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+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
+ <title>
+ ROB ROY, COMPLETE by Sir Walter Scott
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ .indent5 { margin-left: 5%;}
+ .indent10 { margin-left: 10%;}
+ .indent15 { margin-left: 15%;}
+ .indent20 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ .indent30 { margin-left: 30%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 100%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ .side { float: left; font-size: 75%; width: 25%; padding-left: 0.8em;
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+ text-indent: 0; font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;
+ font-weight: bold; color: black; background: #eeeeee; border: solid 1px;}
+ p.pfirst, p.noindent {text-indent: 0}
+ span.dropcap { float: left; margin: 0 0.1em 0 0; line-height: 1 }
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+ <h2>
+ ROB ROY
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+Project Gutenberg's Rob Roy, Complete, Illustrated, by Sir Walter Scott
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Rob Roy, Complete, Illustrated
+
+Author: Sir Walter Scott
+
+Release Date: October 25, 2006 [EBook #7025]
+Last Updated: February 27, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROB ROY, COMPLETE, ILLUSTRATED ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+
+
+
+<p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+<hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ ROB ROY
+ </h2>
+ <h2>
+ BY SIR WALTER SCOTT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="image-0001" id="image-0001">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/bookcover.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Bookcover " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ <a name="image-0002" id="image-0002">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/spines.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Spines " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0001" id="link_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ROB ROY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ BY SIR WALTER SCOTT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="image-0003" id="image-0003">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/frontispiece1.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Frontispiece " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ <a name="image-0004" id="image-0004">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/titlepage1.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Titlepage " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CONTENTS
+ </h2>
+ <h2>
+ VOLUME I.
+ </h2>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0003"> ADVERTISEMENT TO THE FIRST EDITION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_INTR"> INTRODUCTION&mdash;-(1829) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_APPE"> APPENDIX TO INTRODUCTION. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0006"> No. II.&mdash;LETTERS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0007"> COPY OF GRAHAME OF KILLEARN'S LETTER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0008"> THE DUKE OF MONTROSE TO &mdash;&mdash; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0009"> No. III.&mdash;CHALLENGE BY ROB ROY. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0010"> No. IV.&mdash;LETTER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0011"> No. IVa.&mdash;LETTER. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0012"> No. V.&mdash;HIGHLAND WOOING. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0013"> No. VI&mdash;GHLUNE DHU. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0014"> EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION TO ROB ROY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0015"> ROB ROY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0001"> CHAPTER FIRST. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0002"> CHAPTER SECOND. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0003"> CHAPTER THIRD. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0004"> CHAPTER FOURTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0005"> CHAPTER FIFTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0006"> CHAPTER SIXTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0007"> CHAPTER SEVENTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0008"> CHAPTER EIGHTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0009"> CHAPTER NINTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0010"> CHAPTER TENTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0011"> CHAPTER ELEVENTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0012"> CHAPTER TWELFTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0013"> CHAPTER THIRTEENTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0014"> CHAPTER FOURTEENTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0015"> CHAPTER FIFTEENTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0016"> CHAPTER SIXTEENTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCH0017"> CHAPTER SEVENTEENTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ VOLUME II.
+ </h2>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0001"> CHAPTER FIRST </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0002"> CHAPTER SECOND. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0003"> CHAPTER THIRD. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0004"> CHAPTER FOURTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0005"> CHAPTER FIFTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0006"> CHAPTER SIXTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0007"> CHAPTER SEVENTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0008"> CHAPTER EIGHTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0009"> CHAPTER NINTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0010"> CHAPTER TENTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0011"> CHAPTER ELEVENTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0012"> CHAPTER TWELFTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0013"> CHAPTER THIRTEEN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0014"> CHAPTER FOURTEEN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0015"> CHAPTER FIFTEEN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0016"> CHAPTER SIXTEEN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0017"> CHAPTER SEVENTEEN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0018"> CHAPTER EIGHTEENTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0019"> CHAPTER NINETEENTH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0020"> CHAPTER TWENTIETH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0021"> CHAPTER TWENTY-FIRST. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#AlinkCH0022"> CHAPTER TWENTY-SECOND. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0025"> POSTSCRIPT. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0026"> STATE PAPER OFFICE, </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_NOTE"> NOTES TO ROB ROY. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0028"> Note A.&mdash;The Grey Stone of MacGregor. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0029"> Note B.&mdash;Dugald Ciar Mhor. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0030"> Note C.&mdash;The Loch Lomond Expedition. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0031"> Note D.&mdash;Author's Expedition against the
+ MacLarens. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0032"> Note E.&mdash;Allan Breck Stewart. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0033"> Note F.&mdash;The Abbess of Wilton. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0034"> Note G.&mdash;Mons Meg. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0035"> Note H.&mdash;-Fairy Superstition. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link_4_0036"> Note I.&mdash;Clachan of Aberfoil. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ List of Illustrations
+ </h2>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#image-0001"> Bookcover </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#image-0002"> Spines </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#image-0003"> Frontispiece </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#image-0004"> Titlepage </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#image-0005"> Cattle Lifting </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#image-0006"> Frank at Judge Inglewood's </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#image-0007"> Die Vernon at Judge Inglewood's </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#image-0008"> Frank and Andrew Fairservice </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#image-0009"> Die Vernon and Frank in Library </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ VOLUME II.
+ </h2>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#image-0001"> Bookcover </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#image-0002"> Spines </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#Aimage-0003"> Helen Macgregor&mdash;Frontispiece </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#Aimage-0004"> Rob Roy in Prison </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#Aimage-0005"> Rob Roy Parting the Duelists </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#Aimage-0006"> Fray at Jeannie Macalpine's </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#Aimage-0007"> Escape of Rob Roy at the Ford </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#Aimage-0008"> Parting of Die and Frank on the Moor </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#Aimage-0009"> Loch Lomond </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#Aimage-0010"> The Death of Rashleigh </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ VOLUME ONE
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ For why? Because the good old rule
+ Sufficeth them; the simple plan,
+ That they should take who have the power,
+ And they should keep who can.
+
+ <i>Rob Roy's Grave</i>&mdash;Wordsworth
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0003" id="link_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ADVERTISEMENT TO THE FIRST EDITION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When the Editor of the following volumes published, about two years since,
+ the work called the &ldquo;Antiquary,&rdquo; he announced that he was, for the last
+ time, intruding upon the public in his present capacity. He might shelter
+ himself under the plea that every anonymous writer is, like the celebrated
+ Junius, only a phantom, and that therefore, although an apparition, of a
+ more benign, as well as much meaner description, he cannot be bound to
+ plead to a charge of inconsistency. A better apology may be found in the
+ imitating the confession of honest Benedict, that, when he said he would
+ die a bachelor, he did not think he should live to be married. The best of
+ all would be, if, as has eminently happened in the case of some
+ distinguished contemporaries, the merit of the work should, in the
+ reader's estimation, form an excuse for the Author's breach of promise.
+ Without presuming to hope that this may prove the case, it is only further
+ necessary to mention, that his resolution, like that of Benedict, fell a
+ sacrifice, to temptation at least, if not to stratagem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is now about six months since the Author, through the medium of his
+ respectable Publishers, received a parcel of Papers, containing the
+ Outlines of this narrative, with a permission, or rather with a request,
+ couched in highly flattering terms, that they might be given to the
+ Public, with such alterations as should be found suitable.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * As it maybe necessary, in the present Edition(1829), to speak upon the
+ square, the Author thinks it proper to own, that the communication alluded
+ to is entirely imaginary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were of course so numerous, that, besides the suppression of names,
+ and of incidents approaching too much to reality, the work may in a great
+ measure be, said to be new written. Several anachronisms have probably
+ crept in during the course of these changes; and the mottoes for the
+ Chapters have been selected without any reference to the supposed date of
+ the incidents. For these, of course, the Editor is responsible. Some
+ others occurred in the original materials, but they are of little
+ consequence. In point of minute accuracy, it may be stated, that the
+ bridge over the Forth, or rather the Avondhu (or Black River), near the
+ hamlet of Aberfoil, had not an existence thirty years ago. It does not,
+ however, become the Editor to be the first to point out these errors; and
+ he takes this public opportunity to thank the unknown and nameless
+ correspondent, to whom the reader will owe the principal share of any
+ amusement which he may derive from the following pages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1st December 1817.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_INTR" id="link_INTR">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION&mdash;-(1829)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When the author projected this further encroachment on the patience of an
+ indulgent public, he was at some loss for a title; a good name being very
+ nearly of as much consequence in literature as in life. The title of <i>Rob
+ Roy</i> was suggested by the late Mr. Constable, whose sagacity and
+ experience foresaw the germ of popularity which it included.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No introduction can be more appropriate to the work than some account of
+ the singular character whose name is given to the title-page, and who,
+ through good report and bad report, has maintained a wonderful degree of
+ importance in popular recollection. This cannot be ascribed to the
+ distinction of his birth, which, though that of a gentleman, had in it
+ nothing of high destination, and gave him little right to command in his
+ clan. Neither, though he lived a busy, restless, and enterprising life,
+ were his feats equal to those of other freebooters, who have been less
+ distinguished. He owed his fame in a great measure to his residing on the
+ very verge of the Highlands, and playing such pranks in the beginning of
+ the 18th century, as are usually ascribed to Robin Hood in the middle
+ ages,&mdash;and that within forty miles of Glasgow, a great commercial
+ city, the seat of a learned university. Thus a character like his,
+ blending the wild virtues, the subtle policy, and unrestrained license of
+ an American Indian, was flourishing in Scotland during the Augustan age of
+ Queen Anne and George I. Addison, it is probable, or Pope, would have been
+ considerably surprised if they had known that there existed in the same
+ island with them a personage of Rob Roy's peculiar habits and profession.
+ It is this strong contrast betwixt the civilised and cultivated mode of
+ life on the one side of the Highland line, and the wild and lawless
+ adventures which were habitually undertaken and achieved by one who dwelt
+ on the opposite side of that ideal boundary, which creates the interest
+ attached to his name. Hence it is that even yet,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Far and near, through vale and hill,
+ Are faces that attest the same,
+ And kindle like a fire new stirr'd,
+ At sound of Rob Roy's name.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There were several advantages which Rob Roy enjoyed for sustaining to
+ advantage the character which he assumed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most prominent of these was his descent from, and connection with, the
+ clan MacGregor, so famous for their misfortunes, and the indomitable
+ spirit with which they maintained themselves as a clan, linked and banded
+ together in spite of the most severe laws, executed with unheard-of rigour
+ against those who bore this forbidden surname. Their history was that of
+ several others of the original Highland clans, who were suppressed by more
+ powerful neighbours, and either extirpated, or forced to secure themselves
+ by renouncing their own family appellation, and assuming that of the
+ conquerors. The peculiarity in the story of the MacGregors, is their
+ retaining, with such tenacity, their separate existence and union as a
+ clan under circumstances of the utmost urgency. The history of the tribe
+ is briefly as follows&mdash;But we must premise that the tale depends in
+ some degree on tradition; therefore, excepting when written documents are,
+ quoted, it must be considered as in some degree dubious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sept of MacGregor claimed a descent from Gregor, or Gregorius, third
+ son, it is said, of Alpin King of Scots, who flourished about 787. Hence
+ their original patronymic is MacAlpine, and they are usually termed the
+ Clan Alpine. An individual tribe of them retains the same name. They are
+ accounted one of the most ancient clans in the Highlands, and it is
+ certain they were a people of original Celtic descent, and occupied at one
+ period very extensive possessions in Perthshire and Argyleshire, which
+ they imprudently continued to hold by the <i>coir a glaive,</i> that is,
+ the right of the sword. Their neighbours, the Earls of Argyle and
+ Breadalbane, in the meanwhile, managed to leave the lands occupied by the
+ MacGregors engrossed in those charters which they easily obtained from the
+ Crown; and thus constituted a legal right in their own favour, without
+ much regard to its justice. As opportunity occurred of annoying or
+ extirpating their neighbours, they gradually extended their own domains,
+ by usurping, under the pretext of such royal grants, those of their more
+ uncivilised neighbours. A Sir Duncan Campbell of Lochow, known in the
+ Highlands by the name of <i>Donacha Dhu nan Churraichd,</i> that is, Black
+ Duncan with the Cowl, it being his pleasure to wear such a head-gear, is
+ said to have been peculiarly successful in those acts of spoliation upon
+ the clan MacGregor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The devoted sept, ever finding themselves iniquitously driven from their
+ possessions, defended themselves by force, and occasionally gained
+ advantages, which they used cruelly enough. This conduct, though natural,
+ considering the country and time, was studiously represented at the
+ capital as arising from an untameable and innate ferocity, which nothing,
+ it was said, could remedy, save cutting off the tribe of MacGregor root
+ and branch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In an act of Privy Council at Stirling, 22d September 1563, in the reign
+ of Queen Mary, commission is granted to the most powerful nobles, and
+ chiefs of the clans, to pursue the clan Gregor with fire and sword. A
+ similar warrant in 1563, not only grants the like powers to Sir John
+ Campbell of Glenorchy, the descendant of Duncan with the Cowl, but
+ discharges the lieges to receive or assist any of the clan Gregor, or
+ afford them, under any colour whatever, meat, drink, or clothes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An atrocity which the clan Gregor committed in 1589, by the murder of John
+ Drummond of Drummond-ernoch, a forester of the royal forest of Glenartney,
+ is elsewhere given, with all its horrid circumstances. The clan swore upon
+ the severed head of the murdered man, that they would make common cause in
+ avowing the deed. This led to an act of the Privy Council, directing
+ another crusade against the &ldquo;wicked clan Gregor, so long continuing in
+ blood, slaughter, theft, and robbery,&rdquo; in which letters of fire and sword
+ are denounced against them for the space of three years. The reader will
+ find this particular fact illustrated in the Introduction to the Legend of
+ Montrose in the present edition of these Novels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other occasions frequently occurred, in which the MacGregors testified
+ contempt for the laws, from which they had often experienced severity, but
+ never protection. Though they were gradually deprived of their
+ possessions, and of all ordinary means of procuring subsistence, they
+ could not, nevertheless, be supposed likely to starve for famine, while
+ they had the means of taking from strangers what they considered as
+ rightfully their own. Hence they became versed in predatory forays, and
+ accustomed to bloodshed. Their passions were eager, and, with a little
+ management on the part of some of their most powerful neighbours, they
+ could easily be <i>hounded out,</i> to use an expressive Scottish phrase,
+ to commit violence, of which the wily instigators took the advantage, and
+ left the ignorant MacGregors an undivided portion of blame and punishment.
+ This policy of pushing on the fierce clans of the Highlands and Borders to
+ break the peace of the country, is accounted by the historian one of the
+ most dangerous practices of his own period, in which the MacGregors were
+ considered as ready agents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding these severe denunciations,&mdash;-which were acted upon
+ in the same spirit in which they were conceived, some of the clan still
+ possessed property, and the chief of the name in 1592 is designed Allaster
+ MacGregor of Glenstrae. He is said to have been a brave and active man;
+ but, from the tenor of his confession at his death, appears to have been
+ engaged in many and desperate feuds, one of which finally proved fatal to
+ himself and many of his followers. This was the celebrated conflict at
+ Glenfruin, near the southwestern extremity of Loch Lomond, in the vicinity
+ of which the MacGregors continued to exercise much authority by the <i>coir
+ a glaive,</i> or right of the strongest, which we have already mentioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There had been a long and bloody feud betwixt the MacGregors and the Laird
+ of Luss, head of the family of Colquhoun, a powerful race on the lower
+ part of Loch Lomond. The MacGregors' tradition affirms that the quarrel
+ began on a very trifling subject. Two of the MacGregors being benighted,
+ asked shelter in a house belonging to a dependant of the Colquhouns, and
+ were refused. They then retreated to an out-house, took a wedder from the
+ fold, killed it, and supped off the carcass, for which (it is said) they
+ offered payment to the proprietor. The Laird of Luss seized on the
+ offenders, and, by the summary process which feudal barons had at their
+ command, had them both condemned and executed. The MacGregors verify this
+ account of the feud by appealing to a proverb current amongst them,
+ execrating the hour <i>(Mult dhu an Carbail ghil)</i> that the black
+ wedder with the white tail was ever lambed. To avenge this quarrel, the
+ Laird of MacGregor assembled his clan, to the number of three or four
+ hundred men, and marched towards Luss from the banks of Loch Long, by a
+ pass called <i>Raid na Gael,</i> or the Highlandman's Pass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Humphrey Colquhoun received early notice of this incursion, and
+ collected a strong force, more than twice the number of that of the
+ invaders. He had with him the gentlemen of the name of Buchanan, with the
+ Grahams, and other gentry of the Lennox, and a party of the citizens of
+ Dumbarton, under command of Tobias Smollett, a magistrate, or bailie, of
+ that town, and ancestor of the celebrated author.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parties met in the valley of Glenfruin, which signifies the Glen of
+ Sorrow&mdash;-a name that seemed to anticipate the event of the day,
+ which, fatal to the conquered party, was at least equally so to the
+ victors, the &ldquo;babe unborn&rdquo; of Clan Alpine having reason to repent it. The
+ MacGregors, somewhat discouraged by the appearance of a force much
+ superior to their own, were cheered on to the attack by a Seer, or
+ second-sighted person, who professed that he saw the shrouds of the dead
+ wrapt around their principal opponents. The clan charged with great fury
+ on the front of the enemy, while John MacGregor, with a strong party, made
+ an unexpected attack on the flank. A great part of the Colquhouns' force
+ consisted in cavalry, which could not act in the boggy ground. They were
+ said to have disputed the field manfully, but were at length completely
+ routed, and a merciless slaughter was exercised on the fugitives, of whom
+ betwixt two and three hundred fell on the field and in the pursuit. If the
+ MacGregors lost, as is averred, only two men slain in the action, they had
+ slight provocation for an indiscriminate massacre. It is said that their
+ fury extended itself to a party of students for clerical orders, who had
+ imprudently come to see the battle. Some doubt is thrown on this fact,
+ from the indictment against the chief of the clan Gregor being silent on
+ the subject, as is the historian Johnston, and a Professor Ross, who wrote
+ an account of the battle twenty-nine years after it was fought. It is,
+ however, constantly averred by the tradition of the country, and a stone
+ where the deed was done is called <i>Leck-a-Mhinisteir,</i> the Minister
+ or Clerk's Flagstone. The MacGregors, by a tradition which is now found to
+ be inaccurate, impute this cruel action to the ferocity of a single man of
+ their tribe, renowned for size and strength, called Dugald, <i>Ciar Mhor,</i>
+ or the great Mouse-coloured Man. He was MacGregor's foster-brother, and
+ the chief committed the youths to his charge, with directions to keep them
+ safely till the affray was over. Whether fearful of their escape, or
+ incensed by some sarcasms which they threw on his tribe, or whether out of
+ mere thirst of blood, this savage, while the other MacGregors were engaged
+ in the pursuit, poniarded his helpless and defenceless prisoners. When the
+ chieftain, on his return, demanded where the youths were, the <i>Ciar</i>
+ (pronounced Kiar) <i>Mhor</i> drew out his bloody dirk, saying in Gaelic,
+ &ldquo;Ask that, and God save me!&rdquo; The latter words allude to the exclamation
+ which his victims used when he was murdering them. It would seem,
+ therefore, that this horrible part of the story is founded on fact, though
+ the number of the youths so slain is probably exaggerated in the Lowland
+ accounts. The common people say that the blood of the Ciar Mhor's victims
+ can never be washed off the stone. When MacGregor learnt their fate, he
+ expressed the utmost horror at the deed, and upbraided his foster-brother
+ with having done that which would occasion the destruction of him and his
+ clan. This supposed homicide was the ancestor of Rob Roy, and the tribe
+ from which he was descended. He lies buried at the church of Fortingal,
+ where his sepulchre, covered with a large stone,* is still shown, and
+ where his great strength and courage are the theme of many traditions.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Note A. The Grey Stone of MacGregor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ** Note B. Dugald Ciar Mhor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MacGregor's brother was one of the very few of the tribe who was slain. He
+ was buried near the field of battle, and the place is marked by a rude
+ stone, called the Grey Stone of MacGregor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Humphrey Colquhoun, being well mounted, escaped for the time to the
+ castle of Banochar, or Benechra. It proved no sure defence, however, for
+ he was shortly after murdered in a vault of the castle,&mdash;-the family
+ annals say by the MacGregors, though other accounts charge the deed upon
+ the MacFarlanes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This battle of Glenfruin, and the severity which the victors exercised in
+ the pursuit, was reported to King James VI. in a manner the most
+ unfavourable to the clan Gregor, whose general character, being that of
+ lawless though brave men, could not much avail them in such a case. That
+ James might fully understand the extent of the slaughter, the widows of
+ the slain, to the number of eleven score, in deep mourning, riding upon
+ white palfreys, and each bearing her husband's bloody shirt on a spear,
+ appeared at Stirling, in presence of a monarch peculiarly accessible to
+ such sights of fear and sorrow, to demand vengeance for the death of their
+ husbands, upon those by whom they had been made desolate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remedy resorted to was at least as severe as the cruelties which it
+ was designed to punish. By an Act of the Privy Council, dated 3d April
+ 1603, the name of MacGregor was expressly abolished, and those who had
+ hitherto borne it were commanded to change it for other surnames, the pain
+ of death being denounced against those who should call themselves Gregor
+ or MacGregor, the names of their fathers. Under the same penalty, all who
+ had been at the conflict of Glenfruin, or accessory to other marauding
+ parties charged in the act, were prohibited from carrying weapons, except
+ a pointless knife to eat their victuals. By a subsequent act of Council,
+ 24th June 1613, death was denounced against any persons of the tribe
+ formerly called MacGregor, who should presume to assemble in greater
+ numbers than four. Again, by an Act of Parliament, 1617, chap. 26, these
+ laws were continued, and extended to the rising generation, in respect
+ that great numbers of the children of those against whom the acts of Privy
+ Council had been directed, were stated to be then approaching to maturity,
+ who, if permitted to resume the name of their parents, would render the
+ clan as strong as it was before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The execution of those severe acts was chiefly intrusted in the west to
+ the Earl of Argyle and the powerful clan of Campbell, and to the Earl of
+ Athole and his followers in the more eastern Highlands of Perthshire. The
+ MacGregors failed not to resist with the most determined courage; and many
+ a valley in the West and North Highlands retains memory of the severe
+ conflicts, in which the proscribed clan sometimes obtained transient
+ advantages, and always sold their lives dearly. At length the pride of
+ Allaster MacGregor, the chief of the clan, was so much lowered by the
+ sufferings of his people, that he resolved to surrender himself to the
+ Earl of Argyle, with his principal followers, on condition that they
+ should be sent out of Scotland. If the unfortunate chief's own account be
+ true, he had more reasons than one for expecting some favour from the
+ Earl, who had in secret advised and encouraged him to many of the
+ desperate actions for which he was now called to so severe a reckoning.
+ But Argyle, as old Birrell expresses himself, kept a Highlandman's promise
+ with them, fulfilling it to the ear, and breaking it to the sense.
+ MacGregor was sent under a strong guard to the frontier of England, and
+ being thus, in the literal sense, sent out of Scotland, Argyle was judged
+ to have kept faith with him, though the same party which took him there
+ brought him back to Edinburgh in custody.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MacGregor of Glenstrae was tried before the Court of Justiciary, 20th
+ January 1604, and found guilty. He appears to have been instantly conveyed
+ from the bar to the gallows; for Birrell, of the same date, reports that
+ he was hanged at the Cross, and, for distinction sake, was suspended
+ higher by his own height than two of his kindred and friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 18th of February following, more men of the MacGregors were
+ executed, after a long imprisonment, and several others in the beginning
+ of March.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl of Argyle's service, in conducting to the surrender of the
+ insolent and wicked race and name of MacGregor, notorious common
+ malefactors, and in the in-bringing of MacGregor, with a great many of the
+ leading men of the clan, worthily executed to death for their offences, is
+ thankfully acknowledged by an Act of Parliament, 1607, chap. 16, and
+ rewarded with a grant of twenty chalders of victual out of the lands of
+ Kintire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The MacGregors, notwithstanding the letters of fire and sword, and orders
+ for military execution repeatedly directed against them by the Scottish
+ legislature, who apparently lost all the calmness of conscious dignity and
+ security, and could not even name the outlawed clan without vituperation,
+ showed no inclination to be blotted out of the roll of clanship. They
+ submitted to the law, indeed, so far as to take the names of the
+ neighbouring families amongst whom they happened to live, nominally
+ becoming, as the case might render it most convenient, Drummonds,
+ Campbells, Grahams, Buchanans, Stewarts, and the like; but to all intents
+ and purposes of combination and mutual attachment, they remained the clan
+ Gregor, united together for right or wrong, and menacing with the general
+ vengeance of their race, all who committed aggressions against any
+ individual of their number.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They continued to take and give offence with as little hesitation as
+ before the legislative dispersion which had been attempted, as appears
+ from the preamble to statute 1633, chapter 30, setting forth, that the
+ clan Gregor, which had been suppressed and reduced to quietness by the
+ great care of the late King James of eternal memory, had nevertheless
+ broken out again, in the counties of Perth, Stirling, Clackmannan,
+ Monteith, Lennox, Angus, and Mearns; for which reason the statute
+ re-establishes the disabilities attached to the clan, and, grants a new
+ commission for enforcing the laws against that wicked and rebellious race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding the extreme severities of King James I. and Charles I.
+ against this unfortunate people, who were rendered furious by
+ proscription, and then punished for yielding to the passions which had
+ been wilfully irritated, the MacGregors to a man attached themselves
+ during the civil war to the cause of the latter monarch. Their bards have
+ ascribed this to the native respect of the MacGregors for the crown of
+ Scotland, which their ancestors once wore, and have appealed to their
+ armorial bearings, which display a pine-tree crossed saltire wise with a
+ naked sword, the point of which supports a royal crown. But, without
+ denying that such motives may have had their weight, we are disposed to
+ think, that a war which opened the low country to the raids of the clan
+ Gregor would have more charms for them than any inducement to espouse the
+ cause of the Covenanters, which would have brought them into contact with
+ Highlanders as fierce as themselves, and having as little to lose. Patrick
+ MacGregor, their leader, was the son of a distinguished chief, named
+ Duncan Abbarach, to whom Montrose wrote letters as to his trusty and
+ special friend, expressing his reliance on his devoted loyalty, with an
+ assurance, that when once his Majesty's affairs were placed upon a
+ permanent footing, the grievances of the clan MacGregor should be
+ redressed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At a subsequent period of these melancholy times, we find the clan Gregor
+ claiming the immunities of other tribes, when summoned by the Scottish
+ Parliament to resist the invasion of the Commonwealth's army, in 1651. On
+ the last day of March in that year, a supplication to the King and
+ Parliament, from Calum MacCondachie Vich Euen, and Euen MacCondachie Euen,
+ in their own name, and that of the whole name of MacGregor, set forth,
+ that while, in obedience to the orders of Parliament, enjoining all clans
+ to come out in the present service under their chieftains, for the defence
+ of religion, king, and kingdoms, the petitioners were drawing their men to
+ guard the passes at the head of the river Forth, they were interfered with
+ by the Earl of Athole and the Laird of Buchanan, who had required the
+ attendance of many of the clan Gregor upon their arrays. This interference
+ was, doubtless, owing to the change of name, which seems to have given
+ rise to the claim of the Earl of Athole and the Laird of Buchanan to
+ muster the MacGregors under their banners, as Murrays or Buchanans. It
+ does not appear that the petition of the MacGregors, to be permitted to
+ come out in a body, as other clans, received any answer. But upon the
+ Restoration, King Charles, in the first Scottish Parliament of his reign
+ (statute 1661, chap. 195), annulled the various acts against the clan
+ Gregor, and restored them to the full use of their family name, and the
+ other privileges of liege subjects, setting forth, as a reason for this
+ lenity, that those who were formerly designed MacGregors had, during the
+ late troubles, conducted themselves with such loyalty and affection to his
+ Majesty, as might justly wipe off all memory of former miscarriages, and
+ take away all marks of reproach for the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is singular enough, that it seems to have aggravated the feelings of
+ the non-conforming Presbyterians, when the penalties which were most
+ unjustly imposed upon themselves were relaxed towards the poor MacGregors;&mdash;so
+ little are the best men, any more than the worst, able to judge with
+ impartiality of the same measures, as applied to themselves, or to others.
+ Upon the Restoration, an influence inimical to this unfortunate clan, said
+ to be the same with that which afterwards dictated the massacre of
+ Glencoe, occasioned the re-enaction of the penal statutes against the
+ MacGregors. There are no reasons given why these highly penal acts should
+ have been renewed; nor is it alleged that the clan had been guilty of late
+ irregularities. Indeed, there is some reason to think that the clause was
+ formed of set purpose, in a shape which should elude observation; for,
+ though containing conclusions fatal to the rights of so many Scottish
+ subjects, it is neither mentioned in the title nor the rubric of the Act
+ of Parliament in which it occurs, and is thrown briefly in at the close of
+ the statute 1693, chap. 61, entitled, an Act for the Justiciary in the
+ Highlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It does not, however, appear that after the Revolution the acts against
+ the clan were severely enforced; and in the latter half of the eighteenth
+ century, they were not enforced at all. Commissioners of supply were named
+ in Parliament by the proscribed title of MacGregor, and decrees of courts
+ of justice were pronounced, and legal deeds entered into, under the same
+ appellative. The MacGregors, however, while the laws continued in the
+ statute-book, still suffered under the deprivation of the name which was
+ their birthright, and some attempts were made for the purpose of adopting
+ another, MacAlpine or Grant being proposed as the title of the whole clan
+ in future. No agreement, however, could be entered into; and the evil was
+ submitted to as a matter of necessity, until full redress was obtained
+ from the British Parliament, by an act abolishing for ever the penal
+ statutes which had been so long imposed upon this ancient race. This
+ statute, well merited by the services of many a gentleman of the clan in
+ behalf of their King and country, was passed, and the clan proceeded to
+ act upon it with the same spirit of ancient times, which had made them
+ suffer severely under a deprivation that would have been deemed of little
+ consequence by a great part of their fellow-subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They entered into a deed recognising John Murray of Lanrick, Esq.
+ (afterwards Sir John MacGregor, Baronet), representative of the family of
+ Glencarnock, as lawfully descended from the ancient stock and blood of the
+ Lairds and Lords of MacGregor, and therefore acknowledged him as their
+ chief on all lawful occasions and causes whatsoever. The deed was
+ subscribed by eight hundred and twenty-six persons of the name of
+ MacGregor, capable of bearing arms. A great many of the clan during the
+ last war formed themselves into what was called the Clan Alpine Regiment,
+ raised in 1799, under the command of their Chief and his brother Colonel
+ MacGregor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having briefly noticed the history of this clan, which presents a rare and
+ interesting example of the indelible character of the patriarchal system,
+ the author must now offer some notices of the individual who gives name to
+ these volumes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In giving an account of a Highlander, his pedigree is first to be
+ considered. That of Rob Roy was deduced from Ciar Mhor, the great
+ mouse-coloured man, who is accused by tradition of having slain the young
+ students at the battle of Glenfruin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without puzzling ourselves and our readers with the intricacies of
+ Highland genealogy, it is enough to say, that after the death of Allaster
+ MacGregor of Glenstrae, the clan, discouraged by the unremitting
+ persecution of their enemies, seem not to have had the means of placing
+ themselves under the command of a single chief. According to their places
+ of residence and immediate descent, the several families were led and
+ directed by <i>Chieftains,</i> which, in the Highland acceptation,
+ signifies the head of a particular branch of a tribe, in opposition to <i>Chief,</i>
+ who is the leader and commander of the whole name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The family and descendants of Dugald Ciar Mhor lived chiefly in the
+ mountains between Loch Lomond and Loch Katrine, and occupied a good deal
+ of property there&mdash;whether by sufferance, by the right of the sword,
+ which it was never safe to dispute with them, or by legal titles of
+ various kinds, it would be useless to inquire and unnecessary to detail.
+ Enough;&mdash;there they certainly were&mdash;a people whom their most
+ powerful neighbours were desirous to conciliate, their friendship in peace
+ being very necessary to the quiet of the vicinage, and their assistance in
+ war equally prompt and effectual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rob Roy MacGregor Campbell, which last name he bore in consequence of the
+ Acts of Parliament abolishing his own, was the younger son of Donald
+ MacGregor of Glengyle, said to have been a Lieutenant-Colonel (probably in
+ the service of James II.), by his wife, a daughter of Campbell of
+ Glenfalloch. Rob's own designation was of Inversnaid; but he appears to
+ have acquired a right of some kind or other to the property or possession
+ of Craig Royston, a domain of rock and forest, lying on the east side of
+ Loch Lomond, where that beautiful lake stretches into the dusky mountains
+ of Glenfalloch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The time of his birth is uncertain. But he is said to have been active in
+ the scenes of war and plunder which succeeded the Revolution; and
+ tradition affirms him to have been the leader in a predatory incursion
+ into the parish of Kippen, in the Lennox, which took place in the year
+ 1691. It was of almost a bloodless character, only one person losing his
+ life; but from the extent of the depredation, it was long distinguished by
+ the name of the Her'-ship, or devastation, of Kippen.* The time of his
+ death is also uncertain, but as he is said to have survived the year 1733,
+ and died an aged man, it is probable he may have been twenty-five about
+ the time of the Her'-ship of Kippen, which would assign his birth to the
+ middle of the 17th century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * See <i>Statistcal Account of Scotland,</i> 1st edition, vol. xviii. p.
+ 332. Parish of * Kippen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the more quiet times which succeeded the Revolution, Rob Roy, or Red
+ Robert, seems to have exerted his active talents, which were of no mean
+ order, as a drover, or trader in cattle, to a great extent. It may well be
+ supposed that in those days no Lowland, much less English drovers,
+ ventured to enter the Highlands. The cattle, which were the staple
+ commodity of the mountains, were escorted down to fairs, on the borders of
+ the Lowlands, by a party of Highlanders, with their arms rattling around
+ them; and who dealt, however, in all honour and good faith with their
+ Southern customers. A fray, indeed, would sometimes arise, when the
+ Lowlandmen, chiefly Borderers, who had to supply the English market, used
+ to dip their bonnets in the next brook, and wrapping them round their
+ hands, oppose their cudgels to the naked broadswords, which had not always
+ the superiority. I have heard from aged persons who had been engaged in
+ such affrays, that the Highlanders used remarkably fair play, never using
+ the point of the sword, far less their pistols or daggers; so that
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ With many a stiff thwack and many a bang,
+ Hard crabtree and cold iron rang.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A slash or two, or a broken head, was easily accommodated, and as the
+ trade was of benefit to both parties, trifling skirmishes were not allowed
+ to interrupt its harmony. Indeed it was of vital interest to the
+ Highlanders, whose income, so far as derived from their estates, depended
+ entirely on the sale of black cattle; and a sagacious and experienced
+ dealer benefited not only himself, but his friends and neighbours, by his
+ speculations. Those of Rob Roy were for several years so successful as to
+ inspire general confidence, and raise him in the estimation of the country
+ in which he resided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His importance was increased by the death of his father, in consequence of
+ which he succeeded to the management of his nephew Gregor MacGregor of
+ Glengyle's property, and, as his tutor, to such influence with the clan
+ and following as was due to the representative of Dugald Ciar. Such
+ influence was the more uncontrolled, that this family of the MacGregors
+ seemed to have refused adherence to MacGregor of Glencarnock, the ancestor
+ of the present Sir Ewan MacGregor, and asserted a kind of independence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at this time that Rob Roy acquired an interest by purchase, wadset,
+ or otherwise, to the property of Craig Royston already mentioned. He was
+ in particular favour, during this prosperous period of his life, with his
+ nearest and most powerful neighbour, James, first Duke of Montrose, from
+ whom he received many marks of regard. His Grace consented to give his
+ nephew and himself a right of property on the estates of Glengyle and
+ Inversnaid, which they had till then only held as kindly tenants. The Duke
+ also, with a view to the interest of the country and his own estate,
+ supported our adventurer by loans of money to a considerable amount, to
+ enable him to carry on his speculations in the cattle trade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately that species of commerce was and is liable to sudden
+ fluctuations; and Rob Roy was, by a sudden depression of markets, and, as
+ a friendly tradition adds, by the bad faith of a partner named MacDonald,
+ whom he had imprudently received into his confidence, and intrusted with a
+ considerable sum of money, rendered totally insolvent. He absconded, of
+ course&mdash;not empty-handed, if it be true, as stated in an
+ advertisement for his apprehension, that he had in his possession sums to
+ the amount of L1000 sterling, obtained from several noblemen and gentlemen
+ under pretence of purchasing cows for them in the Highlands. This
+ advertisement appeared in June 1712, and was several times repeated. It
+ fixes the period when Rob Roy exchanged his commercial adventures for
+ speculations of a very different complexion.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * See Appendix, No. I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He appears at this period first to have removed from his ordinary dwelling
+ at Inversnaid, ten or twelve Scots miles (which is double the number of
+ English) farther into the Highlands, and commenced the lawless sort of
+ life which he afterwards followed. The Duke of Montrose, who conceived
+ himself deceived and cheated by MacGregor's conduct, employed legal means
+ to recover the money lent to him. Rob Roy's landed property was attached
+ by the regular form of legal procedure, and his stock and furniture made
+ the subject of arrest and sale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is said that this diligence of the law, as it is called in Scotland,
+ which the English more bluntly term distress, was used in this case with
+ uncommon severity, and that the legal satellites, not usually the gentlest
+ persons in the world, had insulted MacGregor's wife, in a manner which
+ would have aroused a milder man than he to thoughts of unbounded
+ vengeance. She was a woman of fierce and haughty temper, and is not
+ unlikely to have disturbed the officers in the execution of their duty,
+ and thus to have incurred ill treatment, though, for the sake of humanity,
+ it is to be hoped that the story sometimes told is a popular exaggeration.
+ It is certain that she felt extreme anguish at being expelled from the
+ banks of Loch Lomond, and gave vent to her feelings in a fine piece of
+ pipe-music, still well known to amateurs by the name of &ldquo;Rob Roy's
+ Lament.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fugitive is thought to have found his first place of refuge in Glen
+ Dochart, under the Earl of Breadalbane's protection; for, though that
+ family had been active agents in the destruction of the MacGregors in
+ former times, they had of late years sheltered a great many of the name in
+ their old possessions. The Duke of Argyle was also one of Rob Roy's
+ protectors, so far as to afford him, according to the Highland phrase,
+ wood and water&mdash;the shelter, namely, that is afforded by the forests
+ and lakes of an inaccessible country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great men of the Highlands in that time, besides being anxiously
+ ambitious to keep up what was called their Following, or military
+ retainers, were also desirous to have at their disposal men of resolute
+ character, to whom the world and the world's law were no friends, and who
+ might at times ravage the lands or destroy the tenants of a feudal enemy,
+ without bringing responsibility on their patrons. The strife between the
+ names of Campbell and Graham, during the civil wars of the seventeenth
+ century, had been stamped with mutual loss and inveterate enmity. The
+ death of the great Marquis of Montrose on the one side, the defeat at
+ Inverlochy, and cruel plundering of Lorn, on the other, were reciprocal
+ injuries not likely to be forgotten. Rob Roy was, therefore, sure of
+ refuge in the country of the Campbells, both as having assumed their name,
+ as connected by his mother with the family of Glenfalloch, and as an enemy
+ to the rival house of Montrose. The extent of Argyle's possessions, and
+ the power of retreating thither in any emergency, gave great encouragement
+ to the bold schemes of revenge which he had adopted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was nothing short of the maintenance of a predatory war against the
+ Duke of Montrose, whom he considered as the author of his exclusion from
+ civil society, and of the outlawry to which he had been sentenced by
+ letters of horning and caption (legal writs so called), as well as the
+ seizure of his goods, and adjudication of his landed property. Against his
+ Grace, therefore, his tenants, friends, allies, and relatives, he disposed
+ himself to employ every means of annoyance in his power; and though this
+ was a circle sufficiently extensive for active depredation, Rob, who
+ professed himself a Jacobite, took the liberty of extending his sphere of
+ operations against all whom he chose to consider as friendly to the
+ revolutionary government, or to that most obnoxious of measures&mdash;the
+ Union of the Kingdoms. Under one or other of these pretexts, all his
+ neighbours of the Lowlands who had anything to lose, or were unwilling to
+ compound for security by paying him an annual sum for protection or
+ forbearance, were exposed to his ravages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The country in which this private warfare, or system of depredation, was
+ to be carried on, was, until opened up by roads, in the highest degree
+ favourable for his purpose. It was broken up into narrow valleys, the
+ habitable part of which bore no proportion to the huge wildernesses of
+ forest, rocks, and precipices by which they were encircled, and which was,
+ moreover, full of inextricable passes, morasses, and natural strengths,
+ unknown to any but the inhabitants themselves, where a few men acquainted
+ with the ground were capable, with ordinary address, of baffling the
+ pursuit of numbers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The opinions and habits of the nearest neighbours to the Highland line
+ were also highly favourable to Rob Roy's purpose. A large proportion of
+ them were of his own clan of MacGregor, who claimed the property of
+ Balquhidder, and other Highland districts, as having been part of the
+ ancient possessions of their tribe; though the harsh laws, under the
+ severity of which they had suffered so deeply, had assigned the ownership
+ to other families. The civil wars of the seventeenth century had
+ accustomed these men to the use of arms, and they were peculiarly brave
+ and fierce from remembrance of their sufferings. The vicinity of a
+ comparatively rich Lowland district gave also great temptations to
+ incursion. Many belonging to other clans, habituated to contempt of
+ industry, and to the use of arms, drew towards an unprotected frontier
+ which promised facility of plunder; and the state of the country, now so
+ peaceable and quiet, verified at that time the opinion which Dr. Johnson
+ heard with doubt and suspicion, that the most disorderly and lawless
+ districts of the Highlands were those which lay nearest to the Lowland
+ line. There was, therefore, no difficulty in Rob Roy, descended of a tribe
+ which was widely dispersed in the country we have described, collecting
+ any number of followers whom he might be able to keep in action, and to
+ maintain by his proposed operations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He himself appears to have been singularly adapted for the profession
+ which he proposed to exercise. His stature was not of the tallest, but his
+ person was uncommonly strong and compact. The greatest peculiarities of
+ his frame were the breadth of his shoulders, and the great and almost
+ disproportionate length of his arms; so remarkable, indeed, that it was
+ said he could, without stooping, tie the garters of his Highland hose,
+ which are placed two inches below the knee. His countenance was open,
+ manly, stern at periods of danger, but frank and cheerful in his hours of
+ festivity. His hair was dark red, thick, and frizzled, and curled short
+ around the face. His fashion of dress showed, of course, the knees and
+ upper part of the leg, which was described to me, as resembling that of a
+ Highland bull, hirsute, with red hair, and evincing muscular strength
+ similar to that animal. To these personal qualifications must be added a
+ masterly use of the Highland sword, in which his length of arm gave him
+ great advantage&mdash;and a perfect and intimate knowledge of all the
+ recesses of the wild country in which he harboured, and the character of
+ the various individuals, whether friendly or hostile, with whom he might
+ come in contact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His mental qualities seem to have been no less adapted to the
+ circumstances in which he was placed. Though the descendant of the
+ blood-thirsty Ciar Mhor, he inherited none of his ancestor's ferocity. On
+ the contrary, Rob Roy avoided every appearance of cruelty, and it is not
+ averred that he was ever the means of unnecessary bloodshed, or the actor
+ in any deed which could lead the way to it. His schemes of plunder were
+ contrived and executed with equal boldness and sagacity, and were almost
+ universally successful, from the skill with which they were laid, and the
+ secrecy and rapidity with which they were executed. Like Robin Hood of
+ England, he was a kind and gentle robber,&mdash;and, while he took from
+ the rich, was liberal in relieving the poor. This might in part be policy;
+ but the universal tradition of the country speaks it to have arisen from a
+ better motive. All whom I have conversed with, and I have in my youth seen
+ some who knew Rob Roy personally, give him the character of a benevolent
+ and humane man &ldquo;in his way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His ideas of morality were those of an Arab chief, being such as naturally
+ arose out of his wild education. Supposing Rob Roy to have argued on the
+ tendency of the life which he pursued, whether from choice or from
+ necessity, he would doubtless have assumed to himself the character of a
+ brave man, who, deprived of his natural rights by the partiality of laws,
+ endeavoured to assert them by the strong hand of natural power; and he is
+ most felicitously described as reasoning thus, in the high-toned poetry of
+ my gifted friend Wordsworth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Say, then, that he was wise as brave,
+ As wise in thought as bold in deed;
+ For in the principles of things
+ <i>He</i> sought his moral creed.
+
+ Said generous Rob, &ldquo;What need of Books?
+ Burn all the statutes and their shelves!
+ They stir us up against our kind,
+ And worse, against ourselves.
+
+ &ldquo;We have a passion, make a law,
+ Too false to guide us or control;
+ And for the law itself we fight
+ In bitterness of soul.
+
+ &ldquo;And puzzled, blinded, then we lose
+ Distinctions that are plain and few;
+ These find I graven on my heart,
+ That tells me what to do.
+
+ &ldquo;The creatures see of flood and field,
+ And those that travel on the wind
+ With them no strife can last; they live
+ In peace, and peace of mind.
+
+ &ldquo;For why? Because the good old rule
+ Sufficeth them; the simple plan,
+ That they should take who have the power,
+ And they should keep who can.
+
+ &ldquo;A lesson which is quickly learn'd,
+ A signal through which all can see;
+ Thus, nothing here provokes the strong
+ To wanton cruelty.
+
+ &ldquo;And freakishness of mind is check'd,
+ He tamed who foolishly aspires,
+ While to the measure of his might
+ Each fashions his desires.
+
+ &ldquo;All kinds and creatures stand and fall
+ By strength of prowess or of wit;
+ 'Tis God's appointment who must sway,
+ And who is to submit.
+
+ &ldquo;Since then,&rdquo; said Robin, &ldquo;right is plain,
+ And longest life is but a day,
+ To have my ends, maintain my rights,
+ I'll take the shortest way.&rdquo;
+
+ And thus among these rocks he lived,
+ Through summer's heat and winter's snow
+
+ The eagle, he was lord above,
+ And Rob was lord below.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We are not, however, to suppose the character of this distinguished outlaw
+ to be that of an actual hero, acting uniformly and consistently on such
+ moral principles as the illustrious bard who, standing by his grave, has
+ vindicated his fame. On the contrary, as is common with barbarous chiefs,
+ Rob Roy appears to have mixed his professions of principle with a large
+ alloy of craft and dissimulation, of which his conduct during the civil
+ war is sufficient proof. It is also said, and truly, that although his
+ courtesy was one of his strongest characteristics, yet sometimes he
+ assumed an arrogance of manner which was not easily endured by the
+ high-spirited men to whom it was addressed, and drew the daring outlaw
+ into frequent disputes, from which he did not always come off with credit.
+ From this it has been inferred, that Rob Roy was more of a bully than a
+ hero, or at least that he had, according to the common phrase, his
+ fighting days. Some aged men who knew him well, have described him also as
+ better at a <i>taich-tulzie,</i> or scuffle within doors, than in mortal
+ combat. The tenor of his life may be quoted to repel this charge; while,
+ at the same time, it must be allowed, that the situation in which he was
+ placed rendered him prudently averse to maintaining quarrels, where
+ nothing was to be had save blows, and where success would have raised up
+ against him new and powerful enemies, in a country where revenge was still
+ considered as a duty rather than a crime. The power of commanding his
+ passions on such occasions, far from being inconsistent with the part
+ which MacGregor had to perform, was essentially necessary, at the period
+ when he lived, to prevent his career from being cut short.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I may here mention one or two occasions on which Rob Roy appears to have
+ given way in the manner alluded to. My late venerable friend, John Ramsay
+ of Ochtertyre, alike eminent as a classical scholar and as an authentic
+ register of the ancient history and manners of Scotland, informed me, that
+ on occasion of a public meeting at a bonfire in the town of Doune, Rob Roy
+ gave some offence to James Edmondstone of Newton, the same gentleman who
+ was unfortunately concerned in the slaughter of Lord Rollo (see
+ Maclaurin's Criminal Trials, No. IX.), when Edmondstone compelled
+ MacGregor to quit the town on pain of being thrown by him into the
+ bonfire. &ldquo;I broke one off your ribs on a former occasion,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;and
+ now, Rob, if you provoke me farther, I will break your neck.&rdquo; But it must
+ be remembered that Edmondstone was a man of consequence in the Jacobite
+ party, as he carried the royal standard of James VII. at the battle of
+ Sheriffmuir, and also, that he was near the door of his own mansion-house,
+ and probably surrounded by his friends and adherents. Rob Roy, however,
+ suffered in reputation for retiring under such a threat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another well-vouched case is that of Cunningham of Boquhan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry Cunningham, Esq. of Boquhan, was a gentleman of Stirlingshire, who,
+ like many <i>exquisites</i> of our own time, united a natural high spirit
+ and daring character with an affectation of delicacy of address and
+ manners amounting to foppery.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * His courage and affectation of foppery were united, which is less
+ frequently the case, with a spirit of innate modesty. He is thus described
+ in Lord Binning's satirical verses, entitled &ldquo;Argyle's Levee:&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Six times had Harry bowed unseen,
+ Before he dared advance;
+ The Duke then, turning round well pleased,
+ Said, 'Sure you've been in France!
+ A more polite and jaunty man
+ I never saw before:'
+ Then Harry bowed, and blushed, and bowed,
+ And strutted to the door.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ See a Collection of original Poems, by Scotch Gentlemen, vol. ii. p. 125.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He chanced to be in company with Rob Roy, who, either in contempt of
+ Boquhan's supposed effeminacy, or because he thought him a safe person to
+ fix a quarrel on (a point which Rob's enemies alleged he was wont to
+ consider), insulted him so grossly that a challenge passed between them.
+ The goodwife of the clachan had hidden Cunningham's sword, and while he
+ rummaged the house in quest of his own or some other, Rob Roy went to the
+ Shieling Hill, the appointed place of combat, and paraded there with great
+ majesty, waiting for his antagonist. In the meantime, Cunningham had
+ rummaged out an old sword, and, entering the ground of contest in all
+ haste, rushed on the outlaw with such unexpected fury that he fairly drove
+ him off the field, nor did he show himself in the village again for some
+ time. Mr. MacGregor Stirling has a softened account of this anecdote in
+ his new edition of Nimmo's Stirlingshire; still he records Rob Roy's
+ discomfiture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Occasionally Rob Roy suffered disasters, and incurred great personal
+ danger. On one remarkable occasion he was saved by the coolness of his
+ lieutenant, Macanaleister or Fletcher, the <i>Little John</i> of his band&mdash;a
+ fine active fellow, of course, and celebrated as a marksman. It happened
+ that MacGregor and his party had been surprised and dispersed by a
+ superior force of horse and foot, and the word was given to &ldquo;split and
+ squander.&rdquo; Each shifted for himself, but a bold dragoon attached himself
+ to pursuit of Rob, and overtaking him, struck at him with his broadsword.
+ A plate of iron in his bonnet saved the MacGregor from being cut down to
+ the teeth; but the blow was heavy enough to bear him to the ground, crying
+ as he fell, &ldquo;Oh, Macanaleister, is there naething in her?&rdquo; (<i>i.e.</i> in
+ the gun). The trooper, at the same time, exclaiming, &ldquo;D&mdash;n ye, your
+ mother never wrought your night-cap!&rdquo; had his arm raised for a second
+ blow, when Macanaleister fired, and the ball pierced the dragoon's heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such as he was, Rob Roy's progress in his occupation is thus described by
+ a gentleman of sense and talent, who resided within the circle of his
+ predatory wars, had probably felt their effects, and speaks of them, as
+ might be expected, with little of the forbearance with which, from their
+ peculiar and romantic character, they are now regarded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This man (Rob Roy MacGregor) was a person of sagacity, and neither wanted
+ stratagem nor address; and having abandoned himself to all licentiousness,
+ set himself at the head of all the loose, vagrant, and desperate people of
+ that clan, in the west end of Perth and Stirling shires, and infested
+ those whole countries with thefts, robberies, and depredations. Very few
+ who lived within his reach (that is, within the distance of a nocturnal
+ expedition) could promise to themselves security, either for their persons
+ or effects, without subjecting themselves to pay him a heavy and shameful
+ tax of <i>black-mail.</i> He at last proceeded to such a degree of
+ audaciousness that he committed robberies, raised contributions, and
+ resented quarrels, at the head of a very considerable body of armed men,
+ in open day, and in the face of the government.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Mr. Grahame of Gartmore's Causes of the Disturbances in the Highlands.
+ See Jamieson's edition of Burt's Letters from the North of Scotland,
+ Appendix, vol. ii. p. 348.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The extent and success of these depredations cannot be surprising, when we
+ consider that the scene of them was laid in a country where the general
+ law was neither enforced nor respected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having recorded that the general habit of cattle-stealing had blinded even
+ those of the better classes to the infamy of the practice, and that as
+ men's property consisted entirely in herds, it was rendered in the highest
+ degree precarious, Mr. Grahame adds&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On these accounts there is no culture of ground, no improvement of
+ pastures, and from the same reasons, no manufactures, no trade; in short,
+ no industry. The people are extremely prolific, and therefore so numerous,
+ that there is not business in that country, according to its present order
+ and economy, for the one-half of them. Every place is full of idle people,
+ accustomed to arms, and lazy in everything but rapines and depredations.
