”
-He raised his eyes a little, and when he caught mine, he started, and
-exclaimed: “Good God, Mr Laidlaw! I have thought of you a thousand
-times!” and he held out his hand. They were all very much surprised;
-and it being quite unexpected, I was much affected. He was put to bed.
-I had gone into one of the empty rooms, and some little time after
-Nicholson came to tell me that Sir Walter wished to see me. He spoke
-a little confusedly, but inquired if the people were suffering any
-hardship, if they were satisfied, &c. I had written to him that I had
-paid off nine or ten of the men after he had gone away last year. I did
-not remain long.
-
-‘I understand Sir Walter’s mind has been wandering from one dream
-to another; but now and then breaking through the cloud that hangs
-over it, and surprising his attendants with glimpses of his original
-intellect. Alas, alas! However, he has rested better than for some
-time past, and was wheeled into the library’ [July 12], ‘and seemed
-gratified. When I called about eleven o’clock, he was sound asleep.’
-
-A fortnight later, Laidlaw writes:
-
-‘Sir Walter is generally collected in the morning, and very restless
-and troublesome to his daughters during the afternoon and night; often
-raving, but always quiet, and generally shewing command of himself when
-Lockhart comes in. Sometimes he seemed gratified at being at home, and
-even once or twice made pertinent quotations, and spoke of books, &c.
-Until yesterday, he always knew me, and I clearly saw he had then a
-distressing desire to speak to me. I perceived that although he might
-appear to feel little pain, he was really suffering a great deal,
-partly from a sense of his situation and inaction, but chiefly from the
-overpowering cloud and weight upon his great intellect. Yesterday,
-he was apparently unconscious; he could not speak, but was wheeled
-into the library for awhile. I never witnessed a more moving or more
-melancholy sight. Once, when Lockhart spoke of his restlessness, he
-replied: “There will be rest in the grave.”’
-
-One delusion under which the illustrious sufferer laboured was
-preparing Abbotsford for the reception of the Duke of Wellington.
-Another was, his personation of the character of a Scottish judge
-trying his own daughters. In the course of the latter, there were
-painful bursts of violence and excitement. ‘It is strange,’ said
-Laidlaw, ‘that he never refers to any of his works or literary plans.’
-The truth is, he had thrown them off, to use an expression of his own,
-with ‘an effort as spontaneous as that of a tree resigning its leaves
-to the wind,’ and they soon passed from his memory. Besides, he had,
-when in health, always practised a modest reticence respecting his
-works, which had become habitual. The following points to the end of
-the struggle:
-
- ‘Poor papa still lingers, although in the most hopeless state of
- mind and body. For this week past, the doctor has taken leave every
- day, saying he could not survive the twenty-four hours; and to-day,
- he says the pulse is weaker and worse than ever it has been, and
- that his living is almost a miracle. How thankful we shall be when
- it pleases God he is at rest, for a more complete aberration of
- mind never was before; and he even now is so violent we sometimes
- dare not go within reach of his hand. And the miserable scenes we
- have witnessed before his strength was reduced as it now is! One
- great comfort has been, all suffering, so far as we can judge,
- mental or bodily, has been spared, and that for two months past he
- has not for an instant been aware of his situation. My brothers
- were sent for, and have been here for two days. When all is over,
- Anne and I and the children will leave this now miserable place for
- ever. Lockhart is obliged to go straight to London, but we mean
- to spend a couple of weeks with his relations in Lanarkshire, and
- perhaps take Rokeby in our way up. We are both much better than you
- would expect under such sad circumstances. Excuse this miserable
- scrawl; I hardly know what I write....
-
- C. SOPHIA LOCKHART.
-
- ‘ABBOTSFORD, _Sunday’ [September 16, 1832]_.[12]
-
-On the day succeeding that on which this melancholy letter would seem
-to have been written, Sir Walter had a brief interval of consciousness,
-as described by Lockhart, although the biographer would appear to
-have misdated the arrival of the sons of the poet. A few more days
-terminated the struggle; Sir Walter died on the 21st of September. In
-October, Laidlaw notes that Major Scott had given him, accompanied with
-a most gratifying letter, the locket which Sir Walter constantly wore
-about his neck. This was presented to Sir Walter by Major Scott and his
-wife (inscribed ‘From Walter and Jane’) on the day of their marriage,
-and it contained some of the hair of each. Major Scott enclosed as
-much of Sir Walter’s hair as would supply the place of theirs, which
-he wished to be taken out of the locket. ‘I shall try to find room for
-all,’ said Mr Laidlaw; and he did find room, interlacing the various
-hairs, and wearing the invaluable jewel to his dying day. ‘What a
-change the loss of Abbotsford must be to the Fergusons and you all!’
-writes Mrs Lockhart, ‘the gentle Sophia,’ as Miss Martineau describes
-the fair sufferer. ‘It breaks my heart when I think of the silence and
-desolation that now reign there. They talk of a monument! God knows
-papa needs no monument; he has left behind him that which won’t pass
-away. But if the people of Melrose do anything, I think a great cairn
-on one of the hills would be what he would have chosen himself.’ Let
-the hills themselves suffice!
-
- ‘A mightier monument command
- The mountains of his native land.’[13]
-
-After the death of his chief, Mr Laidlaw removed to the county of Ross,
-and was successively factor on the estates of Seaforth and Balnagown.
-His health failing, he went to reside with his brother, Mr James
-Laidlaw, sheep-farmer at Contin, also in Ross-shire, and there he died
-May 18, 1845. His remains were interred in the churchyard of Contin,
-a retired spot under the shade of Tor Achilty, one of the loftiest
-and most picturesque of the Ross-shire mountains, and amidst the most
-enchanting Highland scenery. The lord of the manor, Sir George S.
-Mackenzie of Coul, Bart., erected a tomb, with a marble tablet, to his
-memory.
-
-Mr Laidlaw cherished with religious care all his memorials of
-Abbotsford, where, indeed, his heart may be said to have remained
-till its last pulsation. The desk in which the first manuscript of
-_Waverley_ was deposited stood in his room; the works inscribed and
-presented by the author were carefully ranged on his shelves; the
-letters he had received from him were treasured up; the pens with
-which _Ivanhoe_ was written were laid past, and kept as a sacred
-thing; but above all he valued the brooch which was round the neck of
-Scott when he died. That most interesting ornament Mr Laidlaw wore
-while a trace of sensibility remained, and it has descended to another
-generation--one of the most precious of the personal _reliquiæ_ of a
-splendid but melancholy friendship.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The biographer of Scott, John Gibson Lockhart, was not a social or
-clubable man. He was fastidious and reserved, silent in mixed company
-(he heard with only one ear, and was too proud to acknowledge it),
-and was inveterately prone to satire, so that he earned for himself
-the appellation of ‘The Scorpion,’ and he was a victim to dyspepsia,
-which, perhaps, like charity, ought to cover a multitude of sins.
-His fine acute intellect and classic taste were often obscured and
-his better sympathies chilled by pain and languor. To a few friends,
-however, Lockhart at times unbosomed himself. With them his cold,
-sarcastic, haughty manner melted away--at least for a season--and
-in those genial hours he was the most confiding and delightful of
-companions. As shewing the better nature and higher feelings of the
-man, we are tempted to subjoin one of his letters to William Laidlaw,
-in which he speaks of the sense of duty and responsibility under which
-he wrote the Memoirs of Scott--a work which, with all its faults, is
-unquestionably the best biography since Boswell’s _Life of Johnson_.
-There is great tenderness in the following letter; and the picture
-which the writer draws of his happy fireside contrasts painfully with
-his latter years, when broken health, a desolate hearth, and feelings
-lacerated by paternal troubles and anxieties, might have made him join
-in that lamentation of the ancient British bard which he applied to the
-old age of Thomas Campbell:
-
- ‘God hath provided unpleasant things for me;
- Dead is Morgeneu, dead is Mordav,
- Dead is Morien, dead are those I love.’[14]
-
-Few letters of Lockhart’s are so generally interesting or so valuable,
-biographically, as the following:
-
- ‘LONDON, _January 19, 1837_.