+ As <i>buddel</i> or <i>aquavitae</i> houses are to be found everywhere
+ through the country, so in these they saunter away their time, and
+ frequently consume there the returns of their illegal purchases. Here the
+ laws have never been executed, nor the authority of the magistrate ever
+ established. Here the officer of the law neither dare nor can execute his
+ duty, and several places are about thirty miles from lawful persons. In
+ short, here is no order, no authority, no government.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The period of the rebellion, 1715, approached soon after Rob Roy had
+ attained celebrity. His Jacobite partialities were now placed in
+ opposition to his sense of the obligations which he owed to the indirect
+ protection of the Duke of Argyle. But the desire of &ldquo;drowning his sounding
+ steps amid the din of general war&rdquo; induced him to join the forces of the
+ Earl of Mar, although his patron the Duke of Argyle was at the head of the
+ army opposed to the Highland insurgents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The MacGregors, a large sept of them at least, that of Ciar Mhor, on this
+ occasion were not commanded by Rob Roy, but by his nephew already
+ mentioned, Gregor MacGregor, otherwise called James Grahame of Glengyle,
+ and still better remembered by the Gaelic epithet of <i>Ghlune Dhu, i.e.</i>
+ Black Knee, from a black spot on one of his knees, which his Highland garb
+ rendered visible. There can be no question, however, that being then very
+ young, Glengyle must have acted on most occasions by the advice and
+ direction of so experienced a leader as his uncle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The MacGregors assembled in numbers at that period, and began even to
+ threaten the Lowlands towards the lower extremity of Loch Lomond. They
+ suddenly seized all the boats which were upon the lake, and, probably with
+ a view to some enterprise of their own, drew them overland to Inversnaid,
+ in order to intercept the progress of a large body of west-country whigs
+ who were in arms for the government, and moving in that direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whigs made an excursion for the recovery of the boats. Their forces
+ consisted of volunteers from Paisley, Kilpatrick, and elsewhere, who, with
+ the assistance of a body of seamen, were towed up the river Leven in
+ long-boats belonging to the ships of war then lying in the Clyde. At Luss
+ they were joined by the forces of Sir Humphrey Colquhoun, and James Grant,
+ his son-in-law, with their followers, attired in the Highland dress of the
+ period, which is picturesquely described.* The whole party crossed to
+ Craig-Royston, but the MacGregors did not offer combat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * &ldquo;At night they arrived at Luss, where they were joined by Sir Humphrey
+ Colquhoun of Luss, and James Grant of Plascander, his son-in-law, followed
+ by forty or fifty stately fellows in their short hose and belted plaids,
+ armed each of them with a well-fixed gun on his shoulder, a strong
+ handsome target, with a sharp-pointed steel of above half an ell in length
+ screwed into the navel of it, on his left arm, a sturdy claymore by his
+ side, and a pistol or two, with a dirk and knife, in his belt.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Rae's
+ History of the Rebellion,</i> 4to, p. 287.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we are to believe the account of the expedition given by the historian
+ Rae, they leapt on shore at Craig-Royston with the utmost intrepidity, no
+ enemy appearing to oppose them, and by the noise of their drums, which
+ they beat incessantly, and the discharge of their artillery and small
+ arms, terrified the MacGregors, whom they appear never to have seen, out
+ of their fastnesses, and caused them to fly in a panic to the general camp
+ of the Highlanders at Strath-Fillan.* The low-country men succeeded in
+ getting possession of the boats at a great expenditure of noise and
+ courage, and little risk of danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Note C. The Loch Lomond Expedition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this temporary removal from his old haunts, Rob Roy was sent by the
+ Earl of Mar to Aberdeen, to raise, it is believed, a part of the clan
+ Gregor, which is settled in that country. These men were of his own family
+ (the race of the Ciar Mhor). They were the descendants of about three
+ hundred MacGregors whom the Earl of Murray, about the year 1624,
+ transported from his estates in Menteith to oppose against his enemies the
+ MacIntoshes, a race as hardy and restless as they were themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But while in the city of Aberdeen, Rob Roy met a relation of a very
+ different class and character from those whom he was sent to summon to
+ arms. This was Dr. James Gregory (by descent a MacGregor), the patriarch
+ of a dynasty of professors distinguished for literary and scientific
+ talent, and the grandfather of the late eminent physician and accomplished
+ scholar, Professor Gregory of Edinburgh. This gentleman was at the time
+ Professor of Medicine in King's College, Aberdeen, and son of Dr. James
+ Gregory, distinguished in science as the inventor of the reflecting
+ telescope. With such a family it may seem our friend Rob could have had
+ little communion. But civil war is a species of misery which introduces
+ men to strange bed-fellows. Dr. Gregory thought it a point of prudence to
+ claim kindred, at so critical a period, with a man so formidable and
+ influential. He invited Rob Roy to his house, and treated him with so much
+ kindness, that he produced in his generous bosom a degree of gratitude
+ which seemed likely to occasion very inconvenient effects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Professor had a son about eight or nine years old,&mdash;a lively,
+ stout boy of his age,&mdash;with whose appearance our Highland Robin Hood
+ was much taken. On the day before his departure from the house of his
+ learned relative, Rob Roy, who had pondered deeply how he might requite
+ his cousin's kindness, took Dr. Gregory aside, and addressed him to this
+ purport:&mdash;&ldquo;My dear kinsman, I have been thinking what I could do to
+ show my sense of your hospitality. Now, here you have a fine spirited boy
+ of a son, whom you are ruining by cramming him with your useless
+ book-learning, and I am determined, by way of manifesting my great
+ good-will to you and yours, to take him with me and make a man of him.&rdquo;
+ The learned Professor was utterly overwhelmed when his warlike kinsman
+ announced his kind purpose in language which implied no doubt of its being
+ a proposal which, would be, and ought to be, accepted with the utmost
+ gratitude. The task of apology or explanation was of a most delicate
+ description; and there might have been considerable danger in suffering
+ Rob Roy to perceive that the promotion with which he threatened the son
+ was, in the father's eyes, the ready road to the gallows. Indeed, every
+ excuse which he could at first think of&mdash;such as regret for putting
+ his friend to trouble with a youth who had been educated in the Lowlands,
+ and so on&mdash;only strengthened the chieftain's inclination to patronise
+ his young kinsman, as he supposed they arose entirely from the modesty of
+ the father. He would for a long time take no apology, and even spoke of
+ carrying off the youth by a certain degree of kindly violence, whether his
+ father consented, or not. At length the perplexed Professor pleaded that
+ his son was very young, and in an infirm state of health, and not yet able
+ to endure the hardships of a mountain life; but that in another year or
+ two he hoped his health would be firmly established, and he would be in a
+ fitting condition to attend on his brave kinsman, and follow out the
+ splendid destinies to which he opened the way. This agreement being made,
+ the cousins parted,&mdash;Rob Roy pledging his honour to carry his young
+ relation to the hills with him on his next return to Aberdeenshire, and
+ Dr. Gregory, doubtless, praying in his secret soul that he might never see
+ Rob's Highland face again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ James Gregory, who thus escaped being his kinsman's recruit, and in all
+ probability his henchman, was afterwards Professor of Medicine in the
+ College, and, like most of his family, distinguished by his scientific
+ acquirements. He was rather of an irritable and pertinacious disposition;
+ and his friends were wont to remark, when he showed any symptom of these
+ foibles, &ldquo;Ah! this comes of not having been educated by Rob Roy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The connection between Rob Roy and his classical kinsman did not end with
+ the period of Rob's transient power. At a period considerably subsequent
+ to the year 1715, he was walking in the Castle Street of Aberdeen, arm in
+ arm with his host, Dr. James Gregory, when the drums in the barracks
+ suddenly beat to arms, and soldiers were seen issuing from the barracks.
+ &ldquo;If these lads are turning out,&rdquo; said Rob, taking leave of his cousin with
+ great composure, &ldquo;it is time for me to look after my safety.&rdquo; So saying,
+ he dived down a close, and, as John Bunyan says, &ldquo;went upon his way and
+ was seen no more.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * The first of these anecdotes, which brings the highest pitch of
+ civilisation so closely in contact with the half-savage state of society,
+ I have heard told by the late distinguished Dr. Gregory; and the members
+ of his family have had the kindness to collate the story with their
+ recollections and family documents, and furnish the authentic particulars.
+ The second rests on the recollection of an old man, who was present when
+ Rob took French leave of his literary cousin on hearing the drums beat,
+ and communicated the circumstance to Mr. Alexander Forbes, a connection of
+ Dr. Gregory by marriage, who is still alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have already stated that Rob Roy's conduct during the insurrection of
+ 1715 was very equivocal. His person and followers were in the Highland
+ army, but his heart seems to have been with the Duke of Argyle's. Yet the
+ insurgents were constrained to trust to him as their only guide, when they
+ marched from Perth towards Dunblane, with the view of crossing the Forth
+ at what are called the Fords of Frew, and when they themselves said he
+ could not be relied upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This movement to the westward, on the part of the insurgents, brought on
+ the battle of Sheriffmuir&mdash;indecisive, indeed, in its immediate
+ results, but of which the Duke of Argyle reaped the whole advantage. In
+ this action, it will be recollected that the right wing of the Highlanders
+ broke and cut to pieces Argyle's left wing, while the clans on the left of
+ Mar's army, though consisting of Stewarts, Mackenzies, and Camerons, were
+ completely routed. During this medley of flight and pursuit, Rob Roy
+ retained his station on a hill in the centre of the Highland position; and
+ though it is said his attack might have decided the day, he could not be
+ prevailed upon to charge. This was the more unfortunate for the
+ insurgents, as the leading of a party of the Macphersons had been
+ committed to MacGregor. This, it is said, was owing to the age and
+ infirmity of the chief of that name, who, unable to lead his clan in
+ person, objected to his heir-apparent, Macpherson of Nord, discharging his
+ duty on that occasion; so that the tribe, or a part of them, were brigaded
+ with their allies the MacGregors. While the favourable moment for action
+ was gliding away unemployed, Mar's positive orders reached Rob Roy that he
+ should presently attack. To which he coolly replied, &ldquo;No, no! if they
+ cannot do it without me, they cannot do it with me.&rdquo; One of the
+ Macphersons, named Alexander, one of Rob's original profession, <i>videlicet,</i>
+ a drover, but a man of great strength and spirit, was so incensed at the
+ inactivity of this temporary leader, that he threw off his plaid, drew his
+ sword, and called out to his clansmen, &ldquo;Let us endure this no longer! if
+ he will not lead you I will.&rdquo; Rob Roy replied, with great coolness, &ldquo;Were
+ the question about driving Highland stots or kyloes, Sandie, I would yield
+ to your superior skill; but as it respects the leading of men, I must be
+ allowed to be the better judge.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Did the matter respect driving
+ Glen-Eigas stots,&rdquo; answered the Macpherson, &ldquo;the question with Rob would
+ not be, which was to be last, but which was to be foremost.&rdquo; Incensed at
+ this sarcasm, MacGregor drew his sword, and they would have fought upon
+ the spot if their friends on both sides had not interfered. But the moment
+ of attack was completely lost. Rob did not, however, neglect his own
+ private interest on the occasion. In the confusion of an undecided field
+ of battle, he enriched his followers by plundering the baggage and the
+ dead on both sides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fine old satirical ballad on the battle of Sheriffmuir does not forget
+ to stigmatise our hero's conduct on this memorable occasion&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Rob Roy he stood watch
+ On a hill for to catch
+ The booty for aught that I saw, man;
+ For he ne'er advanced
+ From the place where he stanced,
+ Till nae mair was to do there at a', man.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding the sort of neutrality which Rob Roy had continued to
+ observe during the progress of the Rebellion, he did not escape some of
+ its penalties. He was included in the act of attainder, and the house in
+ Breadalbane, which was his place of retreat, was burned by General Lord
+ Cadogan, when, after the conclusion of the insurrection, he marched
+ through the Highlands to disarm and punish the offending clans. But upon
+ going to Inverary with about forty or fifty of his followers, Rob obtained
+ favour, by an apparent surrender of their arms to Colonel Patrick Campbell
+ of Finnah, who furnished them and their leader with protections under his
+ hand. Being thus in a great measure secured from the resentment of
+ government, Rob Roy established his residence at Craig-Royston, near Loch
+ Lomond, in the midst of his own kinsmen, and lost no time in resuming his
+ private quarrel with the Duke of Montrose. For this purpose he soon got on
+ foot as many men, and well armed too, as he had yet commanded. He never
+ stirred without a body-guard of ten or twelve picked followers, and
+ without much effort could increase them to fifty or sixty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke was not wanting in efforts to destroy this troublesome adversary.
+ His Grace applied to General Carpenter, commanding the forces in Scotland,
+ and by his orders three parties of soldiers were directed from the three
+ different points of Glasgow, Stirling, and Finlarig near Killin. Mr.
+ Graham of Killearn, the Duke of Montrose's relation and factor,
+ Sheriff-depute also of Dumbartonshire, accompanied the troops, that they
+ might act under the civil authority, and have the assistance of a trusty
+ guide well acquainted with the hills. It was the object of these several
+ columns to arrive about the same time in the neighbourhood of Rob Roy's
+ residence, and surprise him and his followers. But heavy rains, the
+ difficulties of the country, and the good intelligence which the Outlaw
+ was always supplied with, disappointed their well-concerted combination.
+ The troops, finding the birds were flown, avenged themselves by destroying
+ the nest. They burned Rob Roy's house,&mdash;though not with impunity; for
+ the MacGregors, concealed among the thickets and cliffs, fired on them,
+ and killed a grenadier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rob Roy avenged himself for the loss which he sustained on this occasion
+ by an act of singular audacity. About the middle of November 1716, John
+ Graham of Killearn, already mentioned as factor of the Montrose family,
+ went to a place called Chapel Errock, where the tenants of the Duke were
+ summoned to appear with their termly rents. They appeared accordingly, and
+ the factor had received ready money to the amount of about L300, when Rob
+ Roy entered the room at the head of an armed party. The Steward
+ endeavoured to protect the Duke's property by throwing the books of
+ accounts and money into a garret, trusting they might escape notice. But
+ the experienced freebooter was not to be baffled where such a prize was at
+ stake. He recovered the books and cash, placed himself calmly in the
+ receipt of custom, examined the accounts, pocketed the money, and gave
+ receipts on the Duke's part, saying he would hold reckoning with the Duke
+ of Montrose out of the damages which he had sustained by his Grace's
+ means, in which he included the losses he had suffered, as well by the
+ burning of his house by General Cadogan, as by the later expedition
+ against Craig-Royston. He then requested Mr. Graham to attend him; nor
+ does it appear that he treated him with any personal violence, or even
+ rudeness, although he informed him he regarded him as a hostage, and
+ menaced rough usage in case he should be pursued, or in danger of being
+ overtaken. Few more audacious feats have been performed. After some rapid
+ changes of place (the fatigue attending which was the only annoyance that
+ Mr. Graham seems to have complained of), he carried his prisoner to an
+ island on Loch Katrine, and caused him to write to the Duke, to state that
+ his ransom was fixed at L3400 merks, being the balance which MacGregor
+ pretended remained due to him, after deducting all that he owed to the
+ Duke of Montrose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, after detaining Mr. Graham five or six days in custody on the
+ island, which is still called Rob Roy's Prison, and could be no
+ comfortable dwelling for November nights, the Outlaw seems to have
+ despaired of attaining further advantage from his bold attempt, and
+ suffered his prisoner to depart uninjured, with the account-books, and
+ bills granted by the tenants, taking especial care to retain the cash.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * The reader will find two original letters of the Duke of Montrose, with
+ that which Mr. Graham of Killearn despatched from his prison-house by the
+ Outlaw's command, in the Appendix, No. II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About 1717, our Chieftain had the dangerous adventure of falling into the
+ hands of the Duke of Athole, almost as much his enemy as the Duke of
+ Montrose himself; but his cunning and dexterity again freed him from
+ certain death. See a contemporary account of this curious affair in the
+ Appendix, No. V.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other pranks are told of Rob, which argue the same boldness and sagacity
+ as the seizure of Killearn. The Duke of Montrose, weary of his insolence,
+ procured a quantity of arms, and distributed them among his tenantry, in
+ order that they might defend themselves against future violences. But they
+ fell into different hands from those they were intended for. The
+ MacGregors made separate attacks on the houses of the tenants, and
+ disarmed them all one after another, not, as was supposed, without the
+ consent of many of the persons so disarmed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a great part of the Duke's rents were payable in kind, there were
+ girnels (granaries) established for storing up the corn at Moulin, and
+ elsewhere on the Buchanan estate. To these storehouses Rob Roy used to
+ repair with a sufficient force, and of course when he was least expected,
+ and insist upon the delivery of quantities of grain&mdash;sometimes for
+ his own use, and sometimes for the assistance of the country people;
+ always giving regular receipts in his own name, and pretending to reckon
+ with the Duke for what sums he received.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile a garrison was established by Government, the ruins of
+ which may be still seen about half-way betwixt Loch Lomond and Loch
+ Katrine, upon Rob Roy's original property of Inversnaid. Even this
+ military establishment could not bridle the restless MacGregor. He
+ contrived to surprise the little fort, disarm the soldiers, and destroy
+ the fortification. It was afterwards re-established, and again taken by
+ the MacGregors under Rob Roy's nephew Ghlune Dhu, previous to the
+ insurrection of 1745-6. Finally, the fort of Inversnaid was a third time
+ repaired after the extinction of civil discord; and when we find the
+ celebrated General Wolfe commanding in it, the imagination is strongly
+ affected by the variety of time and events which the circumstance brings
+ simultaneously to recollection. It is now totally dismantled.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * About 1792, when the author chanced to pass that way while on a tour
+ through the Highlands, a garrison, consisting of a single veteran, was
+ still maintained at Inversnaid. The venerable warder was reaping his
+ barley croft in all peace and tranquillity and when we asked admittance to
+ repose ourselves, he told us we would find the key of the Fort under the
+ door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not, strictly speaking, as a professed depredator that Rob Roy now
+ conducted his operations, but as a sort of contractor for the police; in
+ Scottish phrase, a lifter of black-mail. The nature of this contract has
+ been described in the Novel of Waverley, and in the notes on that work.
+ Mr. Grahame of Gartmore's description of the character may be here
+ transcribed:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The confusion and disorders of the country were so great, and the
+ Government go absolutely neglected it, that the sober people were obliged
+ to purchase some security to their effects by shameful and ignominious
+ contracts of <i>black-mail.</i> A person who had the greatest
+ correspondence with the thieves was agreed with to preserve the lands
+ contracted for from thefts, for certain sums to be paid yearly. Upon this
+ fund he employed one half of the thieves to recover stolen cattle, and the
+ other half of them to steal, in order to make this agreement and
+ black-mail contract necessary. The estates of those gentlemen who refused
+ to contract, or give countenance to that pernicious practice, are
+ plundered by the thieving part of the watch, in order to force them to
+ purchase their protection. Their leader calls himself the <i>Captain</i>
+ of the <i>Watch,</i> and his banditti go by that name. And as this gives
+ them a kind of authority to traverse the country, so it makes them capable
+ of doing any mischief. These corps through the Highlands make altogether a
+ very considerable body of men, inured from their infancy to the greatest
+ fatigues, and very capable, to act in a military way when occasion offers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;People who are ignorant and enthusiastic, who are in absolute dependence
+ upon their chief or landlord, who are directed in their consciences by
+ Roman Catholic priests, or nonjuring clergymen, and who are not masters of
+ any property, may easily be formed into any mould. They fear no dangers,
+ as they have nothing to lose, and so can with ease be induced to attempt
+ anything. Nothing can make their condition worse: confusions and troubles
+ do commonly indulge them in such licentiousness, that by these they better
+ it.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Letters from the North of Scotland, vol. ii. pp. 344, 345.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the practice of contracting for black-mail was an obvious encouragement
+ to rapine, and a great obstacle to the course of justice, it was, by the
+ statute 1567, chap. 21, declared a capital crime both on the part of him
+ who levied and him who paid this sort of tax. But the necessity of the
+ case prevented the execution of this severe law, I believe, in any one
+ instance; and men went on submitting to a certain unlawful imposition
+ rather than run the risk of utter ruin&mdash;just as it is now found
+ difficult or impossible to prevent those who have lost a very large sum of
+ money by robbery, from compounding with the felons for restoration of a
+ part of their booty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At what rate Rob Roy levied black-mail I never heard stated; but there is
+ a formal contract by which his nephew, in 1741, agreed with various
+ landholders of estates in the counties of Perth, Stirling, and Dumbarton,
+ to recover cattle stolen from them, or to pay the value within six months
+ of the loss being intimated, if such intimation were made to him with
+ sufficient despatch, in consideration of a payment of L5 on each L100 of
+ valued rent, which was not a very heavy insurance. Petty thefts were not
+ included in the contract; but the theft of one horse, or one head of black
+ cattle, or of sheep exceeding the number of six, fell under the agreement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rob Roy's profits upon such contracts brought him in a considerable
+ revenue in money or cattle, of which he made a popular use; for he was
+ publicly liberal as well as privately beneficent. The minister of the
+ parish of Balquhidder, whose name was Robertson, was at one time
+ threatening to pursue the parish for an augmentation of his stipend. Rob
+ Roy took an opportunity to assure him that he would do well to abstain
+ from this new exaction&mdash;a hint which the minister did not fail to
+ understand. But to make him some indemnification, MacGregor presented him
+ every year with a cow and a fat sheep; and no scruples as to the mode in
+ which the donor came by them are said to have affected the reverend
+ gentleman's conscience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following amount of the proceedings of Rob Roy, on an application to
+ him from one of his contractors, had in it something very interesting to
+ me, as told by an old countryman in the Lennox who was present on the
+ expedition. But as there is no point or marked incident in the story, and
+ as it must necessarily be without the half-frightened, half-bewildered
+ look with which the narrator accompanied his recollections, it may
+ possibly lose, its effect when transferred to paper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My informant stated himself to have been a lad of fifteen, living with his
+ father on the estate of a gentleman in the Lennox, whose name I have
+ forgotten, in the capacity of herd. On a fine morning in the end of
+ October, the period when such calamities were almost always to be
+ apprehended, they found the Highland thieves had been down upon them, and
+ swept away ten or twelve head of cattle. Rob Roy was sent for, and came
+ with a party of seven or eight armed men. He heard with great gravity all
+ that could be told him of the circumstances of the <i>creagh,</i> and
+ expressed his confidence that the <i>herd-widdiefows</i>* could not have
+ carried their booty far, and that he should be able to recover them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Mad herdsmen&mdash;a name given to cattle-stealers [properly one who
+ deserves to fill a <i>widdie,</i> or halter].
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He desired that two Lowlanders should be sent on the party, as it was not
+ to be expected that any of his gentlemen would take the trouble of driving
+ the cattle when he should recover possession of them. My informant and his
+ father were despatched on the expedition. They had no good will to the
+ journey; nevertheless, provided with a little food, and with a dog to help
+ them to manage the cattle, they set off with MacGregor. They travelled a
+ long day's journey in the direction of the mountain Benvoirlich, and slept
+ for the night in a ruinous hut or bothy. The next morning they resumed
+ their journey among the hills, Rob Roy directing their course by signs and
+ marks on the heath which my informant did not understand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About noon Rob commanded the armed party to halt, and to lie couched in
+ the heather where it was thickest. &ldquo;Do you and your son,&rdquo; he said to the
+ oldest Lowlander, &ldquo;go boldly over the hill;&mdash;you will see beneath
+ you, in a glen on the other side, your master's cattle, feeding, it may
+ be, with others; gather your own together, taking care to disturb no one
+ else, and drive them to this place. If any one speak to or threaten you,
+ tell them that I am here, at the head of twenty men.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;But what if
+ they abuse us, or kill us?&rdquo; said the Lowland, peasant, by no means
+ delighted at finding the embassy imposed on him and his son. &ldquo;If they do
+ you any wrong,&rdquo; said Rob, &ldquo;I will never forgive them as long as I live.&rdquo;
+ The Lowlander was by no means content with this security, but did not
+ think it safe to dispute Rob's injunctions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="image-0005" id="image-0005">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/pa000.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Cattle Lifting " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ He and his son climbed the hill therefore, found a deep valley, where
+ there grazed, as Rob had predicted, a large herd of cattle. They
+ cautiously selected those which their master had lost, and took measures
+ to drive them over the hill. As soon as they began to remove them, they
+ were surprised by hearing cries and screams; and looking around in fear
+ and trembling they saw a woman seeming to have started out of the earth,
+ who <i>flyted</i> at them, that is, scolded them, in Gaelic. When they
+ contrived, however, in the best Gaelic they could muster, to deliver the
+ message Rob Roy told them, she became silent, and disappeared without
+ offering them any further annoyance. The chief heard their story on their
+ return, and spoke with great complacency of the art which he possessed of
+ putting such things to rights without any unpleasant bustle. The party
+ were now on their road home, and the danger, though not the fatigue, of
+ the expedition was at an end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They drove on the cattle with little repose until it was nearly dark, when
+ Rob proposed to halt for the night upon a wide moor, across which a cold
+ north-east wind, with frost on its wing, was whistling to the tune of the
+ Pipers of Strath-Dearn.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * The winds which sweep a wild glen in Badenoch are so called.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Highlanders, sheltered by their plaids, lay down on the heath
+ comfortably enough, but the Lowlanders had no protection whatever. Rob Roy
+ observing this, directed one of his followers to afford the old man a
+ portion of his plaid; &ldquo;for the callant (boy), he may,&rdquo; said the
+ freebooter, &ldquo;keep himself warm by walking about and watching the cattle.&rdquo;
+ My informant heard this sentence with no small distress; and as the frost
+ wind grew more and more cutting, it seemed to freeze the very blood in his
+ young veins. He had been exposed to weather all his life, he said, but
+ never could forget the cold of that night; insomuch that, in the
+ bitterness of his heart, he cursed the bright moon for giving no heat with
+ so much light. At length the sense of cold and weariness became so
+ intolerable that he resolved to desert his watch to seek some repose and
+ shelter. With that purpose he couched himself down behind one of the most
+ bulky of the Highlanders, who acted as lieutenant to the party. Not
+ satisfied with having secured the shelter of the man's large person, he
+ coveted a share of his plaid, and by imperceptible degrees drew a corner
+ of it round him. He was now comparatively in paradise, and slept sound
+ till daybreak, when he awoke, and was terribly afraid on observing that
+ his nocturnal operations had altogether uncovered the dhuiniewassell's
+ neck and shoulders, which, lacking the plaid which should have protected
+ them, were covered with <i>cranreuch</i> (<i>i.e.</i> hoar frost). The lad
+ rose in great dread of a beating, at least, when it should be found how
+ luxuriously he had been accommodated at the expense of a principal person
+ of the party. Good Mr. Lieutenant, however, got up and shook himself,
+ rubbing off the hoar frost with his plaid, and muttering something of a <i>cauld
+ neight.</i> They then drove on the cattle, which were restored to their
+ owner without farther adventure&mdash;The above can hardly be termed a
+ tale, but yet it contains materials both for the poet and artist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was perhaps about the same time that, by a rapid march into the
+ Balquhidder hills at the head of a body of his own tenantry, the Duke of
+ Montrose actually surprised Rob Roy, and made him prisoner. He was mounted
+ behind one of the Duke's followers, named James Stewart, and made fast to
+ him by a horse-girth. The person who had him thus in charge was
+ grandfather of the intelligent man of the same name, now deceased, who
+ lately kept the inn in the vicinity of Loch Katrine, and acted as a guide
+ to visitors through that beautiful scenery. From him I learned the story
+ many years before he was either a publican, or a guide, except to moorfowl
+ shooters.&mdash;It was evening (to resume the story), and the Duke was
+ pressing on to lodge his prisoner, so long sought after in vain, in some
+ place of security, when, in crossing the Teith or Forth, I forget which,
+ MacGregor took an opportunity to conjure Stewart, by all the ties of old
+ acquaintance and good neighbourhood, to give him some chance of an escape
+ from an assured doom. Stewart was moved with compassion, perhaps with
+ fear. He slipt the girth-buckle, and Rob, dropping down from behind the
+ horse's croupe, dived, swam, and escaped, pretty much as described in the
+ Novel. When James Stewart came on shore, the Duke hastily demanded where
+ his prisoner was; and as no distinct answer was returned, instantly
+ suspected Stewart's connivance at the escape of the Outlaw; and, drawing a
+ steel pistol from his belt, struck him down with a blow on the head, from
+ the effects of which, his descendant said, he never completely recovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the success of his repeated escapes from the pursuit of his powerful
+ enemy, Rob Roy at length became wanton and facetious. He wrote a mock
+ challenge to the Duke, which he circulated among his friends to amuse them
+ over a bottle. The reader will find this document in the Appendix.* It is
+ written in a good hand, and not particularly deficient in grammar or
+ spelling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Appendix, No. III.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our Southern readers must be given to understand that it was a piece of
+ humour,&mdash;a <i>quiz,</i> in short,&mdash;on the part of the Outlaw,
+ who was too sagacious to propose such a rencontre in reality. This letter
+ was written in the year 1719.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the following year Rob Roy composed another epistle, very little to his
+ own reputation, as he therein confesses having played booty during the
+ civil war of 1715. It is addressed to General Wade, at that time engaged
+ in disarming the Highland clans, and making military roads through the
+ country. The letter is a singular composition. It sets out the writer's
+ real and unfeigned desire to have offered his service to King George, but
+ for his liability to be thrown into jail for a civil debt, at the instance
+ of the Duke of Montrose. Being thus debarred from taking the right side,
+ he acknowledged he embraced the wrong one, upon Falstaff's principle, that
+ since the King wanted men and the rebels soldiers, it were worse shame to
+ be idle in such a stirring world, than to embrace the worst side, were it
+ as black as rebellion could make it. The impossibility of his being
+ neutral in such a debate, Rob seems to lay down as an undeniable
+ proposition. At the same time, while he acknowledges having been forced
+ into an unnatural rebellion against King George, he pleads that he not
+ only avoided acting offensively against his Majesty's forces on all
+ occasions, but, on the contrary, sent to them what intelligence he could
+ collect from time to time; for the truth of which he refers to his Grace
+ the Duke of Argyle. What influence this plea had on General Wade, we have
+ no means of knowing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rob Roy appears to have continued to live very much as usual. His fame, in
+ the meanwhile, passed beyond the narrow limits of the country in which he
+ resided. A pretended history of him appeared in London during his
+ lifetime, under the title of the Highland Rogue. It is a catch-penny
+ publication, bearing in front the effigy of a species of ogre, with a
+ beard of a foot in length; and his actions are as much exaggerated as his
+ personal appearance. Some few of the best known adventures of the hero are
+ told, though with little accuracy; but the greater part of the pamphlet is
+ entirely fictitious. It is great pity so excellent a theme for a narrative
+ of the kind had not fallen into the hands of De Foe, who was engaged at
+ the time on subjects somewhat similar, though inferior in dignity and
+ interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Rob Roy advanced in years, he became more peaceable in his habits, and
+ his nephew Ghlune Dhu, with most of his tribe, renounced those peculiar
+ quarrels with the Duke of Montrose, by which his uncle had been
+ distinguished. The policy of that great family had latterly been rather to
+ attach this wild tribe by kindness than to follow the mode of violence
+ which had been hitherto ineffectually resorted to. Leases at a low rent
+ were granted to many of the MacGregors, who had heretofore held
+ possessions in the Duke's Highland property merely by occupancy; and
+ Glengyle (or Black-knee), who continued to act as collector of black-mail,
+ managed his police, as a commander of the Highland watch arrayed at the
+ charge of Government. He is said to have strictly abstained from the open
+ and lawless depredations which his kinsman had practised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was probably after this state of temporary quiet had been obtained,
+ that Rob Roy began to think of the concerns of his future state. He had
+ been bred, and long professed himself, a Protestant; but in his later
+ years he embraced the Roman Catholic faith,&mdash;perhaps on Mrs. Cole's
+ principle, that it was a comfortable religion for one of his calling. He
+ is said to have alleged as the cause of his conversion, a desire to
+ gratify the noble family of Perth, who were then strict Catholics. Having,
+ as he observed, assumed the name of the Duke of Argyle, his first
+ protector, he could pay no compliment worth the Earl of Perth's acceptance
+ save complying with his mode of religion. Rob did not pretend, when
+ pressed closely on the subject, to justify all the tenets of Catholicism,
+ and acknowledged that extreme unction always appeared to him a great waste
+ of <i>ulzie,</i> or oil.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+* Such an admission is ascribed to the robber Donald Bean Lean in
+Waverley, chap. lxii,
+</pre>
+<p>
+In the last years of Rob Roy's life, his clan was involved in a dispute
+with one more powerful than themselves. Stewart of Appin, a chief of the
+tribe so named, was proprietor of a hill-farm in the Braes of
+Balquhidder, called Invernenty. The MacGregors of Rob Roy's tribe claimed
+a right to it by ancient occupancy, and declared they would oppose to the
+uttermost the settlement of any person upon the farm not being of their
+own name. The Stewarts came down with two hundred men, well armed, to do
+themselves justice by main force. The MacGregors took the field, but were
+unable to muster an equal strength. Rob Roy, fending himself the weaker
+party, asked a parley, in which he represented that both clans were
+friends to the <i>King,</i> and, that he was unwilling they should be weakened
+by mutual conflict, and thus made a merit of surrendering to Appin the
+disputed territory of Invernenty. Appin, accordingly, settled as tenants
+there, at an easy quit-rent, the MacLarens, a family dependent on the
+Stewarts, and from whose character for strength and bravery, it was
+expected that they would make their right good if annoyed by the
+MacGregors. When all this had been amicably adjusted, in presence of the
+two clans drawn up in arms near the Kirk of Balquhidder, Rob Roy,
+apparently fearing his tribe might be thought to have conceded too much
+upon the occasion, stepped forward and said, that where so many gallant
+men were met in arms, it would be shameful to part without it trial of
+skill, and therefore he took the freedom to invite any gentleman of the
+Stewarts present to exchange a few blows with him for the honour of their
+respective clans. The brother-in-law of Appin, and second chieftain of
+the clan, Alaster Stewart of Invernahyle, accepted the challenge, and
+they encountered with broadsword and target before their respective
+kinsmen.*
+</p>
+ <pre>
+ * Some accounts state that Appin himself was Rob Roy's antagonist on this
+ occasion. My recollection, from the account of Invernahyle himself, was as
+ stated in the text. But the period when I received the information is now
+ so distant, that it is possible I may be mistaken. Invernahyle was rather
+ of low stature, but very well made, athletic, and an excellent swordsman.
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ The combat lasted till Rob received a slight wound in the arm, which was
+ the usual termination of such a combat when fought for honour only, and
+ not with a mortal purpose. Rob Roy dropped his point, and congratulated
+ his adversary on having been the first man who ever drew blood from him.
+ The victor generously acknowledged, that without the advantage of youth,
+ and the agility accompanying it, he probably could not have come off with
+ advantage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was probably one of Rob Roy's last exploits in arms. The time of his
+ death is not known with certainty, but he is generally said to have
+ survived 1738, and to have died an aged man. When he found himself
+ approaching his final change, he expressed some contrition for particular
+ parts of his life. His wife laughed at these scruples of conscience, and
+ exhorted him to die like a man, as he had lived. In reply, he rebuked her
+ for her violent passions, and the counsels she had given him. &ldquo;You have
+ put strife,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;betwixt me and the best men of the country, and now
+ you would place enmity between me and my God.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a tradition, no way inconsistent with the former, if the
+ character of Rob Roy be justly considered, that while on his deathbed, he
+ learned that a person with whom he was at enmity proposed to visit him.
+ &ldquo;Raise me from my bed,&rdquo; said the invalid; &ldquo;throw my plaid around me, and
+ bring me my claymore, dirk, and pistols&mdash;it shall never be said that
+ a foeman saw Rob Roy MacGregor defenceless and unarmed.&rdquo; His foeman,
+ conjectured to be one of the MacLarens before and after mentioned, entered
+ and paid his compliments, inquiring after the health of his formidable
+ neighbour. Rob Roy maintained a cold haughty civility during their short
+ conference, and so soon as he had left the house. &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;all is
+ over&mdash;let the piper play, <i>Ha til mi tulidh</i>&rdquo; (we return no
+ more); and he is said to have expired before the dirge was finished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This singular man died in bed in his own house, in the parish of
+ Balquhidder. He was buried in the churchyard of the same parish, where his
+ tombstone is only distinguished by a rude attempt at the figure of a
+ broadsword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The character of Rob Roy is, of course, a mixed one. His sagacity,
+ boldness, and prudence, qualities so highly necessary to success in war,
+ became in some degree vices, from the manner in which they were employed.
+ The circumstances of his education, however, must be admitted as some
+ extenuation of his habitual transgressions against the law; and for his
+ political tergiversations, he might in that distracted period plead the
+ example of men far more powerful, and less excusable in becoming the sport
+ of circumstances, than the poor and desperate outlaw. On the other hand,
+ he was in the constant exercise of virtues, the more meritorious as they
+ seem inconsistent with his general character. Pursuing the occupation of a
+ predatory chieftain,&mdash;in modern phrase a captain of banditti,&mdash;Rob
+ Roy was moderate in his revenge, and humane in his successes. No charge of
+ cruelty or bloodshed, unless in battle, is brought against his memory. In
+ like manner, the formidable outlaw was the friend of the poor, and, to the
+ utmost of his ability, the support of the widow and the orphan&mdash;kept
+ his word when pledged&mdash;and died lamented in his own wild country,
+ where there were hearts grateful for his beneficence, though their minds
+ were not sufficiently instructed to appreciate his errors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The author perhaps ought to stop here; but the fate of a part of Rob Roy's
+ family was so extraordinary, as to call for a continuation of this
+ somewhat prolix account, as affording an interesting chapter, not on
+ Highland manners alone, but on every stage of society in which the people
+ of a primitive and half-civilised tribe are brought into close contact
+ with a nation, in which civilisation and polity have attained a complete
+ superiority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rob had five sons,&mdash;Coll, Ronald, James, Duncan, and Robert. Nothing
+ occurs worth notice concerning three of them; but James, who was a very
+ handsome man, seems to have had a good deal of his father's spirit, and
+ the mantle of Dougal Ciar Mhor had apparently descended on the shoulders
+ of Robin Oig, that is, young Robin. Shortly after Rob Roy's death, the
+ ill-will which the MacGregors entertained against the MacLarens again
+ broke out, at the instigation, it was said, of Rob's widow, who seems thus
+ far to have deserved the character given to her by her husband, as an Ate'
+ stirring up to blood and strife. Robin Oig, under her instigation, swore
+ that as soon as he could get back a certain gun which had belonged to his
+ father, and had been lately at Doune to be repaired, he would shoot
+ MacLaren, for having presumed to settle on his mother's land.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * This fatal piece was taken from Robin Oig, when he was seized many years
+ afterwards. It remained in possession of the magistrates before whom he
+ was brought for examination, and now makes part of a small collection of
+ arms belonging to the Author. It is a Spanish-barrelled gun, marked with
+ the letters R. M. C., for Robert MacGregor Campbell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was as good as his word, and shot MacLaren when between the stilts of
+ his plough, wounding him mortally.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The aid of a Highland leech was procured, who probed the wound with a
+ probe made out of a castock; <i>i.e.</i>, the stalk of a colewort or
+ cabbage. This learned gentleman declared he would not venture to
+ prescribe, not knowing with what shot the patient had been wounded.
+ MacLaren died, and about the same time his cattle were houghed, and his
+ live stock destroyed in a barbarous manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin Oig, after this feat&mdash;which one of his biographers represents
+ as the unhappy discharge of a gun&mdash;retired to his mother's house, to
+ boast that he had drawn the first blood in the quarrel aforesaid. On the
+ approach of troops, and a body of the Stewarts, who were bound to take up
+ the cause of their tenant, Robin Oig absconded, and escaped all search.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor already mentioned, by name Callam MacInleister, with James and
+ Ronald, brothers to the actual perpetrator of the murder, were brought to
+ trial. But as they contrived to represent the action as a rash deed
+ committed by &ldquo;the daft callant Rob,&rdquo; to which they were not accessory, the
+ jury found their accession to the crime was Not Proven. The alleged acts
+ of spoil and violence on the MacLarens' cattle, were also found to be
+ unsupported by evidence. As it was proved, however, that the two brothers,
+ Ronald and James, were held and reputed thieves, they were appointed to
+ find caution to the extent of L200, for their good behaviour for seven
+ years.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Note D. Author's expedition against the MacLarens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spirit of clanship was at that time, so strong&mdash;to which must be
+ added the wish to secure the adherence of stout, able-bodied, and, as the
+ Scotch phrase then went, <i>pretty</i> men&mdash;that the representative
+ of the noble family of Perth condescended to act openly as patron of the
+ MacGregors, and appeared as such upon their trial. So at least the author
+ was informed by the late Robert MacIntosh, Esq., advocate. The
+ circumstance may, however, have occurred later than 1736&mdash;the year in
+ which this first trial took place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin Oig served for a time in the 42d regiment, and was present at the
+ battle of Fontenoy, where he was made prisoner and wounded. He was
+ exchanged, returned to Scotland, and obtained his discharge. He afterwards
+ appeared openly in the MacGregor's country; and, notwithstanding his
+ outlawry, married a daughter of Graham of Drunkie, a gentleman of some
+ property. His wife died a few years afterwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The insurrection of 1745 soon afterwards called the MacGregors to arms.
+ Robert MacGregor of Glencarnoch, generally regarded as the chief of the
+ whole name, and grandfather of Sir John, whom the clan received in that
+ character, raised a MacGregor regiment, with which he joined the standard
+ of the Chevalier. The race of Ciar Mhor, however, affecting independence,
+ and commanded by Glengyle and his cousin James Roy MacGregor, did not join
+ this kindred corps, but united themselves to the levies of the titular
+ Duke of Perth, until William MacGregor Drummond of Bolhaldie, whom they
+ regarded as head of their branch, of Clan Alpine, should come over from
+ France. To cement the union after the Highland fashion, James laid down
+ the name of Campbell, and assumed that of Drummond, in compliment to Lord
+ Perth. He was also called James Roy, after his father, and James Mhor, or
+ Big James, from his height. His corps, the relics of his father Rob's
+ band, behaved with great activity; with only twelve men he succeeded in
+ surprising and burning, for the second time, the fort at Inversnaid,
+ constructed for the express purpose of bridling the country of the
+ MacGregors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What rank or command James MacGregor had, is uncertain. He calls himself
+ Major; and Chevalier Johnstone calls him Captain. He must have held rank
+ under Ghlune Dhu, his kinsman, but his active and audacious character
+ placed him above the rest of his brethren. Many of his followers were
+ unarmed; he supplied the want of guns and swords with scythe-blades set
+ straight upon their handles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the battle of Prestonpans, James Roy distinguished himself. &ldquo;His
+ company,&rdquo; says Chevalier Johnstone, &ldquo;did great execution with their
+ scythes.&rdquo; They cut the legs of the horses in two&mdash;the riders through
+ the middle of their bodies. MacGregor was brave and intrepid, but at the
+ same time, somewhat whimsical and singular. When advancing to the charge
+ with his company, he received five wounds, two of them from balls that
+ pierced his body through and through. Stretched on the ground, with his
+ head resting on his hand, he called out loudly to the Highlanders of his
+ company, &ldquo;My lads, I am not dead. By G&mdash;, I shall see if any of you
+ does not do his duty.&rdquo; The victory, as is well known, was instantly
+ obtained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In some curious letters of James Roy,* it appears that his thigh-bone was
+ broken on this occasion, and that he, nevertheless, rejoined the army with
+ six companies, and was present at the battle of Culloden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Published in Blackwood's Magazine, vol. ii. p. 228.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After that defeat, the clan MacGregor kept together in a body, and did not
+ disperse till they had returned into their own country. They brought James
+ Roy with them in a litter; and, without being particularly molested, he
+ was permitted to reside in the MacGregor's country along with his
+ brothers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ James MacGregor Drummond was attainted for high treason with persons of
+ more importance. But it appears he had entered into some communication
+ with Government, as, in the letters quoted, he mentions having obtained a
+ pass from the Lord Justice-Clerk in 1747, which was a sufficient
+ protection to him from the military. The circumstance is obscurely stated
+ in one of the letters already quoted, but may perhaps, joined to
+ subsequent incidents, authorise the suspicion that James, like his father,
+ could look at both sides of the cards. As the confusion of the country
+ subsided, the MacGregors, like foxes which had baffled the hounds, drew
+ back to their old haunts, and lived unmolested. But an atrocious outrage,
+ in which the sons of Rob Roy were concerned, brought at length on the
+ family the full vengeance of the law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ James Roy was a married man, and had fourteen children. But his brother,
+ Robin Oig, was now a widower; and it was resolved, if possible, that he
+ should make his fortune by carrying off and marrying, by force if
+ necessary, some woman of fortune from the Lowlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The imagination of the half-civilised Highlanders was less shocked at the
+ idea of this particular species of violence, than might be expected from
+ their general kindness to the weaker sex when they make part of their own
+ families. But all their views were tinged with the idea that they lived in
+ a state of war; and in such a state, from the time of the siege of Troy to
+ &ldquo;the moment when Previsa fell,&rdquo; * the female captives are, to uncivilised
+ victors, the most valuable part of the booty&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Canto II.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;The wealthy are slaughtered, the lovely are spared.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ We need not refer to the rape of the Sabines, or to a similar instance in
+ the Book of Judges, for evidence that such deeds of violence have been
+ committed upon a large scale. Indeed, this sort of enterprise was so
+ common along the Highland line as to give rise to a variety of songs and
+ ballads.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * See Appendix, No. VI.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The annals of Ireland, as well as those of Scotland, prove the crime to
+ have been common in the more lawless parts of both countries; and any
+ woman who happened to please a man of spirit who came of a good house, and
+ possessed a few chosen friends, and a retreat in the mountains, was not
+ permitted the alternative of saying him nay. What is more, it would seem
+ that the women themselves, most interested in the immunities of their sex,
+ were, among the lower classes, accustomed to regard such marriages as that
+ which is presently to be detailed as &ldquo;pretty Fanny's way,&rdquo; or rather, the
+ way of Donald with pretty Fanny. It is not a great many years since a
+ respectable woman, above the lower rank of life, expressed herself very
+ warmly to the author on his taking the freedom to censure the behaviour of
+ the MacGregors on the occasion in question. She said &ldquo;that there was no
+ use in giving a bride too much choice upon such occasions; that the
+ marriages were the happiest long syne which had been done offhand.&rdquo;
+ Finally, she averred that her &ldquo;own mother had never seen her father till
+ the night he brought her up from the Lennox, with ten head of black
+ cattle, and there had not been a happier couple in the country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ James Drummond and his brethren having similar opinions with the author's
+ old acquaintance, and debating how they might raise the fallen fortunes of
+ their clan, formed a resolution to settle their brother's fortune by
+ striking up an advantageous marriage betwixt Robin Oig and one Jean Key,
+ or Wright, a young woman scarce twenty years old, and who had been left
+ about two months a widow by the death of her husband. Her property was
+ estimated at only from 16,000 to 18,000 merks, but it seems to have been
+ sufficient temptation to these men to join in the commission of a great
+ crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This poor young victim lived with her mother in her own house at
+ Edinbilly, in the parish of Balfron and shire of Stirling. At this place,
+ in the night of 3d December 1750, the sons of Rob Roy, and particularly
+ James Mhor and Robin Oig, rushed into the house where the object of their
+ attack was resident, presented guns, swords, and pistols to the males of
+ the family, and terrified the women by threatening to break open the doors
+ if Jean Key was not surrendered, as, said James Roy, &ldquo;his brother was a
+ young fellow determined to make his fortune.&rdquo; Having, at length, dragged
+ the object of their lawless purpose from her place of concealment, they
+ tore her from her mother's arms, mounted her on a horse before one of the
+ gang, and carried her off in spite, of her screams and cries, which were
+ long heard after the terrified spectators of the outrage could no longer
+ see the party retreat through the darkness. In her attempts to escape, the
+ poor young woman threw herself from the horse on which they had placed
+ her, and in so doing wrenched her side. They then laid her double over the
+ pummel of the saddle, and transported her through the mosses and moors
+ till the pain of the injury she had suffered in her side, augmented by the
+ uneasiness of her posture, made her consent to sit upright. In the
+ execution of this crime they stopped at more houses than one, but none of
+ the inhabitants dared interrupt their proceedings. Amongst others who saw
+ them was that classical and accomplished scholar the late Professor
+ William Richardson of Glasgow, who used to describe as a terrible dream
+ their violent and noisy entrance into the house where he was then
+ residing. The Highlanders filled the little kitchen, brandishing their
+ arms, demanding what they pleased, and receiving whatever they demanded.
+ James Mhor, he said, was a tall, stern, and soldier-like man. Robin Oig
+ looked more gentle; dark, but yet ruddy in complexion&mdash;a good-looking
+ young savage. Their victim was so dishevelled in her dress, and forlorn in
+ her appearance and demeanour, that he could hardly tell whether she was
+ alive or dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gang carried the unfortunate woman to Rowardennan, where they had a
+ priest unscrupulous enough to read the marriage service, while James Mhor
+ forcibly held the bride up before him; and the priest declared the couple
+ man and wife, even while she protested against the infamy of his conduct.
+ Under the same threats of violence, which had been all along used to
+ enforce their scheme, the poor victim was compelled to reside with the
+ pretended husband who was thus forced upon her. They even dared to carry
+ her to the public church of Balquhidder, where the officiating clergyman
+ (the same who had been Rob Roy's pensioner) only asked them if they were
+ married persons. Robert MacGregor answered in the affirmative; the
+ terrified female was silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The country was now too effectually subjected to the law for this vile
+ outrage to be followed by the advantages proposed by the actors, Military
+ parties were sent out in every direction to seize the MacGregors, who were
+ for two or three weeks compelled to shift from one place to another in the
+ mountains, bearing the unfortunate Jean Key along with them. In the
+ meanwhile, the Supreme Civil Court issued a warrant, sequestrating the
+ property of Jean Key, or Wright, which removed out of the reach of the
+ actors in the violence the prize which they expected. They had, however,
+ adopted a belief of the poor woman's spirit being so far broken that she
+ would prefer submitting to her condition, and adhering to Robin Oig as her
+ husband, rather than incur the disgrace, of appearing in such a cause in
+ an open court. It was, indeed, a delicate experiment; but their kinsman
+ Glengyle, chief of their immediate family, was of a temper averse to
+ lawless proceedings;* and the captive's friends having had recourse to his
+ advice, they feared that he would withdraw his protection if they refused
+ to place the prisoner at liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Such, at least, was his general character; for when James Mhor, while
+ perpetrating the violence at Edinbilly, called out, in order to overawe
+ opposition, that Glengyle was lying in the moor with a hundred men to
+ patronise his enterprise, Jean Key told him he lied, since she was
+ confident Glengyle would never countenance so scoundrelly a business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The brethren resolved, therefore, to liberate the unhappy woman, but
+ previously had recourse to every measure which should oblige her, either
+ from fear or otherwise, to own her marriage with Robin Oig. The cailliachs
+ (old Highland hags) administered drugs, which were designed to have the
+ effect of philtres, but were probably deleterious. James Mhor at one time
+ threatened, that if she did not acquiesce in the match she would find that
+ there were enough of men in the Highlands to bring the heads of two of her
+ uncles who were pursuing the civil lawsuit. At another time he fell down
+ on his knees, and confessed he had been accessory to wronging her, but
+ begged she would not ruin his innocent wife and large family. She was made
+ to swear she would not prosecute the brethren for the offence they had
+ committed; and she was obliged by threats to subscribe papers which were
+ tendered to her, intimating that she was carried off in consequence of her
+ own previous request.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ James Mhor Drummond accordingly brought his pretended sister-in-law to
+ Edinburgh, where, for some little time, she was carried about from one
+ house to another, watched by those with whom she was lodged, and never
+ permitted to go out alone, or even to approach the window. The Court of
+ Session, considering the peculiarity of the case, and regarding Jean Key
+ as being still under some forcible restraint, took her person under their
+ own special charge, and appointed her to reside in the family of Mr.
+ Wightman of Mauldsley, a gentleman of respectability, who was married to
+ one of her near relatives. Two sentinels kept guard on the house day and
+ night&mdash;a precaution not deemed superfluous when the MacGregors were
+ in question. She was allowed to go out whenever she chose, and to see
+ whomsoever she had a mind, as well as the men of law employed in the civil
+ suit on either side. When she first came to Mr. Wightman's house she
+ seemed broken down with affright and suffering, so changed in features
+ that her mother hardly knew her, and so shaken in mind that she scarce
+ could recognise her parent. It was long before she could be assured that
+ she was in perfect safely. But when she at length received confidence in
+ her situation, she made a judicial declaration, or affidavit, telling the
+ full history of her wrongs, imputing to fear her former silence on the
+ subject, and expressing her resolution not to prosecute those who had
+ injured her, in respect of the oath she had been compelled to take. From
+ the possible breach of such an oath, though a compulsory one, she was
+ relieved by the forms of Scottish jurisprudence, in that respect more
+ equitable than those of England, prosecutions for crimes being always
+ conducted at the expense and charge of the King, without inconvenience or
+ cost to the private party who has sustained the wrong. But the unhappy
+ sufferer did not live to be either accuser or witness against those who
+ had so deeply injured her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ James Mhor Drummond had left Edinburgh so soon as his half-dead prey had
+ been taken from his clutches. Mrs. Key, or Wright, was released from her
+ species of confinement there, and removed to Glasgow, under the escort of
+ Mr. Wightman. As they passed the Hill of Shotts, her escort chanced to
+ say, &ldquo;this is a very wild spot; what if the MacGregors should come upon
+ us?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;God forbid!&rdquo; was her immediate answer, &ldquo;the very sight of them
+ would kill me.&rdquo; She continued to reside at Glasgow, without venturing to
+ return to her own house at Edinbilly. Her pretended husband made some
+ attempts to obtain an interview with her, which she steadily rejected. She
+ died on the 4th October 1751. The information for the Crown hints that her
+ decease might be the consequence of the usage she received. But there is a
+ general report that she died of the small-pox. In the meantime, James
+ Mhor, or Drummond, fell into the hands of justice. He was considered as
+ the instigator of the whole affair. Nay, the deceased had informed her
+ friends that on the night of her being carried off, Robin Oig, moved by
+ her cries and tears, had partly consented to let her return, when James
+ came up with a pistol in his hand, and, asking whether he was such a
+ coward as to relinquish an enterprise in which he had risked everything to
+ procure him a fortune, in a manner compelled his brother to persevere.