-
- ‘MY DEAR LAIDLAW--I received yesterday your letter and a very
- munificent donation of ptarmigan, for both which accept my best
- thanks. They were both welcome as remembrancers of Scotland,
- of old days, and of your kindness and affection, of which last,
- though I am the worst of correspondents, neither I nor my wife are
- ever forgetful. The account you give of your situation at present
- is, considering how the world wags, not unsatisfactory. Would it
- were possible to find myself placed in something of a similar
- locality, and with the means of enjoying the country by day and my
- books at night, without the necessity of dividing most of my time
- between the labours of the desk--mere drudge-labours mostly--and
- the harassing turmoil of worldly society, for which I never had
- much, and now-a-days have rarely indeed any, relish! But my wife
- and children bind me to the bit, and I am well pleased with the
- fetters. Walter is now a tall and very handsome boy of near eleven
- years; Charlotte, a very winsome gipsy of eight--both intelligent
- in the extreme, and both, notwithstanding all possible spoiling,
- as simple, natural, and unselfish as if they had been bred on a
- hillside and in a family of twelve. Sophia is your old friend--fat,
- fair, and by-and-by to be forty, which I now am, and over, God
- bless the mark! but though I think I am wiser, at least more sober,
- neither richer nor more likely to be rich than I was in the days of
- Chiefswood and Kaeside--after all, _our_ best days, I still believe.
-
- ‘Politics, over which we used sometimes to dispute, I have quite
- forsworn. I have satisfied myself that the age of Toryism is by
- for ever; and the business of a party which can in reason propose
- to itself nothing but a defensive attitude, without hope either of
- plunder or honour, seems to me to have few claims on those who,
- when it was in power, never were permitted to share any of the
- advantages it so lavishly bestowed on fools and knaves. So I am a
- very tranquil and indifferent observer.
-
- ‘Perhaps, however, much of this equanimity as to passing affairs
- has arisen from the call which has been made on me to live in
- the past, bestowing for so many months all the time I could
- command, and all the care I have had really any heart in, upon
- the manuscript remains of our dear friend. I am glad that Cadell
- and the few others who have seen what I have done with these are
- pleased, but I assure you none of them can think more lightly of
- my own part in the matter than I do myself. My sole object is to
- do him justice, or rather to let him do himself justice, by so
- contriving it that he shall be as far as possible, from first to
- last, his own historiographer; and I have therefore willingly
- expended the time that would have sufficed for writing a dozen
- books on what will be no more than the compilation of one. A stern
- sense of duty--that kind of sense of it which is combined with the
- feeling of his actual presence in a serene state of elevation above
- all terrestrial and temporary views--will induce me to touch the
- few darker points in his life and character as freely as the others
- which were so predominant; and my chief anxiety on the appearance
- of the book will be, not to hear what is said by the world, but
- what is _thought_ by you and the few others who can really compare
- the representation as a whole with the facts of the case. I shall,
- therefore, desire Cadell to send you the volumes as they are
- printed, though long before publication, in the confidence that
- they will be kept sacred, while unpublished, to yourself and your
- own household; and if you can give me encouragement on seeing the
- first and second, now I think nearly out of the printer’s hands,
- it will be very serviceable to me in the completion of the others.
- I have waived all my own notions as to the manner of publication,
- &c., in deference to the bookseller,[15] who is still so largely
- our creditor, and, I am grieved to add, will probably continue to
- be so for many years to come.
-
- ‘Your letters of the closing period I wish you would send to me;
- and of these I am sure some use, and some good use, may be made, as
- of those addressed to myself at the same time, which all, however
- melancholy to compare with those of the better day, have traces of
- the man. Out of these confused and painful scraps I think I can
- contrive to put together a picture that will be highly touching of
- a great mind shattered, but never degraded, and always to the last
- noble, as his heart continued pure and warm as long as it could
- beat.--Ever affectionately yours,
-
- J. G. LOCKHART.’
-
-We are tempted to add a short extract from another letter of
-Lockhart’s, because it mentions a pleasing incident in the life of the
-second Sir Walter Scott. He writes, 25th May 1843, that Major Scott and
-his wife enjoyed perfect health in India, and he adds: ‘He (Sir W. S.)