+ James's trial took place on 13th July 1752, and was conducted with the
+ utmost fairness and impartiality. Several witnesses, all of the MacGregor
+ family, swore that the marriage was performed with every appearance of
+ acquiescence on the woman's part; and three or four witnesses, one of them
+ sheriff-substitute of the county, swore she might have made her escape if
+ she wished, and the magistrate stated that he offered her assistance if
+ she felt desirous to do so. But when asked why he, in his official
+ capacity, did not arrest the MacGregors, he could only answer, that he had
+ not force sufficient to make the attempt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The judicial declarations of Jean Key, or Wright, stated the violent
+ manner in which she had been carried off, and they were confirmed by many
+ of her friends, from her private communications with them, which the event
+ of her death rendered good evidence. Indeed, the fact of her abduction (to
+ use a Scottish law term) was completely proved by impartial witnesses. The
+ unhappy woman admitted that she had pretended acquiescence in her fate on
+ several occasions, because she dared not trust such as offered to assist
+ her to escape, not even the sheriff-substitute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The jury brought in a special verdict, finding that Jean Key, or Wright,
+ had been forcibly carried off from her house, as charged in the
+ indictment, and that the accused had failed to show that she was herself
+ privy and consenting to this act of outrage. But they found the forcible
+ marriage, and subsequent violence, was not proved; and also found, in
+ alleviation of the panel's guilt in the premises, that Jean Key did
+ afterwards acquiesce in her condition. Eleven of the jury, using the names
+ of other four who were absent, subscribed a letter to the Court, stating
+ it was their purpose and desire, by such special verdict, to take the
+ panel's case out of the class of capital crimes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Learned informations (written arguments) on the import of the verdict,
+ which must be allowed a very mild one in the circumstances, were laid
+ before the High Court of Justiciary. This point is very learnedly debated
+ in these pleadings by Mr. Grant, Solicitor for the Crown, and the
+ celebrated Mr. Lockhart, on the part of the prisoner; but James Mhor did
+ not wait the event of the Court's decision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had been committed to the Castle of Edinburgh on some reports that an
+ escape would be attempted. Yet he contrived to achieve his liberty even
+ from that fortress. His daughter had the address to enter the prison,
+ disguised as a cobbler, bringing home work, as she pretended. In this
+ cobbler's dress her father quickly arrayed himself. The wife and daughter
+ of the prisoner were heard by the sentinels scolding the supposed cobbler
+ for having done his work ill, and the man came out with his hat slouched
+ over his eyes, and grumbling, as if at the manner in which they had
+ treated him. In this way the prisoner passed all the guards without
+ suspicion, and made his escape to France. He was afterwards outlawed by
+ the Court of Justiciary, which proceeded to the trial of Duncan MacGregor,
+ or Drummond, his brother, 15th January 1753. The accused had
+ unquestionably been with the party which carried off Jean Key; but no
+ evidence being brought which applied to him individually and directly, the
+ jury found him not guilty&mdash;and nothing more is known of his fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That of James MacGregor, who, from talent and activity, if not by
+ seniority, may be considered as head of the family, has been long
+ misrepresented; as it has been generally averred in Law Reports, as well
+ as elsewhere, that his outlawry was reversed, and that he returned and
+ died in Scotland. But the curious letters published in Blackwood's
+ Magazine for December 1817, show this to be an error. The first of these
+ documents is a petition to Charles Edward. It is dated 20th September
+ 1753, and pleads his service to the cause of the Stuarts, ascribing his
+ exile to the persecution of the Hanoverian Government, without any
+ allusion to the affair of Jean Key, or the Court of Justiciary. It is
+ stated to be forwarded by MacGregor Drummond of Bohaldie, whom, as before
+ mentioned, James Mhor acknowledged as his chief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The effect which this petition produced does not appear. Some temporary
+ relief was perhaps obtained. But, soon after, this daring adventurer was
+ engaged in a very dark intrigue against an exile of his own country, and
+ placed pretty nearly in his own circumstances. A remarkable Highland story
+ must be here briefly alluded to. Mr. Campbell of Glenure, who had been
+ named factor for Government on the forfeited estates of Stewart of
+ Ardshiel, was shot dead by an assassin as he passed through the wood of
+ Lettermore, after crossing the ferry of Ballachulish. A gentleman, named
+ James Stewart, a natural brother of Ardshiel, the forfeited person, was
+ tried as being accessory to the murder, and condemned and executed upon
+ very doubtful evidence; the heaviest part of which only amounted to the
+ accused person having assisted a nephew of his own, called Allan Breck
+ Stewart, with money to escape after the deed was done. Not satisfied with
+ this vengeance, which was obtained in a manner little to the honour of the
+ dispensation of justice at the time, the friends of the deceased Glenure
+ were equally desirous to obtain possession of the person of Allan Breck
+ Stewart, supposed to be the actual homicide. James Mhor Drummond was
+ secretly applied to to trepan Stewart to the sea-coast, and bring him over
+ to Britain, to almost certain death. Drummond MacGregor had kindred
+ connections with the slain Glenure; and, besides, the MacGregors and
+ Campbells had been friends of late, while the former clan and the Stewarts
+ had, as we have seen, been recently at feud; lastly, Robert Oig was now in
+ custody at Edinburgh, and James was desirous to do some service by which
+ his brother might be saved. The joint force of these motives may, in
+ James's estimation of right and wrong, have been some vindication for
+ engaging in such an enterprise, although, as must be necessarily supposed,
+ it could only be executed by treachery of a gross description. MacGregor
+ stipulated for a license to return to England, promising to bring Allan
+ Breck thither along with him. But the intended victim was put upon his
+ guard by two countrymen, who suspected James's intentions towards him. He
+ escaped from his kidnapper, after, as MacGregor alleged, robbing his
+ portmanteau of some clothes and four snuff-boxes. Such a charge, it may be
+ observed, could scarce have been made unless the parties had been living
+ on a footing of intimacy, and had access to each other's baggage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although James Drummond had thus missed his blow in the matter of Allan
+ Breck Stewart, he used his license to make a journey to London, and had an
+ interview, as he avers, with Lord Holdernesse. His Lordship, and the
+ Under-Secretary, put many puzzling questions to him; and, as he says,
+ offered him a situation, which would bring him bread, in the Government's
+ service. This office was advantageous as to emolument; but in the opinion
+ of James Drummond, his acceptance of it would have been a disgrace to his
+ birth, and have rendered him a scourge to his country. If such a tempting
+ offer and sturdy rejection had any foundation in fact, it probably relates
+ to some plan of espionage on the Jacobites, which the Government might
+ hope to carry on by means of a man who, in the matter of Allan Breck
+ Stewart, had shown no great nicety of feeling. Drummond MacGregor was so
+ far accommodating as to intimate his willingness to act in any station in
+ which other gentlemen of honour served, but not otherwise;&mdash;an answer
+ which, compared with some passages of his past life, may remind the reader
+ of Ancient Pistol standing upon his reputation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having thus proved intractable, as he tells the story, to the proposals of
+ Lord Holdernesse, James Drummond was ordered instantly to quit England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his return to France, his condition seems to have been utterly
+ disastrous. He was seized with fever and gravel&mdash;ill, consequently,
+ in body, and weakened and dispirited in mind. Allan Breck Stewart
+ threatened to put him to death in revenge of the designs he had harboured
+ against him.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Note E. Allan Breck Stewart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Stewart clan were in the highest degree unfriendly to him: and his
+ late expedition to London had been attended with many suspicious
+ circumstances, amongst which it was not the slightest that he had kept his
+ purpose secret from his chief Bohaldie. His intercourse with Lord
+ Holdernesse was suspicious. The Jacobites were probably, like Don Bernard
+ de Castel Blaze, in Gil Blas, little disposed to like those who kept
+ company with Alguazils. Mac-Donnell of Lochgarry, a man of unquestioned
+ honour, lodged an information against James Drummond before the High
+ Bailie of Dunkirk, accusing him of being a spy, so that he found himself
+ obliged to leave that town and come to Paris, with only the sum of
+ thirteen livres for his immediate subsistence, and with absolute beggary
+ staring him in the face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We do not offer the convicted common thief, the accomplice in MacLaren's
+ assassination, or the manager of the outrage against Jean Key, as an
+ object of sympathy; but it is melancholy to look on the dying struggles
+ even of a wolf or a tiger, creatures of a species directly hostile to our
+ own; and, in like manner, the utter distress of this man, whose faults may
+ have sprung from a wild system of education, working on a haughty temper,
+ will not be perused without some pity. In his last letter to Bohaldie,
+ dated Paris, 25th September 1754, he describes his state of destitution as
+ absolute, and expresses himself willing to exercise his talents in
+ breaking or breeding horses, or as a hunter or fowler, if he could only
+ procure employment in such an inferior capacity till something better
+ should occur. An Englishman may smile, but a Scotchman will sigh at the
+ postscript, in which the poor starving exile asks the loan of his patron's
+ bagpipes that he might play over some of the melancholy tunes of his own
+ land. But the effect of music arises, in a great degree, from association;
+ and sounds which might jar the nerves of a Londoner or Parisian, bring
+ back to the Highlander his lofty mountain, wild lake, and the deeds of his
+ fathers of the glen. To prove MacGregor's claim to our reader's
+ compassion, we here insert the last part of the letter alluded to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By all appearance I am born to suffer crosses, and it seems they're not
+ at an end; for such is my wretched case at present, that I do not know
+ earthly where to go or what to do, as I have no subsistence to keep body
+ and soul together. All that I have carried here is about 13 livres, and
+ have taken a room at my old quarters in Hotel St. Pierre, Rue de Cordier.
+ I send you the bearer, begging of you to let me know if you are to be in
+ town soon, that I may have the pleasure of seeing you, for I have none to
+ make application to but you alone; and all I want is, if it was possible
+ you could contrive where I could be employed without going to entire
+ beggary. This probably is a difficult point, yet unless it's attended with
+ some difficulty, you might think nothing of it, as your long head can
+ bring about matters of much more difficulty and consequence than this. If
+ you'd disclose this matter to your friend Mr. Butler, it's possible he
+ might have some employ wherein I could be of use, as I pretend to know as
+ much of breeding and riding of horse as any in France, besides that I am a
+ good hunter either on horseback or by footing. You may judge my reduction,
+ as I propose the meanest things to lend a turn till better cast up. I am
+ sorry that I am obliged to give you so much trouble, but I hope you are
+ very well assured that I am grateful for what you have done for me, and I
+ leave you to judge of my present wretched case. I am, and shall for ever
+ continue, dear Chief, your own to command, Jas. MacGregor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;P. S.&mdash;If you'd send your pipes by the bearer, and all the other
+ little trinkims belonging to it, I would put them in order, and play some
+ melancholy tunes, which I may now with safety, and in real truth. Forgive
+ my not going directly to you, for if I could have borne the seeing of
+ yourself, I could not choose to be seen by my friends in my wretchedness,
+ nor by any of my acquaintance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While MacGregor wrote in this disconsolate manner, Death, the sad but sure
+ remedy for mortal evils, and decider of all doubts and uncertainties, was
+ hovering near him. A memorandum on the back of the letter says the writer
+ died about a week after, in October 1754.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It now remains to mention the fate of Robin Oig&mdash;for the other sons
+ of Rob Roy seem to have been no way distinguished. Robin was apprehended
+ by a party of military from the fort of Inversnaid, at the foot of
+ Gartmore, and was conveyed to Edinburgh 26th May 1753. After a delay,
+ which may have been protracted by the negotiations of James for delivering
+ up Allan Breck Stewart upon promise of his brother's life, Robin Oig, on
+ the 24th of December 1753, was brought to the bar of the High Court of
+ Justiciary, and indicted by the name of Robert MacGregor, alias Campbell,
+ alias Drummond, alias Robert Oig; and the evidence led against him
+ resembled exactly that which was brought by the Crown on the former trial.
+ Robert's case was in some degree more favourable than his brother's;&mdash;for,
+ though the principal in the forcible marriage, he had yet to plead that he
+ had shown symptoms of relenting while they were carrying Jean Key off,
+ which were silenced by the remonstrances and threats of his harder natured
+ brother James. A considerable space of time had also elapsed since the
+ poor woman died, which is always a strong circumstance in favour of the
+ accused; for there is a sort of perspective in guilt, and crimes of an old
+ date seem less odious than those of recent occurrence. But notwithstanding
+ these considerations, the jury, in Robert's case, did not express any
+ solicitude to save his life as they had done that of James. They found him
+ guilty of being art and part in the forcible abduction of Jean Key from
+ her own dwelling.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * The Trials of the Sons of Rob Roy, with anecdotes of Himself and his
+ Family, were published at Edinburgh, 1818, in 12mo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin Oig was condemned to death, and executed on the 14th February 1754.
+ At the place of execution he behaved with great decency; and professing
+ himself a Catholic, imputed all his misfortunes to his swerving from the
+ true church two or three years before. He confessed the violent methods he
+ had used to gain Mrs. Key, or Wright, and hoped his fate would stop
+ further proceedings against his brother James.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * James died near three months before, but his family might easily remain
+ a long time without the news of that event.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The newspapers observed that his body, after hanging the usual time, was
+ delivered to his friends to be carried to the Highlands. To this the
+ recollection of a venerable friend, recently taken from us in the fulness
+ of years, then a schoolboy at Linlithgow, enables the author to add, that
+ a much larger body of MacGregors than had cared to advance to Edinburgh
+ received the corpse at that place with the coronach and other wild emblems
+ of Highland mourning, and so escorted it to Balquhidder. Thus we may
+ conclude this long account of Rob Roy and his family with the classic
+ phrase,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Ite. Conclamatum est.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I have only to add, that I have selected the above from many anecdotes of
+ Rob Roy which were, and may still be, current among the mountains where he
+ flourished; but I am far from warranting their exact authenticity.
+ Clannish partialities were very apt to guide the tongue and pen, as well
+ as the pistol and claymore, and the features of an anecdote are
+ wonderfully softened or exaggerated as the story is told by a MacGregor or
+ a Campbell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_APPE" id="link_APPE">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ APPENDIX TO INTRODUCTION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ No. I.&mdash;ADVERTISEMENT FOR THE APPREHENSION OF ROB ROY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (From the Edinburgh Evening Courant, June 18 to June 21, A.D. 1732. No.
+ 1058.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That Robert Campbell, commonly known by the name of Rob Roy MacGregor,
+ being lately intrusted by several noblemen and gentlemen with considerable
+ sums for buying cows for them in the Highlands, has treacherously gone off
+ with the money, to the value of L1000 sterling, which he carries along
+ with him. All Magistrates and Officers of his Majesty's forces are
+ intreated to seize upon the said Rob Roy, and the money which he carries
+ with him, until the persons concerned in the money be heard against him;
+ and that notice be given, when he is apprehended, to the keepers of the
+ Exchange Coffee-house at Edinburgh, and the keeper of the Coffee-house at
+ Glasgow, where the parties concerned will be advertised, and the seizers
+ shall be very reasonably rewarded for their pains.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is unfortunate that this Hue and Cry, which is afterwards repeated in
+ the same paper, contains no description of Rob Roy's person, which, of
+ course, we must suppose to have been pretty generally known. As it is
+ directed against Rob Roy personally, it would seem to exclude the idea of
+ the cattle being carried off by his partner, MacDonald, who would
+ certainly have been mentioned in the advertisement, if the creditors
+ concerned had supposed him to be in possession of the money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0006" id="link_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ No. II.&mdash;LETTERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ FROM AND TO THE DUKE OF MONTROSE RESPECTING ROB ROY'S ARREST OF MR.
+ GRAHAME OF KILLEARN.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ <i>The Duke of Montrose to&mdash;</i>*
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ * It does not appear to whom this letter was addressed. Certainly, from
+ its style and tenor, It was designed for some person high in rank and
+ office&mdash;perhaps the King's Advocate for the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Glasgow, the 21st November, 1716.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Lord,&mdash;I was surprised last night with the account of a very
+ remarkable instance of the insolence of that very notorious rogue Rob Roy,
+ whom your lordship has often heard named. The honour of his Majesty's
+ Government being concerned in it, I thought it my duty to acquaint your
+ lordship of the particulars by an express.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Grahame of Killearn (whom I have had occasion to mention frequently
+ to you, for the good service he did last winter during the rebellion)
+ having the charge of my Highland estate, went to Monteath, which is a part
+ of it, on Monday last, to bring in my rents, it being usual for him to be
+ there for two or three nights together at this time of the year, in a
+ country house, for the conveniency of meeting the tenants, upon that
+ account. The same night, about 9 of the clock, Rob Roy, with a party of
+ those ruffians whom he has still kept about him since the late rebellion,
+ surrounded the house where Mr. Grahame was with some of my tenants doing
+ his business, ordered his men to present their guns in att the windows of
+ the room where he was sitting, while he himself at the same time with
+ others entered at the door, with cocked pistols, and made Mr. Grahame
+ prisoner, carrying him away to the hills with the money he had got, his
+ books and papers, and my tenants' bonds for their fines, amounting to
+ above a thousand pounds sterling, whereof the one-half had been paid last
+ year, and the other was to have been paid now; and att the same time had
+ the insolence to cause him to write a letter to me (the copy of which is
+ enclosed) offering me terms of a treaty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That your Lordship may have the better view of this matter, it will be
+ necessary that I should inform you, that this fellow has now, of a long
+ time, put himself at the head of the Clan M'Gregor, a race of people who
+ in all ages have distinguished themselves beyond others, by robberies,
+ depredations, and murders, and have been the constant harbourers and
+ entertainers of vagabonds and loose people. From the time of the
+ Revolution he has taken every opportunity to appear against the
+ Government, acting rather as a robber than doing any real service to those
+ whom he pretended to appear for, and has really done more mischief to the
+ countrie than all the other Highlanders have done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some three or four years before the last rebellion broke out, being
+ overburdened with debts, he quitted his ordinary residence, and removed
+ some twelve or sixteen miles farther into the Highlands, putting himself
+ under the protection of the Earl of Bredalbin. When my Lord Cadogan was in
+ the Highlands, he ordered his house att this place to be burnt, which your
+ Lordship sees he now places to my account.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This obliges him to return to the same countrie he went from, being a
+ most rugged inaccessible place, where he took up his residence anew
+ amongst his own friends and relations; but well judging that it was
+ possible to surprise him, he, with about forty-five of his followers, went
+ to Inverary, and made a sham surrender of their arms to Coll. Campbell of
+ Finab, Commander of one of the Independent Companies, and returned home
+ with his men, each of them having the Coll.'s protection. This happened in
+ the beginning of summer last; yet not long after he appeared with his men
+ twice in arms, in opposition to the King's troops: and one of those times
+ attackt them, rescued a prisoner from them, and all this while sent abroad
+ his party through the countrie, plundering the countrie people, and
+ amongst the rest some of my tenants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Being informed of these disorders after I came to Scotland, I applied to
+ Lieut.-Genll. Carpenter, who ordered three parties from Glasgow, Stirling,
+ and Finlarig, to march in the night by different routes, in order to
+ surprise him and his men in their houses, which would have its effect
+ certainly, if the great rains that happened to fall that verie night had
+ not retarded the march of the troops, so as some of the parties came too
+ late to the stations that they were ordered for. All that could be done
+ upon the occasion was to burn a countrie house, where Rob Roy then
+ resided, after some of his clan had, from the rocks, fired upon the king's
+ troops, by which a grenadier was killed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Grahame of Killearn, being my deputy-sheriff in that countrie, went
+ along with the party that marched from Stirling; and doubtless will now
+ meet with the worse treatment from that barbarous people on that account.
+ Besides, that he is my relation, and that they know how active he has been
+ in the service of the Government&mdash;all which, your Lordship may
+ believe, puts me under very great concern for the gentleman, while, at the
+ same time, I can foresee no manner of way how to relieve him, other than
+ to leave him to chance and his own management.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had my thoughts before of proposing to Government the building of some
+ barracks as the only expedient for suppressing these rebels, and securing
+ the peace of the countrie; and in that view I spoke to Genll. Carpenter,
+ who has now a scheme of it in his hands; and I am persuaded that will be
+ the true method for restraining them effectually; but, in the meantime, it
+ will be necessary to lodge some of the troops in those places, upon which
+ I intend to write to the Generall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sensible I have troubled your Lordship with a very long letter,
+ which I should be ashamed of, were I myself singly concerned; but where
+ the honour of the King's Government is touched, I need make no apologie,
+ and I shall only beg leave to add, that I am, with great respect, and
+ truth,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Lord, &ldquo;yr. Lord's most humble and obedient servant, &ldquo;MONTROSE&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0007" id="link_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ COPY OF GRAHAME OF KILLEARN'S LETTER, ENCLOSED IN THE PRECEDING.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ &ldquo;Chappellarroch, Nov. 19th, 1716.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May it please your Grace,&mdash;I am obliged to give your Grace the
+ trouble of this, by Robert Roy's commands, being so unfortunate at present
+ as to be his prisoner. I refer the way and manner I was apprehended, to
+ the bearer, and shall only, in short, acquaint your Grace with the
+ demands, which are, that your Grace shall discharge him of all soumes he
+ owes your Grace, and give him the soume of 3400 merks for his loss and
+ damages sustained by him, both at Craigrostown and at his house,
+ Auchinchisallen; and that your Grace shall give your word not to trouble
+ or prosecute him afterwards; till which time he carries me, all the money
+ I received this day, my books and bonds for entress, not yet paid, along
+ with him, with assurance of hard usage, if any party are sent after him.
+ The soume I received this day, conform to the nearest computation I can
+ make before several of the gentlemen, is 3227L. 2sh. 8d. Scots, of which I
+ gave them notes. I shall wait your Grace's return, and ever am,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Grace's most obedient, faithful, &ldquo;humble servant, <i>Sic
+ subscribitur,</i> &ldquo;John Grahame.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0008" id="link_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE DUKE OF MONTROSE TO &mdash;&mdash;
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 28<i>th Nov.</i> 1716&mdash;<i>Killearn's Release.</i>
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Glasgow, 28th Nov. 1716.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&mdash;Having acquainted you by my last, of the 21st instant, of what
+ had happened to my friend, Mr. Grahame of Killearn, I'm very glad now to
+ tell you, that last night I was very agreeably surprised with Mr.
+ Grahame's coming here himself, and giving me the first account I had had
+ of him from the time of his being carried away. It seems Rob Roy, when he
+ came to consider a little better of it, found that, he could not mend his
+ matters by retaining Killearn his prisoner, which could only expose him
+ still the more to the justice of the Government; and therefore thought fit
+ to dismiss him on Sunday evening last, having kept him from the Monday
+ night before, under a very uneasy kind of restraint, being obliged to
+ change continually from place to place. He gave him back the books,
+ papers, and bonds, but kept the money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am, with great truth, Sir, &ldquo;your most humble servant, &ldquo;MONTROSE.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [Some papers connected with Rob Roy Macgregor, signed &ldquo;Ro. Campbell,&rdquo; in
+ 1711, were lately presented to the Society of Antiquaries. One of these is
+ a kind of contract between the Duke of Montrose and Rob Roy, by which the
+ latter undertakes to deliver within a given time &ldquo;Sixtie good and
+ sufficient Kintaill highland Cowes, betwixt the age of five and nine
+ years, at fourtene pounds Scotts per peice, with ane bull to the bargane,
+ and that at the head dykes of Buchanan upon the twenty-eight day of May
+ next.&rdquo;&mdash;Dated December 1711.&mdash;See <i>Proceedings,</i> vol. vii.
+ p. 253.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0009" id="link_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ No. III.&mdash;CHALLENGE BY ROB ROY.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ &ldquo;Rob Roy <i>to ain hie and mighty Prince,</i> James Duke of Montrose.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In charity to your Grace's couradge and conduct, please know, the only
+ way to retrive both is to treat Rob Roy like himself, in appointing tyme,
+ place, and choice of arms, that at once you may extirpate your inveterate
+ enemy, or put a period to your punny (puny?) life in falling gloriously by
+ his hands. That impertinent criticks or flatterers may not brand me for
+ challenging a man that's repute of a poor dastardly soul, let such know
+ that I admit of the two great supporters of his character and the captain
+ of his bands to joyne with him in the combat. Then sure your Grace wont
+ have the impudence to clamour att court for multitudes to hunt me like a
+ fox, under pretence that I am not to be found above ground. This saves
+ your Grace and the troops any further trouble of searching; that is, if
+ your ambition of glory press you to embrace this unequald venture offerd
+ of Rob's head. But if your Grace's piety, prudence, and cowardice, forbids
+ hazarding this gentlemanly expedient, then let your desire of peace
+ restore what you have robed from me by the tyranny of your present
+ cituation, otherwise your overthrow as a man is determined; and advertise
+ your friends never more to look for the frequent civility payed them, of
+ sending them home without their arms only. Even their former cravings wont
+ purchase that favour; so your Grace by this has peace in your offer, if
+ the sound of wax be frightful, and chuse you whilk, your good friend or
+ mortal enemy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This singular rhodomontade is enclosed in a letter to a friend of Rob Roy,
+ probably a retainer of the Duke of Argyle in Isle, which is in these
+ words:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&mdash;Receive the enclosd paper, qn you are takeing yor Botle it
+ will divert yorself and comrad's. I gote noe news since I seed you, only
+ qt wee had before about the Spainyard's is like to continue. If I'll get
+ any further account about them I'll be sure to let you know of it, and
+ till then I will not write any more till I'll have more sure account, and
+ I am
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, your most affectionate Cn [cousin], &ldquo;and most humble servant, &ldquo;Ro:
+ Roy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Apryle</i> 16<i>th,</i> 1719.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To Mr. Patrick Anderson, at Hay&mdash;These.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seal, <i>a stag</i>&mdash;no bad emblem of a wild cateran.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It appears from the envelope that Rob Roy still continued to act as
+ Intelligencer to the Duke of Argyle, and his agents. The war he alludes to
+ is probably some vague report of invasion from Spain. Such rumours were
+ likely enough to be afloat, in consequence of the disembarkation of the
+ troops who were taken at Glensheal in the preceding year, 1718.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0010" id="link_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ No. IV.&mdash;LETTER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ FROM ROBERT CAMPBELL, <i>alias</i> M'GREGOR, COMMONLY CALLED ROB ROY, TO
+ FIELD-MARSHAL WADE,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then receiving the submission of disaffected Chieftains and Clans.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * This curious epistle is copied from an authentic narrative of Marshal
+ Wade's proceedings in the Highlands, communicated by the late eminent
+ antiquary, George Chalmers, Esq., to Mr. Robert Jamieson, of the Register
+ House, Edinburgh, and published in the Appendix to an Edition of Burt's
+ Letters from the North of Scotland, 2 vols. 8vo, Edinburgh, 1818.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir,&mdash;The great humanity with which you have constantly acted in the
+ discharge of the trust reposed in you, and your ever having made use of
+ the great powers with which you were vested as the means of doing good and
+ charitable offices to such as ye found proper objects of compassion, will,
+ I hope, excuse my importunity in endeavouring to approve myself not
+ absolutely unworthy of that mercy and favour which your Excellency has so
+ generously procured from his Majesty for others in my unfortunate
+ circumstances. I am very sensible nothing can be alledged sufficient to
+ excuse so great a crime as I have been guilty of it, that of Rebellion.
+ But I humbly beg leave to lay before your Excellency some particulars in
+ the circumstance of my guilt, which, I hope, will extenuate it in some
+ measure. It was my misfortune, at the time the Rebellion broke out, to be
+ liable to legal diligence and caption, at the Duke of Montrose's instance,
+ for debt alledged due to him. To avoid being flung into prison, as I must
+ certainly have been, had I followed my real inclinations in joining the
+ King's troops at Stirling, I was forced to take party with the adherents
+ of the Pretender; for the country being all in arms, it was neither safe
+ nor indeed possible for me to stand neuter. I should not, however, plead
+ my being forced into that unnatural rebellion against his Majesty, King
+ George, if I could not at the same time assure your Excellency, that I not
+ only avoided acting offensively against his Majesty's forces upon all
+ occasions, but on the contrary, sent his Grace the Duke of Argyle all the
+ intelligence I could from time to time, of the strength and situation of
+ the rebels; which I hope his Grace will do me the justice to acknowledge.
+ As to the debt to the Duke of Montrose, I have discharged it to the utmost
+ farthing. I beg your Excellency would be persuaded that, had it been in my
+ power, as it was in my inclination, I should always have acted for the
+ service of his Majesty King George, and that one reason of my begging the
+ favour of your intercession with his Majesty for the pardon of my life, is
+ the earnest desire I have to employ it in his service, whose goodness,
+ justice, and humanity, are so conspicuous to all mankind.&mdash;I am, with
+ all duty and respect, your Excellency's most, &amp;c.,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Robert Campbell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0011" id="link_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ No. IVa.&mdash;LETTER.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ ESCAPE OF ROB ROY FROM THE DUKE OF ATHOLE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The following copy of a letter which passed from one clergyman of the
+ Church of Scotland to another, was communicated to me by John Gregorson,
+ Esq. of Ardtornish. The escape of Rob Roy is mentioned, like other
+ interesting news of the time with which it is intermingled. The
+ disagreement between the Dukes of Athole and Argyle seems to have animated
+ the former against Rob Roy, as one of Argyle's partisans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rev. and dear Brother,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yrs of the 28th Jun I had by the bearer. Im pleased yo have got back again
+ yr Delinquent which may probably safe you of the trouble of her child. I'm
+ sory I've yet very little of certain news to give you from Court tho' I've
+ seen all the last weekes prints, only I find in them a pasage which is all
+ the account I can give you of the Indemnity yt when the estates of
+ forfaulted Rebells Comes to be sold all Just debts Documented are to be
+ preferred to Officers of the Court of enquiry. The Bill in favours of that
+ Court against the Lords of Session in Scotland in past the house of
+ Commons and Come before the Lords which is thought to be considerably more
+ ample yn formerly wt respect to the Disposeing of estates Canvassing and
+ paying of Debts. It's said yt the examinations of Cadugans accounts is
+ droped but it wants Confirmations here as yet. Oxford's tryals should be
+ entered upon Saturday last. We hear that the Duchess of Argyle is wt
+ child. I doe not hear yt the Divisions at Court are any thing abated or of
+ any appearance of the Dukes having any thing of his Maj: favour. I
+ heartily wish the present humours at Court may not prove an encouragmt to
+ watchfull and restles enemies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My accounts of Rob Roy his escape are yt after severall Embassies between
+ his Grace (who I hear did Correspond wt some at Court about it) and Rob he
+ at length upon promise of protectione Came to waite upon the Duke &amp;
+ being presently secured his Grace sent post to Edr to acquent the Court of
+ his being aprehended &amp; call his friends at Edr and to desire a party
+ from Gen Carpinter to receive and bring him to Edr which party came the
+ length of Kenross in Fife, he was to be delivered to them by a party his
+ Grace had demanded from the Governour at Perth, who when upon their march
+ towards Dunkell to receive him, were mete wt and returned by his Grace
+ having resolved to deliver him by a party of his own men and left Rob at
+ Logierate under a strong guard till yt party should be ready to receive
+ him. This space of time Rob had Imployed in taking the other dram heartily
+ wt the Guard &amp; qn all were pretty hearty, Rob is delivering a letter
+ for his wife to a servant to whom he most needs deliver some private
+ instructions at the Door (for his wife) where he's attended wt on the
+ Guard. When serious in this privat Conversations he is making some few
+ steps carelessly from the Door about the house till he comes close by this
+ horse which he soon mounted and made off. This is no small mortifican to
+ the guard because of the delay it give to there hopes of a Considerable
+ additionall charge agt John Roy.* my wife was upon Thursday last delivered
+ of a Son after sore travell of which she still continues very weak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * <i>i.e.</i> John the Red&mdash;John Duke of Argyle, so called from his
+ complexion, more commonly styled &ldquo;Red John the Warriour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I give yl Lady hearty thanks for the Highland plaid. It's good cloath but
+ it does not answer the sett I sent some time agae wt McArthur &amp; tho it
+ had I told in my last yt my wife was obliged to provid herself to finish
+ her bed before she was lighted but I know yt letr came not timely to yr
+ hand&mdash;I'm sory I had not mony to send by the bearer having no thought
+ of it &amp; being exposed to some little expenses last week but I expect
+ some sure occasion when order by a letter to receive it excuse this
+ freedom from &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Manse of Comrie, July</i> 2<i>d,</i> 1717. &ldquo;I salute yr lady I wish my
+ ............ her Daughter much Joy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0012" id="link_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ No. V.&mdash;HIGHLAND WOOING.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There are many productions of the Scottish Ballad Poets upon the lion-like
+ mode of wooing practised by the ancient Highlanders when they had a fancy
+ for the person (or property) of a Lowland damsel. One example is found in
+ Mr. Robert Jamieson's Popular Scottish Songs:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Bonny Babby Livingstone
+ Gaed out to see the kye,
+ And she has met with Glenlyon,
+ Who has stolen her away.
+
+ He took free her her sattin coat,
+ But an her silken gown,
+ Syne roud her in his tartan plaid,
+ And happd her round and roun'.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In another ballad we are told how&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Four-and-twenty Hieland men,
+ Came doun by Fiddoch Bide,
+ And they have sworn a deadly aith,
+ Jean Muir suld be a bride:
+
+ And they have sworn a deadly aith,
+ Ilke man upon his durke,
+ That she should wed with Duncan Ger,
+ Or they'd make bloody works.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This last we have from tradition, but there are many others in the
+ collections of Scottish Ballads to the same purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The achievement of Robert Oig, or young Rob Roy, as the Lowlanders called
+ him, was celebrated in a ballad, of which there are twenty different and
+ various editions. The tune is lively and wild, and we select the following
+ words from memory:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Rob Roy is frae the Hielands come,
+ Down to the Lowland border;
+ And he has stolen that lady away,
+ To haud his house in order.
+
+ He set her on a milk-white steed,
+ Of none he stood in awe;
+ Untill they reached the Hieland hills,
+ Aboon the Balmaha'!*
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ * A pass on the eastern margin of Loch Lomond, and an entrance to the
+ Highlands.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Saying, Be content, be content,
+ Be content with me, lady;
+ Where will ye find in Lennox land,
+ Sae braw a man as me, lady?
+
+ Rob Roy he was my father called,
+ MacGregor was his name, lady;
+ A' the country, far and near,
+ Have heard MacGregor's fame, lady.
+
+ He was a hedge about his friends,
+ A heckle to his foes, lady;
+ If any man did him gainsay,
+ He felt his deadly blows, lady.
+
+ I am as bold, I am as bold,
+ I am as bold and more, lady;
+ Any man that doubts my word,
+ May try my gude claymore, lady.
+
+ Then be content, be content.
+ Be content with me, lady;
+ For now you are my wedded wife,
+ Until the day you die, lady.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0013" id="link_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ No. VI&mdash;GHLUNE DHU.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The following notices concerning this Chief fell under the Author's eye
+ while the sheets were in the act of going through the press. They occur in
+ manuscript memoirs, written by a person intimately acquainted with the
+ incidents of 1745.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Chief had the important task intrusted to him of defending the Castle
+ of Doune, in which the Chevalier placed a garrison to protect his
+ communication with the Highlands, and to repel any sallies which might be
+ made from Stirling Castle&mdash;Ghlune Dhu distinguished himself by his
+ good conduct in this charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ghlune Dhu is thus described:&mdash;&ldquo;Glengyle is, in person, a tall
+ handsome man, and has more of the mien of the ancient heroes than our
+ modern fine gentlemen are possessed of. He is honest and disinterested to
+ a proverb&mdash;extremely modest&mdash;brave and intrepid&mdash;and born
+ one of the best partisans in Europe. In short, the whole people of that
+ country declared that never did men live under so mild a government as
+ Glengyle's, not a man having so much as lost a chicken while he continued
+ there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would appear from this curious passage, that Glengyle&mdash;not Stewart
+ of Balloch, as averred in a note on Waverley&mdash;commanded the garrison
+ of Doune. Balloch might, no doubt, succeed MacGregor in the situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0014" id="link_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION TO ROB ROY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the magnum opus, the author's final edition of the Waverley Novels,
+ &ldquo;Rob Roy&rdquo; appears out of its chronological order, and comes next after
+ &ldquo;The Antiquary.&rdquo; In this, as in other matters, the present edition follows
+ that of 1829. &ldquo;The Antiquary,&rdquo; as we said, contained in its preface the
+ author's farewell to his art. This valediction was meant as prelude to a
+ fresh appearance in a new disguise. Constable, who had brought out the
+ earlier works, did not publish the &ldquo;Tales of my Landlord&rdquo; (&ldquo;The Black
+ Dwarf&rdquo; and &ldquo;Old Mortality &ldquo;), which Scott had nearly finished by November
+ 12, 1816. The four volumes appeared from the houses of Mr. Murray and Mr.
+ Blackwood, on December 1, 1816. Within less than a month came out &ldquo;Harold
+ the Dauntless,&rdquo; by the author of &ldquo;The Bridal of Triermain.&rdquo; Scott's work
+ on the historical part of the &ldquo;Annual Register&rdquo; had also been unusually
+ arduous. At Abbotsford, or at Ashiestiel, his mode of life was
+ particularly healthy; in Edinburgh, between the claims of the courts, of
+ literature, and of society, he was scarcely ever in the open air. Thus
+ hard sedentary work caused, between the publication of &ldquo;Old Mortality&rdquo; and
+ that of &ldquo;Rob Roy,&rdquo; the first of those alarming illnesses which
+ overshadowed the last fifteen years of his life. The earliest attack of
+ cramp in the stomach occurred on March 5, 1817, when he &ldquo;retired from the
+ room with a scream of agony which electrified his guests.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Living on &ldquo;parritch,&rdquo; as he tells Miss Baillie (for his national spirit
+ rejected arrowroot), Scott had yet energy enough to plan a dramatic piece
+ for Terry, &ldquo;The Doom of Devorgoil.&rdquo; But in April he announced to John
+ Ballantyne &ldquo;a good subject&rdquo; for a novel, and on May 6, John, after a visit
+ to Abbotsford with Constable, proclaimed to James Ballantyne the advent of
+ &ldquo;Rob Roy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The anecdote about the title is well known. Constable suggested it, and
+ Scott was at first wisely reluctant to &ldquo;write up to a title.&rdquo; Names like
+ Rob Roy, Queen Mary, Queen Elizabeth, Cleopatra, and so forth, tell the
+ reader too much, and, Scott imagined, often excite hopes which cannot be
+ fulfilled. However, in the geniality of an after-dinner hour in the
+ gardens of Abbotsford, Scott allowed Constable to be sponsor. Many things
+ had lately brought Rob into his mind. In 1812 Scott had acquired Rob Roy's
+ gun&mdash;&ldquo;a long Spanish-barrelled piece, with his initials R. M. C.,&rdquo; C
+ standing for Campbell, a name assumed in compliment to the Argyll family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rob's spleuchan had also been presented by Mr. Train to Sir Walter, in
+ 1816, and may have directed his thoughts to this popular freebooter.
+ Though Rob flourished in the '15, he was really a character very near
+ Scott, whose friend Invernahyle had fought Rob with broadsword and target&mdash;a
+ courteous combat like that between Ajax and Hector.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Tullibody Scott had met, in 1793, a gentleman who once visited Rob, and
+ arranged to pay him blackmail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. William Adam had mentioned to Scott in 1816 the use of the word
+ &ldquo;curlie-wurlies&rdquo; for highly decorated architecture, and recognised the
+ phrase, next year, in the mouth of Andrew Fairservice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meeting at Abbotsford (May 2, 1817) Scott was very communicative,
+ sketched Bailie Nicol Jarvie, and improvised a dialogue between Rob and
+ the magistrate. A week later he quoted to Southey, Swift's lines&mdash;
+ Too bad for a blessing, too good for a curse,&mdash;which probably
+ suggested Andrew Fairservice's final estimate of Scott's hero,&mdash;&ldquo;over
+ bad for blessing, and ower gude for banning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These are the trifles which show the bent of Scott's mind at this period.
+ The summer of 1817 he spent in working at the &ldquo;Annual Register&rdquo; and at the
+ &ldquo;Border Antiquities.&rdquo; When the courts rose, he visited Rob's cave at the
+ head of Loch Lomond; and this visit seems to have been gossiped about, as
+ literary people, hearing of the new novel, expected the cave to be a very
+ prominent feature. He also went to Glasgow, and refreshed his memory of
+ the cathedral; nor did he neglect old books, such as &ldquo;A Tour through Great
+ Britain, by a Gentleman&rdquo; (4th Edition, 1748). This yielded him the
+ Bailie's account of Glasgow commerce &ldquo;in Musselburgh stuffs and Edinburgh
+ shalloons,&rdquo; and the phrase &ldquo;sortable cargoes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence, too, Scott took the description of the rise of Glasgow. Thus Scott
+ was taking pains with his preparations. The book was not written in
+ post-haste. Announced to Constable early in May, the last sheet was not
+ corrected till about December 21, when Scott wrote to Ballantyne:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DEAR JAMES,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ With great joy I send you Roy.
+ 'T was a tough job,
+ But we're done with Rob.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rob Roy&rdquo; was published on the last day of 1817. The toughness of the job
+ was caused by constant pain, and by struggles with &ldquo;the lassitude of
+ opium.&rdquo; So seldom sentimental, so rarely given to expressing his
+ melancholy moods in verse, Scott, while composing &ldquo;Rob Roy,&rdquo; wrote the
+ beautiful poem &ldquo;The sun upon the Weirdlaw Hill,&rdquo; in which, for this once,
+ &ldquo;pity of self through all makes broken moan.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some stress may be laid on the state of Sir Walter's health at this
+ moment, because a living critic has tried to show that, in his case,
+ &ldquo;every pang of the stomach paralyses the brain;&rdquo; that he &ldquo;never had a fit
+ of the cramp without spoiling a chapter.&rdquo;&mdash;[Mr. Ruskin's &ldquo;Fiction
+ Fair and Foul,&rdquo; &ldquo;Nineteenth Century,&rdquo; 1880, p. 955.]&mdash;&ldquo;Rob Roy&rdquo; is a
+ sufficient answer to these theories. The mind of Scott was no slave to his
+ body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The success of the story is pleasantly proved by a sentence in a review of
+ the day: &ldquo;It is an event unprecedented in the annals either of literature
+ or of the custom-house that the entire cargo of a packet, or smack, bound
+ from Leith to London, should be the impression of a novel, for which the
+ public curiosity was so much upon the alert as to require this immense
+ importation to satisfy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten thousand copies of a three-volume novel are certainly a ponderous
+ cargo, and Constable printed no fewer in his first edition. Scott was
+ assured of his own triumph in February 1819, when a dramatised version of
+ his novel was acted in Edinburgh by the company of Mr. William Murray, a
+ descendant of the traitor Murray of Broughton. Mr. Charles Mackay made a
+ capital Bailie, and the piece remains a favourite with Scotch audiences.
+ It is plain, from the reviews, that in one respect &ldquo;Rob Roy&rdquo; rather
+ disappointed the world. They had expected Rob to be a much more imposing
+ and majestic cateran, and complained that his foot was set too late on his
+ native heather. They found too much of the drover and intriguer, too
+ little of the traditional driver of the spoil. This was what Scott foresaw
+ when he objected to &ldquo;writing up to a title.&rdquo; In fact, he did not write up
+ to, it, and, as the &ldquo;Scots Magazine&rdquo; said, &ldquo;shaped his story in such a
+ manner as to throw busybodies out in their chase, with a slight degree of
+ malicious finesse.&rdquo; &ldquo;All the expeditions to the wonderful cave have been
+ thrown away, for the said cave is not once, we think, mentioned from
+ beginning to end.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rob Roy&rdquo; equals &ldquo;Waverley&rdquo; in its pictures of Highland and Lowland
+ society and character. Scott had clearly set himself to state his opinions
+ about the Highlands as they were under the patriarchal system of
+ government. The Highlanders were then a people, not lawless, indeed, but
+ all their law was the will of their chief. Bailie Nicol Jarvie makes a
+ statement of their economic and military condition as accurate as it is
+ humorous. The modern &ldquo;Highland Question&rdquo; may be studied as well in the
+ Bailie's words as in volumes of history and wildernesses of blue-books. A
+ people patriarchal and military as the Arabs of the desert were suddenly
+ dragged into modern commercial and industrial society. All old bonds were
+ snapped in a moment; emigration (at first opposed by some of the chiefs)
+ and the French wars depleted the country of its &ldquo;lang-leggit callants,
+ gaun wanting the breeks.&rdquo; Cattle took the place of men, sheep of cattle,
+ deer of sheep, and, in the long peace, a population grew up again&mdash;a
+ population destitute of employment even more than of old, because war and
+ robbery had ceased to be outlets for its energy. Some chiefs, as Dr.
+ Johnson said, treated their lands as an attorney treats his row of cheap
+ houses in a town. Hence the Highland Question,&mdash;a question in which
+ Scott's sympathies were with the Highlanders. &ldquo;Rob Roy,&rdquo; naturally, is no
+ mere &ldquo;novel with a purpose,&rdquo; no economic tract in disguise. Among Scott's
+ novels it stands alone as regards its pictures of passionate love. The
+ love of Diana Vernon is no less passionate for its admirable restraint.
+ Here Scott displays, without affectation, a truly Greek reserve in his
+ art. The deep and strong affection of Diana Vernon would not have been
+ otherwise handled by him who drew the not more immortal picture of
+ Antigone. Unlike modern novelists, Sir Walter deals neither in analysis
+ nor in rapturous effusions. We can, unfortunately, imagine but too easily
+ how some writers would peep and pry into the concealed emotions of that
+ maiden heart; how others would revel in tears, kisses, and caresses. In
+ place of all these Scott writes:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ She extended her hand, but I clasped her to my bosom. She sighed as
+ she extricated herself from the embrace which she permitted, escaped
+ to the door which led to her own apartment, and I saw her no more.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Months pass, in a mist of danger and intrigue, before the lovers meet
+ again in the dusk and the solitude.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Mr. Francis Osbaldistone,&rdquo; cries the girl's voice through the
+ moonlight, &ldquo;should not whistle his favourite airs when he wishes to
+ remain undiscovered.&rdquo;
+
+ And Diana Vernon&mdash;for she, wrapped in a horseman's cloak, was the
+ last speaker&mdash;whistled in playful mimicry the second part of the
+ tune, which was on my lips when they came up.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Surely there was never, in story or in song, a lady so loving and so light
+ of heart, save Rosalind alone. Her face touches Frank's, as she says
+ goodbye for ever &ldquo;It was a moment never to be forgotten, inexpressibly
+ bitter, yet mixed with a sensation of pleasure so deeply soothing and
+ affecting as at once to unlock all the floodgates of the heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She rides into the night, her lover knows the <i>hysterica passio</i> of
+ poor Lear, but &ldquo;I had scarce given vent to my feelings in this paroxysm
+ ere I was ashamed of my weakness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were men and women who knew how to love, and how to live. All men
+ who read &ldquo;Rob Roy&rdquo; are innocent rivals of Frank Osbaldistone. Di Vernon
+ holds her place in our hearts with Rosalind, and these airy affections,
+ like the actual emotions which they mimic, are not matters for words. This
+ lady, so gay, so brave, so witty and fearless, so tender and true, who
+ &ldquo;endured trials which might have dignified the history of a martyr, . . .
+ who spent the day in darkness and the night in vigil, and never breathed a
+ murmur of weakness or complaint,&rdquo; is as immortal in men's memories as the
+ actual heroine of the White Rose, Flora Macdonald. Her place is with Helen
+ and Antigone, with Rosalind and Imogen, the deathless daughters of dreams.
+ She brightens the world as she passes, and our own hearts tell us all the
+ story when Osbaldistone says, &ldquo;You know how I lamented her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the central interest, which, for once, is the interest of love, &ldquo;Rob
+ Roy&rdquo; attains the nobility, the reserve, the grave dignity of the highest
+ art. It is not easy to believe that Frank Osbaldistone is worthy of his
+ lady; but here no man is a fair judge. In the four novels&mdash;&ldquo;Waverley,&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Guy Mannering,&rdquo; &ldquo;The Antiquary,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Rob Roy&rdquo;&mdash;which we have
+ studied, the hero has always been a young poet. Waverley versified; so did
+ Mannering; Lovel &ldquo;had attempted a few lyrical pieces;&rdquo; and, in
+ Osbaldistone's rhymes, Scott parodied his own
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ blast of that dread horn
+ On Fontarabian echoes borne.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ All the heroes, then, have been poets, and Osbaldistone's youth may have
+ been suggested by Scott's memories of his own, and of the father who
+ &ldquo;feared that he would never be better than a gangrel scrapegut.&rdquo; Like
+ Henry Morton, in &ldquo;Old Mortality,&rdquo; Frank Osbaldistone is on the political
+ side taken by Scott's judgment, not by his emotions. To make Di Vernon
+ convert him to Jacobitism would have been to repeat the story of Waverley.
+ Still, he would have been more sympathetic if he had been converted. He
+ certainly does not lack spirit, as a sportsman, or &ldquo;on an occasion,&rdquo; as
+ Sir William Hope says in &ldquo;The Scots' Fencing Master,&rdquo; when he encounters
+ Rashleigh in the college gardens. Frank, in short, is all that a hero
+ should be, and is glorified by his affection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the other characters, perhaps Rob Roy is too sympathetically drawn. The
+ materials for a judgment are afforded by Scott's own admirable historical
+ introduction. The Rob Roy who so calmly &ldquo;played booty,&rdquo; and kept a foot in
+ either camp, certainly falls below the heroic. His language has been
+ criticised in late years, and it has been insisted that the Highlanders
+ never talked Lowland Scotch. But Scott has anticipated these cavils in the
+ eighteenth chapter of the second volume. Certainly no Lowlander knew the
+ Highlanders better than he did, and his ear for dialect was as keen as his
+ musical ear was confessedly obtuse. Scott had the best means of knowing
+ whether Helen MacGregor would be likely to soar into heroics as she is apt
+ to do. In fact, here &ldquo;we may trust the artist.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The novel is as rich as any in subordinate characters full of life and
+ humour. Morris is one of the few utter cowards in Scott. He has none of
+ the passionate impulses towards courage of the hapless hero in &ldquo;The Fair
+ Maid of Perth.&rdquo; The various Osbaldistones are nicely discriminated by
+ Diana Vernon, in one of those &ldquo;Beatrix moods&rdquo; which Scott did not always
+ admire, when they were displayed by &ldquo;Lady Anne&rdquo; and other girls of flesh
+ and blood. Rashleigh is of a nature unusual in Scott. He is, perhaps, Sir
+ Walter's nearest approach, for malignant egotism, to an Iago. Of Bailie
+ Nicol Jarvie commendation were impertinent. All Scotland arose, called him
+ hers, laughed at and applauded her civic child. Concerning Andrew
+ Fairservice, the first edition tells us what the final edition leaves us
+ to guess&mdash;that Tresham &ldquo;may recollect him as gardener at Osbaldistone
+ Hall.&rdquo; Andrew was not a friend who could be shaken off. Diana may have
+ ruled the hall, but Andrew must have remained absolute in the gardens,
+ with &ldquo;something to maw that he would like to see mawn, or something to saw
+ that he would like to see sawn, or something to ripe that he would like to
+ see ripen, and sae he e'en daikered on wi' the family frae year's end to
+ year's end,&rdquo; and life's end. His master &ldquo;needed some carefu' body to look
+ after him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only Shakspeare and Scott could have given us medicines to make us like
+ this cowardly, conceited &ldquo;jimp honest&rdquo; fellow, Andrew Fairservice, who
+ just escapes being a hypocrite by dint of some sincere old Covenanting
+ leaven in his veins. We make bold to say that the creator of Parolles and
+ Lucie, and many another lax and lovable knave, would, had he been a Scot,
+ have drawn Andrew Fairservice thus, and not otherwise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The critics of the hour censured, as they were certain to censure, the
+ construction, and especially the conclusion, of &ldquo;Rob Roy.&rdquo; No doubt the
+ critics were right. In both Scott and Shakspeare there is often seen a
+ perfect disregard of the denouement. Any moderately intelligent person can
+ remark on the huddled-up ends and hasty marriages in many of Shakspeare's
+ comedies; Moliere has been charged with the same offence; and, if blame
+ there be, Scott is almost always to blame. Thackeray is little better.
+ There must be some reason that explains why men of genius go wrong where
+ every newspaper critic, every milliner's girl acquainted with circulating
+ libraries, can detect the offence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the closing remarks of &ldquo;Old Mortality&rdquo; Scott expresses himself
+ humorously on this matter of the denouement. His schoolmaster author takes
+ his proofsheets to Miss Martha Buskbody, who was the literary set in
+ Gandercleugh, having read through the whole stock of three circulating
+ libraries. Miss Buskbody criticises the Dominic as Lady Louisa Stuart
+ habitually criticised Sir Walter. &ldquo;Your plan of omitting a formal
+ conclusion will never do!&rdquo; The Dominie replies, &ldquo;Really, madam, you must
+ be aware that every volume of a narrative turns less and less interesting
+ as the author draws to a conclusion,&mdash;just like your tea, which,
+ though excellent hyson, is necessarily weaker and more insipid in the last
+ cup.&rdquo; He compares the orthodox happy ending to &ldquo;the luscious lump of
+ half-dissolved sugar&rdquo; usually found at the bottom of the cup. This topic
+ might be discussed, and indeed has been discussed, endlessly. In our
+ actual lives it is probable that most of us have found ourselves living
+ for a year, or a month, or a week, in a chapter or half a volume of a
+ novel, and these have been our least happy experiences. But we have also
+ found that the romance vanishes away like a ghost, dwindles out, closes
+ with ragged ends, has no denouement. Then the question presents itself, As
+ art is imitation, should not novels, as a rule, close thus? The experiment
+ has frequently been tried, especially by the modern geniuses who do not
+ conceal their belief that their art is altogether finer than Scott's, or,
+ perhaps, than Shakspeare's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his practice, and in his Dominie's critical remarks, Sir Walter appears
+ inclined to agree with them. He was just as well aware as his reviewers,
+ or as Lady Louisa Stuart, that the conclusion of &ldquo;Rob Roy&rdquo; is &ldquo;huddled
+ up,&rdquo; that the sudden demise of all the young Baldistones is a high-handed
+ measure. He knew that, in real life, Frank and Di Vernon would never have
+ met again after that farewell on the moonlit road. But he yielded to Miss
+ Buskbody's demand for &ldquo;a glimpse of sunshine in the last chapter;&rdquo; he
+ understood the human liking for the final lump of sugar. After all,
+ fiction is not, any more than any other art, a mere imitation of life: it
+ is an arrangement, a selection. Scott was too kind, too humane, to
+ disappoint us, the crowd of human beings who find much of our happiness in
+ dreams. He could not keep up his own interest in his characters after he
+ had developed them; he could take pleasure in giving them life,&mdash;he
+ had little pleasure in ushering them into an earthly paradise; so that
+ part of his business he did carelessly, as his only rivals in literature
+ have also done it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The critics censured, not unjustly, the &ldquo;machinery&rdquo; of the story,&mdash;these
+ mysterious &ldquo;assets&rdquo; of Osbaldistone and Tresham, whose absence was to
+ precipitate the Rising of 1715. The &ldquo;Edinburgh Review&rdquo; lost its heart
+ (Jeffrey's heart was always being lost) to Di Vernon. But it pronounces
+ that &ldquo;a king with legs of marble, or a youth with an ivory shoulder,&rdquo;
+ heroes of the &ldquo;Arabian Nights&rdquo; and of Pindar, was probable, compared with
+ the wit and accomplishments of Diana. This is hypercriticism. Diana's
+ education, under Rashleigh, had been elaborate; her acquaintance with
+ Shakspeare, her main strength, is unusual in women, but not beyond the
+ limits of belief. Here she is in agreeable contrast to Rose Bradwardine,
+ who had never heard of &ldquo;Romeo and Juliet.&rdquo; In any case, Diana compels
+ belief as well as wins affection, while we are fortunate enough to be in
+ her delightful company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As long as we believe in her, it is not of moment to consider whether her
+ charms are incompatible with probability.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rob Roy&rdquo; was finished in spite of &ldquo;a very bad touch of the cramp for
+ about three weeks in November, which, with its natural attendants of
+ dulness and, weakness, made me unable to get our matters forward till last
+ week,&rdquo; says Scott to Constable. &ldquo;But,&rdquo; adds the unconquerable author, &ldquo;I
+ am resting myself here a few days before commencing my new labours, which
+ will be untrodden ground, and, I think, pretty likely to succeed.&rdquo; The
+ &ldquo;new labours&rdquo; were &ldquo;The Heart of Mid-Lothian.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ANDREW LANG. <a name="link_4_0015" id="link_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ROB ROY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0001" id="linkCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER FIRST.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ How have I sinn'd, that this affliction
+ Should light so heavy on me? I have no more sons,
+ And this no more mine own.&mdash;My grand curse
+ Hang o'er his head that thus transformed thee!&mdash;
+ Travel? I'll send my horse to travel next.
+ Monsieur Thomas.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ You have requested me, my dear friend, to bestow some of that leisure,
+ with which Providence has blessed the decline of my life, in registering
+ the hazards and difficulties which attended its commencement. The
+ recollection of those adventures, as you are pleased to term them, has
+ indeed left upon my mind a chequered and varied feeling of pleasure and of
+ pain, mingled, I trust, with no slight gratitude and veneration to the
+ Disposer of human events, who guided my early course through much risk and
+ labour, that the ease with which he has blessed my prolonged life might
+ seem softer from remembrance and contrast. Neither is it possible for me
+ to doubt, what you have often affirmed, that the incidents which befell me
+ among a people singularly primitive in their government and manners, have
+ something interesting and attractive for those who love to hear an old
+ man's stories of a past age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, however, you must remember, that the tale told by one friend, and
+ listened to by another, loses half its charms when committed to paper; and
+ that the narratives to which you have attended with interest, as heard
+ from the voice of him to whom they occurred, will appear less deserving of
+ attention when perused in the seclusion of your study. But your greener
+ age and robust constitution promise longer life than will, in all human
+ probability, be the lot of your friend. Throw, then, these sheets into
+ some secret drawer of your escritoire till we are separated from each
+ other's society by an event which may happen at any moment, and which must
+ happen within the course of a few&mdash;a very few years. When we are
+ parted in this world, to meet, I hope, in a better, you will, I am well
+ aware, cherish more than it deserves the memory of your departed friend,
+ and will find in those details which I am now to commit to paper, matter
+ for melancholy, but not unpleasing reflection. Others bequeath to the
+ confidants of their bosom portraits of their external features&mdash;I put
+ into your hands a faithful transcript of my thoughts and feelings, of my
+ virtues and of my failings, with the assured hope, that the follies and
+ headstrong impetuosity of my youth will meet the same kind construction
+ and forgiveness which have so often attended the faults of my matured age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One advantage, among the many, of addressing my Memoirs (if I may give
+ these sheets a name so imposing) to a dear and intimate friend, is, that I
+ may spare some of the details, in this case unnecessary, with which I must
+ needs have detained a stranger from what I have to say of greater
+ interest. Why should I bestow all my tediousness upon you, because I have
+ you in my power, and have ink, paper, and time before me? At the same
+ time, I dare not promise that I may not abuse the opportunity so
+ temptingly offered me, to treat of myself and my own concerns, even though
+ I speak of circumstances as well known to you as to myself. The seductive
+ love of narrative, when we ourselves are the heroes of the events which we
+ tell, often disregards the attention due to the time and patience of the
+ audience, and the best and wisest have yielded to its fascination. I need
+ only remind you of the singular instance evinced by the form of that rare
+ and original edition of Sully's Memoirs, which you (with the fond vanity
+ of a book-collector) insist upon preferring to that which is reduced to
+ the useful and ordinary form of Memoirs, but which I think curious, solely
+ as illustrating how far so great a man as the author was accessible to the
+ foible of self-importance. If I recollect rightly, that venerable peer and
+ great statesman had appointed no fewer than four gentlemen of his
+ household to draw up the events of his life, under the title of Memorials
+ of the Sage and Royal Affairs of State, Domestic, Political, and Military,
+ transacted by Henry IV., and so forth. These grave recorders, having made
+ their compilation, reduced the Memoirs containing all the remarkable
+ events of their master's life into a narrative, addressed to himself in <i>propria
+ persona.</i> And thus, instead of telling his own story, in the third
+ person, like Julius Caesar, or in the first person, like most who, in the
+ hall, or the study, undertake to be the heroes of their own tale, Sully
+ enjoyed the refined, though whimsical pleasure, of having the events of
+ his life told over to him by his secretaries, being himself the auditor,
+ as he was also the hero, and probably the author, of the whole book. It
+ must have been a great sight to have seen the ex-minister, as bolt upright
+ as a starched ruff and laced cassock could make him, seated in state
+ beneath his canopy, and listening to the recitation of his compilers,
+ while, standing bare in his presence, they informed him gravely, &ldquo;Thus
+ said the duke&mdash;so did the duke infer&mdash;such were your grace's
+ sentiments upon this important point&mdash;such were your secret counsels
+ to the king on that other emergency,&rdquo;&mdash;circumstances, all of which
+ must have been much better known to their hearer than to themselves, and
+ most of which could only be derived from his own special communication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My situation is not quite so ludicrous as that of the great Sully, and yet
+ there would be something whimsical in Frank Osbaldistone giving Will
+ Tresham a formal account of his birth, education, and connections in the
+ world. I will, therefore, wrestle with the tempting spirit of P. P., Clerk
+ of our Parish, as I best may, and endeavour to tell you nothing that is
+ familiar to you already. Some things, however, I must recall to your
+ memory, because, though formerly well known to you, they may have been
+ forgotten through lapse of time, and they afford the ground-work of my
+ destiny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You must remember my father well; for, as your own was a member of the
+ mercantile house, you knew him from infancy. Yet you hardly saw him in his
+ best days, before age and infirmity had quenched his ardent spirit of
+ enterprise and speculation. He would have been a poorer man, indeed, but
+ perhaps as happy, had he devoted to the extension of science those active
+ energies, and acute powers of observation, for which commercial pursuits
+ found occupation. Yet, in the fluctuations of mercantile speculation,
+ there is something captivating to the adventurer, even independent of the
+ hope of gain. He who embarks on that fickle sea, requires to possess the
+ skill of the pilot and the fortitude of the navigator, and after all may
+ be wrecked and lost, unless the gales of fortune breathe in his favour.
+ This mixture of necessary attention and inevitable hazard,&mdash;the
+ frequent and awful uncertainty whether prudence shall overcome fortune, or
+ fortune baffle the schemes of prudence, affords full occupation for the
+ powers, as well as for the feelings of the mind, and trade has all the
+ fascination of gambling without its moral guilt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the 18th century, when I (Heaven help me) was a youth of some
+ twenty years old, I was summoned suddenly from Bourdeaux to attend my
+ father on business of importance. I shall never forget our first
+ interview. You recollect the brief, abrupt, and somewhat stern mode in
+ which he was wont to communicate his pleasure to those around him.
+ Methinks I see him even now in my mind's eye;&mdash;the firm and upright
+ figure,&mdash;the step, quick and determined,&mdash;the eye, which shot so
+ keen and so penetrating a glance,&mdash;the features, on which care had
+ already planted wrinkles,&mdash;and hear his language, in which he never
+ wasted word in vain, expressed in a voice which had sometimes an
+ occasional harshness, far from the intention of the speaker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I dismounted from my post-horse, I hastened to my father's apartment.
+ He was traversing it with an air of composed and steady deliberation,
+ which even my arrival, although an only son unseen for four years, was
+ unable to discompose. I threw myself into his arms. He was a kind, though
+ not a fond father, and the tear twinkled in his dark eye, but it was only
+ for a moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dubourg writes to me that he is satisfied with you, Frank.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am happy, sir&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I have less reason to be so&rdquo; he added, sitting down at his bureau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sorry, sir&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sorry and happy, Frank, are words that, on most occasions, signify little
+ or nothing&mdash;Here is your last letter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took it out from a number of others tied up in a parcel of red tape,
+ and curiously labelled and filed. There lay my poor epistle, written on
+ the subject the nearest to my heart at the time, and couched in words
+ which I had thought would work compassion if not conviction,&mdash;there,
+ I say, it lay, squeezed up among the letters on miscellaneous business in
+ which my father's daily affairs had engaged him. I cannot help smiling
+ internally when I recollect the mixture of hurt vanity, and wounded
+ feeling, with which I regarded my remonstrance, to the penning of which
+ there had gone, I promise you, some trouble, as I beheld it extracted from
+ amongst letters of advice, of credit, and all the commonplace lumber, as I
+ then thought them, of a merchant's correspondence. Surely, thought I, a
+ letter of such importance (I dared not say, even to myself, so well
+ written) deserved a separate place, as well as more anxious consideration,
+ than those on the ordinary business of the counting-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But my father did not observe my dissatisfaction, and would not have
+ minded it if he had. He proceeded, with the letter in his hand. &ldquo;This,
+ Frank, is yours of the 21st ultimo, in which you advise me (reading from
+ my letter), that in the most important business of forming a plan, and
+ adopting a profession for life, you trust my paternal goodness will hold
+ you entitled to at least a negative voice; that you have insuperable&mdash;ay,
+ insuperable is the word&mdash;I wish, by the way, you would write a more
+ distinct current hand&mdash;draw a score through the tops of your t's, and
+ open the loops of your l's&mdash;insuperable objections to the
+ arrangements which I have proposed to you. There is much more to the same
+ effect, occupying four good pages of paper, which a little attention to
+ perspicuity and distinctness of expression might have comprised within as
+ many lines. For, after all, Frank, it amounts but to this, that you will
+ not do as I would have you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I cannot, sir, in the present instance, not that I will not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Words avail very little with me, young man,&rdquo; said my father, whose
+ inflexibility always possessed the air of the most perfect calmness of
+ self-possession. &ldquo;<i>Can not</i> may be a more civil phrase than <i>will
+ not,</i> but the expressions are synonymous where there is no moral
+ impossibility. But I am not a friend to doing business hastily; we will
+ talk this matter over after dinner.&mdash;Owen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Owen appeared, not with the silver locks which you were used to venerate,
+ for he was then little more than fifty; but he had the same, or an exactly
+ similar uniform suit of light-brown clothes,&mdash;the same pearl-grey
+ silk stockings,&mdash;the same stock, with its silver buckle,&mdash;the
+ same plaited cambric ruffles, drawn down over his knuckles in the parlour,
+ but in the counting-house carefully folded back under the sleeves, that
+ they might remain unstained by the ink which he daily consumed;&mdash;in a
+ word, the same grave, formal, yet benevolent cast of features, which
+ continued to his death to distinguish the head clerk of the great house of
+ Osbaldistone and Tresham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Owen,&rdquo; said my father, as the kind old man shook me affectionately by the
+ hand, &ldquo;you must dine with us to-day, and hear the news Frank has brought
+ us from our friends in Bourdeaux.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Owen made one of his stiff bows of respectful gratitude; for, in those
+ days, when the distance between superiors and inferiors was enforced in a
+ manner to which the present times are strangers, such an invitation was a
+ favour of some little consequence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I shall long remember that dinner-party. Deeply affected by feelings of
+ anxiety, not unmingled with displeasure, I was unable to take that active
+ share in the conversation which my father seemed to expect from me; and I
+ too frequently gave unsatisfactory answers to the questions with which he
+ assailed me. Owen, hovering betwixt his respect for his patron, and his
+ love for the youth he had dandled on his knee in childhood, like the
+ timorous, yet anxious ally of an invaded nation, endeavoured at every
+ blunder I made to explain my no-meaning, and to cover my retreat;
+ manoeuvres which added to my father's pettish displeasure, and brought a
+ share of it upon my kind advocate, instead of protecting me. I had not,
+ while residing in the house of Dubourg, absolutely conducted myself like
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A clerk condemn'd his father's soul to cross,
+ Who penn'd a stanza when he should engross;&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ but, to say truth, I had frequented the counting-house no more than I had
+ thought absolutely necessary to secure the good report of the Frenchman,
+ long a correspondent of our firm, to whom my father had trusted for
+ initiating me into the mysteries of commerce. In fact, my principal
+ attention had been dedicated to literature and manly exercises. My father
+ did not altogether discourage such acquirements, whether mental or
+ personal. He had too much good sense not to perceive, that they sate
+ gracefully upon every man, and he was sensible that they relieved and
+ dignified the character to which he wished me to aspire. But his chief
+ ambition was, that I should succeed not merely to his fortune, but to the
+ views and plans by which he imagined he could extend and perpetuate the
+ wealthy inheritance which he designed for me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Love of his profession was the motive which he chose should be most
+ ostensible, when he urged me to tread the same path; but he had others
+ with which I only became acquainted at a later period. Impetuous in his
+ schemes, as well as skilful and daring, each new adventure, when
+ successful, became at once the incentive, and furnished the means, for
+ farther speculation. It seemed to be necessary to him, as to an ambitious
+ conqueror, to push on from achievement to achievement, without stopping to
+ secure, far less to enjoy, the acquisitions which he made. Accustomed to
+ see his whole fortune trembling in the scales of chance, and dexterous at
+ adopting expedients for casting the balance in his favour, his health and
+ spirits and activity seemed ever to increase with the animating hazards on
+ which he staked his wealth; and he resembled a sailor, accustomed to brave
+ the billows and the foe, whose confidence rises on the eve of tempest or
+ of battle. He was not, however, insensible to the changes which increasing
+ age or supervening malady might make in his own constitution; and was
+ anxious in good time to secure in me an assistant, who might take the helm
+ when his hand grew weary, and keep the vessel's way according to his
+ counsel and instruction. Paternal affection, as well as the furtherance of
+ his own plans, determined him to the same conclusion. Your father, though
+ his fortune was vested in the house, was only a sleeping partner, as the
+ commercial phrase goes; and Owen, whose probity and skill in the details
+ of arithmetic rendered his services invaluable as a head clerk, was not
+ possessed either of information or talents sufficient to conduct the
+ mysteries of the principal management. If my father were suddenly summoned
+ from life, what would become of the world of schemes which he had formed,
+ unless his son were moulded into a commercial Hercules, fit to sustain the
+ weight when relinquished by the falling Atlas? and what would become of
+ that son himself, if, a stranger to business of this description, he found
+ himself at once involved in the labyrinth of mercantile concerns, without
+ the clew of knowledge necessary for his extraction? For all these reasons,
+ avowed and secret, my father was determined I should embrace his
+ profession; and when he was determined, the resolution of no man was more
+ immovable. I, however, was also a party to be consulted, and, with
+ something of his own pertinacity, I had formed a determination precisely
+ contrary. It may, I hope, be some palliative for the resistance which, on
+ this occasion, I offered to my father's wishes, that I did not fully
+ understand upon what they were founded, or how deeply his happiness was
+ involved in them. Imagining myself certain of a large succession in
+ future, and ample maintenance in the meanwhile, it never occurred to me
+ that it might be necessary, in order to secure these blessings, to submit
+ to labour and limitations unpleasant to my taste and temper. I only saw in
+ my father's proposal for my engaging in business, a desire that I should
+ add to those heaps of wealth which he had himself acquired; and imagining
+ myself the best judge of the path to my own happiness, I did not conceive
+ that I should increase that happiness by augmenting a fortune which I
+ believed was already sufficient, and more than sufficient, for every use,
+ comfort, and elegant enjoyment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, I am compelled to repeat, that my time at Bourdeaux had not
+ been spent as my father had proposed to himself. What he considered as the
+ chief end of my residence in that city, I had postponed for every other,
+ and would (had I dared) have neglected altogether. Dubourg, a favoured and
+ benefited correspondent of our mercantile house, was too much of a shrewd
+ politician to make such reports to the head of the firm concerning his
+ only child, as would excite the displeasure of both; and he might also, as
+ you will presently hear, have views of selfish advantage in suffering me
+ to neglect the purposes for which I was placed under his charge. My
+ conduct was regulated by the bounds of decency and good order, and thus
+ far he had no evil report to make, supposing him so disposed; but,
+ perhaps, the crafty Frenchman would have been equally complaisant, had I
+ been in the habit of indulging worse feelings than those of indolence and
+ aversion to mercantile business. As it was, while I gave a decent portion
+ of my time to the commercial studies he recommended, he was by no means
+ envious of the hours which I dedicated to other and more classical
+ attainments, nor did he ever find fault with me for dwelling upon
+ Corneille and Boileau, in preference to Postlethwayte (supposing his folio
+ to have then existed, and Monsieur Dubourg able to have pronounced his
+ name), or Savary, or any other writer on commercial economy. He had picked
+ up somewhere a convenient expression, with which he rounded off every
+ letter to his correspondent,&mdash;&ldquo;I was all,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that a father
+ could wish.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father never quarrelled with a phrase, however frequently repeated,
+ provided it seemed to him distinct and expressive; and Addison himself
+ could not have found expressions so satisfactory to him as, &ldquo;Yours
+ received, and duly honoured the bills enclosed, as per margin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Knowing, therefore, very well what he desired me to, be, Mr. Osbaldistone
+ made no doubt, from the frequent repetition of Dubourg's favourite phrase,
+ that I was the very thing he wished to see me; when, in an evil hour, he
+ received my letter, containing my eloquent and detailed apology for
+ declining a place in the firm, and a desk and stool in the corner of the
+ dark counting-house in Crane Alley, surmounting in height those of Owen,
+ and the other clerks, and only inferior to the tripod of my father
+ himself. All was wrong from that moment. Dubourg's reports became as
+ suspicious as if his bills had been noted for dishonour. I was summoned
+ home in all haste, and received in the manner I have already communicated
+ to you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0002" id="linkCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER SECOND.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I begin shrewdly to suspect the young man of a terrible
+ taint&mdash;Poetry; with which idle disease if he be infected,
+ there's no hope of him in astate course. <i>Actum est</i> of him
+ for a commonwealth's man, if he goto't in rhyme once.
+ Ben Jonson's <i>Bartholomew Fair.</i>
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ My father had, generally speaking, his temper under complete self-command,
+ and his anger rarely indicated itself by words, except in a sort of dry
+ testy manner, to those who had displeased him. He never used threats, or
+ expressions of loud resentment. All was arranged with him on system, and
+ it was his practice to do &ldquo;the needful&rdquo; on every occasion, without wasting
+ words about it. It was, therefore, with a bitter smile that he listened to
+ my imperfect answers concerning the state of commerce in France, and
+ unmercifully permitted me to involve myself deeper and deeper in the
+ mysteries of agio, tariffs, tare and tret; nor can I charge my memory with
+ his having looked positively angry, until he found me unable to explain
+ the exact effect which the depreciation of the louis d'or had produced on
+ the negotiation of bills of exchange. &ldquo;The most remarkable national
+ occurrence in my time,&rdquo; said my father (who nevertheless had seen the
+ Revolution)&mdash;&ldquo;and he knows no more of it than a post on the quay!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Francis,&rdquo; suggested Owen, in his timid and conciliatory manner,
+ &ldquo;cannot have forgotten, that by an <i>arret</i> of the King of France,
+ dated 1st May 1700, it was provided that the <i>porteur,</i> within ten
+ days after due, must make demand&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Francis,&rdquo; said my father, interrupting him, &ldquo;will, I dare say,
+ recollect for the moment anything you are so kind as hint to him. But,
+ body o' me! how Dubourg could permit him! Hark ye, Owen, what sort of a
+ youth is Clement Dubourg, his nephew there, in the office, the
+ black-haired lad?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One of the cleverest clerks, sir, in the house; a prodigious young man
+ for his time,&rdquo; answered Owen; for the gaiety and civility of the young
+ Frenchman had won his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, ay, I suppose <i>he</i> knows something of the nature of exchange.
+ Dubourg was determined I should have one youngster at least about my hand
+ who understood business. But I see his drift, and he shall find that I do
+ so when he looks at the balance-sheet. Owen, let Clement's salary be paid
+ up to next quarter-day, and let him ship himself back to Bourdeaux in his
+ father's ship, which is clearing out yonder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dismiss Clement Dubourg, sir?&rdquo; said Owen, with a faltering voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, sir, dismiss him instantly; it is enough to have a stupid Englishman
+ in the counting-house to make blunders, without keeping a sharp Frenchman
+ there to profit by them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had lived long enough in the territories of the <i>Grand Monarque</i> to
+ contract a hearty aversion to arbitrary exertion of authority, even if it
+ had not been instilled into me with my earliest breeding; and I could not
+ refrain from interposing, to prevent an innocent and meritorious young man
+ from paying the penalty of having acquired that proficiency which my
+ father had desired for me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg pardon, sir,&rdquo; when Mr. Osbaldistone had done speaking; &ldquo;but I think
+ it but just, that if I have been negligent of my studies, I should pay the
+ forfeit myself. I have no reason to charge Monsieur Dubourg with having
+ neglected to give me opportunities of improvement, however little I may
+ have profited by them; and with respect to Monsieur Clement Dubourg&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With respect to him, and to you, I shall take the measures which I see
+ needful,&rdquo; replied my father; &ldquo;but it is fair in you, Frank, to take your
+ own blame on your own shoulders&mdash;very fair, that cannot be denied.&mdash;I
+ cannot acquit old Dubourg,&rdquo; he said, looking to Owen, &ldquo;for having merely
+ afforded Frank the means of useful knowledge, without either seeing that
+ he took advantage of them or reporting to me if he did not. You see, Owen,
+ he has natural notions of equity becoming a British merchant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Francis,&rdquo; said the head-clerk, with his usual formal inclination of
+ the head, and a slight elevation of his right hand, which he had acquired
+ by a habit of sticking his pen behind his ear before he spoke&mdash;&ldquo;Mr.
+ Francis seems to understand the fundamental principle of all moral
+ accounting, the great ethic rule of three. Let A do to B, as he would have
+ B do to him; the product will give the rule of conduct required.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father smiled at this reduction of the golden rule to arithmetical
+ form, but instantly proceeded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All this signifies nothing, Frank; you have been throwing away your time
+ like a boy, and in future you must learn to live like a man. I shall put
+ you under Owen's care for a few months, to recover the lost ground.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was about to reply, but Owen looked at me with such a supplicatory and
+ warning gesture, that I was involuntarily silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We will then,&rdquo; continued my father, &ldquo;resume the subject of mine of the
+ 1st ultimo, to which you sent me an answer which was unadvised and
+ unsatisfactory. So now, fill your glass, and push the bottle to Owen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Want of courage&mdash;of audacity if you will&mdash;was never my failing.
+ I answered firmly, &ldquo;I was sorry that my letter was unsatisfactory,
+ unadvised it was not; for I had given the proposal his goodness had made
+ me, my instant and anxious attention, and it was with no small pain that I
+ found myself obliged to decline it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father bent his keen eye for a moment on me, and instantly withdrew it.
+ As he made no answer, I thought myself obliged to proceed, though with
+ some hesitation, and he only interrupted me by monosyllables.&mdash;&ldquo;It is
+ impossible, sir, for me to have higher respect for any character than I
+ have for the commercial, even were it not yours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It connects nation with nation, relieves the wants, and contributes to
+ the wealth of all; and is to the general commonwealth of the civilised
+ world what the daily intercourse of ordinary life is to private society,
+ or rather, what air and food are to our bodies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet, sir, I find myself compelled to persist in declining to adopt a
+ character which I am so ill qualified to support.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will take care that you acquire the qualifications necessary. You are
+ no longer the guest and pupil of Dubourg.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, my dear sir, it is no defect of teaching which I plead, but my own
+ inability to profit by instruction.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nonsense.&mdash;Have you kept your journal in the terms I desired?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be pleased to bring it here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The volume thus required was a sort of commonplace book, kept by my
+ father's recommendation, in which I had been directed to enter notes of
+ the miscellaneous information which I had acquired in the course of my
+ studies. Foreseeing that he would demand inspection of this record, I had
+ been attentive to transcribe such particulars of information as he would
+ most likely be pleased with, but too often the pen had discharged the task
+ without much correspondence with the head. And it had also happened, that,
+ the book being the receptacle nearest to my hand, I had occasionally
+ jotted down memoranda which had little regard to traffic. I now put it
+ into my father's hand, devoutly hoping he might light on nothing that
+ would increase his displeasure against me. Owen's face, which had looked
+ something blank when the question was put, cleared up at my ready answer,
+ and wore a smile of hope, when I brought from my apartment, and placed
+ before my father, a commercial-looking volume, rather broader than it was
+ long, having brazen clasps and a binding of rough calf. This looked
+ business-like, and was encouraging to my benevolent well-wisher. But he
+ actually smiled with pleasure as he heard my father run over some part of
+ the contents, muttering his critical remarks as he went on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>&mdash;Brandies&mdash;Barils and barricants, also tonneaux.&mdash;At
+ Nantz 29&mdash;Velles to the barique at Cognac and Rochelle 27&mdash;At
+ Bourdeaux 32</i>&mdash;Very right, Frank&mdash;<i>Duties on tonnage and
+ custom-house, see Saxby's Tables</i>&mdash;That's not well; you should
+ have transcribed the passage; it fixes the thing in the memory&mdash;<i>Reports
+ outward and inward&mdash;Corn debentures&mdash;Over-sea Cockets&mdash;Linens&mdash;Isingham&mdash;Gentish&mdash;Stock-fish&mdash;Titling&mdash;Cropling&mdash;
+ Lub-fish.</i> You should have noted that they are all, nevertheless to be
+ entered as titlings.&mdash;How many inches long is a titling?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Owen, seeing me at fault, hazarded a whisper, of which I fortunately
+ caught the import.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eighteen inches, sir.&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And a lub-fish is twenty-four&mdash;very right. It is important to
+ remember this, on account of the Portuguese trade&mdash;But what have we
+ here?&mdash; <i>Bourdeaux founded in the year&mdash;Castle of the
+ Trompette&mdash;Palace of Gallienus</i>&mdash;Well, well, that's very
+ right too.&mdash;This is a kind of waste-book, Owen, in which all the
+ transactions of the day,&mdash;emptions, orders, payments, receipts,
+ acceptances, draughts, commissions, and advices,&mdash;are entered
+ miscellaneously.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That they may be regularly transferred to the day-book and ledger,&rdquo;
+ answered Owen: &ldquo;I am glad Mr. Francis is so methodical.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I perceived myself getting so fast into favour, that I began to fear the
+ consequence would be my father's more obstinate perseverance in his
+ resolution that I must become a merchant; and as I was determined on the
+ contrary, I began to wish I had not, to use my friend Mr. Owen's phrase,
+ been so methodical. But I had no reason for apprehension on that score;
+ for a blotted piece of paper dropped out of the book, and, being taken up
+ by my father, he interrupted a hint from Owen, on the propriety of
+ securing loose memoranda with a little paste, by exclaiming, &ldquo;To the
+ memory of Edward the Black Prince&mdash;What's all this?&mdash;verses!&mdash;By
+ Heaven, Frank, you are a greater blockhead than I supposed you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father, you must recollect, as a man of business, looked upon the
+ labour of poets with contempt; and as a religious man, and of the
+ dissenting persuasion, he considered all such pursuits as equally trivial
+ and profane. Before you condemn him, you must recall to remembrance how
+ too many of the poets in the end of the seventeenth century had led their
+ lives and employed their talents. The sect also to which my father
+ belonged, felt, or perhaps affected, a puritanical aversion to the lighter
+ exertions of literature. So that many causes contributed to augment the
+ unpleasant surprise occasioned by the ill-timed discovery of this
+ unfortunate copy of verses. As for poor Owen, could the bob-wig which he
+ then wore have uncurled itself, and stood on end with horror, I am
+ convinced the morning's labour of the friseur would have been undone,
+ merely by the excess of his astonishment at this enormity. An inroad on
+ the strong-box, or an erasure in the ledger, or a mis-summation in a
+ fitted account, could hardly have surprised him more disagreeably. My
+ father read the lines sometimes with an affectation of not being able to
+ understand the sense&mdash;sometimes in a mouthing tone of mock heroic&mdash;always
+ with an emphasis of the most bitter irony, most irritating to the nerves
+ of an author.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O for the voice of that wild horn,
+ On Fontarabian echoes borne,
+ The dying hero's call,
+ That told imperial Charlemagne,
+ How Paynim sons of swarthy Spain
+ Had wrought his champion's fall.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Fontarabian echoes!</i>&rdquo; continued my father, interrupting himself;
+ &ldquo;the Fontarabian Fair would have been more to the purpose&mdash;<i>Paynim!</i>&mdash;What's
+ Paynim?&mdash;Could you not say Pagan as well, and write English at least,
+ if you must needs write nonsense?&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Sad over earth and ocean sounding.
+ And England's distant cliffs astounding.
+ Such are the notes should say
+ How Britain's hope, and France's fear,
+ Victor of Cressy and Poitier,
+ In Bordeaux dying lay.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poitiers, by the way, is always spelt with an <i>s,</i> and I know no
+ reason why orthography should give place to rhyme.&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'Raise my faint head, my squires,' he said,
+ 'And let the casement be display'd,
+ That I may see once more
+ The splendour of the setting sun
+ Gleam on thy mirrored wave, Garonne,
+ And Blaye's empurpled shore.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Garonne</i> and <i>sun</i> is a bad rhyme. Why, Frank, you do not even
+ understand the beggarly trade you have chosen.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'Like me, he sinks to Glory's sleep,
+ His fall the dews of evening steep,
+ As if in sorrow shed,
+ So soft shall fall the trickling tear,
+ When England's maids and matrons hear
+ Of their Black Edward dead.
+
+ &ldquo;'And though my sun of glory set,
+ Nor France, nor England, shall forget
+ The terror of my name;
+ And oft shall Britain's heroes rise,
+ New planets in these southern skies,
+ Through clouds of blood and flame.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A cloud of flame is something new&mdash;Good-morrow, my masters all, and
+ a merry Christmas to you!&mdash;Why, the bellman writes better lines.&rdquo; He
+ then tossed the paper from him with an air of superlative contempt, and
+ concluded&mdash;&ldquo;Upon my credit, Frank, you are a greater blockhead than I
+ took you for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What could I say, my dear Tresham? There I stood, swelling with indignant
+ mortification, while my father regarded me with a calm but stern look of
+ scorn and pity; and poor Owen, with uplifted hands and eyes, looked as
+ striking a picture of horror as if he had just read his patron's name in
+ the Gazette. At length I took courage to speak, endeavouring that my tone
+ of voice should betray my feelings as little as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am quite aware, sir, how ill qualified I am to play the conspicuous
+ part in society you have destined for me; and, luckily, I am not ambitious
+ of the wealth I might acquire. Mr. Owen would be a much more effective
+ assistant.&rdquo; I said this in some malice, for I considered Owen as having
+ deserted my cause a little too soon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Owen!&rdquo; said my father&mdash;&ldquo;The boy is mad&mdash;actually insane. And,
+ pray, sir, if I may presume to inquire, having coolly turned me over to
+ Mr. Owen (although I may expect more attention from any one than from my
+ son), what may your own sage projects be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should wish, sir,&rdquo; I replied, summoning up my courage, &ldquo;to travel for
+ two or three years, should that consist with your pleasure; otherwise,
+ although late, I would willingly spend the same time at Oxford or
+ Cambridge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the name of common sense! was the like ever heard?&mdash;to put
+ yourself to school among pedants and Jacobites, when you might be pushing
+ your fortune in the world! Why not go to Westminster or Eton at once, man,
+ and take to Lilly's Grammar and Accidence, and to the birch, too, if you
+ like it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, sir, if you think my plan of improvement too late, I would
+ willingly return to the Continent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have already spent too much time there to little purpose, Mr.
+ Francis.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I would choose the army, sir, in preference to any other active line
+ of life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Choose the d&mdash;l!&rdquo; answered my father, hastily, and then checking
+ himself&mdash;&ldquo;I profess you make me as great a fool as you are yourself.
+ Is he not enough to drive one mad, Owen?&rdquo;&mdash;Poor Owen shook his head,
+ and looked down. &ldquo;Hark ye, Frank,&rdquo; continued my father, &ldquo;I will cut all
+ this matter very short. I was at your age when my father turned me out of
+ doors, and settled my legal inheritance on my younger brother. I left
+ Osbaldistone Hall on the back of a broken-down hunter, with ten guineas in
+ my purse. I have never crossed the threshold again, and I never will. I
+ know not, and I care not, if my fox-hunting brother is alive, or has
+ broken his neck; but he has children, Frank, and one of them shall be my
+ son if you cross me farther in this matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will do your pleasure,&rdquo; I answered&mdash;rather, I fear, with more
+ sullen indifference than respect, &ldquo;with what is your own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, Frank, what I have <i>is</i> my own, if labour in getting, and care
+ in augmenting, can make a right of property; and no drone shall feed on my
+ honeycomb. Think on it well: what I have said is not without reflection,
+ and what I resolve upon I will execute.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Honoured sir!&mdash;dear sir!&rdquo; exclaimed Owen, tears rushing into his
+ eyes, &ldquo;you are not wont to be in such a hurry in transacting business of
+ importance. Let Mr. Francis run up the balance before you shut the
+ account; he loves you, I am sure; and when he puts down his filial
+ obedience to the <i>per contra,</i> I am sure his objections will
+ disappear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think I will ask him twice,&rdquo; said my father, sternly, &ldquo;to be my
+ friend, my assistant, and my confidant?&mdash;to be a partner of my cares
+ and of my fortune?&mdash;Owen, I thought you had known me better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at me as if he meant to add something more, but turned instantly
+ away, and left the room abruptly. I was, I own, affected by this view of
+ the case, which had not occurred to me; and my father would probably have
+ had little reason to complain of me, had he commenced the discussion with
+ this argument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was too late. I had much of his own obduracy of resolution, and
+ Heaven had decreed that my sin should be my punishment, though not to the
+ extent which my transgression merited. Owen, when we were left alone,
+ continued to look at me with eyes which tears from time to time moistened,
+ as if to discover, before attempting the task of intercessor, upon what
+ point my obstinacy was most assailable. At length he began, with broken
+ and disconcerted accents,&mdash;&ldquo;O L&mdash;d, Mr. Francis!&mdash;Good
+ Heavens, sir!&mdash;My stars, Mr. Osbaldistone!&mdash;that I should ever
+ have seen this day&mdash;and you so young a gentleman, sir!&mdash;For the
+ love of Heaven! look at both sides of the account&mdash;think what you are
+ going to lose&mdash;a noble fortune, sir&mdash;one of the finest houses in
+ the City, even under the old firm of Tresham and Trent, and now
+ Osbaldistone and Tresham&mdash;You might roll in gold, Mr. Francis&mdash;And,
+ my dear young Mr. Frank, if there was any particular thing in the business
+ of the house which you disliked, I would&rdquo; (sinking his voice to a whisper)
+ &ldquo;put it in order for you termly, or weekly, or daily, if you will&mdash;Do,
+ my dear Mr. Francis, think of the honour due to your father, that your
+ days may be long in the land.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am much obliged to you, Mr. Owen,&rdquo; said I&mdash;&ldquo;very much obliged
+ indeed; but my father is best judge how to bestow his money. He talks of
+ one of my cousins: let him dispose of his wealth as he pleases&mdash;I
+ will never sell my liberty for gold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gold, sir?&mdash;I wish you saw the balance-sheet of profits at last term&mdash;It
+ was in five figures&mdash;five figures to each partner's sum total, Mr.
+ Frank&mdash;And all this is to go to a Papist, and a north-country booby,
+ and a disaffected person besides&mdash;It will break my heart, Mr.
+ Francis, that have been toiling more like a dog than a man, and all for
+ love of the firm. Think how it will sound, Osbaldistone, Tresham, and
+ Osbaldistone&mdash;or perhaps, who knows&rdquo; (again lowering his voice),
+ &ldquo;Osbaldistone, Osbaldistone, and Tresham, for our Mr. Osbaldistone can buy
+ them all out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, Mr. Owen, my cousin's name being also Osbaldistone, the name of the
+ company will sound every bit as well in your ears.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O fie upon you, Mr. Francis, when you know how well I love you&mdash;Your
+ cousin, indeed!&mdash;a Papist, no doubt, like his father, and a
+ disaffected person to the Protestant succession&mdash;that's another item,
+ doubtless.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are many very good men Catholics, Mr. Owen,&rdquo; rejoined I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Owen was about to answer with unusual animation, my father re-entered
+ the apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were right,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;Owen, and I was wrong; we will take more time
+ to think over this matter.&mdash;Young man, you will prepare to give me an
+ answer on this important subject this day month.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I bowed in silence, sufficiently glad of a reprieve, and trusting it might
+ indicate some relaxation in my father's determination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The time of probation passed slowly, unmarked by any accident whatever. I
+ went and came, and disposed of my time as I pleased, without question or
+ criticism on the part of my father. Indeed, I rarely saw him, save at
+ meal-times, when he studiously avoided a discussion which you may well
+ suppose I was in no hurry to press onward. Our conversation was of the
+ news of the day, or on such general topics as strangers discourse upon to
+ each other; nor could any one have guessed, from its tenor, that there
+ remained undecided betwixt us a dispute of such importance. It haunted me,
+ however, more than once, like the nightmare. Was it possible he would keep
+ his word, and disinherit his only son in favour of a nephew whose very
+ existence he was not perhaps quite certain of? My grandfather's conduct,
+ in similar circumstances, boded me no good, had I considered the matter
+ rightly. But I had formed an erroneous idea of my father's character, from
+ the importance which I recollected I maintained with him and his whole
+ family before I went to France. I was not aware that there are men who
+ indulge their children at an early age, because to do so interests and
+ amuses them, and who can yet be sufficiently severe when the same children
+ cross their expectations at a more advanced period. On the contrary, I
+ persuaded myself, that all I had to apprehend was some temporary
+ alienation of affection&mdash;perhaps a rustication of a few weeks, which
+ I thought would rather please me than otherwise, since it would give me an
+ opportunity of setting about my unfinished version of Orlando Furioso, a
+ poem which I longed to render into English verse. I suffered this belief
+ to get such absolute possession of my mind, that I had resumed my blotted
+ papers, and was busy in meditation on the oft-recurring rhymes of the
+ Spenserian stanza, when I heard a low and cautious tap at the door of my
+ apartment. &ldquo;Come in,&rdquo; I said, and Mr. Owen entered. So regular were the
+ motions and habits of this worthy man, that in all probability this was
+ the first time he had ever been in the second story of his patron's house,
+ however conversant with the first; and I am still at a loss to know in
+ what manner he discovered my apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Francis,&rdquo; he said, interrupting my expression of surprise and
+ pleasure at seeing, him, &ldquo;I do not know if I am doing well in what I am
+ about to say&mdash;it is not right to speak of what passes in the
+ compting-house out of doors&mdash;one should not tell, as they say, to the
+ post in the warehouse, how many lines there are in the ledger. But young
+ Twineall has been absent from the house for a fortnight and more, until
+ two days since.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well, my dear sir, and how does that concern us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, Mr. Francis;&mdash;your father gave him a private commission; and I
+ am sure he did not go down to Falmouth about the pilchard affair; and the
+ Exeter business with Blackwell and Company has been settled; and the
+ mining people in Cornwall, Trevanion and Treguilliam, have paid all they
+ are likely to pay; and any other matter of business must have been put
+ through my books:&mdash;in short, it's my faithful belief that Twineall
+ has been down in the north.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you really suppose?&rdquo; so said I, somewhat startled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has spoken about nothing, sir, since he returned, but his new boots,
+ and his Ripon spurs, and a cockfight at York&mdash;it's as true as the
+ multiplication-table. Do, Heaven bless you, my dear child, make up your
+ mind to please your father, and to be a man and a merchant at once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I felt at that instant a strong inclination to submit, and to make Owen
+ happy by requesting him to tell my father that I resigned myself to his
+ disposal. But pride&mdash;pride, the source of so much that is good and so
+ much that is evil in our course of life, prevented me. My acquiescence
+ stuck in my throat; and while I was coughing to get it up, my father's
+ voice summoned Owen. He hastily left the room, and the opportunity was
+ lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father was methodical in everything. At the very same time of the day,
+ in the same apartment, and with the same tone and manner which he had
+ employed an exact month before, he recapitulated the proposal he had made
+ for taking me into partnership, and assigning me a department in the
+ counting-house, and requested to have my final decision. I thought at the
+ time there was something unkind in this; and I still think that my
+ father's conduct was injudicious. A more conciliatory treatment would, in
+ all probability, have gained his purpose. As it was, I stood fast, and, as
+ respectfully as I could, declined the proposal he made to me. Perhaps&mdash;for
+ who can judge of their own heart?&mdash;I felt it unmanly to yield on the
+ first summons, and expected farther solicitation, as at least a pretext
+ for changing my mind. If so, I was disappointed; for my father turned
+ coolly to Owen, and only said, &ldquo;You see it is as I told you.&mdash;Well,
+ Frank&rdquo; (addressing me), &ldquo;you are nearly of age, and as well qualified to
+ judge of what will constitute your own happiness as you ever are like to
+ be; therefore, I say no more. But as I am not bound to give in to your
+ plans, any more than you are compelled to submit to mine, may I ask to
+ know if you have formed any which depend on my assistance?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I answered, not a little abashed, &ldquo;That being bred to no profession, and
+ having no funds of my own, it was obviously impossible for me to subsist
+ without some allowance from my father; that my wishes were very moderate;
+ and that I hoped my aversion for the profession to which he had designed
+ me, would not occasion his altogether withdrawing his paternal support and
+ protection.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is to say, you wish to lean on my arm, and yet to walk your own way?
+ That can hardly be, Frank;&mdash;however, I suppose you mean to obey my
+ directions, so far as they do not cross your own humour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was about to speak&mdash;&ldquo;Silence, if you please,&rdquo; he continued.
+ &ldquo;Supposing this to be the case, you will instantly set out for the north
+ of England, to pay your uncle a visit, and see the state of his family. I
+ have chosen from among his sons (he has six, I believe) one who, I
+ understand, is most worthy to fill the place I intended for you in the
+ counting-house. But some farther arrangements may be necessary, and for
+ these your presence may be requisite. You shall have farther instructions
+ at Osbaldistone Hall, where you will please to remain until you hear from
+ me. Everything will be ready for your departure to-morrow morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these words my father left the apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What does all this mean, Mr. Owen?&rdquo; said I to my sympathetic friend,
+ whose countenance wore a cast of the deepest dejection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have ruined yourself, Mr. Frank, that's all. When your father talks
+ in that quiet determined manner, there will be no more change in him than
+ in a fitted account.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so it proved; for the next morning, at five o'clock, I found myself on
+ the road to York, mounted on a reasonably good horse, and with fifty
+ guineas in my pocket; travelling, as it would seem, for the purpose of
+ assisting in the adoption of a successor to myself in my father's house
+ and favour, and, for aught I knew, eventually in his fortune also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0003" id="linkCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER THIRD.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The slack sail shifts from side to side,
+ The boat, untrimm'd, admits the tide,
+ Borne down, adrift, at random tost,
+ The oar breaks short, the rudder's lost.
+ Gay's <i>Fables.</i>
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I have tagged with rhyme and blank verse the subdivisions of this
+ important narrative, in order to seduce your continued attention by powers
+ of composition of stronger attraction than my own. The preceding lines
+ refer to an unfortunate navigator, who daringly unloosed from its moorings
+ a boat, which he was unable to manage, and thrust it off into the full
+ tide of a navigable river. No schoolboy, who, betwixt frolic and defiance,
+ has executed a similar rash attempt, could feel himself, when adrift in a
+ strong current, in a situation more awkward than mine, when I found myself
+ driving, without a compass, on the ocean of human life. There had been
+ such unexpected ease in the manner in which my father slipt a knot,
+ usually esteemed the strongest which binds society together, and suffered
+ me to depart as a sort of outcast from his family, that it strangely
+ lessened the confidence in my own personal accomplishments, which had
+ hitherto sustained me. Prince Prettyman, now a prince, and now a fisher's
+ son, had not a more awkward sense of his degradation. We are so apt, in
+ our engrossing egotism, to consider all those accessories which are drawn
+ around us by prosperity, as pertaining and belonging to our own persons,
+ that the discovery of our unimportance, when left to our own proper
+ resources, becomes inexpressibly mortifying. As the hum of London died
+ away on my ear, the distant peal of her steeples more than once sounded to
+ my ears the admonitory &ldquo;Turn again,&rdquo; erst heard by her future Lord Mayor;
+ and when I looked back from Highgate on her dusky magnificence, I felt as
+ if I were leaving behind me comfort, opulence, the charms of society, and
+ all the pleasures of cultivated life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the die was cast. It was, indeed, by no means probable that a late and
+ ungracious compliance with my father's wishes would have reinstated me in
+ the situation which I had lost. On the contrary, firm and strong of
+ purpose as he himself was, he might rather have been disgusted than
+ conciliated by my tardy and compulsory acquiescence in his desire that I
+ should engage in commerce. My constitutional obstinacy came also to my
+ aid, and pride whispered how poor a figure I should make, when an airing
+ of four miles from London had blown away resolutions formed during a
+ month's serious deliberation. Hope, too, that never forsakes the young and
+ hardy, lent her lustre to my future prospects. My father could not be
+ serious in the sentence of foris-familiation, which he had so
+ unhesitatingly pronounced. It must be but a trial of my disposition,
+ which, endured with patience and steadiness on my part, would raise me in
+ his estimation, and lead to an amicable accommodation of the point in
+ dispute between us. I even settled in my own mind how far I would concede
+ to him, and on what articles of our supposed treaty I would make a firm
+ stand; and the result was, according to my computation, that I was to be
+ reinstated in my full rights of filiation, paying the easy penalty of some
+ ostensible compliances to atone for my past rebellion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile, I was lord of my person, and experienced that feeling of
+ independence which the youthful bosom receives with a thrilling mixture of
+ pleasure and apprehension. My purse, though by no means amply replenished,
+ was in a situation to supply all the wants and wishes of a traveller. I
+ had been accustomed, while at Bourdeaux, to act as my own valet; my horse
+ was fresh, young, and active, and the buoyancy of my spirits soon
+ surmounted the melancholy reflections with which my journey commenced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I should have been glad to have journeyed upon a line of road better
+ calculated to afford reasonable objects of curiosity, or a more
+ interesting country, to the traveller. But the north road was then, and
+ perhaps still is, singularly deficient in these respects; nor do I believe
+ you can travel so far through Britain in any other direction without
+ meeting more of what is worthy to engage the attention. My mental
+ ruminations, notwithstanding my assumed confidence, were not always of an
+ unchequered nature. The Muse too,&mdash;the very coquette who had led me
+ into this wilderness,&mdash;like others of her sex, deserted me in my
+ utmost need, and I should have been reduced to rather an uncomfortable
+ state of dulness, had it not been for the occasional conversation of
+ strangers who chanced to pass the same way. But the characters whom I met
+ with were of a uniform and uninteresting description. Country parsons,
+ jogging homewards after a visitation; farmers, or graziers, returning from
+ a distant market; clerks of traders, travelling to collect what was due to
+ their masters, in provincial towns; with now and then an officer going
+ down into the country upon the recruiting service, were, at this period,
+ the persons by whom the turnpikes and tapsters were kept in exercise. Our
+ speech, therefore, was of tithes and creeds, of beeves and grain, of
+ commodities wet and dry, and the solvency of the retail dealers,
+ occasionally varied by the description of a siege, or battle, in Flanders,
+ which, perhaps, the narrator only gave me at second hand. Robbers, a
+ fertile and alarming theme, filled up every vacancy; and the names of the
+ Golden Farmer, the Flying Highwayman, Jack Needham, and other Beggars'
+ Opera heroes, were familiar in our mouths as household words. At such
+ tales, like children closing their circle round the fire when the ghost
+ story draws to its climax, the riders drew near to each other, looked
+ before and behind them, examined the priming of their pistols, and vowed
+ to stand by each other in case of danger; an engagement which, like other
+ offensive and defensive alliances, sometimes glided out of remembrance
+ when there was an appearance of actual peril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the fellows whom I ever saw haunted by terrors of this nature, one
+ poor man, with whom I travelled a day and a half, afforded me most
+ amusement. He had upon his pillion a very small, but apparently a very
+ weighty portmanteau, about the safety of which he seemed particularly
+ solicitous; never trusting it out of his own immediate care, and uniformly
+ repressing the officious zeal of the waiters and ostlers, who offered
+ their services to carry it into the house. With the same precaution he
+ laboured to conceal, not only the purpose of his journey, and his ultimate
+ place of destination, but even the direction of each day's route. Nothing
+ embarrassed him more than to be asked by any one, whether he was
+ travelling upwards or downwards, or at what stage he intended to bait. His
+ place of rest for the night he scrutinised with the most anxious care,
+ alike avoiding solitude, and what he considered as bad neighbourhood; and
+ at Grantham, I believe, he sate up all night to avoid sleeping in the next
+ room to a thick-set squinting fellow, in a black wig, and a tarnished
+ gold-laced waistcoat. With all these cares on his mind, my fellow
+ traveller, to judge by his thews and sinews, was a man who might have set
+ danger at defiance with as much impunity as most men. He was strong and
+ well built; and, judging from his gold-laced hat and cockade, seemed to
+ have served in the army, or, at least, to belong to the military
+ profession in one capacity or other. His conversation also, though always
+ sufficiently vulgar, was that of a man of sense, when the terrible
+ bugbears which haunted his imagination for a moment ceased to occupy his
+ attention. But every accidental association recalled them. An open heath,
+ a close plantation, were alike subjects of apprehension; and the whistle
+ of a shepherd lad was instantly converted into the signal of a depredator.
+ Even the sight of a gibbet, if it assured him that one robber was safely
+ disposed of by justice, never failed to remind him how many remained still
+ unhanged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I should have wearied of this fellow's company, had I not been still more
+ tired of my own thoughts. Some of the marvellous stories, however, which
+ he related, had in themselves a cast of interest, and another whimsical
+ point of his peculiarities afforded me the occasional opportunity of
+ amusing myself at his expense. Among his tales, several of the unfortunate
+ travellers who fell among thieves, incurred that calamity from associating
+ themselves on the road with a well-dressed and entertaining stranger, in
+ whose company they trusted to find protection as well as amusement; who
+ cheered their journey with tale and song, protected them against the evils
+ of over-charges and false reckonings, until at length, under pretext of
+ showing a near path over a desolate common, he seduced his unsuspicious
+ victims from the public road into some dismal glen, where, suddenly
+ blowing his whistle, he assembled his comrades from their lurking-place,
+ and displayed himself in his true colours&mdash;the captain, namely, of
+ the band of robbers to whom his unwary fellow-travellers had forfeited
+ their purses, and perhaps their lives. Towards the conclusion of such a
+ tale, and when my companion had wrought himself into a fever of
+ apprehension by the progress of his own narrative, I observed that he
+ usually eyed me with a glance of doubt and suspicion, as if the
+ possibility occurred to him, that he might, at that very moment, be in
+ company with a character as dangerous as that which his tale described.
+ And ever and anon, when such suggestions pressed themselves on the mind of
+ this ingenious self-tormentor, he drew off from me to the opposite side of
+ the high-road, looked before, behind, and around him, examined his arms,
+ and seemed to prepare himself for flight or defence, as circumstances
+ might require.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The suspicion implied on such occasions seemed to me only momentary, and
+ too ludicrous to be offensive. There was, in fact, no particular
+ reflection on my dress or address, although I was thus mistaken for a
+ robber. A man in those days might have all the external appearance of a
+ gentleman, and yet turn out to be a highwayman. For the division of labour
+ in every department not having then taken place so fully as since that
+ period, the profession of the polite and accomplished adventurer, who
+ nicked you out of your money at White's, or bowled you out of it at
+ Marylebone, was often united with that of the professed ruffian, who on
+ Bagshot Heath, or Finchley Common, commanded his brother beau to stand and
+ deliver. There was also a touch of coarseness and hardness about the
+ manners of the times, which has since, in a great degree, been softened
+ and shaded away. It seems to me, on recollection, as if desperate men had
+ less reluctance then than now to embrace the most desperate means of
+ retrieving their fortune. The times were indeed past, when Anthony-a-Wood
+ mourned over the execution of two men, goodly in person, and of undisputed
+ courage and honour, who were hanged without mercy at Oxford, merely
+ because their distress had driven them to raise contributions on the
+ highway. We were still farther removed from the days of &ldquo;the mad Prince
+ and Poins.&rdquo; And yet, from the number of unenclosed and extensive heaths in
+ the vicinity of the metropolis, and from the less populous state of remote
+ districts, both were frequented by that species of mounted highwaymen,
+ that may possibly become one day unknown, who carried on their trade with
+ something like courtesy; and, like Gibbet in the Beaux Stratagem, piqued
+ themselves on being the best behaved men on the road, and on conducting
+ themselves with all appropriate civility in the exercise of their
+ vocation. A young man, therefore, in my circumstances was not entitled to
+ be highly indignant at the mistake which confounded him with this
+ worshipful class of depredators.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither was I offended. On the contrary, I found amusement in alternately
+ exciting, and lulling to sleep, the suspicions of my timorous companion,
+ and in purposely so acting as still farther to puzzle a brain which nature
+ and apprehension had combined to render none of the clearest. When my free
+ conversation had lulled him into complete security, it required only a
+ passing inquiry concerning the direction of his journey, or the nature of
+ the business which occasioned it, to put his suspicions once more in arms.