-tells me that hearing a Highland battalion was to pass about fifty
-miles off from his station (Bangalore), he rode that distance one day,
-and back the next, merely to hear the _skirl_ of the pipes! No doubt
-there would be a jolly mess for his reception besides; but I could not
-but be pleased with the touch of the “auld man.”’
-
-
- LUCY’S FLITTIN’.
-
- ‘’Twas when the wan leaf frae the birk-tree was fa’in,
- And Martinmas dowie had wound up the year,
- That Lucy row’d up her wee kist wi’ her a’ in ’t,
- And left her auld master and neebours sae dear.
-
- For Lucy had serv’d i’ the Glen[16] a’ the simmer;
- She cam there afore the bloom cam on the pea;[17]
- An orphan was she, an’ they had been gude till her;
- Sure that was the thing brought the tear to her ee.
-
- She gaed by the stable, where Jamie was stan’in’,
- Right sair was his kind heart her flittin’ to see;
- Fare ye weel, Lucy! quo’ Jamie, and ran in--
- The gatherin’ tears trickled fast frae her ee.
-
- As down the burn-side she gaed slow wi’ her flittin’,
- Fare ye weel, Lucy! was ilka bird’s sang;
- She heard the craw sayin ’t, high on the tree sittin’,
- And Robin was chirpin ’t the brown leaves amang.
-
- O what is’t that pits my puir heart in a flutter?
- And what gars the tears come sae fast to my ee?
- If I wasna ettled to be ony better,
- Then what gars me wish ony better to be?
-
- I ’m just like a lammie that loses its mither,
- Nae mither nor frien’ the poor lammie can see;
- I fear I hae tint my bit heart a’ thegither;
- Nae wonder the tear fa’s sae fast frae my ee.
-
- Wi’ the rest o’ my claes, I hae row’d up the ribbon,
- The bonnie blue ribbon that Jamie gae me;
- Yestreen, when he gae me ’t, and saw I was sabbin’,
- I’ll never forget the wae blink o’ his ee.
-
- Though now he said naething but Fare ye weel, Lucy!
- It made me I neither could speak, hear, nor see;
- He couldna say mair but just Fare ye weel, Lucy!
- Yet that I will mind till the day that I dee.
-
- The lamb likes the gowan wi’ dew when it’s droukit;
- The hare likes the brake and the braird on the lea;
- But Lucy likes Jamie;--she turn’d, and she lookit;
- She thought the dear place she wad never mair see!’
-
-In publishing the ballad, Hogg added the following verse, in order,
-as he said, to _complete the story_; but it will be felt, we think,
-that he has marred the pathetic simplicity of the original, which was
-complete enough as a picture of the flittin’:
-
- ‘Ah, weel may young Jamie gang dowie and cheerless,
- And weel may he greet on the bank o’ the burn!
- His bonnie sweet Lucy, sae gentle and peerless,
- Lies cauld in her grave, and will never return.’
-
-Lockhart has truly characterised Laidlaw’s ballad as ‘a simple and
-pathetic picture of a poor Ettrick maiden’s feelings in leaving a
-service where she had been happy,’ and he adds that it has ‘long been
-and must ever be a favourite with all who understand the delicacies
-of the Scottish dialect, and the manners of the district in which the
-scene is laid.’ A no less flattering or discriminating notice had
-been previously given by a critic in the _Edinburgh Review_, who, in
-quoting _one_ song from the four volumes of Allan Cunningham’s _Songs
-of Scotland, Ancient and Modern_, selected Laidlaw’s ‘simple ditty’ as
-a ‘fair example of the lowly pathetic’ which would ‘go to the heart of
-many a village-bred Scotchman in remote regions and all conditions of
-society.’
-
-
- THE END.
-
-
- Edinburgh:
- Printed by W. & R. Chambers.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] This print, glazed in a black frame, was presented by Sir Adam
-Ferguson to my brother Robert, and it is now in my possession.--W. C.