+ For example, a conversation on the comparative strength and activity of
+ our horses, took such a turn as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O sir,&rdquo; said my companion, &ldquo;for the gallop I grant you; but allow me to
+ say, your horse (although he is a very handsome gelding&mdash;that must be
+ owned,) has too little bone to be a good roadster. The trot, sir&rdquo;
+ (striking his Bucephalus with his spurs),&mdash;&ldquo;the trot is the true pace
+ for a hackney; and, were we near a town, I should like to try that
+ daisy-cutter of yours upon a piece of level road (barring canter) for a
+ quart of claret at the next inn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Content, sir,&rdquo; replied I; &ldquo;and here is a stretch of ground very
+ favourable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hem, ahem,&rdquo; answered my friend with hesitation; &ldquo;I make it a rule of
+ travelling never to blow my horse between stages; one never knows what
+ occasion he may have to put him to his mettle: and besides, sir, when I
+ said I would match you, I meant with even weight; you ride four stone
+ lighter than I.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well; but I am content to carry weight. Pray, what may that
+ portmanteau of yours weigh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My p-p-portmanteau?&rdquo; replied he, hesitating&mdash;&ldquo;O very little&mdash;a
+ feather&mdash;just a few shirts and stockings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think it heavier, from its appearance. I'll hold you the quart
+ of claret it makes the odds betwixt our weight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You're mistaken, sir, I assure you&mdash;quite mistaken,&rdquo; replied my
+ friend, edging off to the side of the road, as was his wont on these
+ alarming occasions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I am willing to venture the wine; or, I will bet you ten pieces to
+ five, that I carry your portmanteau on my croupe, and out-trot you into
+ the bargain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This proposal raised my friend's alarm to the uttermost. His nose changed
+ from the natural copper hue which it had acquired from many a comfortable
+ cup of claret or sack, into a palish brassy tint, and his teeth chattered
+ with apprehension at the unveiled audacity of my proposal, which seemed to
+ place the barefaced plunderer before him in full atrocity. As he faltered
+ for an answer, I relieved him in some degree by a question concerning a
+ steeple, which now became visible, and an observation that we were now so
+ near the village as to run no risk from interruption on the road. At this
+ his countenance cleared up: but I easily perceived that it was long ere he
+ forgot a proposal which seemed to him so fraught with suspicion as that
+ which I had now hazarded. I trouble you with this detail of the man's
+ disposition, and the manner in which I practised upon it, because, however
+ trivial in themselves, these particulars were attended by an important
+ influence on future incidents which will occur in this narrative. At the
+ time, this person's conduct only inspired me with contempt, and confirmed
+ me in an opinion which I already entertained, that of all the propensities
+ which teach mankind to torment themselves, that of causeless fear is the
+ most irritating, busy, painful, and pitiable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0004" id="linkCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER FOURTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Scots are poor, cries surly English pride.
+ True is the charge; nor by themselves denied.
+ Are they not, then, in strictest reason clear,
+ Who wisely come to mend their fortunes here?
+ Churchill.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There was, in the days of which I write, an old-fashioned custom on the
+ English road, which I suspect is now obsolete, or practised only by the
+ vulgar. Journeys of length being made on horseback, and, of course, by
+ brief stages, it was usual always to make a halt on the Sunday in some
+ town where the traveller might attend divine service, and his horse have
+ the benefit of the day of rest, the institution of which is as humane to
+ our brute labourers as profitable to ourselves. A counterpart to this
+ decent practice, and a remnant of old English hospitality, was, that the
+ landlord of a principal inn laid aside his character of a publican on the
+ seventh day, and invited the guests who chanced to be within his walls to
+ take a part of his family beef and pudding. This invitation was usually
+ complied with by all whose distinguished rank did not induce them to think
+ compliance a derogation; and the proposal of a bottle of wine after
+ dinner, to drink the landlord's health, was the only recompense ever
+ offered or accepted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was born a citizen of the world, and my inclination led me into all
+ scenes where my knowledge of mankind could be enlarged; I had, besides, no
+ pretensions to sequester myself on the score of superior dignity, and
+ therefore seldom failed to accept of the Sunday's hospitality of mine
+ host, whether of the Garter, Lion, or Bear. The honest publican, dilated
+ into additional consequence by a sense of his own importance, while
+ presiding among the guests on whom it was his ordinary duty to attend, was
+ in himself an entertaining, spectacle; and around his genial orbit, other
+ planets of inferior consequence performed their revolutions. The wits and
+ humorists, the distinguished worthies of the town or village, the
+ apothecary, the attorney, even the curate himself, did not disdain to
+ partake of this hebdomadal festivity. The guests, assembled from different
+ quarters, and following different professions, formed, in language,
+ manners, and sentiments, a curious contrast to each other, not indifferent
+ to those who desired to possess a knowledge of mankind in its varieties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was on such a day, and such an occasion, that my timorous acquaintance
+ and I were about to grace the board of the ruddy-faced host of the Black
+ Bear, in the town of Darlington, and bishopric of Durham, when our
+ landlord informed us, with a sort of apologetic tone, that there was a
+ Scotch gentleman to dine with us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A gentleman!&mdash;what sort of a gentleman?&rdquo; said my companion somewhat
+ hastily&mdash;his mind, I suppose, running on gentlemen of the pad, as
+ they were then termed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, a Scotch sort of a gentleman, as I said before,&rdquo; returned mine host;
+ &ldquo;they are all gentle, ye mun know, though they ha' narra shirt to back;
+ but this is a decentish hallion&mdash;a canny North Briton as e'er cross'd
+ Berwick Bridge&mdash;I trow he's a dealer in cattle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us have his company, by all means,&rdquo; answered my companion; and then,
+ turning to me, he gave vent to the tenor of his own reflections. &ldquo;I
+ respect the Scotch, sir; I love and honour the nation for their sense of
+ morality. Men talk of their filth and their poverty: but commend me to
+ sterling honesty, though clad in rags, as the poet saith. I have been
+ credibly assured, sir, by men on whom I can depend, that there was never
+ known such a thing in Scotland as a highway robbery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's because they have nothing to lose,&rdquo; said mine host, with the
+ chuckle of a self-applauding wit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no, landlord,&rdquo; answered a strong deep voice behind him, &ldquo;it's e'en
+ because your English gaugers and supervisors,* that you have sent down
+ benorth the Tweed, have taen up the trade of thievery over the heads of
+ the native professors.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * The introduction of gaugers, supervisors, and examiners, was one of the
+ great complaints of the Scottish nation, though a natural consequence of
+ the Union.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well said, Mr. Campbell,&rdquo; answered the landlord; &ldquo;I did not think
+ thoud'st been sae near us, mon. But thou kens I'm an outspoken Yorkshire
+ tyke. And how go markets in the south?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Even in the ordinar,&rdquo; replied Mr. Campbell; &ldquo;wise folks buy and sell, and
+ fools are bought and sold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But wise men and fools both eat their dinner,&rdquo; answered our jolly
+ entertainer; &ldquo;and here a comes&mdash;as prime a buttock of beef as e'er
+ hungry men stuck fork in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he eagerly whetted his knife, assumed his seat of empire at the
+ head of the board, and loaded the plates of his sundry guests with his
+ good cheer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the first time I had heard the Scottish accent, or, indeed, that
+ I had familiarly met with an individual of the ancient nation by whom it
+ was spoken. Yet, from an early period, they had occupied and interested my
+ imagination. My father, as is well known to you, was of an ancient family
+ in Northumberland, from whose seat I was, while eating the aforesaid
+ dinner, not very many miles distant. The quarrel betwixt him and his
+ relatives was such, that he scarcely ever mentioned the race from which he
+ sprung, and held as the most contemptible species of vanity, the weakness
+ which is commonly termed family pride. His ambition was only to be
+ distinguished as William Osbaldistone, the first, at least one of the
+ first, merchants on Change; and to have proved him the lineal
+ representative of William the Conqueror would have far less flattered his
+ vanity than the hum and bustle which his approach was wont to produce
+ among the bulls, bears, and brokers of Stock-alley. He wished, no doubt,
+ that I should remain in such ignorance of my relatives and descent as
+ might insure a correspondence between my feelings and his own on this
+ subject. But his designs, as will happen occasionally to the wisest, were,
+ in some degree at least, counteracted by a being whom his pride would
+ never have supposed of importance adequate to influence them in any way.
+ His nurse, an old Northumbrian woman, attached to him from his infancy,
+ was the only person connected with his native province for whom he
+ retained any regard; and when fortune dawned upon him, one of the first
+ uses which he made of her favours, was to give Mabel Rickets a place of
+ residence within his household. After the death of my mother, the care of
+ nursing me during my childish illnesses, and of rendering all those tender
+ attentions which infancy exacts from female affection, devolved on old
+ Mabel. Interdicted by her master from speaking to him on the subject of
+ the heaths, glades, and dales of her beloved Northumberland, she poured
+ herself forth to my infant ear in descriptions of the scenes of her youth,
+ and long narratives of the events which tradition declared to have passed
+ amongst them. To these I inclined my ear much more seriously than to
+ graver, but less animated instructors. Even yet, methinks I see old Mabel,
+ her head slightly agitated by the palsy of age, and shaded by a close cap,
+ as white as the driven snow,&mdash;her face wrinkled, but still retaining
+ the healthy tinge which it had acquired in rural labour&mdash;I think I
+ see her look around on the brick walls and narrow street which presented
+ themselves before our windows, as she concluded with a sigh the favourite
+ old ditty, which I then preferred, and&mdash;why should I not tell the
+ truth?&mdash;which I still prefer to all the opera airs ever minted by the
+ capricious brain of an Italian Mus. D.&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Oh, the oak, the ash, and the bonny ivy tree,
+ They flourish best at home in the North Countrie!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Now, in the legends of Mabel, the Scottish nation was ever freshly
+ remembered, with all the embittered declamation of which the narrator was
+ capable. The inhabitants of the opposite frontier served in her narratives
+ to fill up the parts which ogres and giants with seven-leagued boots
+ occupy in the ordinary nursery tales. And how could it be otherwise? Was
+ it not the Black Douglas who slew with his own hand the heir of the
+ Osbaldistone family the day after he took possession of his estate,
+ surprising him and his vassals while solemnizing a feast suited to the
+ occasion? Was it not Wat the Devil, who drove all the year-old hogs off
+ the braes of Lanthorn-side, in the very recent days of my grandfather's
+ father? And had we not many a trophy, but, according to old Mabel's
+ version of history, far more honourably gained, to mark our revenge of
+ these wrongs? Did not Sir Henry Osbaldistone, fifth baron of the name,
+ carry off the fair maid of Fairnington, as Achilles did his Chryseis and
+ Briseis of old, and detain her in his fortress against all the power of
+ her friends, supported by the most mighty Scottish chiefs of warlike fame?
+ And had not our swords shone foremost at most of those fields in which
+ England was victorious over her rival? All our family renown was acquired&mdash;all
+ our family misfortunes were occasioned&mdash;by the northern wars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Warmed by such tales, I looked upon the Scottish people during my
+ childhood, as a race hostile by nature to the more southern inhabitants of
+ this realm; and this view of the matter was not much corrected by the
+ language which my father sometimes held with respect to them. He had
+ engaged in some large speculations concerning oak-woods, the property of
+ Highland proprietors, and alleged, that he found them much more ready to
+ make bargains, and extort earnest of the purchase-money, than punctual in
+ complying on their side with the terms of the engagements. The Scottish
+ mercantile men, whom he was under the necessity of employing as a sort of
+ middle-men on these occasions, were also suspected by my father of having
+ secured, by one means or other, more than their own share of the profit
+ which ought to have accrued. In short, if Mabel complained of the Scottish
+ arms in ancient times, Mr. Osbaldistone inveighed no less against the arts
+ of these modern Sinons; and between them, though without any fixed purpose
+ of doing so, they impressed my youthful mind with a sincere aversion to
+ the northern inhabitants of Britain, as a people bloodthirsty in time of
+ war, treacherous during truce, interested, selfish, avaricious, and tricky
+ in the business of peaceful life, and having few good qualities, unless
+ there should be accounted such, a ferocity which resembled courage in
+ martial affairs, and a sort of wily craft which supplied the place of
+ wisdom in the ordinary commerce of mankind. In justification, or apology,
+ for those who entertained such prejudices, I must remark, that the Scotch
+ of that period were guilty of similar injustice to the English, whom they
+ branded universally as a race of purse-proud arrogant epicures. Such seeds
+ of national dislike remained between the two countries, the natural
+ consequences of their existence as separate and rival states. We have seen
+ recently the breath of a demagogue blow these sparks into a temporary
+ flame, which I sincerely hope is now extinguished in its own ashes. *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * This seems to have been written about the time of Wilkes and Liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was, then, with an impression of dislike, that I contemplated the first
+ Scotchman I chanced to meet in society. There was much about him that
+ coincided with my previous conceptions. He had the hard features and
+ athletic form said to be peculiar to his country, together with the
+ national intonation and slow pedantic mode of expression, arising from a
+ desire to avoid peculiarities of idiom or dialect. I could also observe
+ the caution and shrewdness of his country in many of the observations
+ which he made, and the answers which he returned. But I was not prepared
+ for the air of easy self-possession and superiority with which he seemed
+ to predominate over the company into which he was thrown, as it were by
+ accident. His dress was as coarse as it could be, being still decent; and,
+ at a time when great expense was lavished upon the wardrobe, even of the
+ lowest who pretended to the character of gentleman, this indicated
+ mediocrity of circumstances, if not poverty. His conversation intimated
+ that he was engaged in the cattle trade, no very dignified professional
+ pursuit. And yet, under these disadvantages, he seemed, as a matter of
+ course, to treat the rest of the company with the cool and condescending
+ politeness which implies a real, or imagined, superiority over those
+ towards whom it is used. When he gave his opinion on any point, it was
+ with that easy tone of confidence used by those superior to their society
+ in rank or information, as if what he said could not be doubted, and was
+ not to be questioned. Mine host and his Sunday guests, after an effort or
+ two to support their consequence by noise and bold averment, sunk
+ gradually under the authority of Mr. Campbell, who thus fairly possessed
+ himself of the lead in the conversation. I was tempted, from curiosity, to
+ dispute the ground with him myself, confiding in my knowledge of the
+ world, extended as it was by my residence abroad, and in the stores with
+ which a tolerable education had possessed my mind. In the latter respect
+ he offered no competition, and it was easy to see that his natural powers
+ had never been cultivated by education. But I found him much better
+ acquainted than I was myself with the present state of France, the
+ character of the Duke of Orleans, who had just succeeded to the regency of
+ that kingdom, and that of the statesmen by whom he was surrounded; and his
+ shrewd, caustic, and somewhat satirical remarks, were those of a man who
+ had been a close observer of the affairs of that country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the subject of politics, Campbell observed a silence and moderation
+ which might arise from caution. The divisions of Whig and Tory then shook
+ England to her very centre, and a powerful party, engaged in the Jacobite
+ interest, menaced the dynasty of Hanover, which had been just established
+ on the throne. Every alehouse resounded with the brawls of contending
+ politicians, and as mine host's politics were of that liberal description
+ which quarrelled with no good customer, his hebdomadal visitants were
+ often divided in their opinion as irreconcilably as if he had feasted the
+ Common Council. The curate and the apothecary, with a little man, who made
+ no boast of his vocation, but who, from the flourish and snap of his
+ fingers, I believe to have been the barber, strongly espoused the cause of
+ high church and the Stuart line. The excise-man, as in duty bound, and the
+ attorney, who looked to some petty office under the Crown, together with
+ my fellow-traveller, who seemed to enter keenly into the contest,
+ staunchly supported the cause of King George and the Protestant
+ succession. Dire was the screaming&mdash;deep the oaths! Each party
+ appealed to Mr. Campbell, anxious, it seemed, to elicit his approbation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a Scotchman, sir; a gentleman of your country must stand up for
+ hereditary right,&rdquo; cried one party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a Presbyterian,&rdquo; assumed the other class of disputants; &ldquo;you
+ cannot be a friend to arbitrary power.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gentlemen,&rdquo; said our Scotch oracle, after having gained, with some
+ difficulty, a moment's pause, &ldquo;I havena much dubitation that King George
+ weel deserves the predilection of his friends; and if he can haud the grip
+ he has gotten, why, doubtless, he may made the gauger, here, a
+ commissioner of the revenue, and confer on our friend, Mr. Quitam, the
+ preferment of solicitor-general; and he may also grant some good deed or
+ reward to this honest gentleman who is sitting upon his portmanteau, which
+ he prefers to a chair: And, questionless, King James is also a grateful
+ person, and when he gets his hand in play, he may, if he be so minded,
+ make this reverend gentleman archprelate of Canterbury, and Dr. Mixit
+ chief physician to his household, and commit his royal beard to the care
+ of my friend Latherum. But as I doubt mickle whether any of the competing
+ sovereigns would give Rob Campbell a tass of aquavitae, if he lacked it, I
+ give my vote and interest to Jonathan Brown, our landlord, to be the King
+ and Prince of Skinkers, conditionally that he fetches us another bottle as
+ good as the last.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This sally was received with general applause, in which the landlord
+ cordially joined; and when he had given orders for fulfilling the
+ condition on which his preferment was to depend, he failed not to acquaint
+ them, &ldquo;that, for as peaceable a gentleman as Mr. Campbell was, he was,
+ moreover, as bold as a lion&mdash;seven highwaymen had he defeated with
+ his single arm, that beset him as he came from Whitson-Tryste.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art deceived, friend Jonathan,&rdquo; said Campbell, interrupting him;
+ &ldquo;they were but barely two, and two cowardly loons as man could wish to
+ meet withal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And did you, sir, really,&rdquo; said my fellow-traveller, edging his chair (I
+ should have said his portmanteau) nearer to Mr. Campbell, &ldquo;really and
+ actually beat two highwaymen yourself alone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In troth did I, sir,&rdquo; replied Campbell; &ldquo;and I think it nae great thing
+ to make a sang about.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Upon my word, sir,&rdquo; replied my acquaintance, &ldquo;I should be happy to have
+ the pleasure of your company on my journey&mdash;I go northward, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This piece of gratuitous information concerning the route he proposed to
+ himself, the first I had heard my companion bestow upon any one, failed to
+ excite the corresponding confidence of the Scotchman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We can scarce travel together,&rdquo; he replied, drily. &ldquo;You, sir, doubtless,
+ are well mounted, and I for the present travel on foot, or on a Highland
+ shelty, that does not help me much faster forward.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he called for a reckoning for the wine, and throwing down the
+ price of the additional bottle which he had himself introduced, rose as if
+ to take leave of us. My companion made up to him, and taking him by the
+ button, drew him aside into one of the windows. I could not help
+ overhearing him pressing something&mdash;I supposed his company upon the
+ journey, which Mr. Campbell seemed to decline.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will pay your charges, sir,&rdquo; said the traveller, in a tone as if he
+ thought the argument should bear down all opposition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is quite impossible,&rdquo; said Campbell, somewhat contemptuously; &ldquo;I have
+ business at Rothbury.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I am in no great hurry; I can ride out of the way, and never miss a
+ day or so for good company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Upon my faith, sir,&rdquo; said Campbell, &ldquo;I cannot render you the service you
+ seem to desiderate. I am,&rdquo; he added, drawing himself up haughtily,
+ &ldquo;travelling on my own private affairs, and if ye will act by my
+ advisement, sir, ye will neither unite yourself with an absolute stranger
+ on the road, nor communicate your line of journey to those who are asking
+ ye no questions about it.&rdquo; He then extricated his button, not very
+ ceremoniously, from the hold which detained him, and coming up to me as
+ the company were dispersing, observed, &ldquo;Your friend, sir, is too
+ communicative, considering the nature of his trust.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That gentleman,&rdquo; I replied, looking towards the traveller, &ldquo;is no friend
+ of mine, but an acquaintance whom I picked up on the road. I know neither
+ his name nor business, and you seem to be deeper in his confidence than I
+ am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I only meant,&rdquo; he replied hastily, &ldquo;that he seems a thought rash in
+ conferring the honour of his company on those who desire it not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The gentleman,&rdquo; replied I, &ldquo;knows his own affairs best, and I should be
+ sorry to constitute myself a judge of them in any respect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Campbell made no farther observation, but merely wished me a good
+ journey, and the party dispersed for the evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day I parted company with my timid companion, as I left the great
+ northern road to turn more westerly in the direction of Osbaldistone
+ Manor, my uncle's seat. I cannot tell whether he felt relieved or
+ embarrassed by my departure, considering the dubious light in which he
+ seemed to regard me. For my own part, his tremors ceased to amuse me, and,
+ to say the truth, I was heartily glad to get rid of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0005" id="linkCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER FIFTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ How melts my beating heart as I behold
+ Each lovely nymph, our island's boast and pride,
+ Push on the generous steed, that sweeps along
+ O'er rough, o'er smooth, nor heeds the steepy hill,
+ Nor falters in the extended vale below!
+ The Chase.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I approached my native north, for such I esteemed it, with that enthusiasm
+ which romantic and wild scenery inspires in the lovers of nature. No
+ longer interrupted by the babble of my companion, I could now remark the
+ difference which the country exhibited from that through which I had
+ hitherto travelled. The streams now more properly deserved the name, for,
+ instead of slumbering stagnant among reeds and willows, they brawled along
+ beneath the shade of natural copsewood; were now hurried down declivities,
+ and now purled more leisurely, but still in active motion, through little
+ lonely valleys, which, opening on the road from time to time, seemed to
+ invite the traveller to explore their recesses. The Cheviots rose before
+ me in frowning majesty; not, indeed, with the sublime variety of rock and
+ cliff which characterizes mountains of the primary class but huge,
+ round-headed, and clothed with a dark robe of russet, gaining, by their
+ extent and desolate appearance, an influence upon the imagination, as a
+ desert district possessing a character of its own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The abode of my fathers, which I was now approaching, was situated in a
+ glen, or narrow valley, which ran up among those hills. Extensive estates,
+ which once belonged to the family of Osbaldistone, had been long
+ dissipated by the misfortunes or misconduct of my ancestors; but enough
+ was still attached to the old mansion, to give my uncle the title of a man
+ of large property. This he employed (as I was given to understand by some
+ inquiries which I made on the road) in maintaining the prodigal
+ hospitality of a northern squire of the period, which he deemed essential
+ to his family dignity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the summit of an eminence I had already had a distant view of
+ Osbaldistone Hall, a large and antiquated edifice, peeping out from a
+ Druidical grove of huge oaks; and I was directing my course towards it, as
+ straightly and as speedily as the windings of a very indifferent road
+ would permit, when my horse, tired as he was, pricked up his ears at the
+ enlivening notes of a pack of hounds in full cry, cheered by the
+ occasional bursts of a French horn, which in those days was a constant
+ accompaniment to the chase. I made no doubt that the pack was my uncle's,
+ and drew up my horse with the purpose of suffering the hunters to pass
+ without notice, aware that a hunting-field was not the proper scene to
+ introduce myself to a keen sportsman, and determined when they had passed
+ on, to proceed to the mansion-house at my own pace, and there to await the
+ return of the proprietor from his sport. I paused, therefore, on a rising
+ ground, and, not unmoved by the sense of interest which that species of
+ silvan sport is so much calculated to inspire (although my mind was not at
+ the moment very accessible to impressions of this nature), I expected with
+ some eagerness the appearance of the huntsmen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fox, hard run, and nearly spent, first made his appearance from the
+ copse which clothed the right-hand side of the valley. His drooping brush,
+ his soiled appearance, and jaded trot, proclaimed his fate impending; and
+ the carrion crow, which hovered over him, already considered poor Reynard
+ as soon to be his prey. He crossed the stream which divides the little
+ valley, and was dragging himself up a ravine on the other side of its wild
+ banks, when the headmost hounds, followed by the rest of the pack in full
+ cry, burst from the coppice, followed by the huntsman and three or four
+ riders. The dogs pursued the trace of Reynard with unerring instinct; and
+ the hunters followed with reckless haste, regardless of the broken and
+ difficult nature of the ground. They were tall, stout young men, well
+ mounted, and dressed in green and red, the uniform of a sporting
+ association, formed under the auspices of old Sir Hildebrand Osbaldistone.&mdash;&ldquo;My
+ cousins!&rdquo; thought I, as they swept past me. The next reflection was, what
+ is my reception likely to be among these worthy successors of Nimrod? and
+ how improbable is it that I, knowing little or nothing of rural sports,
+ shall find myself at ease, or happy, in my uncle's family. A vision that
+ passed me interrupted these reflections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a young lady, the loveliness of whose very striking features was
+ enhanced by the animation of the chase and the glow of the exercise,
+ mounted on a beautiful horse, jet black, unless where he was flecked by
+ spots of the snow-white foam which embossed his bridle. She wore, what was
+ then somewhat unusual, a coat, vest, and hat, resembling those of a man,
+ which fashion has since called a riding habit. The mode had been
+ introduced while I was in France, and was perfectly new to me. Her long
+ black hair streamed on the breeze, having in the hurry of the chase
+ escaped from the ribbon which bound it. Some very broken ground, through
+ which she guided her horse with the most admirable address and presence of
+ mind, retarded her course, and brought her closer to me than any of the
+ other riders had passed. I had, therefore, a full view of her uncommonly
+ fine face and person, to which an inexpressible charm was added by the
+ wild gaiety of the scene, and the romance of her singular dress and
+ unexpected appearance. As she passed me, her horse made, in his
+ impetuosity, an irregular movement, just while, coming once more upon open
+ ground, she was again putting him to his speed. It served as an apology
+ for me to ride close up to her, as if to her assistance. There was,
+ however, no cause for alarm; it was not a stumble, nor a false step; and,
+ if it had, the fair Amazon had too much self-possession to have been
+ deranged by it. She thanked my good intentions, however, by a smile, and I
+ felt encouraged to put my horse to the same pace, and to keep in her
+ immediate neighbourhood. The clamour of &ldquo;Whoop! dead! dead!&rdquo;&mdash;and the
+ corresponding flourish of the French horn, soon announced to us that there
+ was no more occasion for haste, since the chase was at a close. One of the
+ young men whom we had seen approached us, waving the brush of the fox in
+ triumph, as if to upbraid my fair companion,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; she replied,&mdash;&ldquo;I see; but make no noise about it: if
+ Phoebe,&rdquo; she said, patting the neck of the beautiful animal on which she
+ rode, &ldquo;had not got among the cliffs, you would have had little cause for
+ boasting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They met as she spoke, and I observed them both look at me, and converse a
+ moment in an under-tone, the young lady apparently pressing the sportsman
+ to do something which he declined shyly, and with a sort of sheepish
+ sullenness. She instantly turned her horse's head towards me, saying,&mdash;&ldquo;Well,
+ well, Thornie, if you won't, I must, that's all.&mdash;Sir,&rdquo; she
+ continued, addressing me, &ldquo;I have been endeavouring to persuade this
+ cultivated young gentleman to make inquiry of you whether, in the course
+ of your travels in these parts, you have heard anything of a friend of
+ ours, one Mr. Francis Osbaldistone, who has been for some days expected at
+ Osbaldistone Hall?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was too happy to acknowledge myself to be the party inquired after, and
+ to express my thanks for the obliging inquiries of the young lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In that case, sir,&rdquo; she rejoined, &ldquo;as my kinsman's politeness seems to be
+ still slumbering, you will permit me (though I suppose it is highly
+ improper) to stand mistress of ceremonies, and to present to you young
+ Squire Thorncliff Osbaldistone, your cousin, and Die Vernon, who has also
+ the honour to be your accomplished cousin's poor kinswoman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a mixture of boldness, satire, and simplicity in the manner in
+ which Miss Vernon pronounced these words. My knowledge of life was
+ sufficient to enable me to take up a corresponding tone as I expressed my
+ gratitude to her for her condescension, and my extreme pleasure at having
+ met with them. To say the truth, the compliment was so expressed, that the
+ lady might easily appropriate the greater share of it, for Thorncliff
+ seemed an arrant country bumpkin, awkward, shy, and somewhat sulky withal.
+ He shook hands with me, however, and then intimated his intention of
+ leaving me that he might help the huntsman and his brothers to couple up
+ the hounds,&mdash;a purpose which he rather communicated by way of
+ information to Miss Vernon than as apology to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There he goes,&rdquo; said the young lady, following him with eyes in which
+ disdain was admirably painted&mdash;&ldquo;the prince of grooms and
+ cock-fighters, and blackguard horse-coursers. But there is not one of them
+ to mend another.&mdash;Have you read Markham?&rdquo; said Miss Vernon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Read whom, ma'am?&mdash;I do not even remember the author's name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O lud! on what a strand are you wrecked!&rdquo; replied the young lady. &ldquo;A poor
+ forlorn and ignorant stranger, unacquainted with the very Alcoran of the
+ savage tribe whom you are come to reside among&mdash;Never to have heard
+ of Markham, the most celebrated author on farriery! then I fear you are
+ equally a stranger to the more modern names of Gibson and Bartlett?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am, indeed, Miss Vernon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And do you not blush to own it?&rdquo; said Miss Vernon. &ldquo;Why, we must forswear
+ your alliance. Then, I suppose, you can neither give a ball, nor a mash,
+ nor a horn!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I confess I trust all these matters to an ostler, or to my groom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Incredible carelessness!&mdash;And you cannot shoe a horse, or cut his
+ mane and tail; or worm a dog, or crop his ears, or cut his dew-claws; or
+ reclaim a hawk, or give him his casting-stones, or direct his diet when he
+ is sealed; or&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To sum up my insignificance in one word,&rdquo; replied I, &ldquo;I am profoundly
+ ignorant in all these rural accomplishments.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, in the name of Heaven, Mr. Francis Osbaldistone, what <i>can</i>
+ you do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very little to the purpose, Miss Vernon; something, however, I can
+ pretend to&mdash;When my groom has dressed my horse I can ride him, and
+ when my hawk is in the field, I can fly him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can you do this?&rdquo; said the young lady, putting her horse to a canter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a sort of rude overgrown fence crossed the path before us, with
+ a gate composed of pieces of wood rough from the forest; I was about to
+ move forward to open it, when Miss Vernon cleared the obstruction at a
+ flying leap. I was bound in point of honour to follow, and was in a moment
+ again at her side. &ldquo;There are hopes of you yet,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I was afraid
+ you had been a very degenerate Osbaldistone. But what on earth brings you
+ to Cub-Castle?&mdash;for so the neighbours have christened this
+ hunting-hall of ours. You might have stayed away, I suppose, if you
+ would?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I felt I was by this time on a very intimate footing with my beautiful
+ apparition, and therefore replied, in a confidential under-tone&mdash;&ldquo;Indeed,
+ my dear Miss Vernon, I might have considered it as a sacrifice to be a
+ temporary resident in Osbaldistone Hall, the inmates being such as you
+ describe them; but I am convinced there is one exception that will make
+ amends for all deficiencies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, you mean Rashleigh?&rdquo; said Miss Vernon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed I do not; I was thinking&mdash;forgive me&mdash;of some person
+ much nearer me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose it would be proper not to understand your civility?&mdash;But
+ that is not my way&mdash;I don't make a courtesy for it because I am
+ sitting on horseback. But, seriously, I deserve your exception, for I am
+ the only conversable being about the Hall, except the old priest and
+ Rashleigh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And who is Rashleigh, for Heaven's sake?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rashleigh is one who would fain have every one like him for his own sake.
+ He is Sir Hildebrand's youngest son&mdash;about your own age, but not so&mdash;not
+ well looking, in short. But nature has given him a mouthful of common
+ sense, and the priest has added a bushelful of learning; he is what we
+ call a very clever man in this country, where clever men are scarce. Bred
+ to the church, but in no hurry to take orders.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To the Catholic Church?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Catholic Church? what Church else?&rdquo; said the young lady. &ldquo;But I
+ forgot&mdash;they told me you are a heretic. Is that true, Mr.
+ Osbaldistone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must not deny the charge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet you have been abroad, and in Catholic countries?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For nearly four years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have seen convents?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Often; but I have not seen much in them which recommended the Catholic
+ religion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are not the inhabitants happy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some are unquestionably so, whom either a profound sense of devotion, or
+ an experience of the persecutions and misfortunes of the world, or a
+ natural apathy of temper, has led into retirement. Those who have adopted
+ a life of seclusion from sudden and overstrained enthusiasm, or in hasty
+ resentment of some disappointment or mortification, are very miserable.
+ The quickness of sensation soon returns, and like the wilder animals in a
+ menagerie, they are restless under confinement, while others muse or
+ fatten in cells of no larger dimensions than theirs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what,&rdquo; continued Miss Vernon, &ldquo;becomes of those victims who are
+ condemned to a convent by the will of others? what do they resemble?
+ especially, what do they resemble, if they are born to enjoy life, and
+ feel its blessings?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are like imprisoned singing-birds,&rdquo; replied I, &ldquo;condemned to wear
+ out their lives in confinement, which they try to beguile by the exercise
+ of accomplishments which would have adorned society had they been left at
+ large.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall be,&rdquo; returned Miss Vernon&mdash;&ldquo;that is,&rdquo; said she, correcting
+ herself&mdash;&ldquo;I should be rather like the wild hawk, who, barred the free
+ exercise of his soar through heaven, will dash himself to pieces against
+ the bars of his cage. But to return to Rashleigh,&rdquo; said she, in a more
+ lively tone, &ldquo;you will think him the pleasantest man you ever saw in your
+ life, Mr. Osbaldistone,&mdash;that is, for a week at least. If he could
+ find out a blind mistress, never man would be so secure of conquest; but
+ the eye breaks the spell that enchants the ear.&mdash;But here we are in
+ the court of the old hall, which looks as wild and old-fashioned as any of
+ its inmates. There is no great toilette kept at Osbaldistone Hall, you
+ must know; but I must take off these things, they are so unpleasantly
+ warm,&mdash;and the hat hurts my forehead, too,&rdquo; continued the lively
+ girl, taking it off, and shaking down a profusion of sable ringlets,
+ which, half laughing, half blushing, she separated with her white slender
+ fingers, in order to clear them away from her beautiful face and piercing
+ hazel eyes. If there was any coquetry in the action, it was well disguised
+ by the careless indifference of her manner. I could not help saying,
+ &ldquo;that, judging of the family from what I saw, I should suppose the
+ toilette a very unnecessary care.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's very politely said&mdash;though, perhaps, I ought not to
+ understand in what sense it was meant,&rdquo; replied Miss Vernon; &ldquo;but you will
+ see a better apology for a little negligence when you meet the Orsons you
+ are to live amongst, whose forms no toilette could improve. But, as I said
+ before, the old dinner-bell will clang, or rather clank, in a few minutes&mdash;it
+ cracked of its own accord on the day of the landing of King Willie, and my
+ uncle, respecting its prophetic talent, would never permit it to be
+ mended. So do you hold my palfrey, like a duteous knight, until I send
+ some more humble squire to relieve you of the charge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She threw me the rein as if we had been acquainted from our childhood,
+ jumped from her saddle, tripped across the courtyard, and entered at a
+ side-door, leaving me in admiration of her beauty, and astonished with the
+ over-frankness of her manners, which seemed the more extraordinary at a
+ time when the dictates of politeness, flowing from the court of the Grand
+ Monarque Louis XIV., prescribed to the fair sex an unusual severity of
+ decorum. I was left awkwardly enough stationed in the centre of the court
+ of the old hall, mounted on one horse, and holding another in my hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The building afforded little to interest a stranger, had I been disposed
+ to consider it attentively; the sides of the quadrangle were of various
+ architecture, and with their stone-shafted latticed windows, projecting
+ turrets, and massive architraves, resembled the inside of a convent, or of
+ one of the older and less splendid colleges of Oxford. I called for a
+ domestic, but was for some time totally unattended to; which was the more
+ provoking, as I could perceive I was the object of curiosity to several
+ servants, both male and female, from different parts of the building, who
+ popped out their heads and withdrew them, like rabbits in a warren, before
+ I could make a direct appeal to the attention of any individual. The
+ return of the huntsmen and hounds relieved me from my embarrassment, and
+ with some difficulty I got one down to relieve me of the charge of the
+ horses, and another stupid boor to guide me to the presence of Sir
+ Hildebrand. This service he performed with much such grace and good-will,
+ as a peasant who is compelled to act as guide to a hostile patrol; and in
+ the same manner I was obliged to guard against his deserting me in the
+ labyrinth of low vaulted passages which conducted to &ldquo;Stun Hall,&rdquo; as he
+ called it, where I was to be introduced to the gracious presence of my
+ uncle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We did, however, at length reach a long vaulted room, floored with stone,
+ where a range of oaken tables, of a weight and size too massive ever to be
+ moved aside, were already covered for dinner. This venerable apartment,
+ which had witnessed the feasts of several generations of the Osbaldistone
+ family, bore also evidence of their success in field sports. Huge antlers
+ of deer, which might have been trophies of the hunting of Chevy Chace,
+ were ranged around the walls, interspersed with the stuffed skins of
+ badgers, otters, martins, and other animals of the chase. Amidst some
+ remnants of old armour, which had, perhaps, served against the Scotch,
+ hung the more valued weapons of silvan war, cross-bows, guns of various
+ device and construction, nets, fishing-rods, otter-spears, hunting-poles,
+ with many other singular devices, and engines for taking or killing game.
+ A few old pictures, dimmed with smoke, and stained with March beer, hung
+ on the walls, representing knights and ladies, honoured, doubtless, and
+ renowned in their day; those frowning fearfully from huge bushes of wig
+ and of beard; and these looking delightfully with all their might at the
+ roses which they brandished in their hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had just time to give a glance at these matters, when about twelve
+ blue-coated servants burst into the hall with much tumult and talk, each
+ rather employed in directing his comrades than in discharging his own
+ duty. Some brought blocks and billets to the fire, which roared, blazed,
+ and ascended, half in smoke, half in flame, up a huge tunnel, with an
+ opening wide enough to accommodate a stone seat within its ample vault,
+ and which was fronted, by way of chimney-piece, with a huge piece of heavy
+ architecture, where the monsters of heraldry, embodied by the art of some
+ Northumbrian chisel, grinned and ramped in red free-stone, now japanned by
+ the smoke of centuries. Others of these old-fashioned serving-men bore
+ huge smoking dishes, loaded with substantial fare; others brought in cups,
+ flagons, bottles, yea barrels of liquor. All tramped, kicked, plunged,
+ shouldered, and jostled, doing as little service with as much tumult as
+ could well be imagined. At length, while the dinner was, after various
+ efforts, in the act of being arranged upon the board, &ldquo;the clamour much of
+ men and dogs,&rdquo; the cracking of whips, calculated for the intimidation of
+ the latter, voices loud and high, steps which, impressed by the
+ heavy-heeled boots of the period, clattered like those in the statue of
+ the <i>Festin de Pierre,</i>* announced the arrival of those for whose
+ benefit the preparations were made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Now called Don Juan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hubbub among the servants rather increased than diminished as this
+ crisis approached. Some called to make haste,&mdash;others to take time,&mdash;some
+ exhorted to stand out of the way, and make room for Sir Hildebrand and the
+ young squires,&mdash;some to close round the table and be <i>in</i> the
+ way,&mdash;some bawled to open, some to shut, a pair of folding-doors
+ which divided the hall from a sort of gallery, as I afterwards learned, or
+ withdrawing-room, fitted up with black wainscot. Opened the doors were at
+ length, and in rushed curs and men,&mdash;eight dogs, the domestic
+ chaplain, the village doctor, my six cousins, and my uncle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0006" id="linkCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER SIXTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The rude hall rocks&mdash;they come, they come,&mdash;
+ The din of voices shakes the dome;&mdash;
+ In stalk the various forms, and, drest
+ In varying morion, varying vest,
+ All march with haughty step&mdash;all proudly shake the crest.
+ Penrose.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ If Sir Hildebrand Osbaldistone was in no hurry to greet his nephew, of
+ whose arrival he must have been informed for some time, he had important
+ avocations to allege in excuse. &ldquo;Had seen thee sooner, lad,&rdquo; he exclaimed,
+ after a rough shake of the hand, and a hearty welcome to Osbaldistone
+ Hall, &ldquo;but had to see the hounds kennelled first. Thou art welcome to the
+ Hall, lad&mdash;here is thy cousin Percie, thy cousin Thornie, and thy
+ cousin John&mdash;your cousin Dick, your cousin Wilfred, and&mdash;stay,
+ where's Rashleigh?&mdash;ay, here's Rashleigh&mdash;take thy long body
+ aside Thornie, and let's see thy brother a bit&mdash;your cousin
+ Rashleigh. So, thy father has thought on the old Hall, and old Sir
+ Hildebrand at last&mdash;better late than never&mdash;Thou art welcome,
+ lad, and there's enough. Where's my little Die?&mdash;ay, here she comes&mdash;this
+ is my niece Die, my wife's brother's daughter&mdash;the prettiest girl in
+ our dales, be the other who she may&mdash;and so now let's to the
+ sirloin.&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To gain some idea of the person who held this language, you must suppose,
+ my dear Tresham, a man aged about sixty, in a hunting suit which had once
+ been richly laced, but whose splendour had been tarnished by many a
+ November and December storm. Sir Hildebrand, notwithstanding the
+ abruptness of his present manner, had, at one period of his life, known
+ courts and camps; had held a commission in the army which encamped on
+ Hounslow Heath previous to the Revolution&mdash;and, recommended perhaps
+ by his religion, had been knighted about the same period by the
+ unfortunate and ill-advised James II. But the Knight's dreams of further
+ preferment, if he ever entertained any, had died away at the crisis which
+ drove his patron from the throne, and since that period he had spent a
+ sequestered life upon his native domains. Notwithstanding his rusticity,
+ however, Sir Hildebrand retained much of the exterior of a gentleman, and
+ appeared among his sons as the remains of a Corinthian pillar, defaced and
+ overgrown with moss and lichen, might have looked, if contrasted with the
+ rough unhewn masses of upright stones in Stonhenge, or any other Druidical
+ temple. The sons were, indeed, heavy unadorned blocks as the eye would
+ desire to look upon. Tall, stout, and comely, all and each of the five
+ eldest seemed to want alike the Promethean fire of intellect, and the
+ exterior grace and manner, which, in the polished world, sometimes supply
+ mental deficiency. Their most valuable moral quality seemed to be the
+ good-humour and content which was expressed in their heavy features, and
+ their only pretence to accomplishment was their dexterity in field sports,
+ for which alone they lived. The strong Gyas, and the strong Cloanthus, are
+ not less distinguished by the poet, than the strong Percival, the strong
+ Thorncliff, the strong John, Richard, and Wilfred Osbaldistones, were by
+ outward appearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, as if to indemnify herself for a uniformity so uncommon in her
+ productions, Dame Nature had rendered Rashleigh Osbaldistone a striking
+ contrast in person and manner, and, as I afterwards learned, in temper and
+ talents, not only to his brothers, but to most men whom I had hitherto met
+ with. When Percie, Thornie, and Co. had respectively nodded, grinned, and
+ presented their shoulder rather than their hand, as their father named
+ them to their new kinsman, Rashleigh stepped forward, and welcomed me to
+ Osbaldistone Hall, with the air and manner of a man of the world. His
+ appearance was not in itself prepossessing. He was of low stature, whereas
+ all his brethren seemed to be descendants of Anak; and while they were
+ handsomely formed, Rashleigh, though strong in person, was bull-necked and
+ cross-made, and from some early injury in his youth had an imperfection in
+ his gait, so much resembling an absolute halt, that many alleged that it
+ formed the obstacle to his taking orders; the Church of Rome, as is well
+ known, admitting none to the clerical profession who labours under any
+ personal deformity. Others, however, ascribed this unsightly defect to a
+ mere awkward habit, and contended that it did not amount to a personal
+ disqualification from holy orders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The features of Rashleigh were such, as, having looked upon, we in vain
+ wish to banish from our memory, to which they recur as objects of painful
+ curiosity, although we dwell upon them with a feeling of dislike, and even
+ of disgust. It was not the actual plainness of his face, taken separately
+ from the meaning, which made this strong impression. His features were,
+ indeed, irregular, but they were by no means vulgar; and his keen dark
+ eyes, and shaggy eyebrows, redeemed his face from the charge of
+ commonplace ugliness. But there was in these eyes an expression of art and
+ design, and, on provocation, a ferocity tempered by caution, which nature
+ had made obvious to the most ordinary physiognomist, perhaps with the same
+ intention that she has given the rattle to the poisonous snake. As if to
+ compensate him for these disadvantages of exterior, Rashleigh Osbaldistone
+ was possessed of a voice the most soft, mellow, and rich in its tones that
+ I ever heard, and was at no loss for language of every sort suited to so
+ fine an organ. His first sentence of welcome was hardly ended, ere I
+ internally agreed with Miss Vernon, that my new kinsman would make an
+ instant conquest of a mistress whose ears alone were to judge his cause.
+ He was about to place himself beside me at dinner, but Miss Vernon, who,
+ as the only female in the family, arranged all such matters according to
+ her own pleasure, contrived that I should sit betwixt Thorncliff and
+ herself; and it can scarce be doubted that I favoured this more
+ advantageous arrangement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want to speak with you,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and I have placed honest Thornie
+ betwixt Rashleigh and you on purpose. He will be like&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Feather-bed 'twixt castle wall
+ And heavy brunt of cannon ball,
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ while I, your earliest acquaintance in this intellectual family, ask of
+ you how you like us all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A very comprehensive question, Miss Vernon, considering how short while I
+ have been at Osbaldistone Hall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, the philosophy of our family lies on the surface&mdash;there are
+ minute shades distinguishing the individuals, which require the eye of an
+ intelligent observer; but the species, as naturalists I believe call it,
+ may be distinguished and characterized at once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My five elder cousins, then, are I presume of pretty nearly the same
+ character.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, they form a happy compound of sot, gamekeeper, bully, horse-jockey,
+ and fool; but as they say there cannot be found two leaves on the same
+ tree exactly alike, so these happy ingredients, being mingled in somewhat
+ various proportions in each individual, make an agreeable variety for
+ those who like to study character.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me a sketch, if you please, Miss Vernon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall have them all in a family-piece, at full length&mdash;the
+ favour is too easily granted to be refused. Percie, the son and heir, has
+ more of the sot than of the gamekeeper, bully, horse-jockey, or fool&mdash;My
+ precious Thornie is more of the bully than the sot, gamekeeper, jockey, or
+ fool&mdash;John, who sleeps whole weeks amongst the hills, has most of the
+ gamekeeper&mdash;The jockey is powerful with Dickon, who rides two hundred
+ miles by day and night to be bought and sold at a horse-race&mdash;And the
+ fool predominates so much over Wilfred's other qualities, that he may be
+ termed a fool positive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A goodly collection, Miss Vernon, and the individual varieties belong to
+ a most interesting species. But is there no room on the canvas for Sir
+ Hildebrand?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I love my uncle,&rdquo; was her reply: &ldquo;I owe him some kindness (such it was
+ meant for at least), and I will leave you to draw his picture yourself,
+ when you know him better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; thought I to myself, &ldquo;I am glad there is some forbearance. After
+ all, who would have looked for such bitter satire from a creature so
+ young, and so exquisitely beautiful?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are thinking of me,&rdquo; she said, bending her dark eyes on me, as if she
+ meant to pierce through my very soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I certainly was,&rdquo; I replied, with some embarrassment at the determined
+ suddenness of the question, and then, endeavouring to give a complimentary
+ turn to my frank avowal&mdash;&ldquo;How is it possible I should think of
+ anything else, seated as I have the happiness to be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She smiled with such an expression of concentrated haughtiness as she
+ alone could have thrown into her countenance. &ldquo;I must inform you at once,
+ Mr. Osbaldistone, that compliments are entirely lost upon me; do not,
+ therefore, throw away your pretty sayings&mdash;they serve fine gentlemen
+ who travel in the country, instead of the toys, beads, and bracelets,
+ which navigators carry to propitiate the savage inhabitants of
+ newly-discovered lands. Do not exhaust your stock in trade;&mdash;you will
+ find natives in Northumberland to whom your fine things will recommend you&mdash;on
+ me they would be utterly thrown away, for I happen to know their real
+ value.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was silenced and confounded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You remind me at this moment,&rdquo; said the young lady, resuming her lively
+ and indifferent manner, &ldquo;of the fairy tale, where the man finds all the
+ money which he had carried to market suddenly changed into pieces of
+ slate. I have cried down and ruined your whole stock of complimentary
+ discourse by one unlucky observation. But come, never mind it&mdash;You
+ are belied, Mr. Osbaldistone, unless you have much better conversation
+ than these <i>fadeurs,</i> which every gentleman with a toupet thinks
+ himself obliged to recite to an unfortunate girl, merely because she is
+ dressed in silk and gauze, while he wears superfine cloth with embroidery.
+ Your natural paces, as any of my five cousins might say, are far
+ preferable to your complimentary amble. Endeavour to forget my unlucky
+ sex; call me Tom Vernon, if you have a mind, but speak to me as you would
+ to a friend and companion; you have no idea how much I shall like you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That would be a bribe indeed,&rdquo; returned I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Again!&rdquo; replied Miss Vernon, holding up her finger; &ldquo;I told you I would
+ not bear the shadow of a compliment. And now, when you have pledged my
+ uncle, who threatens you with what he calls a brimmer, I will tell you
+ what you think of me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bumper being pledged by me, as a dutiful nephew, and some other
+ general intercourse of the table having taken place, the continued and
+ business-like clang of knives and forks, and the devotion of cousin
+ Thorncliff on my right hand, and cousin Dickon, who sate on Miss Vernon's
+ left, to the huge quantities of meat with which they heaped their plates,
+ made them serve as two occasional partitions, separating us from the rest
+ of the company, and leaving us to our <i>tete-a-tete.</i> &ldquo;And now,&rdquo; said
+ I, &ldquo;give me leave to ask you frankly, Miss Vernon, what you suppose I am
+ thinking of you!&mdash;I could tell you what I really <i>do</i> think, but
+ you have interdicted praise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not want your assistance. I am conjuror enough to tell your thoughts
+ without it. You need not open the casement of your bosom; I see through
+ it. You think me a strange bold girl, half coquette, half romp; desirous
+ of attracting attention by the freedom of her manners and loudness of her
+ conversation, because she is ignorant of what the Spectator calls the
+ softer graces of the sex; and perhaps you think I have some particular
+ plan of storming you into admiration. I should be sorry to shock your
+ self-opinion, but you were never more mistaken. All the confidence I have
+ reposed in you, I would have given as readily to your father, if I thought
+ he could have understood me. I am in this happy family as much secluded
+ from intelligent listeners as Sancho in the Sierra Morena, and when
+ opportunity offers, I must speak or die. I assure you I would not have
+ told you a word of all this curious intelligence, had I cared a pin who
+ knew it or knew it not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is very cruel in you, Miss Vernon, to take away all particular marks
+ of favour from your communications, but I must receive them on your own
+ terms.&mdash;You have not included Mr. Rashleigh Osbaldistone in your
+ domestic sketches.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She shrunk, I thought, at this remark, and hastily answered, in a much
+ lower tone, &ldquo;Not a word of Rashleigh! His ears are so acute when his
+ selfishness is interested, that the sounds would reach him even through
+ the mass of Thorncliff's person, stuffed as it is with beef,
+ venison-pasty, and pudding.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I replied; &ldquo;but peeping past the living screen which divides us,
+ before I put the question, I perceived that Mr. Rashleigh's chair was
+ empty&mdash;he has left the table.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would not have you be too sure of that,&rdquo; Miss Vernon replied. &ldquo;Take my
+ advice, and when you speak of Rashleigh, get up to the top of
+ Otterscope-hill, where you can see for twenty miles round you in every
+ direction&mdash;stand on the very peak, and speak in whispers; and, after
+ all, don't be too sure that the bird of the air will not carry the matter,
+ Rashleigh has been my tutor for four years; we are mutually tired of each
+ other, and we shall heartily rejoice at our approaching separation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Rashleigh leaves Osbaldistone Hall, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, in a few days;&mdash;did you not know that?&mdash;your father must
+ keep his resolutions much more secret than Sir Hildebrand. Why, when my
+ uncle was informed that you were to be his guest for some time, and that
+ your father desired to have one of his hopeful sons to fill up the
+ lucrative situation in his counting-house which was vacant by your
+ obstinacy, Mr. Francis, the good knight held a <i>cour ple'nie're</i> of
+ all his family, including the butler, housekeeper, and gamekeeper. This
+ reverend assembly of the peers and household officers of Osbaldistone Hall
+ was not convoked, as you may suppose, to elect your substitute, because,
+ as Rashleigh alone possessed more arithmetic than was necessary to
+ calculate the odds on a fighting cock, none but he could be supposed
+ qualified for the situation. But some solemn sanction was necessary for
+ transforming Rashleigh's destination from starving as a Catholic priest to
+ thriving as a wealthy banker; and it was not without some reluctance that
+ the acquiescence of the assembly was obtained to such an act of
+ degradation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can conceive the scruples&mdash;but how were they got over?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By the general wish, I believe, to get Rashleigh out of the house,&rdquo;
+ replied Miss Vernon. &ldquo;Although youngest of the family, he has somehow or
+ other got the entire management of all the others; and every one is
+ sensible of the subjection, though they cannot shake it off. If any one
+ opposes him, he is sure to rue having done so before the year goes about;
+ and if you do him a very important service, you may rue it still more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At that rate,&rdquo; answered I, smiling, &ldquo;I should look about me; for I have
+ been the cause, however unintentionally, of his change of situation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; and whether he regards it as an advantage or disadvantage, he will
+ owe you a grudge for it&mdash;But here comes cheese, radishes, and a
+ bumper to church and king, the hint for chaplains and ladies to disappear;
+ and I, the sole representative of womanhood at Osbaldistone Hall, retreat,
+ as in duty bound.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She vanished as she spoke, leaving me in astonishment at the mingled
+ character of shrewdness, audacity, and frankness, which her conversation
+ displayed. I despair conveying to you the least idea of her manner,
+ although I have, as nearly as I can remember, imitated her language. In
+ fact, there was a mixture of untaught simplicity, as well as native
+ shrewdness and haughty boldness, in her manner, and all were modified and
+ recommended by the play of the most beautiful features I had ever beheld.
+ It is not to be thought that, however strange and uncommon I might think
+ her liberal and unreserved communications, a young man of two-and-twenty
+ was likely to be severely critical on a beautiful girl of eighteen, for
+ not observing a proper distance towards him. On the contrary, I was
+ equally diverted and flattered by Miss Vernon's confidence, and that
+ notwithstanding her declaration of its being conferred on me solely
+ because I was the first auditor who occurred, of intelligence enough to
+ comprehend it. With the presumption of my age, certainly not diminished by
+ my residence in France, I imagined that well-formed features, and a
+ handsome person, both which I conceived myself to possess, were not
+ unsuitable qualifications for the confidant of a young beauty. My vanity
+ thus enlisted in Miss Vernon's behalf, I was far from judging her with
+ severity, merely for a frankness which I supposed was in some degree
+ justified by my own personal merit; and the feelings of partiality, which
+ her beauty, and the singularity of her situation, were of themselves
+ calculated to excite, were enhanced by my opinion of her penetration and
+ judgment in her choice of a friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Miss Vernon quitted the apartment, the bottle circulated, or rather
+ flew, around the table in unceasing revolution. My foreign education had
+ given me a distaste to intemperance, then and yet too common a vice among
+ my countrymen. The conversation which seasoned such orgies was as little
+ to my taste, and if anything could render it more disgusting, it was the
+ relationship of the company. I therefore seized a lucky opportunity, and
+ made my escape through a side door, leading I knew not whither, rather
+ than endure any longer the sight of father and sons practising the same
+ degrading intemperance, and holding the same coarse and disgusting
+ conversation. I was pursued, of course, as I had expected, to be reclaimed
+ by force, as a deserter from the shrine of Bacchus. When I heard the whoop
+ and hollo, and the tramp of the heavy boots of my pursuers on the winding
+ stair which I was descending, I plainly foresaw I should be overtaken
+ unless I could get into the open air. I therefore threw open a casement in
+ the staircase, which looked into an old-fashioned garden, and as the
+ height did not exceed six feet, I jumped out without hesitation, and soon
+ heard far behind the &ldquo;hey whoop! stole away! stole away!&rdquo; of my baffled
+ pursuers. I ran down one alley, walked fast up another; and then,
+ conceiving myself out of all danger of pursuit, I slackened my pace into a
+ quiet stroll, enjoying the cool air which the heat of the wine I had been
+ obliged to swallow, as well as that of my rapid retreat, rendered doubly
+ grateful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I sauntered on, I found the gardener hard at his evening employment,
+ and saluted him, as I paused to look at his work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good even, my friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gude e'en&mdash;gude e'en t'ye,&rdquo; answered the man, without looking up,
+ and in a tone which at once indicated his northern extraction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fine weather for your work, my friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's no that muckle to be compleened o',&rdquo; answered the man, with that
+ limited degree of praise which gardeners and farmers usually bestow on the
+ very best weather. Then raising his head, as if to see who spoke to him,
+ he touched his Scotch bonnet with an air of respect, as he observed, &ldquo;Eh,
+ gude safe us!&mdash;it's a sight for sair een, to see a gold-laced
+ jeistiecor in the Ha'garden sae late at e'en.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A gold-laced what, my good friend?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ou, a jeistiecor*&mdash;that's a jacket like your ain, there. They
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Perhaps from the French <i>Juste-au-corps.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ hae other things to do wi' them up yonder&mdash;unbuttoning them to make
+ room for the beef and the bag-puddings, and the claret-wine, nae doubt&mdash;that's
+ the ordinary for evening lecture on this side the border.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's no such plenty of good cheer in your country, my good friend,&rdquo; I
+ replied, &ldquo;as to tempt you to sit so late at it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hout, sir, ye ken little about Scotland; it's no for want of gude vivers&mdash;the
+ best of fish, flesh, and fowl hae we, by sybos, ingans, turneeps, and
+ other garden fruit. But we hae mense and discretion, and are moderate of
+ our mouths;&mdash;but here, frae the kitchen to the ha', it's fill and
+ fetch mair, frae the tae end of the four-and-twenty till the tother. Even
+ their fast days&mdash;they ca' it fasting when they hae the best o'
+ sea-fish frae Hartlepool and Sunderland by land carriage, forbye trouts,
+ grilses, salmon, and a' the lave o't, and so they make their very fasting
+ a kind of luxury and abomination; and then the awfu' masses and matins of
+ the puir deceived souls&mdash;But I shouldna speak about them, for your
+ honour will be a Roman, I'se warrant, like the lave.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not I, my friend; I was bred an English presbyterian, or dissenter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The right hand of fellowship to your honour, then,&rdquo; quoth the gardener,
+ with as much alacrity as his hard features were capable of expressing,
+ and, as if to show that his good-will did not rest on words, he plucked
+ forth a huge horn snuff-box, or mull, as he called it, and proffered a
+ pinch with a most fraternal grin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having accepted his courtesy, I asked him if he had been long a domestic
+ at Osbaldistone Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have been fighting with wild beasts at Ephesus,&rdquo; said he, looking
+ towards the building, &ldquo;for the best part of these four-and-twenty years,
+ as sure as my name's Andrew Fairservice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, my excellent friend, Andrew Fairservice, if your religion and your
+ temperance are so much offended by Roman rituals and southern hospitality,
+ it seems to me that you must have been putting yourself to an unnecessary
+ penance all this while, and that you might have found a service where they
+ eat less, and are more orthodox in their worship. I dare say it cannot be
+ want of skill which prevented your being placed more to your
+ satisfaction.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It disna become me to speak to the point of my qualifications,&rdquo; said
+ Andrew, looking round him with great complacency; &ldquo;but nae doubt I should
+ understand my trade of horticulture, seeing I was bred in the parish of
+ Dreepdaily, where they raise lang-kale under glass, and force the early
+ nettles for their spring kale. And, to speak truth, I hae been flitting
+ every term these four-and-twenty years; but when the time comes, there's
+ aye something to saw that I would like to see sawn,&mdash;or something to
+ maw that I would like to see mawn,&mdash;or something to ripe that I would
+ like to see ripen,&mdash;and sae I e'en daiker on wi' the family frae
+ year's end to year's end. And I wad say for certain, that I am gaun to
+ quit at Cannlemas, only I was just as positive on it twenty years syne,
+ and I find mysell still turning up the mouls here, for a' that. Forbye
+ that, to tell your honour the evendown truth, there's nae better place
+ ever offered to Andrew. But if your honour wad wush me to ony place where
+ I wad hear pure doctrine, and hae a free cow's grass, and a cot, and a
+ yard, and mair than ten punds of annual fee, and where there's nae leddy
+ about the town to count the apples, I'se hold mysell muckle indebted
+ t'ye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bravo, Andrew! I perceive you'll lose no preferment for want of asking
+ patronage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I canna see what for I should,&rdquo; replied Andrew; &ldquo;it's no a generation to
+ wait till ane's worth's discovered, I trow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you are no friend, I observe, to the ladies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Na, by my troth, I keep up the first gardener's quarrel to them. They're
+ fasheous bargains&mdash;aye crying for apricocks, pears, plums, and
+ apples, summer and winter, without distinction o' seasons; but we hae nae
+ slices o' the spare rib here, be praised for't! except auld Martha, and
+ she's weel eneugh pleased wi' the freedom o' the berry-bushes to her
+ sister's weans, when they come to drink tea in a holiday in the
+ housekeeper's room, and wi' a wheen codlings now and then for her ain
+ private supper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You forget your young mistress.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What mistress do I forget?&mdash;whae's that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your young mistress, Miss Vernon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! the lassie Vernon?&mdash;She's nae mistress o' mine, man. I wish
+ she was her ain mistress; and I wish she mayna be some other body's
+ mistress or it's lang&mdash;She's a wild slip that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo; said I, more interested than I cared to own to myself, or to
+ show to the fellow&mdash;&ldquo;why, Andrew, you know all the secrets of this
+ family.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I ken them, I can keep them,&rdquo; said Andrew; &ldquo;they winna work in my wame
+ like harm in a barrel, I'se warrant ye. Miss Die is&mdash;but it's neither
+ beef nor brose o' mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he began to dig with a great semblance of assiduity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is Miss Vernon, Andrew? I am a friend of the family, and should like
+ to know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Other than a gude ane, I'm fearing,&rdquo; said Andrew, closing one eye hard,
+ and shaking his head with a grave and mysterious look&mdash;&ldquo;something
+ glee'd&mdash;your honour understands me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot say I do,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;Andrew; but I should like to hear you
+ explain yourself;&rdquo; and therewithal I slipped a crown-piece into Andrew's
+ horn-hard hand. The touch of the silver made him grin a ghastly smile, as
+ he nodded slowly, and thrust it into his breeches pocket; and then, like a
+ man who well understood that there was value to be returned, stood up, and
+ rested his arms on his spade, with his features composed into the most
+ important gravity, as for some serious communication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye maun ken, then, young gentleman, since it imports you to know, that
+ Miss Vernon is&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here breaking off, he sucked in both his cheeks, till his lantern jaws and
+ long chin assumed the appearance of a pair of nut-crackers; winked hard
+ once more, frowned, shook his head, and seemed to think his physiognomy
+ had completed the information which his tongue had not fully told.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good God!&rdquo; said I&mdash;&ldquo;so young, so beautiful, so early lost!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Troth ye may say sae&mdash;she's in a manner lost, body and saul; forby
+ being a Papist, I'se uphaud her for&rdquo;&mdash;and his northern caution
+ prevailed, and he was again silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For what, sir?&rdquo; said I sternly. &ldquo;I insist on knowing the plain meaning of
+ all this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On, just for the bitterest Jacobite in the haill shire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pshaw! a Jacobite?&mdash;is that all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrew looked at me with some astonishment, at hearing his information
+ treated so lightly; and then muttering, &ldquo;Aweel, it's the warst thing I ken
+ aboot the lassie, howsoe'er,&rdquo; he resumed his spade, like the king of the
+ Vandals, in Marmontel's late novel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0007" id="linkCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER SEVENTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Bardolph.</i>&mdash;The sheriff, with a monstrous watch, is at the door.
+ Henry IV. <i>First Part.</i>
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I found out with some difficulty the apartment which was destined for my
+ accommodation; and having secured myself the necessary good-will and
+ attention from my uncle's domestics, by using the means they were most
+ capable of comprehending, I secluded myself there for the remainder of the
+ evening, conjecturing, from the fair way in which I had left my new
+ relatives, as well as from the distant noise which continued to echo from
+ the stone-hall (as their banqueting-room was called), that they were not
+ likely to be fitting company for a sober man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What could my father mean by sending me to be an inmate in this strange
+ family?&rdquo; was my first and most natural reflection. My uncle, it was plain,
+ received me as one who was to make some stay with him, and his rude
+ hospitality rendered him as indifferent as King Hal to the number of those
+ who fed at his cost. But it was plain my presence or absence would be of
+ as little importance in his eyes as that of one of his blue-coated
+ serving-men. My cousins were mere cubs, in whose company I might, if I
+ liked it, unlearn whatever decent manners, or elegant accomplishments, I
+ had acquired, but where I could attain no information beyond what regarded
+ worming dogs, rowelling horses, and following foxes. I could only imagine
+ one reason, which was probably the true one. My father considered the life
+ which was led at Osbaldistone Hall as the natural and inevitable pursuits
+ of all country gentlemen, and he was desirous, by giving me an opportunity
+ of seeing that with which he knew I should be disgusted, to reconcile me,
+ if possible, to take an active share in his own business. In the meantime,
+ he would take Rashleigh Osbaldistone into the counting-house. But he had
+ an hundred modes of providing for him, and that advantageously, whenever
+ he chose to get rid of him. So that, although I did feel a certain qualm
+ of conscience at having been the means of introducing Rashleigh, being
+ such as he was described by Miss Vernon, into my father's business&mdash;perhaps
+ into his confidence&mdash;I subdued it by the reflection that my father
+ was complete master of his own affairs&mdash;a man not to be imposed upon,
+ or influenced by any one&mdash;and that all I knew to the young
+ gentleman's prejudice was through the medium of a singular and giddy girl,
+ whose communications were made with an injudicious frankness, which might
+ warrant me in supposing her conclusions had been hastily or inaccurately
+ formed. Then my mind naturally turned to Miss Vernon herself; her extreme
+ beauty; her very peculiar situation, relying solely upon her reflections,
+ and her own spirit, for guidance and protection; and her whole character
+ offering that variety and spirit which piques our curiosity, and engages
+ our attention in spite of ourselves. I had sense enough to consider the
+ neighbourhood of this singular young lady, and the chance of our being
+ thrown into very close and frequent intercourse, as adding to the dangers,
+ while it relieved the dulness, of Osbaldistone Hall; but I could not, with
+ the fullest exertion of my prudence, prevail upon myself to regret
+ excessively this new and particular hazard to which I was to be exposed.
+ This scruple I also settled as young men settle most difficulties of the
+ kind&mdash;I would be very cautious, always on my guard, consider Miss
+ Vernon rather as a companion than an intimate; and all would do well
+ enough. With these reflections I fell asleep, Miss Vernon, of course,
+ forming the last subject of my contemplation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether I dreamed of her or not, I cannot satisfy you, for I was tired and
+ slept soundly. But she was the first person I thought of in the morning,
+ when waked at dawn by the cheerful notes of the hunting horn. To start up,
+ and direct my horse to be saddled, was my first movement; and in a few
+ minutes I was in the court-yard, where men, dogs, and horses, were in full
+ preparation. My uncle, who, perhaps, was not entitled to expect a very
+ alert sportsman in his nephew, bred as he had been in foreign parts,
+ seemed rather surprised to see me, and I thought his morning salutation
+ wanted something of the hearty and hospitable tone which distinguished his
+ first welcome. &ldquo;Art there, lad?&mdash;ay, youth's aye rathe&mdash;but look
+ to thysell&mdash;mind the old song, lad&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ He that gallops his horse on Blackstone edge
+ May chance to catch a fall.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ I believe there are few young men, and those very sturdy moralists, who
+ would not rather be taxed with some moral peccadillo than with want of
+ knowledge in horsemanship. As I was by no means deficient either in skill
+ or courage, I resented my uncle's insinuation accordingly, and assured him
+ he would find me up with the hounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I doubtna, lad,&rdquo; was his reply; &ldquo;thou'rt a rank rider, I'se warrant thee&mdash;but
+ take heed. Thy father sent thee here to me to be bitted, and I doubt I
+ must ride thee on the curb, or we'll hae some one to ride thee on the
+ halter, if I takena the better heed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As this speech was totally unintelligible to me&mdash;as, besides, it did
+ not seem to be delivered for my use, or benefit, but was spoken as it were
+ aside, and as if expressing aloud something which was passing through the
+ mind of my much-honoured uncle, I concluded it must either refer to my
+ desertion of the bottle on the preceding evening, or that my uncle's
+ morning hours being a little discomposed by the revels of the night
+ before, his temper had suffered in proportion. I only made the passing
+ reflection, that if he played the ungracious landlord, I would remain the
+ shorter while his guest, and then hastened to salute Miss Vernon, who
+ advanced cordially to meet me. Some show of greeting also passed between
+ my cousins and me; but as I saw them maliciously bent upon criticising my
+ dress and accoutrements, from the cap to the stirrup-irons, and sneering
+ at whatever had a new or foreign appearance, I exempted myself from the
+ task of paying them much attention; and assuming, in requital of their
+ grins and whispers, an air of the utmost indifference and contempt, I
+ attached myself to Miss Vernon, as the only person in the party whom I
+ could regard as a suitable companion. By her side, therefore, we sallied
+ forth to the destined cover, which was a dingle or copse on the side of an
+ extensive common. As we rode thither, I observed to Diana, &ldquo;that I did not
+ see my cousin Rashleigh in the field;&rdquo; to which she replied,&mdash;&ldquo;O no&mdash;he's
+ a mighty hunter, but it's after the fashion of Nimrod, and his game is
+ man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dogs now brushed into the cover, with the appropriate encouragement
+ from the hunters&mdash;all was business, bustle, and activity. My cousins
+ were soon too much interested in the business of the morning to take any
+ further notice of me, unless that I overheard Dickon the horse-jockey
+ whisper to Wilfred the fool&mdash;&ldquo;Look thou, an our French cousin be nat
+ off a' first burst.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To which Wilfred answered, &ldquo;Like enow, for he has a queer outlandish
+ binding on's castor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thorncliff, however, who in his rude way seemed not absolutely insensible
+ to the beauty of his kinswoman, appeared determined to keep us company
+ more closely than his brothers,&mdash;perhaps to watch what passed betwixt
+ Miss Vernon and me&mdash;perhaps to enjoy my expected mishaps in the
+ chase. In the last particular he was disappointed. After beating in vain
+ for the greater part of the morning, a fox was at length found, who led us
+ a chase of two hours, in the course of which, notwithstanding the
+ ill-omened French binding upon my hat, I sustained my character as a
+ horseman to the admiration of my uncle and Miss Vernon, and the secret
+ disappointment of those who expected me to disgrace it. Reynard, however,
+ proved too wily for his pursuers, and the hounds were at fault. I could at
+ this time observe in Miss Vernon's manner an impatience of the close
+ attendance which we received from Thorncliff Osbaldistone; and, as that
+ active-spirited young lady never hesitated at taking the readiest means to
+ gratify any wish of the moment, she said to him, in a tone of reproach&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ wonder, Thornie, what keeps you dangling at my horse's crupper all this
+ morning, when you know the earths above Woolverton-mill are not stopt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know no such an thing then, Miss Die, for the miller swore himself as
+ black as night, that he stopt them at twelve o'clock midnight that was.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O fie upon you, Thornie! would you trust to a miller's word?&mdash;and
+ these earths, too, where we lost the fox three times this season! and you
+ on your grey mare, that can gallop there and back in ten minutes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Miss Die, I'se go to Woolverton then, and if the earths are not
+ stopt, I'se raddle Dick the miller's bones for him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do, my dear Thornie; horsewhip the rascal to purpose&mdash;via&mdash;fly
+ away, and about it;&rdquo;&mdash;Thorncliff went off at the gallop&mdash;&ldquo;or get
+ horsewhipt yourself, which will serve my purpose just as well.&mdash;I
+ must teach them all discipline and obedience to the word of command. I am
+ raising a regiment, you must know. Thornie shall be my sergeant-major,
+ Dickon my riding-master, and Wilfred, with his deep dub-a-dub tones, that
+ speak but three syllables at a time, my kettle-drummer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And Rashleigh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rashleigh shall be my scout-master.&rdquo; &ldquo;And will you find no employment for
+ me, most lovely colonel?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall have the choice of being pay-master, or plunder-master, to the
+ corps. But see how the dogs puzzle about there. Come, Mr. Frank, the
+ scent's cold; they won't recover it there this while; follow me, I have a
+ view to show you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in fact, she cantered up to the top of a gentle hill, commanding an
+ extensive prospect. Casting her eyes around, to see that no one was near
+ us, she drew up her horse beneath a few birch-trees, which screened us
+ from the rest of the hunting-field&mdash;&ldquo;Do you see yon peaked, brown,
+ heathy hill, having something like a whitish speck upon the side?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Terminating that long ridge of broken moorish uplands?&mdash;I see it
+ distinctly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That whitish speck is a rock called Hawkesmore-crag, and Hawkesmore-crag
+ is in Scotland.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed! I did not think we had been so near Scotland.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is so, I assure you, and your horse will carry you there in two
+ hours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall hardly give him the trouble; why, the distance must be eighteen
+ miles as the crow flies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may have my mare, if you think her less blown&mdash;I say, that in
+ two hours you may be in Scotland.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I say, that I have so little desire to be there, that if my horse's
+ head were over the Border, I would not give his tail the trouble of
+ following. What should I do in Scotland?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Provide for your safety, if I must speak plainly. Do you understand me
+ now, Mr. Frank?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a whit; you are more and more oracular.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, on my word, you either mistrust me most unjustly, and are a better
+ dissembler than Rashleigh Osbaldistone himself, or you know nothing of
+ what is imputed to you; and then no wonder you stare at me in that grave
+ manner, which I can scarce see without laughing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Upon my word of honour, Miss Vernon,&rdquo; said I, with an impatient feeling
+ of her childish disposition to mirth, &ldquo;I have not the most distant
+ conception of what you mean. I am happy to afford you any subject of
+ amusement, but I am quite ignorant in what it consists.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, there's no sound jest after all,&rdquo; said the young lady, composing
+ herself; &ldquo;only one looks so very ridiculous when he is fairly perplexed.
+ But the matter is serious enough. Do you know one Moray, or Morris, or
+ some such name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not that I can at present recollect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Think a moment. Did you not lately travel with somebody of such a name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The only man with whom I travelled for any length of time was a fellow
+ whose soul seemed to lie in his portmanteau.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then it was like the soul of the licentiate Pedro Garcias, which lay
+ among the ducats in his leathern purse. That man has been robbed, and he
+ has lodged an information against you, as connected with the violence done
+ to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You jest, Miss Vernon!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not, I assure you&mdash;the thing is an absolute fact.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And do you,&rdquo; said I, with strong indignation, which I did not attempt to
+ suppress, &ldquo;do you suppose me capable of meriting such a charge?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would call me out for it, I suppose, had I the advantage of being a
+ man&mdash;You may do so as it is, if you like it&mdash;I can shoot flying,
+ as well as leap a five-barred gate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And are colonel of a regiment of horse besides,&rdquo; replied I, reflecting
+ how idle it was to be angry with her&mdash;&ldquo;But do explain the present
+ jest to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's no jest whatever,&rdquo; said Diana; &ldquo;you are accused of robbing this
+ man, and my uncle believes it as well as I did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Upon my honour, I am greatly obliged to my friends for their good
+ opinion!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now do not, if you can help it, snort, and stare, and snuff the wind, and
+ look so exceedingly like a startled horse&mdash;There's no such offence as
+ you suppose&mdash;you are not charged with any petty larceny or vulgar
+ felony&mdash;by no means. This fellow was carrying money from Government,
+ both specie and bills, to pay the troops in the north; and it is said he
+ has been also robbed of some despatches of great consequence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And so it is high treason, then, and not simple robbery, of which I am
+ accused!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly&mdash;which, you know, has been in all ages accounted the crime
+ of a gentleman. You will find plenty in this country, and one not far from
+ your elbow, who think it a merit to distress the Hanoverian government by
+ every means possible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Neither my politics nor my morals, Miss Vernon, are of a description so
+ accommodating.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I really begin to believe that you are a Presbyterian and Hanoverian in
+ good earnest. But what do you propose to do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Instantly to refute this atrocious calumny.&mdash;Before whom,&rdquo; I asked,
+ &ldquo;was this extraordinary accusation laid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Before old Squire Inglewood, who had sufficient unwillingness to receive
+ it. He sent tidings to my uncle, I suppose, that he might smuggle you away
+ into Scotland, out of reach of the warrant. But my uncle is sensible that
+ his religion and old predilections render him obnoxious to Government, and
+ that, were he caught playing booty, he would be disarmed, and probably
+ dismounted (which would be the worse evil of the two), as a Jacobite,
+ papist, and suspected person.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * On occasions of public alarm, in the beginning of the eighteenth
+ century, the horses of the Catholics were often seized upon, as they were
+ always supposed to be on the eve of rising in rebellion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can conceive that, sooner than lose his hunters, he would give up his
+ nephew.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His nephew, nieces, sons&mdash;daughters, if he had them, and whole
+ generation,&rdquo; said Diana;&mdash;&ldquo;therefore trust not to him, even for a
+ single moment, but make the best of your way before they can serve the
+ warrant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I shall certainly do; but it shall be to the house of this Squire
+ Inglewood&mdash;Which way does it lie?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;About five miles off, in the low ground, behind yonder plantations&mdash;you
+ may see the tower of the clock-house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will be there in a few minutes,&rdquo; said I, putting my horse in motion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I will go with you, and show you the way,&rdquo; said Diana, putting her
+ palfrey also to the trot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not think of it, Miss Vernon,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;It is not&mdash;permit me
+ the freedom of a friend&mdash;it is not proper, scarcely even delicate, in
+ you to go with me on such an errand as I am now upon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand your meaning,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon, a slight blush crossing her
+ haughty brow;&mdash;&ldquo;it is plainly spoken;&rdquo; and after a moment's pause she
+ added, &ldquo;and I believe kindly meant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is indeed, Miss Vernon. Can you think me insensible of the interest
+ you show me, or ungrateful for it?&rdquo; said I, with even more earnestness
+ than I could have wished to express. &ldquo;Yours is meant for true kindness,
+ shown best at the hour of need. But I must not, for your own sake&mdash;for
+ the chance of misconstruction&mdash;suffer you to pursue the dictates of
+ your generosity; this is so public an occasion&mdash;it is almost like
+ venturing into an open court of justice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if it were not almost, but altogether entering into an open court of
+ justice, do you think I would not go there if I thought it right, and
+ wished to protect a friend? You have no one to stand by you&mdash;you are
+ a stranger; and here, in the outskirts of the kingdom, country justices do
+ odd things. My uncle has no desire to embroil himself in your affair;
+ Rashleigh is absent, and were he here, there is no knowing which side he
+ might take; the rest are all more stupid and brutal one than another. I
+ will go with you, and I do not fear being able to serve you. I am no fine
+ lady, to be terrified to death with law-books, hard words, or big wigs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But my dear Miss Vernon&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But my dear Mr. Francis, be patient and quiet, and let me take my own
+ way; for when I take the bit between my teeth, there is no bridle will
+ stop me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Flattered with the interest so lovely a creature seemed to take in my
+ fate, yet vexed at the ridiculous appearance I should make, by carrying a
+ girl of eighteen along with me as an advocate, and seriously concerned for
+ the misconstruction to which her motives might be exposed, I endeavoured
+ to combat her resolution to accompany me to Squire Inglewood's. The
+ self-willed girl told me roundly, that my dissuasions were absolutely in
+ vain; that she was a true Vernon, whom no consideration, not even that of
+ being able to do but little to assist him, should induce to abandon a
+ friend in distress; and that all I could say on the subject might be very
+ well for pretty, well-educated, well-behaved misses from a town
+ boarding-school, but did not apply to her, who was accustomed to mind
+ nobody's opinion but her own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While she spoke thus, we were advancing hastily towards Inglewood Place,
+ while, as if to divert me from the task of further remonstrance, she drew
+ a ludicrous picture of the magistrate and his clerk.&mdash;Inglewood was&mdash;according
+ to her description&mdash;a white-washed Jacobite; that is, one who, having
+ been long a non-juror, like most of the other gentlemen of the country,
+ had lately qualified himself to act as a justice, by taking the oaths to
+ Government. &ldquo;He had done so,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;in compliance with the urgent
+ request of most of his brother squires, who saw, with regret, that the
+ palladium of silvan sport, the game-laws, were likely to fall into disuse
+ for want of a magistrate who would enforce them; the nearest acting
+ justice being the Mayor of Newcastle, and he, as being rather inclined to
+ the consumption of the game when properly dressed, than to its
+ preservation when alive, was more partial, of course, to the cause of the
+ poacher than of the sportsman. Resolving, therefore, that it was expedient
+ some one of their number should sacrifice the scruples of Jacobitical
+ loyalty to the good of the community, the Northumbrian country gentlemen
+ imposed the duty on Inglewood, who, being very inert in most of his
+ feelings and sentiments, might, they thought, comply with any political
+ creed without much repugnance. Having thus procured the body of justice,
+ they proceeded,&rdquo; continued Miss Vernon, &ldquo;to attach to it a clerk, by way
+ of soul, to direct and animate its movements. Accordingly they got a sharp
+ Newcastle attorney, called Jobson, who, to vary my metaphor, finds it a
+ good thing enough to retail justice at the sign of Squire Inglewood, and,
+ as his own emoluments depend on the quantity of business which he
+ transacts, he hooks in his principal for a great deal more employment in
+ the justice line than the honest squire had ever bargained for; so that no
+ apple-wife within the circuit of ten miles can settle her account with a
+ costermonger without an audience of the reluctant Justice and his alert
+ clerk, Mr. Joseph Jobson. But the most ridiculous scenes occur when
+ affairs come before him, like our business of to-day, having any colouring
+ of politics. Mr. Joseph Jobson (for which, no doubt, he has his own very
+ sufficient reasons) is a prodigious zealot for the Protestant religion,
+ and a great friend to the present establishment in church and state. Now,
+ his principal, retaining a sort of instinctive attachment to the opinions
+ which he professed openly until he relaxed his political creed with the
+ patriotic view of enforcing the law against unauthorized destroyers of
+ black-game, grouse, partridges, and hares, is peculiarly embarrassed when
+ the zeal of his assistant involves him in judicial proceedings connected
+ with his earlier faith; and, instead of seconding his zeal, he seldom
+ fails to oppose to it a double dose of indolence and lack of exertion. And
+ this inactivity does not by any means arise from actual stupidity. On the
+ contrary, for one whose principal delight is in eating and drinking, he is
+ an alert, joyous, and lively old soul, which makes his assumed dulness the
+ more diverting. So you may see Jobson on such occasions, like a bit of a
+ broken down blood-tit condemned to drag an overloaded cart, puffing,
+ strutting, and spluttering, to get the Justice put in motion, while,
+ though the wheels groan, creak, and revolve slowly, the great and
+ preponderating weight of the vehicle fairly frustrates the efforts of the
+ willing quadruped, and prevents its being brought into a state of actual
+ progression. Nay more, the unfortunate pony, I understand, has been heard
+ to complain that this same car of justice, which he finds it so hard to
+ put in motion on some occasions, can on others run fast enough down hill
+ of its own accord, dragging his reluctant self backwards along with it,
+ when anything can be done of service to Squire Inglewood's quondam
+ friends. And then Mr. Jobson talks big about reporting his principal to
+ the Secretary of State for the Home Department, if it were not for his
+ particular regard and friendship for Mr. Inglewood and his family.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Miss Vernon concluded this whimsical description, we found ourselves in
+ front of Inglewood Place, a handsome, though old-fashioned building, which
+ showed the consequence of the family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0008" id="linkCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER EIGHTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; quoth the Lawyer, &ldquo;not to flatter ye,
+ You have as good and fair a battery
+ As heart could wish, and need not shame
+ The proudest man alive to claim.&rdquo;
+ Butler.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Our horses were taken by a servant in Sir Hildebrand's livery, whom we
+ found in the court-yard, and we entered the house. In the entrance-hall I
+ was somewhat surprised, and my fair companion still more so, when we met
+ Rashleigh Osbaldistone, who could not help showing equal wonder at our
+ rencontre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rashleigh,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon, without giving him time to ask any
+ question, &ldquo;you have heard of Mr. Francis Osbaldistone's affair, and you
+ have been talking to the Justice about it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; said Rashleigh, composedly&mdash;&ldquo;it has been my business
+ here.&mdash; I have been endeavouring,&rdquo; he said, with a bow to me, &ldquo;to
+ render my cousin what service I can. But I am sorry to meet him here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As a friend and relation, Mr. Osbaldistone, you ought to have been sorry
+ to have met me anywhere else, at a time when the charge of my reputation
+ required me to be on this spot as soon as possible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True; but judging from what my father said, I should have supposed a
+ short retreat into Scotland&mdash;just till matters should be smoothed
+ over in a quiet way&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I answered with warmth, &ldquo;That I had no prudential measures to observe, and
+ desired to have nothing smoothed over;&mdash;on the contrary, I was come
+ to inquire into a rascally calumny, which I was determined to probe to the
+ bottom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Francis Osbaldistone is an innocent man, Rashleigh,&rdquo; said Miss
+ Vernon, &ldquo;and he demands an investigation of the charge against him, and I
+ intend to support him in it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do, my pretty cousin?&mdash;I should think, now, Mr. Francis
+ Osbaldistone was likely to be as effectually, and rather more delicately,
+ supported by my presence than by yours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, certainly; but two heads are better than one, you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Especially such a head as yours, my pretty Die,&rdquo; advancing and taking her
+ hand with a familiar fondness, which made me think him fifty times uglier
+ than nature had made him. She led him, however, a few steps aside; they
+ conversed in an under voice, and she appeared to insist upon some request
+ which he was unwilling or unable to comply with. I never saw so strong a
+ contrast betwixt the expression of two faces. Miss Vernon's, from being
+ earnest, became angry; her eyes and cheeks became more animated, her
+ colour mounted, she clenched her little hand, and stamping on the ground
+ with her tiny foot, seemed to listen with a mixture of contempt and
+ indignation to the apologies, which, from his look of civil deference, his
+ composed and respectful smile, his body rather drawing back than advanced,
+ and other signs of look and person, I concluded him to be pouring out at
+ her feet. At length she flung away from him, with &ldquo;I <i>will</i> have it
+ so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not in my power&mdash;there is no possibility of it.&mdash;Would
+ you think it, Mr. Osbaldistone?&rdquo; said he, addressing me&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are not mad?&rdquo; said she, interrupting him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would you think it?&rdquo; said he, without attending to her hint&mdash;&ldquo;Miss
+ Vernon insists, not only that I know your innocence (of which, indeed, it
+ is impossible for any one to be more convinced), but that I must also be
+ acquainted with the real perpetrators of the outrage on this fellow&mdash;if
+ indeed such an outrage has been committed. Is this reasonable, Mr.
+ Osbaldistone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will not allow any appeal to Mr. Osbaldistone, Rashleigh,&rdquo; said the
+ young lady; &ldquo;he does not know, as I do, the incredible extent and accuracy
+ of your information on all points.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As I am a gentleman, you do me more honour than I deserve.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Justice, Rashleigh&mdash;only justice:&mdash;and it is only justice which
+ I expect at your hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a tyrant, Diana,&rdquo; he answered, with a sort of sigh&mdash;&ldquo;a
+ capricious tyrant, and rule your friends with a rod of iron. Still,
+ however, it shall be as you desire. But you ought not to be here&mdash;you
+ know you ought not;&mdash;you must return with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then turning from Diana, who seemed to stand undecided, he came up to me
+ in the most friendly manner, and said, &ldquo;Do not doubt my interest in what
+ regards you, Mr. Osbaldistone. If I leave you just at this moment, it is
+ only to act for your advantage. But you must use your influence with your
+ cousin to return; her presence cannot serve you, and must prejudice
+ herself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I assure you, sir,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;you cannot be more convinced of this
+than I; I have urged Miss Vernon's return as anxiously as she would
+permit me to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have thought on it,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon after a pause, &ldquo;and I will not
+go till I see you safe out of the hands of the Philistines. Cousin
+Rashleigh, I dare say, means well; but he and I know each other well.
+Rashleigh, I will not go;&mdash;I know,&rdquo; she added, in a more soothing tone,
+&ldquo;my being here will give you more motive for speed and exertion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay then, rash, obstinate girl,&rdquo; said Rashleigh; &ldquo;you know but too well
+ to whom you trust;&rdquo; and hastening out of the hall, we heard his horse's
+ feet a minute afterwards in rapid motion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank Heaven he is gone!&rdquo; said Diana. &ldquo;And now let us seek out the
+ Justice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Had we not better call a servant?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, by no means; I know the way to his den&mdash;we must burst on him
+ suddenly&mdash;follow me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I did follow her accordingly, as she tripped up a few gloomy steps,
+ traversed a twilight passage, and entered a sort of ante-room, hung round
+ with old maps, architectural elevations, and genealogical trees. A pair of
+ folding-doors opened from this into Mr. Inglewood's sitting apartment,
+ from which was heard the fag-end of an old ditty, chanted by a voice which
+ had been in its day fit for a jolly bottle-song.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O, in Skipton-in-Craven
+ Is never a haven,
+ But many a day foul weather;
+ And he that would say
+ A pretty girl nay,
+ I wish for his cravat a tether.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heyday!&rdquo; said Miss Vernon, &ldquo;the genial Justice must have dined already&mdash;I
+ did not think it had been so late.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was even so. Mr. Inglewood's appetite having been sharpened by his
+ official investigations, he had antedated his meridian repast, having
+ dined at twelve instead of one o'clock, then the general dining hour in
+ England. The various occurrences of the morning occasioned our arriving
+ some time after this hour, to the Justice the most important of the
+ four-and-twenty, and he had not neglected the interval.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay you here,&rdquo; said Diana. &ldquo;I know the house, and I will call a servant;
+ your sudden appearance might startle the old gentleman even to choking;&rdquo;
+ and she escaped from me, leaving me uncertain whether I ought to advance
+ or retreat. It was impossible for me not to hear some part of what passed
+ within the dinner apartment, and particularly several apologies for
+ declining to sing, expressed in a dejected croaking voice, the tones of
+ which, I conceived, were not entirely new to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not sing, sir? by our Lady! but you must&mdash;What! you have cracked my
+ silver-mounted cocoa-nut of sack, and tell me that you cannot sing!&mdash;Sir,
+ sack will make a cat sing, and speak too; so up with a merry stave, or
+ trundle yourself out of my doors!&mdash;Do you think you are to take up
+ all my valuable time with your d-d declarations, and then tell me you
+ cannot sing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your worship is perfectly in rule,&rdquo; said another voice, which, from its
+ pert conceited accent, might be that of the cleric, &ldquo;and the party must be
+ conformable; he hath <i>canet</i> written on his face in court hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Up with it then,&rdquo; said the Justice, &ldquo;or by St. Christopher, you shall
+ crack the cocoa-nut full of salt-and-water, according to the statute for
+ such effect made and provided.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus exhorted and threatened, my quondam fellow-traveller, for I could no
+ longer doubt that he was the recusant in question, uplifted, with a voice
+ similar to that of a criminal singing his last psalm on the scaffold, a
+ most doleful stave to the following effect:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Good people all, I pray give ear,
+ A woeful story you shall hear,
+ 'Tis of a robber as stout as ever
+ Bade a true man stand and deliver.
+ With his foodle doo fa loodle loo.
+
+ &ldquo;This knave, most worthy of a cord,
+ Being armed with pistol and with sword,
+ 'Twixt Kensington and Brentford then
+ Did boldly stop six honest men.
+ With his foodle doo, etc.
+
+ &ldquo;These honest men did at Brentford dine,
+ Having drank each man his pint of wine,
+ When this bold thief, with many curses,
+ Did say, You dogs, your lives or purses.
+ With his foodle doo,&rdquo; etc.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I question if the honest men, whose misfortune is commemorated in this
+ pathetic ditty, were more startled at the appearance of the bold thief
+ than the songster was at mine; for, tired of waiting for some one to
+ announce me, and finding my situation as a listener rather awkward, I
+ presented myself to the company just as my friend Mr. Morris, for such, it
+ seems, was his name, was uplifting the fifth stave of his doleful ballad.
+ The high tone with which the tune started died away in a quaver of
+ consternation on finding himself so near one whose character he supposed
+ to be little less suspicious than that of the hero of his madrigal, and he
+ remained silent, with a mouth gaping as if I had brought the Gorgon's head
+ in my hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Justice, whose eyes had closed under the influence of the somniferous
+ lullaby of the song, started up in his chair as it suddenly ceased, and
+ stared with wonder at the unexpected addition which the company had
+ received while his organs of sight were in abeyance. The clerk, as I
+ conjectured him to be from his appearance, was also commoved; for, sitting
+ opposite to Mr. Morris, that honest gentleman's terror communicated itself
+ to him, though he wotted not why.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="image-0006" id="image-0006">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/pa104.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Frank at Judge Inglewood's " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ I broke the silence of surprise occasioned by my abrupt entrance.&mdash;&ldquo;My
+ name, Mr. Inglewood, is Francis Osbaldistone; I understand that some
+ scoundrel has brought a complaint before you, charging me with being
+ concerned in a loss which he says he has sustained.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said the Justice, somewhat peevishly, &ldquo;these are matters I never
+ enter upon after dinner;&mdash;there is a time for everything, and a
+ justice of peace must eat as well as other folks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The goodly person of Mr. Inglewood, by the way, seemed by no means to have
+ suffered by any fasts, whether in the service of the law or of religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg pardon for an ill-timed visit, sir; but as my reputation is
+ concerned, and as the dinner appears to be concluded&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not concluded, sir,&rdquo; replied the magistrate; &ldquo;man requires
+ digestion as well as food, and I protest I cannot have benefit from my
+ victuals unless I am allowed two hours of quiet leisure, intermixed with
+ harmless mirth, and a moderate circulation of the bottle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If your honour will forgive me,&rdquo; said Mr. Jobson, who had produced and
+ arranged his writing implements in the brief space that our conversation
+ afforded; &ldquo;as this is a case of felony, and the gentleman seems something
+ impatient, the charge is <i>contra pacem domini regis</i>&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;D&mdash;n <i>dominie regis!</i>&rdquo; said the impatient Justice&mdash;&ldquo;I hope
+ it's no treason to say so; but it's enough to made one mad to be worried
+ in this way. Have I a moment of my life quiet for warrants, orders,
+ directions, acts, bails, bonds, and recognisances?&mdash;I pronounce to
+ you, Mr. Jobson, that I shall send you and the justiceship to the devil
+ one of these days.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your honour will consider the dignity of the office one of the quorum and
+ custos rotulorum, an office of which Sir Edward Coke wisely saith, The
+ whole Christian world hath not the like of it, so it be duly executed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the Justice, partly reconciled by this eulogium on the
+ dignity of his situation, and gulping down the rest of his dissatisfaction
+ in a huge bumper of claret, &ldquo;let us to this gear then, and get rid of it
+ as fast as we can.&mdash;Here you, sir&mdash;you, Morris&mdash;you, knight
+ of the sorrowful countenance&mdash;is this Mr. Francis Osbaldistone the
+ gentleman whom you charge with being art and part of felony?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I, sir?&rdquo; replied Morris, whose scattered wits had hardly yet reassembled
+ themselves; &ldquo;I charge nothing&mdash;I say nothing against the gentleman,&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then we dismiss your complaint, sir, that's all, and a good riddance&mdash;
+ Push about the bottle&mdash;Mr. Osbaldistone, help yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jobson, however, was determined that Morris should not back out of the
+ scrape so easily. &ldquo;What do you mean, Mr. Morris?&mdash;Here is your own
+ declaration&mdash;the ink scarce dried&mdash;and you would retract it in
+ this scandalous manner!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How do I know,&rdquo; whispered the other in a tremulous tone, &ldquo;how many rogues
+ are in the house to back him? I have read of such things in Johnson's
+ Lives of the Highwaymen. I protest the door opens&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it did open, and Diana Vernon entered&mdash;&ldquo;You keep fine order here,
+ Justice&mdash;not a servant to be seen or heard of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said the Justice, starting up with an alacrity which showed that he
+ was not so engrossed by his devotions to Themis or Comus, as to forget
+ what was due to beauty&mdash;&ldquo;Ah, ha! Die Vernon, the heath-bell of
+ Cheviot, and the blossom of the Border, come to see how the old bachelor
+ keeps house? Art welcome, girl, as flowers in May.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A fine, open, hospitable house you do keep, Justice, that must be allowed&mdash;not
+ a soul to answer a visitor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, the knaves! they reckoned themselves secure of me for a couple of
+ hours&mdash;But why did you not come earlier?&mdash;Your cousin Rashleigh
+ dined here, and ran away like a poltroon after the first bottle was out&mdash;But
+ you have not dined&mdash;we'll have something nice and ladylike&mdash;sweet
+ and pretty like yourself, tossed up in a trice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I may eat a crust in the ante-room before I set out,&rdquo; answered Miss
+ Vernon&mdash;&ldquo;I have had a long ride this morning; but I can't stay long,
+ Justice&mdash;I came with my cousin, Frank Osbaldistone, there, and I must
+ show him the way back again to the Hall, or he'll lose himself in the
+ wolds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whew! sits the wind in that quarter?&rdquo; inquired the Justice&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;She showed him the way, she showed him the way,
+ She showed him the way to woo.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ What! no luck for old fellows, then, my sweet bud of the wilderness?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None whatever, Squire Inglewood; but if you will be a good kind Justice,
+ and despatch young Frank's business, and let us canter home again, I'll
+ bring my uncle to dine with you next week, and we'll expect merry doings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you shall find them, my pearl of the Tyne&mdash;Zookers, lass, I
+ never envy these young fellows their rides and scampers, unless when you
+ come across me. But I must not keep you just now, I suppose?&mdash;I am
+ quite satisfied with Mr. Francis Osbaldistone's explanation&mdash;here has
+ been some mistake, which can be cleared at greater leisure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, sir,&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;but I have not heard the nature of the
+ accusation yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, sir,&rdquo; said the clerk, who, at the appearance of Miss Vernon, had
+ given up the matter in despair, but who picked up courage to press farther
+ investigation on finding himself supported from a quarter whence assuredly
+ he expected no backing&mdash;&ldquo;Yes, sir, and Dalton saith, That he who is
+ apprehended as a felon shall not be discharged upon any man's discretion,
+ but shall be held either to bail or commitment, paying to the clerk of the
+ peace the usual fees for recognisance or commitment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Justice, thus goaded on, gave me at length a few words of explanation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems the tricks which I had played to this man Morris had made a
+ strong impression on his imagination; for I found they had been arrayed
+ against me in his evidence, with all the exaggerations which a timorous
+ and heated imagination could suggest. It appeared also, that on the day he
+ parted from me, he had been stopped on a solitary spot and eased of his
+ beloved travelling-companion, the portmanteau, by two men, well mounted
+ and armed, having their faces covered with vizards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of them, he conceived, had much of my shape and air, and in a
+ whispering conversation which took place betwixt the freebooters, he heard
+ the other apply to him the name of Osbaldistone. The declaration farther
+ set forth, that upon inquiring into the principles of the family so named,
+ he, the said declarant, was informed that they were of the worst
+ description, the family, in all its members, having been Papists and
+ Jacobites, as he was given to understand by the dissenting clergyman at
+ whose house he stopped after his rencontre, since the days of William the
+ Conqueror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon all and each of these weighty reasons, he charged me with being
+ accessory to the felony committed upon his person; he, the said declarant,
+ then travelling in the special employment of Government, and having charge
+ of certain important papers, and also a large sum in specie, to be paid
+ over, according to his instructions, to certain persons of official trust
+ and importance in Scotland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having heard this extraordinary accusation, I replied to it, that the
+ circumstances on which it was founded were such as could warrant no
+ justice, or magistrate, in any attempt on my personal liberty. I admitted
+ that I had practised a little upon the terrors of Mr. Morris, while we
+ travelled together, but in such trifling particulars as could have excited
+ apprehension in no one who was one whit less timorous and jealous than
+ himself. But I added, that I had never seen him since we parted, and if
+ that which he feared had really come upon him, I was in nowise accessory
+ to an action so unworthy of my character and station in life. That one of
+ the robbers was called Osbaldistone, or that such a name was mentioned in
+ the course of the conversation betwixt them, was a trifling circumstance,
+ to which no weight was due. And concerning the disaffection alleged
+ against me, I was willing to prove, to the satisfaction of the Justice,
+ the clerk, and even the witness himself, that I was of the same persuasion
+ as his friend the dissenting clergyman; had been educated as a good
+ subject in the principles of the Revolution, and as such now demanded the
+ personal protection of the laws which had been assured by that great
+ event.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Justice fidgeted, took snuff, and seemed considerably embarrassed,
+ while Mr. Attorney Jobson, with all the volubility of his profession, ran
+ over the statute of the 34 Edward III., by which justices of the peace are
+ allowed to arrest all those whom they find by indictment or suspicion, and
+ to put them into prison. The rogue even turned my own admissions against
+ me, alleging, &ldquo;that since I had confessedly, upon my own showing, assumed
+ the bearing or deportment of a robber or malefactor, I had voluntarily
+ subjected myself to the suspicions of which I complained, and brought
+ myself within the compass of the act, having wilfully clothed my conduct
+ with all the colour and livery of guilt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I combated both his arguments and his jargon with much indignation and
+ scorn, and observed, &ldquo;That I should, if necessary, produce the bail of my
+ relations, which I conceived could not be refused, without subjecting the
+ magistrate in a misdemeanour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, my good sir&mdash;pardon me,&rdquo; said the insatiable clerk; &ldquo;this
+ is a case in which neither bail nor mainprize can be received, the felon
+ who is liable to be committed on heavy grounds of suspicion, not being
+ replevisable under the statute of the 3d of King Edward, there being in
+ that act an express exception of such as be charged of commandment, or
+ force, and aid of felony done;&rdquo; and he hinted that his worship would do
+ well to remember that such were no way replevisable by common writ, nor
+ without writ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this period of the conversation a servant entered, and delivered a
+ letter to Mr. Jobson. He had no sooner run it hastily over, than he
+ exclaimed, with the air of one who wished to appear much vexed at the
+ interruption, and felt the consequence attached to a man of multifarious
+ avocations&mdash;&ldquo;Good God!&mdash;why, at this rate, I shall have neither
+ time to attend to the public concerns nor my own&mdash;no rest&mdash;no
+ quiet&mdash;I wish to Heaven another gentleman in our line would settle
+ here!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God forbid!&rdquo; said the Justice in a tone of <i>sotto-voce</i> deprecation;
+ &ldquo;some of us have enough of one of the tribe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is a matter of life and death, if your worship pleases.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In God's name! no more justice business, I hope,&rdquo; said the alarmed
+ magistrate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No&mdash;no,&rdquo; replied Mr. Jobson, very consequentially; &ldquo;old Gaffer
+ Rutledge of Grime's-hill is subpoenaed for the next world; he has sent an
+ express for Dr. Kill-down to put in bail&mdash;another for me to arrange
+ his worldly affairs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Away with you, then,&rdquo; said Mr. Inglewood, hastily; &ldquo;his may not be a
+ replevisable case under the statute, you know, or Mr. Justice Death may
+ not like the doctor for a <i>main pernor,</i> or bailsman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet,&rdquo; said Jobson, lingering as he moved towards the door, &ldquo;if my
+ presence here be necessary&mdash;I could make out the warrant for
+ committal in a moment, and the constable is below&mdash;And you have
+ heard,&rdquo; he said, lowering his voice, &ldquo;Mr. Rashleigh's opinion&rdquo;&mdash;the
+ rest was lost in a whisper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Justice replied aloud, &ldquo;I tell thee no, man, no&mdash;we'll do nought
+ till thou return, man; 'tis but a four-mile ride&mdash;Come, push the
+ bottle, Mr. Morris&mdash;Don't be cast down, Mr. Osbaldistone&mdash;And
+ you, my rose of the wilderness&mdash;one cup of claret to refresh the
+ bloom of your cheeks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Diana started, as if from a reverie, in which she appeared to have been
+ plunged while we held this discussion. &ldquo;No, Justice&mdash;I should be
+ afraid of transferring the bloom to a part of my face where it would show
+ to little advantage; but I will pledge you in a cooler beverage;&rdquo; and
+ filling a glass with water, she drank it hastily, while her hurried manner
+ belied her assumed gaiety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had not much leisure to make remarks upon her demeanour, however, being
+ full of vexation at the interference of fresh obstacles to an instant
+ examination of the disgraceful and impertinent charge which was brought
+ against me. But there was no moving the Justice to take the matter up in
+ absence of his clerk, an incident which gave him apparently as much
+ pleasure as a holiday to a schoolboy. He persisted in his endeavours to
+ inspire jollity into a company, the individuals of which, whether
+ considered with reference to each other, or to their respective
+ situations, were by no means inclined to mirth. &ldquo;Come, Master Morris,
+ you're not the first man that's been robbed, I trow&mdash;grieving ne'er
+ brought back loss, man. And you, Mr. Frank Osbaldistone, are not the first
+ bully-boy that has said stand to a true man. There was Jack Winterfield,
+ in my young days, kept the best company in the land&mdash;at horse-races
+ and cock-fights who but he&mdash;hand and glove was I with Jack. Push the
+ bottle, Mr. Morris, it's dry talking&mdash;Many quart bumpers have I
+ cracked, and thrown many a merry main with poor Jack&mdash;good family&mdash;ready
+ wit&mdash;quick eye&mdash;as honest a fellow, barring the deed he died for&mdash;we'll
+ drink to his memory, gentlemen&mdash;Poor Jack Winterfield&mdash;And since
+ we talk of him, and of those sort of things, and since that d&mdash;d
+ clerk of mine has taken his gibberish elsewhere, and since we're snug
+ among ourselves, Mr. Osbaldistone, if you will have my best advice, I
+ would take up this matter&mdash;the law's hard&mdash;very severe&mdash;hanged
+ poor Jack Winterfield at York, despite family connections and great
+ interest, all for easing a fat west-country grazier of the price of a few
+ beasts&mdash;Now, here is honest Mr. Morris, has been frightened, and so
+ forth&mdash;D&mdash;n it, man, let the poor fellow have back his
+ portmanteau, and end the frolic at once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morris's eyes brightened up at this suggestion, and he began to hesitate
+ forth an assurance that he thirsted for no man's blood, when I cut the
+ proposed accommodation short, by resenting the Justice's suggestion as an
+ insult, that went directly to suppose me guilty of the very crime which I
+ had come to his house with the express intention of disavowing. We were in
+ this awkward predicament when a servant, opening the door, announced, &ldquo;A
+ strange gentleman to wait upon his honour;&rdquo; and the party whom he thus
+ described entered the room without farther ceremony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="image-0007" id="image-0007">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/pa112.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Die Vernon at Judge Inglewood's " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0009" id="linkCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER NINTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ One of the thieves come back again! I'll stand close,
+ He dares not wrong me now, so near the house,
+ And call in vain 'tis, till I see him offer it.
+ The Widow.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A stranger!&rdquo; echoed the Justice&mdash;&ldquo;not upon business, I trust, for
+ I'll be&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His protestation was cut short by the answer of the man himself. &ldquo;My
+ business is of a nature somewhat onerous and particular,&rdquo; said my
+ acquaintance, Mr. Campbell&mdash;for it was he, the very Scotchman whom I
+ had seen at Northallerton&mdash;&ldquo;and I must solicit your honour to give
+ instant and heedful consideration to it.&mdash;I believe, Mr. Morris,&rdquo; he
+ added, fixing his eye on that person with a look of peculiar firmness and
+ almost ferocity&mdash;&ldquo;I believe ye ken brawly what I am&mdash;I believe
+ ye cannot have forgotten what passed at our last meeting on the road?&rdquo;
+ Morris's jaw dropped&mdash;his countenance became the colour of tallow&mdash;his
+ teeth chattered, and he gave visible signs of the utmost consternation.
+ &ldquo;Take heart of grace, man,&rdquo; said Campbell, &ldquo;and dinna sit clattering your
+ jaws there like a pair of castanets! I think there can be nae difficulty
+ in your telling Mr. Justice, that ye have seen me of yore, and ken me to
+ be a cavalier of fortune, and a man of honour. Ye ken fu' weel ye will be
+ some time resident in my vicinity, when I may have the power, as I will
+ possess the inclination, to do you as good a turn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir&mdash;sir&mdash;I believe you to be a man of honour, and, as you say,
+ a man of fortune. Yes, Mr. Inglewood,&rdquo; he added, clearing his voice, &ldquo;I
+ really believe this gentleman to be so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what are this gentleman's commands with me?&rdquo; said the Justice,
+ somewhat peevishly. &ldquo;One man introduces another, like the rhymes in the
+ 'house that Jack built,' and I get company without either peace or
+ conversation!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Both shall be yours, sir,&rdquo; answered Campbell, &ldquo;in a brief period of time.