-
-[2] [For a number of years after the decease of Sir Walter, there were
-many small floating anecdotes and memorabilia of his habits, and the
-happy way in which he would make some pleasantry out of very ordinary
-occurrences. Two or three instances occur to recollection.--One
-day, when walking along Princes Street, Edinburgh, my brother, who
-accompanied him, made the remark that he was evidently well known,
-for many persons looked back at him on passing. ‘Oh, ay, ay,’ replied
-Scott jocosely; ‘more know Tom Fool than Tom Fool knows!’--The late Mr
-Thomas Tegg, publisher, Cheapside, having, on the occasion of visiting
-Scotland, ventured with a friend to call on Sir Walter at Abbotsford,
-was somewhat doubtful of his reception, for he had published a small
-book in doggerel verse, designed to bring Scott’s muse into ridicule.
-He was speedily relieved of his apprehensions. ‘I am sorry to say,’
-said Tegg apologetically, ‘that I happen to be the publisher of
-_Jokeby, a Burlesque on Rokeby_.’ ‘Glad to see you, Mr Tegg,’ replied
-Sir Walter; ‘the more jokes the better!’--Mrs John Ballantyne, in
-her reminiscences of Scott, states that, besides his story-telling
-manner, he had another quite distinct, in which he was accustomed to
-utter any snatch of poetry, such as a verse of a Border ballad, or a
-simple but touching popular rhyme. ‘I can never forget,’ she says,
-‘the awe-striking solemnity with which he pronounced an elegiac stanza
-inscribed on a tombstone in Melrose Abbey:
-
- “Earth walketh on the earth
- Glistering like gold;
- Earth goeth to the earth
- Sooner than it wold.
- Earth buildeth on the earth
- Palaces and towers;
- Earth sayeth to the earth,
- All shall be ours.”’
-
---On the occasion of an excursion with a friend to Dumfriesshire and
-Galloway, Scott’s money happened to run out; and he borrowed from his
-companion a pound-note at Tinwald Manse, and two pounds at the inn of
-Beattock Bridge. The payment of the loan became the subject of a bit
-of pleasantry. Returning home, he enclosed three pounds to his friend,
-with the following lines:
-
- ‘One at Tinwald Manse, and two at Beattock Brig,
- That makes three, if Cocker’s worth a fig;
- Borrow while you may, pay when you can,
- And at the last you’ll die an honest man!’]
-
-
-[3]
-
- ‘From Soldan Turk I this Forest wan
- When the king and his men was not to see.’
-
-In the copy printed in the _Border Minstrelsy_, this is _Soudron_--i.
-e., Southron or English, which I have no doubt is the proper
-reading.--_Aytoun._
-
-[4] The Shepherd’s conjecture proved correct. Mr Aytoun procured his
-copy of the ballad from the charter-chest at Philiphaugh. The copy in
-the _Border Minstrelsy_ was printed from one found among the papers of
-Mrs Cockburn, authoress of _The Flowers of the Forest_.
-
-[5] MS. notes by W. Laidlaw. Professor Aytoun says that one cause of
-his doubts as to the antiquity of _Auld Maitland_ was that it wanted
-a clear intelligible story and main plot, so that it could not be
-retained in memory for a couple of months. If the Professor (alas,
-now no more!) had chanced, in any of his angling excursions on the
-Tweed, to have fallen in with a brother of the rod, Mr Stirling, Depute
-Sheriff-clerk of Peebles (also now gone), he would have found at least
-one gentleman who could repeat the whole ballad without a break, though
-he had not read a line of it for more than twenty years. Hogg states
-explicitly that when the sheriff visited his cottage at Ettrick,
-his mother recited or chanted the ballad; and in a poetical address
-to Scott congratulating him on his elevation to the baronetcy, the
-Shepherd says:
-
- ‘When Maitland’s song first met your ear,
- How the furled visage up did clear,
- Beaming delight! though now a shade
- Of doubt would darken into dread,
- That some unskilled presumptuous arm
- Had marred tradition’s mighty charm.
- Scarce drew thy lurking dread the less
- Till she, the ancient Minstreless,
- With fervid voice and kindling eye,
- And withered arms waving on high,
- Sung forth these words in eldritch shriek,
- While tears stood on thy nut-brown cheek:
-
- “Na, we are nane o’ the lads o’ France,
- Nor e’er pretend to be;
- We be three lads of fair Scotland,
- Auld Maitland’s sons a’ three!”