+ I come to release your mind from a piece of troublesome duty, not to make
+ increment to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Body o' me! then you are welcome as ever Scot was to England, and that's
+ not saying much. But get on, man&mdash;let's hear what you have got to say
+ at once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I presume, this gentleman,&rdquo; continued the North Briton, &ldquo;told you there
+ was a person of the name of Campbell with him, when he had the mischance
+ to lose his valise?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has not mentioned such a name, from beginning to end of the matter,&rdquo;
+ said the Justice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! I conceive&mdash;I conceive,&rdquo; replied Mr. Campbell;&mdash;&ldquo;Mr. Morris
+ was kindly afeared of committing a stranger into collision wi' the
+ judicial forms of the country; but as I understand my evidence is
+ necessary to the compurgation of one honest gentleman here, Mr. Francis
+ Osbaldistone, wha has been most unjustly suspected, I will dispense with
+ the precaution. Ye will therefore&rdquo; (he added addressing Morris with the
+ same determined look and accent) &ldquo;please tell Mr. Justice Inglewood,
+ whether we did not travel several miles together on the road, in
+ consequence of your own anxious request and suggestion, reiterated ance
+ and again, baith on the evening that we were at Northallerton, and there
+ declined by me, but afterwards accepted, when I overtook ye on the road
+ near Cloberry Allers, and was prevailed on by you to resign my ain
+ intentions of proceeding to Rothbury; and, for my misfortune, to accompany
+ you on your proposed route.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a melancholy truth,&rdquo; answered Morris, holding down his head, as he
+ gave this general assent to the long and leading question which Campbell
+ put to him, and seemed to acquiesce in the statement it contained with
+ rueful docility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I presume you can also asseverate to his worship, that no man is
+ better qualified than I am to bear testimony in this case, seeing that I
+ was by you, and near you, constantly during the whole occurrence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No man better qualified, certainly,&rdquo; said Morris, with a deep and
+ embarrassed sigh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And why the devil did you not assist him, then,&rdquo; said the Justice,
+ &ldquo;since, by Mr. Morris's account, there were but two robbers; so you were
+ two to two, and you are both stout likely men?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, if it please your worship,&rdquo; said Campbell, &ldquo;I have been all my life
+ a man of peace and quietness, noways given to broils or batteries. Mr.
+ Morris, who belongs, as I understand, or hath belonged, to his Majesty's
+ army, might have used his pleasure in resistance, he travelling, as I also
+ understand, with a great charge of treasure; but, for me, who had but my
+ own small peculiar to defend, and who am, moreover, a man of a pacific
+ occupation, I was unwilling to commit myself to hazard in the matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I looked at Campbell as he muttered these words, and never recollect to
+ have seen a more singular contrast than that between the strong daring
+ sternness expressed in his harsh features, and the air of composed
+ meekness and simplicity which his language assumed. There was even a
+ slight ironical smile lurking about the corners of his mouth, which
+ seemed, involuntarily as it were, to intimate his disdain of the quiet and
+ peaceful character which he thought proper to assume, and which led me to
+ entertain strange suspicions that his concern in the violence done to
+ Morris had been something very different from that of a fellow-sufferer,
+ or even of a mere spectator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps some suspicious crossed the Justice's mind at the moment, for he
+ exclaimed, as if by way of ejaculation, &ldquo;Body o' me! but this is a strange
+ story.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The North Briton seemed to guess at what was passing in his mind; for he
+ went on, with a change of manner and tone, dismissing from his countenance
+ some part of the hypocritical affectation of humility which had made him
+ obnoxious to suspicion, and saying, with a more frank and unconstrained
+ air, &ldquo;To say the truth, I am just ane o' those canny folks wha care not to
+ fight but when they hae gotten something to fight for, which did not
+ chance to be my predicament when I fell in wi' these loons. But that your
+ worship may know that I am a person of good fame and character, please to
+ cast your eye over that billet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Inglewood took the paper from his hand, and read, half aloud, &ldquo;These
+ are to certify, that the bearer, Robert Campbell of&mdash;of some place
+ which I cannot pronounce,&rdquo; interjected the Justice&mdash;&ldquo;is a person of
+ good lineage, and peaceable demeanour, travelling towards England on his
+ own proper affairs, &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c. Given under our hand, at our
+ Castle of Inver&mdash;Invera&mdash;rara&mdash;Argyle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A slight testimonial, sir, which I thought fit to impetrate from that
+ worthy nobleman&rdquo; (here he raised his hand to his head, as if to touch his
+ hat), &ldquo;MacCallum More.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;MacCallum who, sir?&rdquo; said the Justice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whom the Southern call the Duke of Argyle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know the Duke of Argyle very well to be a nobleman of great worth and
+ distinction, and a true lover of his country. I was one of those that
+ stood by him in 1714, when he unhorsed the Duke of Marlborough out of his
+ command. I wish we had more noblemen like him. He was an honest Tory in
+ those days, and hand and glove with Ormond. And he has acceded to the
+ present Government, as I have done myself, for the peace and quiet of his
+ country; for I cannot presume that great man to have been actuated, as
+ violent folks pretend, with the fear of losing his places and regiment.
+ His testimonial, as you call it, Mr. Campbell, is perfectly satisfactory;
+ and now, what have you got to say to this matter of the robbery?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Briefly this, if it please your worship,&mdash;that Mr. Morris might as
+ weel charge it against the babe yet to be born, or against myself even, as
+ against this young gentleman, Mr. Osbaldistone; for I am not only free to
+ depone that the person whom he took for him was a shorter man, and a
+ thicker man, but also, for I chanced to obtain a glisk of his visage, as
+ his fause-face slipped aside, that he was a man of other features and
+ complexion than those of this young gentleman, Mr. Osbaldistone. And I
+ believe,&rdquo; he added, turning round with a natural, yet somewhat sterner
+ air, to Mr. Morris, &ldquo;that the gentleman will allow I had better
+ opportunity to take cognisance wha were present on that occasion than he,
+ being, I believe, much the cooler o' the twa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I agree to it, sir&mdash;I agree to it perfectly,&rdquo; said Morris, shrinking
+ back as Campbell moved his chair towards him to fortify his appeal&mdash;&ldquo;And
+ I incline, sir,&rdquo; he added, addressing Mr. Inglewood, &ldquo;to retract my
+ information as to Mr. Osbaldistone; and I request, sir, you will permit
+ him, sir, to go about his business, and me to go about mine also; your
+ worship may have business to settle with Mr. Campbell, and I am rather in
+ haste to be gone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, there go the declarations,&rdquo; said the Justice, throwing them into
+ the fire&mdash;&ldquo;And now you are at perfect liberty, Mr Osbaldistone. And
+ you, Mr. Morris, are set quite at your ease.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said Campbell, eyeing Morris as he assented with a rueful grin to
+ the Justice's observations, &ldquo;much like the ease of a tod under a pair of
+ harrows&mdash;But fear nothing, Mr. Morris; you and I maun leave the house
+ thegither. I will see you safe&mdash;I hope you will not doubt my honour,
+ when I say sae&mdash;to the next highway, and then we part company; and if
+ we do not meet as friends in Scotland, it will be your ain fault.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With such a lingering look of terror as the condemned criminal throws,
+ when he is informed that the cart awaits him, Morris arose; but when on
+ his legs, appeared to hesitate. &ldquo;I tell thee, man, fear nothing,&rdquo;
+ reiterated Campbell; &ldquo;I will keep my word with you&mdash;Why, thou sheep's
+ heart, how do ye ken but we may can pick up some speerings of your valise,
+ if ye will be amenable to gude counsel?&mdash;Our horses are ready. Bid
+ the Justice fareweel, man, and show your Southern breeding.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morris, thus exhorted and encouraged, took his leave, under the escort of
+ Mr. Campbell; but, apparently, new scruples and terrors had struck him
+ before they left the house, for I heard Campbell reiterating assurances of
+ safety and protection as they left the ante-room&mdash;&ldquo;By the soul of my
+ body, man, thou'rt as safe as in thy father's kailyard&mdash;Zounds! that
+ a chield wi' sic a black beard should hae nae mair heart than a
+ hen-partridge!&mdash;Come on wi' ye, like a frank fallow, anes and for
+ aye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voices died away, and the subsequent trampling of their horses
+ announced to us that they had left the mansion of Justice Inglewood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The joy which that worthy magistrate received at this easy conclusion of a
+ matter which threatened him with some trouble in his judicial capacity,
+ was somewhat damped by reflection on what his clerk's views of the
+ transaction might be at his return. &ldquo;Now, I shall have Jobson on my
+ shoulders about these d&mdash;d papers&mdash;I doubt I should not have
+ destroyed them, after all&mdash;But hang it! it is only paying his fees,
+ and that will make all smooth&mdash;And now, Miss Die Vernon, though I
+ have liberated all the others, I intend to sign a writ for committing you
+ to the custody of Mother Blakes, my old housekeeper, for the evening, and
+ we will send for my neighbour Mrs. Musgrave, and the Miss Dawkins, and
+ your cousins, and have old Cobs the fiddler, and be as merry as the maids;
+ and Frank Osbaldistone and I will have a carouse that will make us fit
+ company for you in half-an-hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thanks, most worshipful,&rdquo; returned Miss Vernon; &ldquo;but, as matters stand,
+ we must return instantly to Osbaldistone Hall, where they do not know what
+ has become of us, and relieve my uncle of his anxiety on my cousin's
+ account, which is just the same as if one of his own sons were concerned.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe it truly,&rdquo; said the Justice; &ldquo;for when his eldest son, Archie,
+ came to a bad end, in that unlucky affair of Sir John Fenwick's, old
+ Hildebrand used to hollo out his name as readily as any of the remaining
+ six, and then complain that he could not recollect which of his sons had
+ been hanged. So, pray hasten home, and relieve his paternal solicitude,
+ since go you must. But hark thee hither, heath-blossom,&rdquo; he said, pulling
+ her towards him by the hand, and in a good-humoured tone of admonition,
+ &ldquo;another time let the law take its course, without putting your pretty
+ finger into her old musty pie, all full of fragments of law gibberish&mdash;French
+ and dog-Latin&mdash;And, Die, my beauty, let young fellows show each other
+ the way through the moors, in case you should lose your own road, while
+ you are pointing out theirs, my pretty Will o' the Wisp.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this admonition, he saluted and dismissed Miss Vernon, and took an
+ equally kind farewell of me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou seems to be a good tight lad, Mr. Frank, and I remember thy father
+ too&mdash;he was my playfellow at school. Hark thee, lad,&mdash;ride early
+ at night, and don't swagger with chance passengers on the king's highway.
+ What, man! all the king's liege subjects are not bound to understand
+ joking, and it's ill cracking jests on matters of felony. And here's poor
+ Die Vernon too&mdash;in a manner alone and deserted on the face of this
+ wide earth, and left to ride, and run, and scamper, at her own silly
+ pleasure. Thou must be careful of Die, or, egad, I will turn a young
+ fellow again on purpose, and fight thee myself, although I must own it
+ would be a great deal of trouble. And now, get ye both gone, and leave me
+ to my pipe of tobacco, and my meditations; for what says the song&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Indian leaf doth briefly burn;
+ So doth man's strength to weakness turn
+ The fire of youth extinguished quite,
+ Comes age, like embers, dry and white.
+ Think of this as you take tobacco.&rdquo; *
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ * [The lines here quoted belong to or were altered from a set of verses at
+ one time very popular in England, beginning, <i>Tobacco that is withered
+ quite.</i> In Scotland, the celebrated Ralph Erskine, author of the <i>Gospel
+ Sonnets,</i> published what he called &ldquo;<i>Smoking Spiritualized,</i> in
+ two parts. The first part being an Old Meditation upon Smoking Tobacco.&rdquo;
+ It begins&mdash;*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ This Indian weed now withered quite,
+ Tho' green at noon, cut down at night,
+ Shows thy decay;
+ All flesh is hay.
+ Thus thank, and smoke tobacco.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I was much pleased with the gleams of sense and feeling which escaped from
+ the Justice through the vapours of sloth and self-indulgence, assured him
+ of my respect to his admonitions, and took a friendly farewell of the
+ honest magistrate and his hospitable mansion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We found a repast prepared for us in the ante-room, which we partook of
+ slightly, and rejoined the same servant of Sir Hildebrand who had taken
+ our horses at our entrance, and who had been directed, as he informed Miss
+ Vernon, by Mr. Rashleigh, to wait and attend upon us home. We rode a
+ little way in silence, for, to say truth, my mind was too much bewildered
+ with the events of the morning, to permit me to be the first to break it.
+ At length Miss Vernon exclaimed, as if giving vent to her own reflections,
+ &ldquo;Well, Rashleigh is a man to be feared and wondered at, and all but loved;
+ he does whatever he pleases, and makes all others his puppets&mdash;has a
+ player ready to perform every part which he imagines, and an invention and
+ readiness which supply expedients for every emergency.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You think, then,&rdquo; said I, answering rather to her meaning, than to the
+ express words she made use of, &ldquo;that this Mr. Campbell, whose appearance
+ was so opportune, and who trussed up and carried off my accuser as a
+ falcon trusses a partridge, was an agent of Mr. Rashleigh Osbaldistone's?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do guess as much,&rdquo; replied Diana; &ldquo;and shrewdly suspect, moreover, that
+ he would hardly have appeared so very much in the nick of time, if I had
+ not happened to meet Rashleigh in the hall at the Justice's.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In that case, my thanks are chiefly due to you, my fair preserver.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To be sure they are,&rdquo; returned Diana; &ldquo;and pray, suppose them paid, and
+ accepted with a gracious smile, for I do not care to be troubled with
+ hearing them in good earnest, and am much more likely to yawn than to
+ behave becoming. In short, Mr. Frank, I wished to serve you, and I have
+ fortunately been able to do so, and have only one favour to ask in return,
+ and that is, that you will say no more about it.&mdash;But who comes here
+ to meet us, 'bloody with spurring, fiery-red with haste?' It is the
+ subordinate man of law, I think&mdash;no less than Mr. Joseph Jobson.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Mr. Joseph Jobson it proved to be, in great haste, and, as it speedily
+ appeared, in most extreme bad humour. He came up to us, and stopped his
+ horse, as we were about to pass with a slight salutation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So, sir&mdash;so, Miss Vernon&mdash;ay, I see well enough how it is&mdash;bail
+ put in during my absence, I suppose&mdash;I should like to know who drew
+ the recognisance, that's all. If his worship uses this form of procedure
+ often, I advise him to get another clerk, that's all, for I shall
+ certainly demit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Or suppose he get this present clerk stitched to his sleeve, Mr. Jobson,&rdquo;
+ said Diana; &ldquo;would not that do as well? And pray, how does Farmer
+ Rutledge, Mr. Jobson? I hope you found him able to sign, seal, and
+ deliver?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This question seemed greatly to increase the wrath of the man of law. He
+ looked at Miss Vernon with such an air of spite and resentment, as laid me
+ under a strong temptation to knock him off his horse with the butt-end of
+ my whip, which I only suppressed in consideration of his insignificance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Farmer Rutledge, ma'am?&rdquo; said the clerk, as soon as his indignation
+ permitted him to articulate, &ldquo;Farmer Rutledge is in as handsome enjoyment
+ of his health as you are&mdash;it's all a bam, ma'am&mdash;all a bamboozle
+ and a bite, that affair of his illness; and if you did not know as much
+ before, you know it now, ma'am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;La you there now!&rdquo; replied Miss Vernon, with an affectation of extreme
+ and simple wonder, &ldquo;sure you don't say so, Mr. Jobson?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I <i>do</i> say so, ma'am,&rdquo; rejoined the incensed scribe; &ldquo;and
+ moreover I say, that the old miserly clod-breaker called me pettifogger&mdash;pettifogger,
+ ma'am&mdash;and said I came to hunt for a job, ma'am&mdash;which I have no
+ more right to have said to me than any other gentleman of my profession,
+ ma'am&mdash;especially as I am clerk to the peace, having and holding said
+ office under <i>Trigesimo Septimo Henrici Octavi</i> and <i>Primo
+ Gulielmi,</i> the first of King William, ma'am, of glorious and immortal
+ memory&mdash;our immortal deliverer from papists and pretenders, and
+ wooden shoes and warming pans, Miss Vernon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sad things, these wooden shoes and warming pans,&rdquo; retorted the young
+ lady, who seemed to take pleasure in augmenting his wrath;&mdash;&ldquo;and it
+ is a comfort you don't seem to want a warming pan at present, Mr. Jobson.
+ I am afraid Gaffer Rutledge has not confined his incivility to language&mdash;Are
+ you sure he did not give you a beating?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beating, ma'am!&mdash;no&rdquo;&mdash;(very shortly)&mdash;&ldquo;no man alive shall
+ beat me, I promise you, ma'am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is according as you happen to merit, sir,&rdquo; said I: &ldquo;for your mode of
+ speaking to this young lady is so unbecoming, that, if you do not change
+ your tone, I shall think it worth while to chastise you myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Chastise, sir? and&mdash;me, sir?&mdash;Do you know whom you speak to,
+ sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, sir,&rdquo; I replied; &ldquo;you say yourself you are clerk of peace to the
+ county; and Gaffer Rutledge says you are a pettifogger; and in neither
+ capacity are you entitled to be impertinent to a young lady of fashion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Vernon laid her hand on my arm, and exclaimed, &ldquo;Come, Mr.
+ Osbaldistone, I will have no assaults and battery on Mr. Jobson; I am not
+ in sufficient charity with him to permit a single touch of your whip&mdash;why,
+ he would live on it for a term at least. Besides, you have already hurt
+ his feelings sufficiently&mdash;you have called him impertinent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't value his language, Miss,&rdquo; said the clerk, somewhat crestfallen:
+ &ldquo;besides, impertinent is not an actionable word; but pettifogger is
+ slander in the highest degree, and that I will make Gaffer Rutledge know
+ to his cost, and all who maliciously repeat the same, to the breach of the
+ public peace, and the taking away of my private good name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind that, Mr. Jobson,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon; &ldquo;you know, where there is
+ nothing, your own law allows that the king himself must lose his rights;
+ and for the taking away of your good name, I pity the poor fellow who gets
+ it, and wish you joy of losing it with all my heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well, ma'am&mdash;good evening, ma'am&mdash;I have no more to say&mdash;only
+ there are laws against papists, which it would be well for the land were
+ they better executed. There's third and fourth Edward VI., of antiphoners,
+ missals, grailes, professionals, manuals, legends, pies, portuasses, and
+ those that have such trinkets in their possession, Miss Vernon&mdash;and
+ there's summoning of papists to take the oaths&mdash;and there are popish
+ recusant convicts under the first of his present Majesty&mdash;ay, and
+ there are penalties for hearing mass&mdash;See twenty-third of Queen
+ Elizabeth, and third James First, chapter twenty-fifth. And there are
+ estates to be registered, and deeds and wills to be enrolled, and double
+ taxes to be made, according to the acts in that case made and provided&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See the new edition of the Statutes at Large, published under the careful
+ revision of Joseph Jobson, Gent., Clerk of the Peace,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Also, and above all,&rdquo; continued Jobson,&mdash;&ldquo;for I speak to your
+ warning&mdash;you, Diana Vernon, spinstress, not being a <i>femme
+ couverte,</i> and being a convict popish recusant, are bound to repair to
+ your own dwelling, and that by the nearest way, under penalty of being
+ held felon to the king&mdash;and diligently to seek for passage at common
+ ferries, and to tarry there but one ebb and flood; and unless you can have
+ it in such places, to walk every day into the water up to the knees,
+ assaying to pass over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A sort of Protestant penance for my Catholic errors, I suppose,&rdquo; said
+ Miss Vernon, laughing.&mdash;&ldquo;Well, I thank you for the information, Mr.
+ Jobson, and will hie me home as fast as I can, and be a better housekeeper
+ in time coming. Good-night, my dear Mr. Jobson, thou mirror of clerical
+ courtesy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good-night, ma'am, and remember the law is not to be trifled with.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And we rode on our separate ways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There he goes for a troublesome mischief-making tool,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon,
+ as she gave a glance after him; &ldquo;it is hard that persons of birth and rank
+ and estate should be subjected to the official impertinence of such a
+ paltry pickthank as that, merely for believing as the whole world believed
+ not much above a hundred years ago&mdash;for certainly our Catholic Faith
+ has the advantage of antiquity at least.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was much tempted to have broken the rascal's head,&rdquo; I replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would have acted very like a hasty young man,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon; &ldquo;and
+ yet, had my own hand been an ounce heavier than it is, I think I should
+ have laid its weight upon him. Well, it does not signify complaining, but
+ there are three things for which I am much to be pitied, if any one
+ thought it worth while to waste any compassion upon me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what are these three things, Miss Vernon, may I ask?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will you promise me your deepest sympathy, if I tell you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly;&mdash;can you doubt it?&rdquo; I replied, closing my horse nearer to
+ hers as I spoke, with an expression of interest which I did not attempt to
+ disguise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it is very seducing to be pitied, after all; so here are my three
+ grievances: In the first place, I am a girl, and not a young fellow, and
+ would be shut up in a mad-house if I did half the things that I have a
+ mind to;&mdash;and that, if I had your happy prerogative of acting as you
+ list, would make all the world mad with imitating and applauding me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't quite afford you the sympathy you expect upon this score,&rdquo; I
+ replied; &ldquo;the misfortune is so general, that it belongs to one half of the
+ species; and the other half&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are so much better cared for, that they are jealous of their
+ prerogatives,&rdquo; interrupted Miss Vernon&mdash;&ldquo;I forgot you were a party
+ interested. Nay,&rdquo; she said, as I was going to speak, &ldquo;that soft smile is
+ intended to be the preface of a very pretty compliment respecting the
+ peculiar advantages which Die Vernon's friends and kinsmen enjoy, by her
+ being born one of their Helots; but spare me the utterance, my good
+ friend, and let us try whether we shall agree better on the second count
+ of my indictment against fortune, as that quill-driving puppy would call
+ it. I belong to an oppressed sect and antiquated religion, and, instead of
+ getting credit for my devotion, as is due to all good girls beside, my
+ kind friend, Justice Inglewood, may send me to the house of correction,
+ merely for worshipping God in the way of my ancestors, and say, as old
+ Pembroke did to the Abbess of Wilton,* when he usurped her convent and
+ establishment, 'Go spin, you jade,&mdash;Go spin.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Note F. The Abbess of Wilton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is not a cureless evil,&rdquo; said I gravely. &ldquo;Consult some of our
+ learned divines, or consult your own excellent understanding, Miss Vernon;
+ and surely the particulars in which our religious creed differs from that
+ in which you have been educated&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; said Diana, placing her fore-finger on her mouth,&mdash;&ldquo;Hush! no
+ more of that. Forsake the faith of my gallant fathers! I would as soon,
+ were I a man, forsake their banner when the tide of battle pressed hardest
+ against it, and turn, like a hireling recreant, to join the victorious
+ enemy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I honour your spirit, Miss Vernon; and as to the inconveniences to which
+ it exposes you, I can only say, that wounds sustained for the sake of
+ conscience carry their own balsam with the blow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay; but they are fretful and irritating, for all that. But I see, hard of
+ heart as you are, my chance of beating hemp, or drawing out flax into
+ marvellous coarse thread, affects you as little as my condemnation to coif
+ and pinners, instead of beaver and cockade; so I will spare myself the
+ fruitless pains of telling my third cause of vexation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my dear Miss Vernon, do not withdraw your confidence, and I will
+ promise you, that the threefold sympathy due to your very unusual causes
+ of distress shall be all duly and truly paid to account of the third,
+ providing you assure me, that it is one which you neither share with all
+ womankind, nor even with every Catholic in England, who, God bless you,
+ are still a sect more numerous than we Protestants, in our zeal for church
+ and state, would desire them to be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is indeed,&rdquo; said Diana, with a manner greatly altered, and more
+ serious than I had yet seen her assume, &ldquo;a misfortune that well merits
+ compassion. I am by nature, as you may easily observe, of a frank and
+ unreserved disposition&mdash;a plain true-hearted girl, who would
+ willingly act openly and honestly by the whole world, and yet fate has
+ involved me in such a series of nets and toils, and entanglements, that I
+ dare hardly speak a word for fear of consequences&mdash;not to myself, but
+ to others.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is indeed a misfortune, Miss Vernon, which I do most sincerely
+ compassionate, but which I should hardly have anticipated.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, Mr. Osbaldistone, if you but knew&mdash;if any one knew, what
+ difficulty I sometimes find in hiding an aching heart with a smooth brow,
+ you would indeed pity me. I do wrong, perhaps, in speaking to you even
+ thus far on my own situation; but you are a young man of sense and
+ penetration&mdash;you cannot but long to ask me a hundred questions on the
+ events of this day&mdash;on the share which Rashleigh has in your
+ deliverance from this petty scrape&mdash;upon many other points which
+ cannot but excite your attention; and I cannot bring myself to answer with
+ the necessary falsehood and finesse&mdash;I should do it awkwardly, and
+ lose your good opinion, if I have any share of it, as well as my own. It
+ is best to say at once, Ask me no questions,&mdash;I have it not in my
+ power to reply to them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Vernon spoke these words with a tone of feeling which could not but
+ make a corresponding impression upon me. I assured her she had neither to
+ fear my urging her with impertinent questions, nor my misconstruing her
+ declining to answer those which might in themselves be reasonable, or at
+ least natural.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was too much obliged,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;by the interest she had taken in my
+ affairs, to misuse the opportunity her goodness had afforded me of prying
+ into hers&mdash;I only trusted and entreated, that if my services could at
+ any time be useful, she would command them without doubt or hesitation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you&mdash;thank you,&rdquo; she replied; &ldquo;your voice does not ring the
+ cuckoo chime of compliment, but speaks like that of one who knows to what
+ he pledges himself. If&mdash;but it is impossible&mdash;but yet, if an
+ opportunity should occur, I will ask you if you remember this promise; and
+ I assure you, I shall not be angry if I find you have forgotten it, for it
+ is enough that you are sincere in your intentions just now&mdash;much may
+ occur to alter them ere I call upon you, should that moment ever come, to
+ assist Die Vernon, as if you were Die Vernon's brother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if I were Die Vernon's brother,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;there could not be less
+ chance that I should refuse my assistance&mdash;And now I am afraid I must
+ not ask whether Rashleigh was willingly accessory to my deliverance?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not of me; but you may ask it of himself, and depend upon it, he will say
+ <i>yes;</i> for rather than any good action should walk through the world
+ like an unappropriated adjective in an ill-arranged sentence, he is always
+ willing to stand noun substantive to it himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I must not ask whether this Campbell be himself the party who eased
+ Mr. Morris of his portmanteau,&mdash;or whether the letter, which our
+ friend the attorney received, was not a finesse to withdraw him from the
+ scene of action, lest he should have marred the happy event of my
+ deliverance? And I must not ask&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must ask nothing of me,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon; &ldquo;so it is quite in vain to
+ go on putting cases. You are to think just as well of me as if I had
+ answered all these queries, and twenty others besides, as glibly as
+ Rashleigh could have done; and observe, whenever I touch my chin just so,
+ it is a sign that I cannot speak upon the topic which happens to occupy
+ your attention. I must settle signals of correspondence with you, because
+ you are to be my confidant and my counsellor, only you are to know nothing
+ whatever of my affairs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing can be more reasonable,&rdquo; I replied, laughing; &ldquo;and the extent of
+ your confidence will, you may rely upon it, only be equalled by the
+ sagacity of my counsels.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This sort of conversation brought us, in the highest good-humour with each
+ other, to Osbaldistone Hall, where we found the family far advanced in the
+ revels of the evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get some dinner for Mr. Osbaldistone and me in the library,&rdquo; said Miss
+ Vernon to a servant.&mdash;&ldquo;I must have some compassion upon you,&rdquo; she
+ added, turning to me, &ldquo;and provide against your starving in this mansion
+ of brutal abundance; otherwise I am not sure that I should show you my
+ private haunts. This same library is my den&mdash;the only corner of the
+ Hall-house where I am safe from the Ourang-Outangs, my cousins. They never
+ venture there, I suppose for fear the folios should fall down and crack
+ their skulls; for they will never affect their heads in any other way&mdash;So
+ follow me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And I followed through hall and bower, vaulted passage and winding stair,
+ until we reached the room where she had ordered our refreshments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0010" id="linkCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER TENTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ In the wide pile, by others heeded not,
+ Hers was one sacred solitary spot,
+ Whose gloomy aisles and bending shelves contain
+ For moral hunger food, and cures for moral pain.
+ Anonymous.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The library at Osbaldistone Hall was a gloomy room, whose antique oaken
+ shelves bent beneath the weight of the ponderous folios so dear to the
+ seventeenth century, from which, under favour be it spoken, we have
+ distilled matter for our quartos and octavos, and which, once more
+ subjected to the alembic, may, should our sons be yet more frivolous than
+ ourselves, be still farther reduced into duodecimos and pamphlets. The
+ collection was chiefly of the classics, as well foreign as ancient
+ history, and, above all, divinity. It was in wretched order. The priests,
+ who in succession had acted as chaplains at the Hall, were, for many
+ years, the only persons who entered its precincts, until Rashleigh's
+ thirst for reading had led him to disturb the venerable spiders, who had
+ muffled the fronts of the presses with their tapestry. His destination for
+ the church rendered his conduct less absurd in his father's eyes, than if
+ any of his other descendants had betrayed so strange a propensity, and Sir
+ Hildebrand acquiesced in the library receiving some repairs, so as to fit
+ it for a sitting-room. Still an air of dilapidation, as obvious as it was
+ uncomfortable, pervaded the large apartment, and announced the neglect
+ from which the knowledge which its walls contained had not been able to
+ exempt it. The tattered tapestry, the worm-eaten shelves, the huge and
+ clumsy, yet tottering, tables, desks, and chairs, the rusty grate, seldom
+ gladdened by either sea-coal or faggots, intimated the contempt of the
+ lords of Osbaldistone Hall for learning, and for the volumes which record
+ its treasures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You think this place somewhat disconsolate, I suppose?&rdquo; said Diana, as I
+ glanced my eye round the forlorn apartment; &ldquo;but to me it seems like a
+ little paradise, for I call it my own, and fear no intrusion. Rashleigh
+ was joint proprietor with me, while we were friends.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And are you no longer so?&rdquo; was my natural question. Her fore-finger
+ immediately touched her dimpled chin, with an arch look of prohibition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are still <i>allies,</i>&rdquo; she continued, &ldquo;bound, like other
+ confederate powers, by circumstances of mutual interest; but I am afraid,
+ as will happen in other cases, the treaty of alliance has survived the
+ amicable dispositions in which it had its origin. At any rate, we live
+ less together; and when he comes through that door there, I vanish through
+ this door here; and so, having made the discovery that we two were one too
+ many for this apartment, as large as it seems, Rashleigh, whose occasions
+ frequently call him elsewhere, has generously made a cession of his rights
+ in my favour; so that I now endeavour to prosecute alone the studies in
+ which he used formerly to be my guide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what are those studies, if I may presume to ask?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed you may, without the least fear of seeing my fore-finger raised to
+ my chin. Science and history are my principal favourites; but I also study
+ poetry and the classics.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the classics? Do you read them in the original?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unquestionably. Rashleigh, who is no contemptible scholar, taught me
+ Greek and Latin, as well as most of the languages of modern Europe. I
+ assure you there has been some pains taken in my education, although I can
+ neither sew a tucker, nor work cross-stitch, nor make a pudding, nor&mdash;as
+ the vicar's fat wife, with as much truth as elegance, good-will, and
+ politeness, was pleased to say in my behalf&mdash;do any other useful
+ thing in the varsal world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And was this selection of studies Rashleigh's choice, or your own, Miss
+ Vernon?&rdquo; I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Um!&rdquo; said she, as if hesitating to answer my question,&mdash;&ldquo;It's not
+ worth while lifting my finger about, after all. Why, partly his and partly
+ mine. As I learned out of doors to ride a horse, and bridle and saddle him
+ in cue of necessity, and to clear a five-barred gate, and fire a gun
+ without winking, and all other of those masculine accomplishments that my
+ brute cousins run mad after, I wanted, like my rational cousin, to read
+ Greek and Latin within doors, and make my complete approach to the tree of
+ knowledge, which you men-scholars would engross to yourselves, in revenge,
+ I suppose, for our common mother's share in the great original
+ transgression.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And Rashleigh indulged your propensity to learning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, he wished to have me for his scholar, and he could but teach me that
+ which he knew himself&mdash;he was not likely to instruct me in the
+ mysteries of washing lace-ruffles, or hemming cambric handkerchiefs, I
+ suppose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I admit the temptation of getting such a scholar, and have no doubt that
+ it made a weighty consideration on the tutor's part.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, if you begin to investigate Rashleigh's motives, my finger touches my
+ chin once more. I can only be frank where my own are inquired into. But to
+ resume&mdash;he has resigned the library in my favour, and never enters
+ without leave had and obtained; and so I have taken the liberty to make it
+ the place of deposit for some of my own goods and chattels, as you may see
+ by looking round you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg pardon, Miss Vernon, but I really see nothing around these walls
+ which I can distinguish as likely to claim you as mistress.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is, I suppose, because you neither see a shepherd or shepherdess
+ wrought in worsted, and handsomely framed in black ebony, or a stuffed
+ parrot,&mdash;or a breeding-cage, full of canary birds,&mdash;or a
+ housewife-case, broidered with tarnished silver,&mdash;or a toilet-table
+ with a nest of japanned boxes, with as many angles as Christmas
+ minced-pies,&mdash;or a broken-backed spinet,&mdash;or a lute with three
+ strings,&mdash;or rock-work,&mdash;or shell-work,&mdash;or needle-work, or
+ work of any kind,&mdash;or a lap-dog with a litter of blind puppies&mdash;None
+ of these treasures do I possess,&rdquo; she continued, after a pause, in order
+ to recover the breath she had lost in enumerating them&mdash;&ldquo;But there
+ stands the sword of my ancestor Sir Richard Vernon, slain at Shrewsbury,
+ and sorely slandered by a sad fellow called Will Shakspeare, whose
+ Lancastrian partialities, and a certain knack at embodying them, has
+ turned history upside down, or rather inside out;&mdash;and by that
+ redoubted weapon hangs the mail of the still older Vernon, squire to the
+ Black Prince, whose fate is the reverse of his descendant's, since he is
+ more indebted to the bard who took the trouble to celebrate him, for
+ good-will than for talents,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Amiddes the route you may discern one
+ Brave knight, with pipes on shield, ycleped Vernon
+ Like a borne fiend along the plain he thundered,
+ Prest to be carving throtes, while others plundered.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then there is a model of a new martingale, which I invented myself&mdash;a
+ great improvement on the Duke of Newcastle's; and there are the hood and
+ bells of my falcon Cheviot, who spitted himself on a heron's bill at
+ Horsely-moss&mdash;poor Cheviot, there is not a bird on the perches below,
+ but are kites and riflers compared to him; and there is my own light
+ fowling-piece, with an improved firelock; with twenty other treasures,
+ each more valuable than another&mdash;And there, that speaks for itself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She pointed to the carved oak frame of a full-length portrait by Vandyke,
+ on which were inscribed, in Gothic letters, the words <i>Vernon semper
+ viret.</i> I looked at her for explanation. &ldquo;Do you not know,&rdquo; said she,
+ with some surprise, &ldquo;our motto&mdash;the Vernon motto, where,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Like the solemn vice iniquity,
+ We moralise two meanings in one word
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And do you not know our cognisance, the pipes?&rdquo; pointing to the armorial
+ bearings sculptured on the oaken scutcheon, around which the legend was
+ displayed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pipes!&mdash;they look more like penny-whistles&mdash;But, pray, do not
+ be angry with my ignorance,&rdquo; I continued, observing the colour mount to
+ her cheeks, &ldquo;I can mean no affront to your armorial bearings, for I do not
+ even know my own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You an Osbaldistone, and confess so much!&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;Why, Percie,
+ Thornie, John, Dickon&mdash;Wilfred himself, might be your instructor.
+ Even ignorance itself is a plummet over you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With shame I confess it, my dear Miss Vernon, the mysteries couched under
+ the grim hieroglyphics of heraldry are to me as unintelligible as those of
+ the pyramids of Egypt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! is it possible?&mdash;Why, even my uncle reads Gwillym sometimes of
+ a winter night&mdash;Not know the figures of heraldry!&mdash;of what could
+ your father be thinking?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of the figures of arithmetic,&rdquo; I answered; &ldquo;the most insignificant unit
+ of which he holds more highly than all the blazonry of chivalry. But,
+ though I am ignorant to this inexpressible degree, I have knowledge and
+ taste enough to admire that splendid picture, in which I think I can
+ discover a family likeness to you. What ease and dignity in the attitude!&mdash;what
+ richness of colouring&mdash;what breadth and depth of shade!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it really a fine painting?&rdquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have seen many works of the renowned artist,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;but never
+ beheld one more to my liking!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I know as little of pictures as you do of heraldry,&rdquo; replied Miss
+ Vernon; &ldquo;yet I have the advantage of you, because I have always admired
+ the painting without understanding its value.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;While I have neglected pipes and tabors, and all the whimsical
+ combinations of chivalry, still I am informed that they floated in the
+ fields of ancient fame. But you will allow their exterior appearance is
+ not so peculiarly interesting to the uninformed spectator as that of a
+ fine painting.&mdash;Who is the person here represented?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My grandfather. He shared the misfortunes of Charles I., and, I am sorry
+ to add, the excesses of his son. Our patrimonial estate was greatly
+ impaired by his prodigality, and was altogether lost by his successor, my
+ unfortunate father. But peace be with them who have got it!&mdash;it was
+ lost in the cause of loyalty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your father, I presume, suffered in the political dissensions of the
+ period?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He did indeed;&mdash;he lost his all. And hence is his child a dependent
+ orphan&mdash;eating the bread of others&mdash;subjected to their caprices,
+ and compelled to study their inclinations; yet prouder of having had such
+ a father, than if, playing a more prudent but less upright part, he had
+ left me possessor of all the rich and fair baronies which his family once
+ possessed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she thus spoke, the entrance of the servants with dinner cut off all
+ conversation but that of a general nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When our hasty meal was concluded, and the wine placed on the table, the
+ domestic informed us, &ldquo;that Mr. Rashleigh had desired to be told when our
+ dinner was removed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell him,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon, &ldquo;we shall be happy to see him if he will
+ step this way&mdash;place another wineglass and chair, and leave the room.&mdash;
+ You must retire with him when he goes away,&rdquo; she continued, addressing
+ herself to me; &ldquo;even <i>my</i> liberality cannot spare a gentleman above
+ eight hours out of the twenty-four; and I think we have been together for
+ at least that length of time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The old scythe-man has moved so rapidly,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;that I could not
+ count his strides.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; said Miss Vernon, &ldquo;here comes Rashleigh;&rdquo; and she drew off her
+ chair, to which I had approached mine rather closely, so as to place a
+ greater distance between us. A modest tap at the door,&mdash;a gentle
+ manner of opening when invited to enter,&mdash;a studied softness and
+ humility of step and deportment, announced that the education of Rashleigh
+ Osbaldistone at the College of St. Omers accorded well with the ideas I
+ entertained of the manners of an accomplished Jesuit. I need not add,
+ that, as a sound Protestant, these ideas were not the most favourable.
+ &ldquo;Why should you use the ceremony of knocking,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon, &ldquo;when you
+ knew that I was not alone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was spoken with a burst of impatience, as if she had felt that
+ Rashleigh's air of caution and reserve covered some insinuation of
+ impertinent suspicion. &ldquo;You have taught me the form of knocking at this
+ door so perfectly, my fair cousin,&rdquo; answered Rashleigh, without change of
+ voice or manner, &ldquo;that habit has become a second nature.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I prize sincerity more than courtesy, sir, and you know I do,&rdquo; was Miss
+ Vernon's reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Courtesy is a gallant gay, a courtier by name and by profession,&rdquo; replied
+ Rashleigh, &ldquo;and therefore most fit for a lady's bower.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But Sincerity is the true knight,&rdquo; retorted Miss Vernon, &ldquo;and therefore
+ much more welcome, cousin. But to end a debate not over amusing to your
+ stranger kinsman, sit down, Rashleigh, and give Mr. Francis Osbaldistone
+ your countenance to his glass of wine. I have done the honours of the
+ dinner, for the credit of Osbaldistone Hall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rashleigh sate down, and filled his glass, glancing his eye from Diana to
+ me, with an embarrassment which his utmost efforts could not entirely
+ disguise. I thought he appeared to be uncertain concerning the extent of
+ confidence she might have reposed in me, and hastened to lead the
+ conversation into a channel which should sweep away his suspicion that
+ Diana might have betrayed any secrets which rested between them. &ldquo;Miss
+ Vernon,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;Mr. Rashleigh, has recommended me to return my thanks to
+ you for my speedy disengagement from the ridiculous accusation of Morris;
+ and, unjustly fearing my gratitude might not be warm enough to remind me
+ of this duty, she has put my curiosity on its side, by referring me to you
+ for an account, or rather explanation, of the events of the day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed?&rdquo; answered Rashleigh; &ldquo;I should have thought&rdquo; (looking keenly at
+ Miss Vernon) &ldquo;that the lady herself might have stood interpreter;&rdquo; and his
+ eye, reverting from her face, sought mine, as if to search, from the
+ expression of my features, whether Diana's communication had been as
+ narrowly limited as my words had intimated. Miss Vernon retorted his
+ inquisitorial glance with one of decided scorn; while I, uncertain whether
+ to deprecate or resent his obvious suspicion, replied, &ldquo;If it is your
+ pleasure, Mr. Rashleigh, as it has been Miss Vernon's, to leave me in
+ ignorance, I must necessarily submit; but, pray, do not withhold your
+ information from me on the ground of imagining that I have already
+ obtained any on the subject. For I tell you, as a man of honour, I am as
+ ignorant as that picture of anything relating to the events I have
+ witnessed to-day, excepting that I understand from Miss Vernon, that you
+ have been kindly active in my favour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Vernon has overrated my humble efforts,&rdquo; said Rashleigh, &ldquo;though I
+ claim full credit for my zeal. The truth is, that as I galloped back to
+ get some one of our family to join me in becoming your bail, which was the
+ most obvious, or, indeed, I may say, the only way of serving you which
+ occurred to my stupidity, I met the man Cawmil&mdash;Colville&mdash;Campbell,
+ or whatsoever they call him. I had understood from Morris that he was
+ present when the robbery took place, and had the good fortune to prevail
+ on him (with some difficulty, I confess) to tender his evidence in your
+ exculpation&mdash;which I presume was the means of your being released
+ from an unpleasant situation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed?&mdash;I am much your debtor for procuring such a seasonable
+ evidence in my behalf. But I cannot see why (having been, as he said, a
+ fellow-sufferer with Morris) it should have required much trouble to
+ persuade him to step forth and bear evidence, whether to convict the
+ actual robber, or free an innocent person.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do not know the genius of that man's country, sir,&rdquo; answered
+ Rashleigh;&mdash;&ldquo;discretion, prudence, and foresight, are their leading
+ qualities; these are only modified by a narrow-spirited, but yet ardent
+ patriotism, which forms as it were the outmost of the concentric bulwarks
+ with which a Scotchman fortifies himself against all the attacks of a
+ generous philanthropical principle. Surmount this mound, you find an inner
+ and still dearer barrier&mdash;the love of his province, his village, or,
+ most probably, his clan; storm this second obstacle, you have a third&mdash;his
+ attachment to his own family&mdash;his father, mother, sons, daughters,
+ uncles, aunts, and cousins, to the ninth generation. It is within these
+ limits that a Scotchman's social affection expands itself, never reaching
+ those which are outermost, till all means of discharging itself in the
+ interior circles have been exhausted. It is within these circles that his
+ heart throbs, each pulsation being fainter and fainter, till, beyond the
+ widest boundary, it is almost unfelt. And what is worst of all, could you
+ surmount all these concentric outworks, you have an inner citadel, deeper,
+ higher, and more efficient than them all&mdash;a Scotchman's love for
+ himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All this is extremely eloquent and metaphorical, Rashleigh,&rdquo; said Miss
+ Vernon, who listened with unrepressed impatience; &ldquo;there are only two
+ objections to it: first, it is <i>not</i> true; secondly, if true, it is
+ nothing to the purpose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It <i>is</i> true, my fairest Diana,&rdquo; returned Rashleigh; &ldquo;and moreover,
+ it is most instantly to the purpose. It is true, because you cannot deny
+ that I know the country and people intimately, and the character is drawn
+ from deep and accurate consideration&mdash;and it is to the purpose,
+ because it answers Mr. Francis Osbaldistone's question, and shows why this
+ same wary Scotchman, considering our kinsman to be neither his countryman,
+ nor a Campbell, nor his cousin in any of the inextricable combinations by
+ which they extend their pedigree; and, above all, seeing no prospect of
+ personal advantage, but, on the contrary, much hazard of loss of time and
+ delay of business&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With other inconveniences, perhaps, of a nature yet more formidable,&rdquo;
+ interrupted Miss Vernon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of which, doubtless, there might be many,&rdquo; said Rashleigh, continuing in
+ the same tone&mdash;&ldquo;In short, my theory shows why this man, hoping for no
+ advantage, and afraid of some inconvenience, might require a degree of
+ persuasion ere he could be prevailed on to give his testimony in favour of
+ Mr. Osbaldistone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems surprising to me,&rdquo; I observed, &ldquo;that during the glance I cast
+ over the declaration, or whatever it is termed, of Mr. Morris, he should
+ never have mentioned that Campbell was in his company when he met the
+ marauders.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understood from Campbell, that he had taken his solemn promise not to
+ mention that circumstance,&rdquo; replied Rashleigh: &ldquo;his reason for exacting
+ such an engagement you may guess from what I have hinted&mdash;he wished
+ to get back to his own country, undelayed and unembarrassed by any of the
+ judicial inquiries which he would have been under the necessity of
+ attending, had the fact of his being present at the robbery taken air
+ while he was on this side of the Border. But let him once be as distant as
+ the Forth, Morris will, I warrant you, come forth with all he knows about
+ him, and, it may be, a good deal more. Besides, Campbell is a very
+ extensive dealer in cattle, and has often occasion to send great droves
+ into Northumberland; and, when driving such a trade, he would be a great
+ fool to embroil himself with our Northumbrian thieves, than whom no men
+ who live are more vindictive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dare be sworn of that,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon, with a tone which implied
+ something more than a simple acquiescence in the proposition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Still,&rdquo; said I, resuming the subject, &ldquo;allowing the force of the reasons
+ which Campbell might have for desiring that Morris should be silent with
+ regard to his promise when the robbery was committed, I cannot yet see how
+ he could attain such an influence over the man, as to make him suppress
+ his evidence in that particular, at the manifest risk of subjecting his
+ story to discredit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rashleigh agreed with me, that it was very extraordinary, and seemed to
+ regret that he had not questioned the Scotchman more closely on that
+ subject, which he allowed looked extremely mysterious. &ldquo;But,&rdquo; he asked,
+ immediately after this acquiescence, &ldquo;are you very sure the circumstance
+ of Morris's being accompanied by Campbell is really not alluded to in his
+ examination?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I read the paper over hastily,&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;but it is my strong impression
+ that no such circumstance is mentioned;&mdash;at least, it must have been
+ touched on very slightly, since it failed to catch my attention.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, true,&rdquo; answered Rashleigh, forming his own inference while he
+ adopted my words; &ldquo;I incline to think with you, that the circumstance must
+ in reality have been mentioned, but so slightly that it failed to attract
+ your attention. And then, as to Campbell's interest with Morris, I incline
+ to suppose that it must have been gained by playing upon his fears. This
+ chicken-hearted fellow, Morris, is bound, I understand, for Scotland,
+ destined for some little employment under Government; and, possessing the
+ courage of the wrathful dove, or most magnanimous mouse, he may have been
+ afraid to encounter the ill-will of such a kill-cow as Campbell, whose
+ very appearance would be enough to fright him out of his little wits. You
+ observed that Mr. Campbell has at times a keen and animated manner&mdash;something
+ of a martial cast in his tone and bearing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I own,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;that his expression struck me as being occasionally
+ fierce and sinister, and little adapted to his peaceable professions. Has
+ he served in the army?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes&mdash;no&mdash;not, strictly speaking, <i>served;</i> but he has
+ been, I believe, like most of his countrymen, trained to arms. Indeed,
+ among the hills, they carry them from boyhood to the grave. So, if you
+ know anything of your fellow-traveller, you will easily judge, that, going
+ to such a country, he will take cue to avoid a quarrel, if he can help it,
+ with any of the natives. But, come, I see you decline your wine&mdash;and
+ I too am a degenerate Osbaldistone, so far as respects the circulation of
+ the bottle. If you will go to my room, I will hold you a hand at piquet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We rose to take leave of Miss Vernon, who had from time to time
+ suppressed, apparently with difficulty, a strong temptation to break in
+ upon Rashleigh's details. As we were about to leave the room, the
+ smothered fire broke forth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Osbaldistone,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;your own observation will enable you to
+ verify the justice, or injustice, of Rashleigh's suggestions concerning
+ such individuals as Mr. Campbell and Mr. Morris. But, in slandering
+ Scotland, he has borne false witness against a whole country; and I
+ request you will allow no weight to his evidence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;I may find it somewhat difficult to obey your
+ injunction, Miss Vernon; for I must own I was bred up with no very
+ favourable idea of our northern neighbours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Distrust that part of your education, sir,&rdquo; she replied, &ldquo;and let the
+ daughter of a Scotchwoman pray you to respect the land which gave her
+ parent birth, until your own observation has proved them to be unworthy of
+ your good opinion. Preserve your hatred and contempt for dissimulation,
+ baseness, and falsehood, wheresoever they are to be met with. You will
+ find enough of all without leaving England.&mdash;Adieu, gentlemen, I wish
+ you good evening.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And she signed to the door, with the manner of a princess dismissing her
+ train.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We retired to Rashleigh's apartment, where a servant brought us coffee and
+ cards. I had formed my resolution to press Rashleigh no farther on the
+ events of the day. A mystery, and, as I thought, not of a favourable
+ complexion, appeared to hang over his conduct; but to ascertain if my
+ suspicions were just, it was necessary to throw him off his guard. We cut
+ for the deal, and were soon earnestly engaged in our play. I thought I
+ perceived in this trifling for amusement (for the stake which Rashleigh
+ proposed was a mere trifle) something of a fierce and ambitious temper. He
+ seemed perfectly to understand the beautiful game at which he played, but
+ preferred, as it were on principle, the risking bold and precarious
+ strokes to the ordinary rules of play; and neglecting the minor and
+ better-balanced chances of the game, he hazarded everything for the chance
+ of piqueing, repiqueing, or capoting his adversary. So soon as the
+ intervention of a game or two at piquet, like the music between the acts
+ of a drama, had completely interrupted our previous course of
+ conversation, Rashleigh appeared to tire of the game, and the cards were
+ superseded by discourse, in which he assumed the lead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More learned than soundly wise&mdash;better acquainted with men's minds
+ than with the moral principles that ought to regulate them, he had still
+ powers of conversation which I have rarely seen equalled, never excelled.
+ Of this his manner implied some consciousness; at least, it appeared to me
+ that he had studied hard to improve his natural advantages of a melodious
+ voice, fluent and happy expression, apt language, and fervid imagination.
+ He was never loud, never overbearing, never so much occupied with his own
+ thoughts as to outrun either the patience or the comprehension of those he
+ conversed with. His ideas succeeded each other with the gentle but
+ unintermitting flow of a plentiful and bounteous spring; while I have
+ heard those of others, who aimed at distinction in conversation, rush
+ along like the turbid gush from the sluice of a mill-pond, as hurried, and
+ as easily exhausted. It was late at night ere I could part from a
+ companion so fascinating; and, when I gained my own apartment, it cost me
+ no small effort to recall to my mind the character of Rashleigh, such as I
+ had pictured him previous to this <i>tete-a-tete.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So effectual, my dear Tresham, does the sense of being pleased and amused
+ blunt our faculties of perception and discrimination of character, that I
+ can only compare it to the taste of certain fruits, at once luscious and
+ poignant, which renders our palate totally unfit for relishing or
+ distinguishing the viands which are subsequently subjected to its
+ criticism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0011" id="linkCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER ELEVENTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ What gars ye gaunt, my merrymen a'?
+ What gars ye look sae dreary?
+ What gars ye hing your head sae sair
+ In the castle of Balwearie?
+ Old Scotch Ballad.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The next morning chanced to be Sunday, a day peculiarly hard to be got rid
+ of at Osbaldistone Hall; for after the formal religious service of the
+ morning had been performed, at which all the family regularly attended, it
+ was hard to say upon which individual, Rashleigh and Miss Vernon excepted,
+ the fiend of ennui descended with the most abundant outpouring of his
+ spirit. To speak of my yesterday's embarrassment amused Sir Hildebrand for
+ several minutes, and he congratulated me on my deliverance from Morpeth or
+ Hexham jail, as he would have done if I had fallen in attempting to clear
+ a five-barred gate, and got up without hurting myself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hast had a lucky turn, lad; but do na be over venturous again. What, man!