-
- Thy fist made all the table ring--
- “By ----, sir, but that is the thing!”’
-
-
-[6] _Marmion_--Introduction to Canto II.
-
-[7] He rarely made corrections on his published works, but there is one
-alteration worth noting in the opening of this Introduction. In the
-first edition he says: ‘From the remote period when the Roman deity
-TERMINUS retired behind the ramparts of SEVERUS,’ &c. This seemed a
-little inflated, and also inappropriate, for it represents Terminus as
-if capable of motion, though the Romans represented the god as wanting
-legs and arms, to shew that he was immovable; and Scott reduced the
-illustration to sober historical limits: ‘From the remote period when
-the Roman province was contracted by the ramparts of SEVERUS,’ &c.
-
-[8] _Marmion_: Introd. to Canto II. When the poem was published, its
-author wrote to his friend at Blackhouse: ‘This accompanies a copy
-of _Marmion_, which I will see put up with my own eyes. Constable is
-greatly too busy to be uniformly accurate.’
-
-[9] Letter to Hon. Mrs Stewart Mackenzie.
-
-[10] Seaforth Papers at Brahan Castle, Ross-shire.
-
-[11] The Burghers were a religious sect, now merged in the United
-Presbyterian body.
-
-[12] Letter to Hon. Mrs Stewart Mackenzie.
-
-[13] Lockhart also was in favour of a cairn: ‘As to monuments, if I
-could choose--passing Abbotsford--I should say, put a plain sitting
-statue of Sir W. S. on Princes Street, Edinburgh, at the south end
-of Castle Street, backed by the rock; and put a cairn on the Eildon
-Hill, that every lad might carry his stone to. As for _temples_ and
-_pillars_, they have been vulgarised in Edinburgh. A friend said to
-me: ‘Good God, what a grand thing it will be to have Sir Walter put
-on a level with the late Lord Melville! Let us have another pillar at
-the west end of George Street, by all means.’ This man is a sensible
-one, and was dead serious. On a level with Lord Melville, whose name
-will appear only in the fag-end of a note to the future history of
-this country, and really will be kept in memory chiefly by the pillar!
-Dugald Stewart and Playfair, admirable dominies both, have their
-temples; so I fancy will now Sir John Leslie. The Calton Hill had
-better be left to the schoolmasters; in a hundred years they will have
-covered it; but, if they please, they may keep a place in the midst for
-Sir John Sinclair.’--_Letter to Hon. Mrs Stewart Mackenzie._
-
-[14] Vide _Quarterly Review_, June 1849.
-
-[15] Mr Cadell. In the autumn of the same year, the enterprising
-bookseller writes to Laidlaw: ‘Strange that all the Ballantynes and
-Constable are gone, and I am left alone of those behind the curtain
-during so many critical years! Born at Cockenzie, in East Lothian,
-educated for business above five years in Glasgow, I came here’ [to
-Edinburgh] ‘a raw young man of twenty-one in the winter of 1809–10, and
-have cuckooed all these men out of their nests, firmly seated in which
-they all were at that time. And here is Lockhart telling about all of
-us to posterity. We will all be handed down as appendages to the great
-man!’ Mr Cadell died January 20, 1849, having, it is said, made about
-£100,000 in business, chiefly by Scott’s works. ‘Our late illustrious
-friend used to joke me about a Waverley Cottage or Waverley Hall: I am
-now rated for a palace!’ (Cadell to Laidlaw, July 1834.) Latterly, he
-was proprietor of the estate of Ratho, near Edinburgh.
-
-[16] The Glen is a small mountain valley on the banks of the Quair,
-about four and a half miles from Innerleithen. A magnificent residence
-has been built on the estate by the proprietor, Charles Tennant, Esq.
-Vide description and engraving in Chambers’s _History of Peeblesshire_.
-
-[17] Hogg altered this line as follows:
-
- ‘She cam there afore the flower bloom’d on the pea.’
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a
-predominant preference was found in the original book; otherwise they
-were not changed.
-
-Simple typographical errors were corrected; unbalanced quotation
-marks were remedied when the change was obvious, and otherwise left
-unbalanced.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIFE OF SIR WALTER SCOTT ***
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