+ the king's road is free to all men, be they Whigs, be they Tories.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On my word, sir, I am innocent of interrupting it; and it is the most
+ provoking thing on earth, that every person will take it for granted that
+ I am accessory to a crime which I despise and detest, and which would,
+ moreover, deservedly forfeit my life to the laws of my country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well, lad; even so be it; I ask no questions&mdash;no man bound to
+ tell on himsell&mdash;that's fair play, or the devil's in't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rashleigh here came to my assistance; but I could not help thinking that
+ his arguments were calculated rather as hints to his father to put on a
+ show of acquiescence in my declaration of innocence, than fully to
+ establish it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In your own house, my dear sir&mdash;and your own nephew&mdash;you will
+ not surely persist in hurting his feelings by seeming to discredit what he
+ is so strongly interested in affirming. No doubt, you are fully deserving
+ of all his confidence, and I am sure, were there anything you could do to
+ assist him in this strange affair, he would have recourse to your
+ goodness. But my cousin Frank has been dismissed as an innocent man, and
+ no one is entitled to suppose him otherwise. For my part, I have not the
+ least doubt of his innocence; and our family honour, I conceive, requires
+ that we should maintain it with tongue and sword against the whole
+ country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rashleigh,&rdquo; said his father, looking fixedly at him, &ldquo;thou art a sly loon&mdash;thou
+ hast ever been too cunning for me, and too cunning for most folks. Have a
+ care thou provena too cunning for thysell&mdash;two faces under one hood
+ is no true heraldry. And since we talk of heraldry, I'll go and read
+ Gwillym.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This resolution he intimated with a yawn, resistless as that of the
+ Goddess in the Dunciad, which was responsively echoed by his giant sons,
+ as they dispersed in quest of the pastimes to which their minds severally
+ inclined them&mdash;Percie to discuss a pot of March beer with the steward
+ in the buttery,&mdash;Thorncliff to cut a pair of cudgels, and fix them in
+ their wicker hilts,&mdash;John to dress May-flies,&mdash;Dickon to play at
+ pitch and toss by himself, his right hand against his left,&mdash;and
+ Wilfred to bite his thumbs and hum himself into a slumber which should
+ last till dinner-time, if possible. Miss Vernon had retired to the
+ library.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rashleigh and I were left alone in the old hall, from which the servants,
+ with their usual bustle and awkwardness, had at length contrived to hurry
+ the remains of our substantial breakfast. I took the opportunity to
+ upbraid him with the manner in which he had spoken of my affair to his
+ father, which I frankly stated was highly offensive to me, as it seemed
+ rather to exhort Sir Hildebrand to conceal his suspicions, than to root
+ them out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, what can I do, my dear friend?&rdquo; replied Rashleigh &ldquo;my father's
+ disposition is so tenacious of suspicions of all kinds, when once they
+ take root (which, to do him justice, does not easily happen), that I have
+ always found it the best way to silence him upon such subjects, instead of
+ arguing with him. Thus I get the better of the weeds which I cannot
+ eradicate, by cutting them over as often as they appear, until at length
+ they die away of themselves. There is neither wisdom nor profit in
+ disputing with such a mind as Sir Hildebrand's, which hardens itself
+ against conviction, and believes in its own inspirations as firmly as we
+ good Catholics do in those of the Holy Father of Rome.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is very hard, though, that I should live in the house of a man, and he
+ a near relation too, who will persist in believing me guilty of a highway
+ robbery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My father's foolish opinion, if one may give that epithet to any opinion
+ of a father's, does not affect your real innocence; and as to the disgrace
+ of the fact, depend on it, that, considered in all its bearings, political
+ as well as moral, Sir Hildebrand regards it as a meritorious action&mdash;a
+ weakening of the enemy&mdash;a spoiling of the Amalekites; and you will
+ stand the higher in his regard for your supposed accession to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I desire no man's regard, Mr. Rashleigh, on such terms as must sink me in
+ my own; and I think these injurious suspicions will afford a very good
+ reason for quitting Osbaldistone Hall, which I shall do whenever I can
+ communicate on the subject with my father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dark countenance of Rashleigh, though little accustomed to betray its
+ master's feelings, exhibited a suppressed smile, which he instantly
+ chastened by a sigh. &ldquo;You are a happy man, Frank&mdash;you go and come, as
+ the wind bloweth where it listeth. With your address, taste, and talents,
+ you will soon find circles where they will be more valued, than amid the
+ dull inmates of this mansion; while I&mdash;&rdquo; he paused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what is there in your lot that can make you or any one envy mine,&mdash;an
+ outcast, as I may almost term myself, from my father's house and favour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, but,&rdquo; answered Rashleigh, &ldquo;consider the gratified sense of
+ independence which you must have attained by a very temporary sacrifice,&mdash;for
+ such I am sure yours will prove to be; consider the power of acting as a
+ free agent, of cultivating your own talents in the way to which your taste
+ determines you, and in which you are well qualified to distinguish
+ yourself. Fame and freedom are cheaply purchased by a few weeks' residence
+ in the North, even though your place of exile be Osbaldistone Hall. A
+ second Ovid in Thrace, you have not his reasons for writing Tristia.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not know,&rdquo; said I, blushing as became a young scribbler, &ldquo;how you
+ should be so well acquainted with my truant studies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There was an emissary of your father's here some time since, a young
+ coxcomb, one Twineall, who informed me concerning your secret sacrifices
+ to the muses, and added, that some of your verses had been greatly admired
+ by the best judges.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tresham, I believe you are guiltless of having ever essayed to build the
+ lofty rhyme; but you must have known in your day many an apprentice and
+ fellow-craft, if not some of the master-masons, in the temple of Apollo.
+ Vanity is their universal foible, from him who decorated the shades of
+ Twickenham, to the veriest scribbler whom he has lashed in his Dunciad. I
+ had my own share of this common failing, and without considering how
+ little likely this young fellow Twineall was, by taste and habits, either
+ to be acquainted with one or two little pieces of poetry, which I had at
+ times insinuated into Button's coffee-house, or to report the opinion of
+ the critics who frequented that resort of wit and literature, I almost
+ instantly gorged the bait; which Rashleigh perceiving, improved his
+ opportunity by a diffident, yet apparently very anxious request to be
+ permitted to see some of my manuscript productions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall give me an evening in my own apartment,&rdquo; he continued; &ldquo;for I
+ must soon lose the charms of literary society for the drudgery of
+ commerce, and the coarse every-day avocations of the world. I repeat it,
+ that my compliance with my father's wishes for the advantage of my family,
+ is indeed a sacrifice, especially considering the calm and peaceful
+ profession to which my education destined me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was vain, but not a fool, and this hypocrisy was too strong for me to
+ swallow. &ldquo;You would not persuade me,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;that you really regret
+ to exchange the situation of an obscure Catholic priest, with all its
+ privations, for wealth and society, and the pleasures of the world?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rashleigh saw that he had coloured his affectation of moderation too
+ highly, and, after a second's pause, during which, I suppose, he
+ calculated the degree of candour which it was necessary to use with me
+ (that being a quality of which he was never needlessly profuse), he
+ answered, with a smile&mdash;&ldquo;At my age, to be condemned, as you say, to
+ wealth and the world, does not, indeed, sound so alarming as perhaps it
+ ought to do. But, with pardon be it spoken, you have mistaken my
+ destination&mdash;a Catholic priest, if you will, but not an obscure one.
+ No, sir,&mdash;Rashleigh Osbaldistone will be more obscure, should he rise
+ to be the richest citizen in London, than he might have been as a member
+ of a church, whose ministers, as some one says, 'set their sandall'd feet
+ on princes.' My family interest at a certain exiled court is high, and the
+ weight which that court ought to possess, and does possess, at Rome is yet
+ higher&mdash;my talents not altogether inferior to the education I have
+ received. In sober judgment, I might have looked forward to high eminence
+ in the church&mdash;in the dream of fancy, to the very highest. Why might
+ not&rdquo;&mdash;(he added, laughing, for it was part of his manner to keep much
+ of his discourse apparently betwixt jest and earnest)&mdash;&ldquo;why might not
+ Cardinal Osbaldistone have swayed the fortunes of empires, well-born and
+ well-connected, as well as the low-born Mazarin, or Alberoni, the son of
+ an Italian gardener?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, I can give you no reason to the contrary; but in your place I should
+ not much regret losing the chance of such precarious and invidious
+ elevation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Neither would I,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;were I sure that my present establishment
+ was more certain; but that must depend upon circumstances which I can only
+ learn by experience&mdash;the disposition of your father, for example.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Confess the truth without finesse, Rashleigh; you would willingly know
+ something of him from me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since, like Die Vernon, you make a point of following the banner of the
+ good knight Sincerity, I reply&mdash;certainly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then, you will find in my father a man who has followed the paths
+ of thriving more for the exercise they afforded to his talents, than for
+ the love of the gold with which they are strewed. His active mind would
+ have been happy in any situation which gave it scope for exertion, though
+ that exertion had been its sole reward. But his wealth has accumulated,
+ because, moderate and frugal in his habits, no new sources of expense have
+ occurred to dispose of his increasing income. He is a man who hates
+ dissimulation in others; never practises it himself; and is peculiarly
+ alert in discovering motives through the colouring of language. Himself
+ silent by habit, he is readily disgusted by great talkers; the rather,
+ that the circumstances by which he is most interested, afford no great
+ scope for conversation. He is severely strict in the duties of religion;
+ but you have no reason to fear his interference with yours, for he regards
+ toleration as a sacred principle of political economy. But if you have any
+ Jacobitical partialities, as is naturally to be supposed, you will do well
+ to suppress them in his presence, as well as the least tendency to the
+ highflying or Tory principles; for he holds both in utter detestation. For
+ the rest, his word is his own bond, and must be the law of all who act
+ under him. He will fail in his duty to no one, and will permit no one to
+ fail towards him; to cultivate his favour, you must execute his commands,
+ instead of echoing his sentiments. His greatest failings arise out of
+ prejudices connected with his own profession, or rather his exclusive
+ devotion to it, which makes him see little worthy of praise or attention,
+ unless it be in some measure connected with commerce.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O rare-painted portrait!&rdquo; exclaimed Rashleigh, when I was silent&mdash;&ldquo;Vandyke
+ was a dauber to you, Frank. I see thy sire before me in all his strength
+ and weakness; loving and honouring the King as a sort of lord mayor of the
+ empire, or chief of the board of trade&mdash;venerating the Commons, for
+ the acts regulating the export trade&mdash;and respecting the Peers,
+ because the Lord Chancellor sits on a woolsack.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mine was a likeness, Rashleigh; yours is a caricature. But in return for
+ the <i>carte du pays</i> which I have unfolded to you, give me some lights
+ on the geography of the unknown lands&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On which you are wrecked,&rdquo; said Rashleigh. &ldquo;It is not worth while; it is
+ no Isle of Calypso, umbrageous with shade and intricate with silvan
+ labyrinth&mdash;but a bare ragged Northumbrian moor, with as little to
+ interest curiosity as to delight the eye; you may descry it in all its
+ nakedness in half an hour's survey, as well as if I were to lay it down
+ before you by line and compass.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, but something there is, worthy a more attentive survey&mdash;What say
+ you to Miss Vernon? Does not she form an interesting object in the
+ landscape, were all round as rude as Iceland's coast?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could plainly perceive that Rashleigh disliked the topic now presented
+ to him; but my frank communication had given me the advantageous title to
+ make inquiries in my turn. Rashleigh felt this, and found himself obliged
+ to follow my lead, however difficult he might find it to play his cards
+ successfully. &ldquo;I have known less of Miss Vernon,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;for some time,
+ than I was wont to do formerly. In early age I was her tutor; but as she
+ advanced towards womanhood, my various avocations,&mdash;the gravity of
+ the profession to which I was destined,&mdash;the peculiar nature of her
+ engagements,&mdash;our mutual situation, in short, rendered a close and
+ constant intimacy dangerous and improper. I believe Miss Vernon might
+ consider my reserve as unkindness, but it was my duty; I felt as much as
+ she seemed to do, when compelled to give way to prudence. But where was
+ the safety in cultivating an intimacy with a beautiful and susceptible
+ girl, whose heart, you are aware, must be given either to the cloister or
+ to a betrothed husband?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The cloister or a betrothed husband?&rdquo; I echoed&mdash;&ldquo;Is that the
+ alternative destined for Miss Vernon?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is indeed,&rdquo; said Rashleigh, with a sigh. &ldquo;I need not, I suppose,
+ caution you against the danger of cultivating too closely the friendship
+ of Miss Vernon;&mdash;you are a man of the world, and know how far you can
+ indulge yourself in her society with safety to yourself, and justice to
+ her. But I warn you, that, considering her ardent temper, you must let
+ your experience keep guard over her as well as yourself, for the specimen
+ of yesterday may serve to show her extreme thoughtlessness and neglect of
+ decorum.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was something, I was sensible, of truth, as well as good sense, in
+ all this; it seemed to be given as a friendly warning, and I had no right
+ to take it amiss; yet I felt I could with pleasure have run Rashleigh
+ Osbaldistone through the body all the time he was speaking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The deuce take his insolence!&rdquo; was my internal meditation. &ldquo;Would he wish
+ me to infer that Miss Vernon had fallen in love with that hatchet-face of
+ his, and become degraded so low as to require his shyness to cure her of
+ an imprudent passion? I will have his meaning from him,&rdquo; was my
+ resolution, &ldquo;if I should drag it out with cart-ropes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this purpose, I placed my temper under as accurate a guard as I could,
+ and observed, &ldquo;That, for a lady of her good sense and acquired
+ accomplishments, it was to be regretted that Miss Vernon's manners were
+ rather blunt and rustic.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Frank and unreserved, at least, to the extreme,&rdquo; replied Rashleigh: &ldquo;yet,
+ trust me, she has an excellent heart. To tell you the truth, should she
+ continue her extreme aversion to the cloister, and to her destined
+ husband, and should my own labours in the mine of Plutus promise to secure
+ me a decent independence, I shall think of reviewing our acquaintance and
+ sharing it with Miss Vernon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With all his fine voice, and well-turned periods,&rdquo; thought I, &ldquo;this same
+ Rashleigh Osbaldistone is the ugliest and most conceited coxcomb I ever
+ met with!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; continued Rashleigh, as if thinking aloud, &ldquo;I should not like to
+ supplant Thorncliff.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Supplant Thorncliff!&mdash;Is your brother Thorncliff,&rdquo; I inquired, with
+ great surprise, &ldquo;the destined husband of Diana Vernon?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, ay, her father's commands, and a certain family-contract, destined
+ her to marry one of Sir Hildebrand's sons. A dispensation has been
+ obtained from Rome to Diana Vernon to marry <i>Blank</i> Osbaldistone,
+ Esq., son of Sir Hildebrand Osbaldistone, of Osbaldistone Hall, Bart., and
+ so forth; and it only remains to pitch upon the happy man whose name shall
+ fill the gap in the manuscript. Now, as Percie is seldom sober, my father
+ pitched on Thorncliff, as the second prop of the family, and therefore
+ most proper to carry on the line of the Osbaldistones.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The young lady,&rdquo; said I, forcing myself to assume an air of pleasantry,
+ which, I believe, became me extremely ill, &ldquo;would perhaps have been
+ inclined to look a little lower on the family-tree, for the branch to
+ which she was desirous of clinging.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot say,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;There is room for little choice in our
+ family; Dick is a gambler, John a boor, and Wilfred an ass. I believe my
+ father really made the best selection for poor Die, after all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The present company,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;being always excepted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, my destination to the church placed me out of the question; otherwise
+ I will not affect to say, that, qualified by my education both to instruct
+ and guide Miss Vernon, I might not have been a more creditable choice than
+ any of my elders.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And so thought the young lady, doubtless?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are not to suppose so,&rdquo; answered Rashleigh, with an affectation of
+ denial which was contrived to convey the strongest affirmation the case
+ admitted of: &ldquo;friendship&mdash;only friendship&mdash;formed the tie
+ betwixt us, and the tender affection of an opening mind to its only
+ instructor&mdash;Love came not near us&mdash;I told you I was wise in
+ time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I felt little inclination to pursue this conversation any farther, and
+ shaking myself clear of Rashleigh, withdrew to my own apartment, which I
+ recollect I traversed with much vehemence of agitation, repeating aloud
+ the expressions which had most offended me.&mdash;&ldquo;Susceptible&mdash;ardent&mdash;tender
+ affection&mdash;Love&mdash;Diana Vernon, the most beautiful creature I
+ ever beheld, in love with him, the bandy-legged, bull-necked, limping
+ scoundrel! Richard the Third in all but his hump-back!&mdash;And yet the
+ opportunities he must have had during his cursed course of lectures; and
+ the fellow's flowing and easy strain of sentiment; and her extreme
+ seclusion from every one who spoke and acted with common sense; ay, and
+ her obvious pique at him, mixed with admiration of his talents, which
+ looked as like the result of neglected attachment as anything else&mdash;Well,
+ and what is it to me, that I should storm and rage at it? Is Diana Vernon
+ the first pretty girl that has loved and married an ugly fellow? And if
+ she were free of every Osbaldistone of them, what concern is it of mine?&mdash;a
+ Catholic&mdash;a Jacobite&mdash;a termagant into the boot&mdash;for me to
+ look that way were utter madness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By throwing such reflections on the flame of my displeasure, I subdued it
+ into a sort of smouldering heart-burning, and appeared at the dinner-table
+ in as sulky a humour as could well be imagined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0012" id="linkCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER TWELFTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drunk?&mdash;and speak parrot?&mdash;and squabble?&mdash;swagger?&mdash;
+ Swear?&mdash;and discourse fustian with one's own shadow?
+ Othello.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I have already told you, my dear Tresham, what probably was no news to
+ you, that my principal fault was an unconquerable pitch of pride, which
+ exposed me to frequent mortification. I had not even whispered to myself
+ that I loved Diana Vernon; yet no sooner did I hear Rashleigh talk of her
+ as a prize which he might stoop to carry off, or neglect, at his pleasure,
+ than every step which the poor girl had taken, in the innocence and
+ openness of her heart, to form a sort of friendship with me, seemed in my
+ eyes the most insulting coquetry.&mdash;&ldquo;Soh! she would secure me as a <i>pis
+ aller,</i> I suppose, in case Mr. Rashleigh Osbaldistone should not take
+ compassion upon her! But I will satisfy her that I am not a person to be
+ trepanned in that manner&mdash;I will make her sensible that I see through
+ her arts, and that I scorn them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I did not reflect for a moment, that all this indignation, which I had no
+ right whatever to entertain, proved that I was anything but indifferent to
+ Miss Vernon's charms; and I sate down to table in high ill-humour with her
+ and all the daughters of Eve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Vernon heard me, with surprise, return ungracious answers to one or
+ two playful strokes of satire which she threw out with her usual freedom
+ of speech; but, having no suspicion that offence was meant, she only
+ replied to my rude repartees with jests somewhat similar, but polished by
+ her good temper, though pointed by her wit. At length she perceived I was
+ really out of humour, and answered one of my rude speeches thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They say, Mr. Frank, that one may gather sense from fools&mdash;I heard
+ cousin Wilfred refuse to play any longer at cudgels the other day with
+ cousin Thornie, because cousin Thornie got angry, and struck harder than
+ the rules of amicable combat, it seems, permitted. 'Were I to break your
+ head in good earnest,' quoth honest Wilfred, 'I care not how angry you
+ are, for I should do it so much the more easily but it's hard I should get
+ raps over the costard, and only pay you back in make-believes'&mdash;Do
+ you understand the moral of this, Frank?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have never felt myself under the necessity, madam, of studying how to
+ extract the slender portion of sense with which this family season their
+ conversation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Necessity! and madam!&mdash;You surprise me, Mr. Osbaldistone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am unfortunate in doing so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Am I to suppose that this capricious tone is serious? or is it only
+ assumed, to make your good-humour more valuable?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have a right to the attention of so many gentlemen in this family,
+ Miss Vernon, that it cannot be worth your while to inquire into the cause
+ of my stupidity and bad spirits.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;am I to understand, then, that you have deserted my
+ faction, and gone over to the enemy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, looking across the table, and observing that Rashleigh, who was
+ seated opposite, was watching us with a singular expression of interest on
+ his harsh features, she continued&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Horrible thought!&mdash;Ay, now I see 'tis true,
+ For the grim-visaged Rashleigh smiles on me,
+ And points at thee for his!&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Well, thank Heaven, and the unprotected state which has taught me
+ endurance, I do not take offence easily; and that I may not be forced to
+ quarrel, whether I like it or no, I have the honour, earlier than usual,
+ to wish you a happy digestion of your dinner and your bad humour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And she left the table accordingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon Miss Vernon's departure, I found myself very little satisfied with my
+ own conduct. I had hurled back offered kindness, of which circumstances
+ had but lately pointed out the honest sincerity, and I had but just
+ stopped short of insulting the beautiful, and, as she had said with some
+ emphasis, the unprotected being by whom it was proffered. My conduct
+ seemed brutal in my own eyes. To combat or drown these painful
+ reflections, I applied myself more frequently than usual to the wine which
+ circulated on the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The agitated state of my feelings combined with my habits of temperance to
+ give rapid effect to the beverage. Habitual topers, I believe, acquire the
+ power of soaking themselves with a quantity of liquor that does little
+ more than muddy those intellects which in their sober state are none of
+ the clearest; but men who are strangers to the vice of drunkenness as a
+ habit, are more powerfully acted upon by intoxicating liquors. My spirits,
+ once aroused, became extravagant; I talked a great deal, argued upon what
+ I knew nothing of, told stories of which I forgot the point, then laughed
+ immoderately at my own forgetfulness; I accepted several bets without
+ having the least judgment; I challenged the giant John to wrestle with me,
+ although he had kept the ring at Hexham for a year, and I never tried so
+ much as a single fall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My uncle had the goodness to interpose and prevent this consummation of
+ drunken folly, which, I suppose, would have otherwise ended in my neck
+ being broken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has even been reported by maligners, that I sung a song while under
+ this vinous influence; but, as I remember nothing of it, and never
+ attempted to turn a tune in all my life before or since, I would willingly
+ hope there is no actual foundation for the calumny. I was absurd enough
+ without this exaggeration. Without positively losing my senses, I speedily
+ lost all command of my temper, and my impetuous passions whirled me onward
+ at their pleasure. I had sate down sulky and discontented, and disposed to
+ be silent&mdash;the wine rendered me loquacious, disputatious, and
+ quarrelsome. I contradicted whatever was asserted, and attacked, without
+ any respect to my uncle's table, both his politics and his religion. The
+ affected moderation of Rashleigh, which he well knew how to qualify with
+ irritating ingredients, was even more provoking to me than the noisy and
+ bullying language of his obstreperous brothers. My uncle, to do him
+ justice, endeavoured to bring us to order; but his authority was lost
+ amidst the tumult of wine and passion. At length, frantic at some real or
+ supposed injurious insinuation, I actually struck Rashleigh with my fist.
+ No Stoic philosopher, superior to his own passion and that of others,
+ could have received an insult with a higher degree of scorn. What he
+ himself did not think it apparently worth while to resent, Thorncliff
+ resented for him. Swords were drawn, and we exchanged one or two passes,
+ when the other brothers separated us by main force; and I shall never
+ forget the diabolical sneer which writhed Rashleigh's wayward features, as
+ I was forced from the apartment by the main strength of two of these
+ youthful Titans. They secured me in my apartment by locking the door, and
+ I heard them, to my inexpressible rage, laugh heartily as they descended
+ the stairs. I essayed in my fury to break out; but the window-grates, and
+ the strength of a door clenched with iron, resisted my efforts. At length
+ I threw myself on my bed, and fell asleep amidst vows of dire revenge to
+ be taken in the ensuing day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But with the morning cool repentance came. I felt, in the keenest manner,
+ the violence and absurdity of my conduct, and was obliged to confess that
+ wine and passion had lowered my intellects even below those of Wilfred
+ Osbaldistone, whom I held in so much contempt. My uncomfortable
+ reflections were by no means soothed by meditating the necessity of an
+ apology for my improper behaviour, and recollecting that Miss Vernon must
+ be a witness of my submission. The impropriety and unkindness of my
+ conduct to her personally, added not a little to these galling
+ considerations, and for this I could not even plead the miserable excuse
+ of intoxication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under all these aggravating feelings of shame and degradation, I descended
+ to the breakfast hall, like a criminal to receive sentence. It chanced
+ that a hard frost had rendered it impossible to take out the hounds, so
+ that I had the additional mortification to meet the family, excepting only
+ Rashleigh and Miss Vernon, in full divan, surrounding the cold venison
+ pasty and chine of beef. They were in high glee as I entered, and I could
+ easily imagine that the jests were furnished at my expense. In fact, what
+ I was disposed to consider with serious pain, was regarded as an excellent
+ good joke by my uncle, and the greater part of my cousins. Sir Hildebrand,
+ while he rallied me on the exploits of the preceding evening, swore he
+ thought a young fellow had better be thrice drunk in one day, than sneak
+ sober to bed like a Presbyterian, and leave a batch of honest fellows, and
+ a double quart of claret. And to back this consolatory speech, he poured
+ out a large bumper of brandy, exhorting me to swallow &ldquo;a hair of the dog
+ that had bit me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind these lads laughing, nevoy,&rdquo; he continued; &ldquo;they would have
+ been all as great milksops as yourself, had I not nursed them, as one may
+ say, on the toast and tankard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ill-nature was not the fault of my cousins in general; they saw I was
+ vexed and hurt at the recollections of the preceding evening, and
+ endeavoured, with clumsy kindness, to remove the painful impression they
+ had made on me. Thorncliff alone looked sullen and unreconciled. This
+ young man had never liked me from the beginning; and in the marks of
+ attention occasionally shown me by his brothers, awkward as they were, he
+ alone had never joined. If it was true, of which, however, I began to have
+ my doubts, that he was considered by the family, or regarded himself, as
+ the destined husband of Miss Vernon, a sentiment of jealousy might have
+ sprung up in his mind from the marked predilection which it was that young
+ lady's pleasure to show for one whom Thorncliff might, perhaps, think
+ likely to become a dangerous rival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rashleigh at last entered, his visage as dark as mourning weed&mdash;brooding,
+ I could not but doubt, over the unjustifiable and disgraceful insult I had
+ offered to him. I had already settled in my own mind how I was to behave
+ on the occasion, and had schooled myself to believe, that true honour
+ consisted not in defending, but in apologising for, an injury so much
+ disproportioned to any provocation I might have to allege.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I therefore hastened to meet Rashleigh, and to express myself in the
+ highest degree sorry for the violence with which I had acted on the
+ preceding evening. &ldquo;No circumstances,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;could have wrung from me a
+ single word of apology, save my own consciousness of the impropriety of my
+ behaviour. I hoped my cousin would accept of my regrets so sincerely
+ offered, and consider how much of my misconduct was owing to the excessive
+ hospitality of Osbaldistone Hall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He shall be friends with thee, lad,&rdquo; cried the honest knight, in the full
+ effusion of his heart; &ldquo;or d&mdash;n me, if I call him son more!&mdash;Why,
+ Rashie, dost stand there like a log? <i>Sorry for it</i> is all a
+ gentleman can say, if he happens to do anything awry, especially over his
+ claret. I served in Hounslow, and should know something, I think, of
+ affairs of honour. Let me hear no more of this, and we'll go in a body and
+ rummage out the badger in Birkenwood-bank.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rashleigh's face resembled, as I have already noticed, no other
+ countenance that I ever saw. But this singularity lay not only in the
+ features, but in the mode of changing their expression. Other
+ countenances, in altering from grief to joy, or from anger to
+ satisfaction, pass through some brief interval, ere the expression of the
+ predominant passion supersedes entirely that of its predecessor. There is
+ a sort of twilight, like that between the clearing up of the darkness and
+ the rising of the sun, while the swollen muscles subside, the dark eye
+ clears, the forehead relaxes and expands itself, and the whole countenance
+ loses its sterner shades, and becomes serene and placid. Rashleigh's face
+ exhibited none of these gradations, but changed almost instantaneously
+ from the expression of one passion to that of the contrary. I can compare
+ it to nothing but the sudden shifting of a scene in the theatre, where, at
+ the whistle of the prompter, a cavern disappears, and a grove arises.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My attention was strongly arrested by this peculiarity on the present
+ occasion. At Rashleigh's first entrance, &ldquo;black he stood as night!&rdquo; With
+ the same inflexible countenance he heard my excuse and his father's
+ exhortation; and it was not until Sir Hildebrand had done speaking, that
+ the cloud cleared away at once, and he expressed, in the kindest and most
+ civil terms, his perfect satisfaction with the very handsome apology I had
+ offered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I have so poor a brain myself, when I impose on it the
+ least burden beyond my usual three glasses, that I have only, like honest
+ Cassio, a very vague recollection of the confusion of last night&mdash;remember
+ a mass of things, but nothing distinctly&mdash;a quarrel, but nothing
+ wherefore&mdash;So, my dear Cousin,&rdquo; he continued, shaking me kindly by
+ the hand, &ldquo;conceive how much I am relieved by finding that I have to
+ receive an apology, instead of having to make one&mdash;I will not have a
+ word said upon the subject more; I should be very foolish to institute any
+ scrutiny into an account, when the balance, which I expected to be against
+ me, has been so unexpectedly and agreeably struck in my favour. You see,
+ Mr. Osbaldistone, I am practising the language of Lombard Street, and
+ qualifying myself for my new calling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I was about to answer, and raised my eyes for the purpose, they
+ encountered those of Miss Vernon, who, having entered the room unobserved
+ during the conversation, had given it her close attention. Abashed and
+ confounded, I fixed my eyes on the ground, and made my escape to the
+ breakfast-table, where I herded among my busy cousins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My uncle, that the events of the preceding day might not pass out of our
+ memory without a practical moral lesson, took occasion to give Rashleigh
+ and me his serious advice to correct our milksop habits, as he termed
+ them, and gradually to inure our brains to bear a gentlemanlike quantity
+ of liquor, without brawls or breaking of heads. He recommended that we
+ should begin piddling with a regular quart of claret per day, which, with
+ the aid of March beer and brandy, made a handsome competence for a
+ beginner in the art of toping. And for our encouragement, he assured us
+ that he had known many a man who had lived to our years without having
+ drunk a pint of wine at a sitting, who yet, by falling into honest
+ company, and following hearty example, had afterwards been numbered among
+ the best good fellows of the time, and could carry off their six bottles
+ under their belt quietly and comfortably, without brawling or babbling,
+ and be neither sick nor sorry the next morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sage as this advice was, and comfortable as was the prospect it held out
+ to me, I profited but little by the exhortation&mdash;partly, perhaps,
+ because, as often as I raised my eyes from the table, I observed Miss
+ Vernon's looks fixed on me, in which I thought I could read grave
+ compassion blended with regret and displeasure. I began to consider how I
+ should seek a scene of explanation and apology with her also, when she
+ gave me to understand she was determined to save me the trouble of
+ soliciting an interview. &ldquo;Cousin Francis,&rdquo; she said, addressing me by the
+ same title she used to give to the other Osbaldistones, although I had,
+ properly speaking, no title to be called her kinsman, &ldquo;I have encountered
+ this morning a difficult passage in the Divina Comme'dia of Dante; will
+ you have the goodness to step to the library and give me your assistance?
+ and when you have unearthed for me the meaning of the obscure Florentine,
+ we will join the rest at Birkenwood-bank, and see their luck at unearthing
+ the badger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I signified, of course, my readiness to wait upon her. Rashleigh made an
+ offer to accompany us. &ldquo;I am something better skilled,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;at
+ tracking the sense of Dante through the metaphors and elisions of his wild
+ and gloomy poem, than at hunting the poor inoffensive hermit yonder out of
+ his cave.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, Rashleigh,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon, &ldquo;but as you are to occupy Mr.
+ Francis's place in the counting-house, you must surrender to him the
+ charge of your pupil's education at Osbaldistone Hall. We shall call you
+ in, however, if there is any occasion; so pray do not look so grave upon
+ it. Besides, it is a shame to you not to understand field-sports&mdash;What
+ will you do should our uncle in Crane-Alley ask you the signs by which you
+ track a badger?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, true, Die,&mdash;true,&rdquo; said Sir Hildebrand, with a sigh, &ldquo;I misdoubt
+ Rashleigh will be found short at the leap when he is put to the trial. An
+ he would ha' learned useful knowledge like his brothers, he was bred up
+ where it grew, I wuss; but French antics, and book-learning, with the new
+ turnips, and the rats, and the Hanoverians, ha' changed the world that I
+ ha' known in Old England&mdash;But come along with us, Rashie, and carry
+ my hunting-staff, man; thy cousin lacks none of thy company as now, and I
+ wonna ha' Die crossed&mdash;It's ne'er be said there was but one woman in
+ Osbaldistone Hall, and she died for lack of her will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rashleigh followed his father, as he commanded, not, however, ere he had
+ whispered to Diana, &ldquo;I suppose I must in discretion bring the courtier,
+ Ceremony, in my company, and knock when I approach the door of the
+ library?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no, Rashleigh,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon; &ldquo;dismiss from your company the
+ false archimage Dissimulation, and it will better ensure your free access
+ to our classical consultations.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, she led the way to the library, and I followed&mdash;like a
+ criminal, I was going to say, to execution; but, as I bethink me, I have
+ used the simile once, if not twice before. Without any simile at all,
+ then, I followed, with a sense of awkward and conscious embarrassment,
+ which I would have given a great deal to shake off. I thought it a
+ degrading and unworthy feeling to attend one on such an occasion, having
+ breathed the air of the Continent long enough to have imbibed the notion
+ that lightness, gallantry, and something approaching to well-bred
+ self-assurance, should distinguish the gentleman whom a fair lady selects
+ for her companion in a <i>tete-a-tete.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My English feelings, however, were too many for my French education, and I
+ made, I believe, a very pitiful figure, when Miss Vernon, seating herself
+ majestically in a huge elbow-chair in the library, like a judge about to
+ hear a cause of importance, signed to me to take a chair opposite to her
+ (which I did, much like the poor fellow who is going to be tried), and
+ entered upon conversation in a tone of bitter irony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0013" id="linkCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER THIRTEENTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Dire was his thought, who first in poison steeped
+ The weapon formed for slaughter&mdash;direr his,
+ And worthier of damnation, who instilled
+ The mortal venom in the social cup,
+ To fill the veins with death instead of life.
+ Anonymous.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Upon my Word, Mr. Francis Osbaldistone,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon, with the air
+ of one who thought herself fully entitled to assume the privilege of
+ ironical reproach, which she was pleased to exert, &ldquo;your character
+ improves upon us, sir&mdash;I could not have thought that it was in you.
+ Yesterday might be considered as your assay-piece, to prove yourself
+ entitled to be free of the corporation of Osbaldistone Hall. But it was a
+ masterpiece.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am quite sensible of my ill-breeding, Miss Vernon, and I can only say
+ for myself that I had received some communications by which my spirits
+ were unusually agitated. I am conscious I was impertinent and absurd.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do yourself great injustice,&rdquo; said the merciless monitor&mdash;&ldquo;you
+ have contrived, by what I saw and have since heard, to exhibit in the
+ course of one evening a happy display of all the various masterly
+ qualifications which distinguish your several cousins;&mdash;the gentle
+ and generous temper of the benevolent Rashleigh,&mdash;the temperance of
+ Percie,&mdash;the cool courage of Thorncliff,&mdash;John's skill in
+ dog-breaking,&mdash;Dickon's aptitude to betting,&mdash;all exhibited by
+ the single individual, Mr. Francis, and that with a selection of time,
+ place, and circumstance, worthy the taste and sagacity of the sapient
+ Wilfred.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have a little mercy, Miss Vernon,&rdquo; said I; for I confess I thought the
+ schooling as severe as the case merited, especially considering from what
+ quarter it came, &ldquo;and forgive me if I suggest, as an excuse for follies I
+ am not usually guilty of, the custom of this house and country. I am far
+ from approving of it; but we have Shakspeare's authority for saying, that
+ good wine is a good familiar creature, and that any man living may be
+ overtaken at some time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, Mr. Francis, but he places the panegyric and the apology in the mouth
+ of the greatest villain his pencil has drawn. I will not, however, abuse
+ the advantage your quotation has given me, by overwhelming you with the
+ refutation with which the victim Cassio replies to the tempter Iago. I
+ only wish you to know, that there is one person at least sorry to see a
+ youth of talents and expectations sink into the slough in which the
+ inhabitants of this house are nightly wallowing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have but wet my shoe, I assure you, Miss Vernon, and am too sensible of
+ the filth of the puddle to step farther in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If such be your resolution,&rdquo; she replied, &ldquo;it is a wise one. But I was so
+ much vexed at what I heard, that your concerns have pressed before my own,&mdash;You
+ behaved to me yesterday, during dinner, as if something had been told you
+ which lessened or lowered me in your opinion&mdash;I beg leave to ask you
+ what it was?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was stupified. The direct bluntness of the demand was much in the style
+ one gentleman uses to another, when requesting explanation of any part of
+ his conduct in a good-humoured yet determined manner, and was totally
+ devoid of the circumlocutions, shadings, softenings, and periphrasis,
+ which usually accompany explanations betwixt persons of different sexes in
+ the higher orders of society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I remained completely embarrassed; for it pressed on my recollection, that
+ Rashleigh's communications, supposing them to be correct, ought to have
+ rendered Miss Vernon rather an object of my compassion than of my pettish
+ resentment; and had they furnished the best apology possible for my own
+ conduct, still I must have had the utmost difficulty in detailing what
+ inferred such necessary and natural offence to Miss Vernon's feelings. She
+ observed my hesitation, and proceeded, in a tone somewhat more peremptory,
+ but still temperate and civil&mdash;&ldquo;I hope Mr. Osbaldistone does not
+ dispute my title to request this explanation. I have no relative who can
+ protect me; it is, therefore, just that I be permitted to protect myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I endeavoured with hesitation to throw the blame of my rude behaviour upon
+ indisposition&mdash;upon disagreeable letters from London. She suffered me
+ to exhaust my apologies, and fairly to run myself aground, listening all
+ the while with a smile of absolute incredulity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, Mr. Francis, having gone through your prologue of excuses, with
+ the same bad grace with which all prologues are delivered, please to draw
+ the curtain, and show me that which I desire to see. In a word, let me
+ know what Rashleigh says of me; for he is the grand engineer and first
+ mover of all the machinery of Osbaldistone Hall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, supposing there was anything to tell, Miss Vernon, what does he
+ deserve that betrays the secrets of one ally to another?&mdash;Rashleigh,
+ you yourself told me, remained your ally, though no longer your friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have neither patience for evasion, nor inclination for jesting, on the
+ present subject. Rashleigh cannot&mdash;ought not&mdash;dare not, hold any
+ language respecting me, Diana Vernon, but what I may demand to hear
+ repeated. That there are subjects of secrecy and confidence between us, is
+ most certain; but to such, his communications to you could have no
+ relation; and with such, I, as an individual, have no concern.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had by this time recovered my presence of mind, and hastily determined
+ to avoid making any disclosure of what Rashleigh had told me in a sort of
+ confidence. There was something unworthy in retailing private
+ conversation; it could, I thought, do no good, and must necessarily give
+ Miss Vernon great pain. I therefore replied, gravely, &ldquo;that nothing but
+ frivolous talk had passed between Mr. Rashleigh Osbaldistone and me on the
+ state of the family at the Hall; and I protested, that nothing had been
+ said which left a serious impression to her disadvantage. As a gentleman,&rdquo;
+ I said, &ldquo;I could not be more explicit in reporting private conversation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She started up with the animation of a Camilla about to advance into
+ battle. &ldquo;This shall not serve your turn, sir,&mdash;I must have another
+ answer from you.&rdquo; Her features kindled&mdash;her brow became flushed&mdash;her
+ eye glanced wild-fire as she proceeded&mdash;&ldquo;I demand such an
+ explanation, as a woman basely slandered has a right to demand from every
+ man who calls himself a gentleman&mdash;as a creature, motherless,
+ friendless, alone in the world, left to her own guidance and protection,
+ has a right to require from every being having a happier lot, in the name
+ of that God who sent <i>them</i> into the world to enjoy, and <i>her</i>
+ to suffer. You shall not deny me&mdash;or,&rdquo; she added, looking solemnly
+ upwards, &ldquo;you will rue your denial, if there is justice for wrong either
+ on earth or in heaven.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was utterly astonished at her vehemence, but felt, thus conjured, that
+ it became my duty to lay aside scrupulous delicacy, and gave her briefly,
+ but distinctly, the heads of the information which Rashleigh had conveyed
+ to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She sate down and resumed her composure, as soon as I entered upon the
+ subject, and when I stopped to seek for the most delicate turn of
+ expression, she repeatedly interrupted me with &ldquo;Go on&mdash;pray, go on;
+ the first word which occurs to you is the plainest, and must be the best.
+ Do not think of my feelings, but speak as you would to an unconcerned
+ third party.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus urged and encouraged, I stammered through all the account which
+ Rashleigh had given of her early contract to marry an Osbaldistone, and of
+ the uncertainty and difficulty of her choice; and there I would willingly
+ have paused. But her penetration discovered that there was still something
+ behind, and even guessed to what it related.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it was ill-natured of Rashleigh to tell this tale on me. I am like
+ the poor girl in the fairy tale, who was betrothed in her cradle to the
+ Black Bear of Norway, but complained chiefly of being called Bruin's bride
+ by her companions at school. But besides all this, Rashleigh said
+ something of himself with relation to me&mdash;Did he not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He certainly hinted, that were it not for the idea of supplanting his
+ brother, he would now, in consequence of his change of profession, be
+ desirous that the word Rashleigh should fill up the blank in the
+ dispensation, instead of the word Thorncliff.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay? indeed?&rdquo; she replied&mdash;&ldquo;was he so very condescending?&mdash;Too
+ much honour for his humble handmaid, Diana Vernon&mdash;And she, I
+ suppose, was to be enraptured with joy could such a substitute be
+ effected?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To confess the truth, he intimated as much, and even farther insinuated&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What?&mdash;Let me hear it all!&rdquo; she exclaimed, hastily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That he had broken off your mutual intimacy, lest it should have given
+ rise to an affection by which his destination to the church would not
+ permit him to profit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am obliged to him for his consideration,&rdquo; replied Miss Vernon, every
+ feature of her fine countenance taxed to express the most supreme degree
+ of scorn and contempt. She paused a moment, and then said, with her usual
+ composure, &ldquo;There is but little I have heard from you which I did not
+ expect to hear, and which I ought not to have expected; because, bating
+ one circumstance, it is all very true. But as there are some poisons so
+ active, that a few drops, it is said, will infect a whole fountain, so
+ there is one falsehood in Rashleigh's communication, powerful enough to
+ corrupt the whole well in which Truth herself is said to have dwelt. It is
+ the leading and foul falsehood, that, knowing Rashleigh as I have reason
+ too well to know him, any circumstance on earth could make me think of
+ sharing my lot with him. No,&rdquo; she continued with a sort of inward
+ shuddering that seemed to express involuntary horror, &ldquo;any lot rather than
+ that&mdash;the sot, the gambler, the bully, the jockey, the insensate
+ fool, were a thousand times preferable to Rashleigh:&mdash;the convent&mdash;the
+ jail&mdash;the grave, shall be welcome before them all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a sad and melancholy cadence in her voice, corresponding with
+ the strange and interesting romance of her situation. So young, so
+ beautiful, so untaught, so much abandoned to herself, and deprived of all
+ the support which her sex derives from the countenance and protection of
+ female friends, and even of that degree of defence which arises from the
+ forms with which the sex are approached in civilised life,&mdash;it is
+ scarce metaphorical to say, that my heart bled for her. Yet there was an
+ expression of dignity in her contempt of ceremony&mdash;of upright feeling
+ in her disdain of falsehood&mdash;of firm resolution in the manner in
+ which she contemplated the dangers by which she was surrounded, which
+ blended my pity with the warmest admiration. She seemed a princess
+ deserted by her subjects, and deprived of her power, yet still scorning
+ those formal regulations of society which are created for persons of an
+ inferior rank; and, amid her difficulties, relying boldly and confidently
+ on the justice of Heaven, and the unshaken constancy of her own mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I offered to express the mingled feelings of sympathy and admiration with
+ which her unfortunate situation and her high spirit combined to impress
+ me, but she imposed silence on me at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I told you in jest,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that I disliked compliments&mdash;I now
+ tell you in earnest, that I do not ask sympathy, and that I despise
+ consolation. What I have borne, I have borne&mdash;What I am to bear I
+ will sustain as I may; no word of commiseration can make a burden feel one
+ feather's weight lighter to the slave who must carry it. There is only one
+ human being who could have assisted me, and that is he who has rather
+ chosen to add to my embarrassment&mdash;Rashleigh Osbaldistone.&mdash;Yes!
+ the time once was that I might have learned to love that man&mdash;But,
+ great God! the purpose for which he insinuated himself into the confidence
+ of one already so forlorn&mdash;the undeviating and continued assiduity
+ with which he pursued that purpose from year to year, without one single
+ momentary pause of remorse or compassion&mdash;the purpose for which he
+ would have converted into poison the food he administered to my mind&mdash;Gracious
+ Providence! what should I have been in this world, and the next, in body
+ and soul, had I fallen under the arts of this accomplished villain!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was so much struck with the scene of perfidious treachery which these
+ words disclosed, that I rose from my chair hardly knowing what I did, laid
+ my hand on the hilt of my sword, and was about to leave the apartment in
+ search of him on whom I might discharge my just indignation. Almost
+ breathless, and with eyes and looks in which scorn and indignation had
+ given way to the most lively alarm, Miss Vernon threw herself between me
+ and the door of the apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay!&rdquo; she said&mdash;&ldquo;stay!&mdash;however just your resentment, you do
+ not know half the secrets of this fearful prison-house.&rdquo; She then glanced
+ her eyes anxiously round the room, and sunk her voice almost to a whisper&mdash;&ldquo;He
+ bears a charmed life; you cannot assail him without endangering other
+ lives, and wider destruction. Had it been otherwise, in some hour of
+ justice he had hardly been safe, even from this weak hand. I told you,&rdquo;
+ she said, motioning me back to my seat, &ldquo;that I needed no comforter. I now
+ tell you I need no avenger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I resumed my seat mechanically, musing on what she said, and recollecting
+ also, what had escaped me in my first glow of resentment, that I had no
+ title whatever to constitute myself Miss Vernon's champion. She paused to
+ let her own emotions and mine subside, and then addressed me with more
+ composure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have already said that there is a mystery connected with Rashleigh, of
+ a dangerous and fatal nature. Villain as he is, and as he knows he stands
+ convicted in my eyes, I cannot&mdash;dare not, openly break with or defy
+ him. You also, Mr. Osbaldistone, must bear with him with patience, foil
+ his artifices by opposing to them prudence, not violence; and, above all,
+ you must avoid such scenes as that of last night, which cannot but give
+ him perilous advantages over you. This caution I designed to give you, and
+ it was the object with which I desired this interview; but I have extended
+ my confidence farther than I proposed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I assured her it was not misplaced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not believe that it is,&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;You have that in your face
+ and manners which authorises trust. Let us continue to be friends. You
+ need not fear,&rdquo; she said, laughing, while she blushed a little, yet
+ speaking with a free and unembarrassed voice, &ldquo;that friendship with us
+ should prove only a specious name, as the poet says, for another feeling.
+ I belong, in habits of thinking and acting, rather to your sex, with which
+ I have always been brought up, than to my own. Besides, the fatal veil was
+ wrapt round me in my cradle; for you may easily believe I have never
+ thought of the detestable condition under which I may remove it. The
+ time,&rdquo; she added, &ldquo;for expressing my final determination is not arrived,
+ and I would fain have the freedom of wild heath and open air with the
+ other commoners of nature, as long as I can be permitted to enjoy them.
+ And now that the passage in Dante is made so clear, pray go and see what
+ has become of the badger-baiters. My head aches so much that I cannot join
+ the party.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I left the library, but not to join the hunters. I felt that a solitary
+ walk was necessary to compose my spirits before I again trusted myself in
+ Rashleigh's company, whose depth of calculating villany had been so
+ strikingly exposed to me. In Dubourg's family (as he was of the reformed
+ persuasion) I had heard many a tale of Romish priests who gratified, at
+ the expense of friendship, hospitality, and the most sacred ties of social
+ life, those passions, the blameless indulgence of which is denied by the
+ rules of their order. But the deliberate system of undertaking the
+ education of a deserted orphan of noble birth, and so intimately allied to
+ his own family, with the perfidious purpose of ultimately seducing her,
+ detailed as it was by the intended victim with all the glow of virtuous
+ resentment, seemed more atrocious to me than the worst of the tales I had
+ heard at Bourdeaux, and I felt it would be extremely difficult for me to
+ meet Rashleigh, and yet to suppress the abhorrence with which he impressed
+ me. Yet this was absolutely necessary, not only on account of the
+ mysterious charge which Diana had given me, but because I had, in reality,
+ no ostensible ground for quarrelling with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I therefore resolved, as far as possible, to meet Rashleigh's
+ dissimulation with equal caution on my part during our residence in the
+ same family; and when he should depart for London, I resolved to give Owen
+ at least such a hint of his character as might keep him on his guard over
+ my father's interests. Avarice or ambition, I thought, might have as
+ great, or greater charms, for a mind constituted like Rashleigh's, than
+ unlawful pleasure; the energy of his character, and his power of assuming
+ all seeming good qualities, were likely to procure him a high degree of
+ confidence, and it was not to be hoped that either good faith or gratitude
+ would prevent him from abusing it. The task was somewhat difficult,
+ especially in my circumstances, since the caution which I threw out might
+ be imputed to jealousy of my rival, or rather my successor, in my father's
+ favour. Yet I thought it absolutely necessary to frame such a letter,
+ leaving it to Owen, who, in his own line, was wary, prudent, and
+ circumspect, to make the necessary use of his knowledge of Rashleigh's
+ true character. Such a letter, therefore, I indited, and despatched to the
+ post-house by the first opportunity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At my meeting with Rashleigh, he, as well as I, appeared to have taken up
+ distant ground, and to be disposed to avoid all pretext for collision. He
+ was probably conscious that Miss Vernon's communications had been
+ unfavourable to him, though he could not know that they extended to
+ discovering his meditated villany towards her. Our intercourse, therefore,
+ was reserved on both sides, and turned on subjects of little interest.
+ Indeed, his stay at Osbaldistone Hall did not exceed a few days after this
+ period, during which I only remarked two circumstances respecting him. The
+ first was the rapid and almost intuitive manner in which his powerful and
+ active mind seized upon and arranged the elementary principles necessary
+ to his new profession, which he now studied hard, and occasionally made
+ parade of his progress, as if to show me how light it was for him to lift
+ the burden which I had flung down from very weariness and inability to
+ carry it. The other remarkable circumstance was, that, notwithstanding the
+ injuries with which Miss Vernon charged Rashleigh, they had several
+ private interviews together of considerable length, although their bearing
+ towards each other in public did not seem more cordial than usual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the day of Rashleigh's departure arrived, his father bade him
+ farewell with indifference; his brothers with the ill-concealed glee of
+ school-boys who see their task-master depart for a season, and feel a joy
+ which they dare not express; and I myself with cold politeness. When he
+ approached Miss Vernon, and would have saluted her she drew back with a
+ look of haughty disdain; but said, as she extended her hand to him,
+ &ldquo;Farewell, Rashleigh; God reward you for the good you have done, and
+ forgive you for the evil you have meditated.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Amen, my fair cousin,&rdquo; he replied, with an air of sanctity, which
+ belonged, I thought, to the seminary of Saint Omers; &ldquo;happy is he whose
+ good intentions have borne fruit in deeds, and whose evil thoughts have
+ perished in the blossom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were his parting words. &ldquo;Accomplished hypocrite!&rdquo; said Miss Vernon
+ to me, as the door closed behind him&mdash;&ldquo;how nearly can what we most
+ despise and hate, approach in outward manner to that which we most
+ venerate!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had written to my father by Rashleigh, and also a few lines to Owen,
+ besides the confidential letter which I have already mentioned, and which
+ I thought it more proper and prudent to despatch by another conveyance. In
+ these epistles, it would have been natural for me to have pointed out to
+ my father and my friend, that I was at present in a situation where I
+ could improve myself in no respect, unless in the mysteries of hunting and
+ hawking; and where I was not unlikely to forget, in the company of rude
+ grooms and horse-boys, any useful knowledge or elegant accomplishments
+ which I had hitherto acquired. It would also have been natural that I
+ should have expressed the disgust and tedium which I was likely to feel
+ among beings whose whole souls were centred in field-sports or more
+ degrading pastimes&mdash;that I should have complained of the habitual
+ intemperance of the family in which I was a guest, and the difficulty and
+ almost resentment with which my uncle, Sir Hildebrand, received any
+ apology for deserting the bottle. This last, indeed, was a topic on which
+ my father, himself a man of severe temperance, was likely to be easily
+ alarmed, and to have touched upon this spring would to a certainty have
+ opened the doors of my prison-house, and would either have been the means
+ of abridging my exile, or at least would have procured me a change of
+ residence during my rustication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I say, my dear Tresham, that, considering how very unpleasant a prolonged
+ residence at Osbaldistone Hall must have been to a young man of my age,
+ and with my habits, it might have seemed very natural that I should have
+ pointed out all these disadvantages to my father, in order to obtain his
+ consent for leaving my uncle's mansion. Nothing, however, is more certain,
+ than that I did not say a single word to this purpose in my letters to my
+ father and Owen. If Osbaldistone Hall had been Athens in all its pristine
+ glory of learning, and inhabited by sages, heroes, and poets, I could not
+ have expressed less inclination to leave it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If thou hast any of the salt of youth left in thee, Tresham, thou wilt be
+ at no loss to account for my silence on a topic seemingly so obvious. Miss
+ Vernon's extreme beauty, of which she herself seemed so little conscious&mdash;her
+ romantic and mysterious situation&mdash;the evils to which she was exposed&mdash;the
+ courage with which she seemed to face them&mdash;her manners, more frank
+ than belonged to her sex, yet, as it seemed to me, exceeding in frankness
+ only from the dauntless consciousness of her innocence,&mdash;above all,
+ the obvious and flattering distinction which she made in my favour over
+ all other persons, were at once calculated to interest my best feelings,
+ to excite my curiosity, awaken my imagination, and gratify my vanity. I
+ dared not, indeed, confess to myself the depth of the interest with which
+ Miss Vernon inspired me, or the large share which she occupied in my
+ thoughts. We read together, walked together, rode together, and sate
+ together. The studies which she had broken off upon her quarrel with
+ Rashleigh, she now resumed, under the auspices of a tutor whose views were
+ more sincere, though his capacity was far more limited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In truth, I was by no means qualified to assist her in the prosecution of
+ several profound studies which she had commenced with Rashleigh, and which
+ appeared to me more fitted for a churchman than for a beautiful female.
+ Neither can I conceive with what view he should have engaged Diana in the
+ gloomy maze of casuistry which schoolmen called philosophy, or in the
+ equally abstruse though more certain sciences of mathematics and
+ astronomy; unless it were to break down and confound in her mind the
+ difference and distinction between the sexes, and to habituate her to
+ trains of subtle reasoning, by which he might at his own time invest that
+ which is wrong with the colour of that which is right. It was in the same
+ spirit, though in the latter case the evil purpose was more obvious, that
+ the lessons of Rashleigh had encouraged Miss Vernon in setting at nought
+ and despising the forms and ceremonial limits which are drawn round
+ females in modern society. It is true, she was sequestrated from all
+ female company, and could not learn the usual rules of decorum, either
+ from example or precept; yet such was her innate modesty, and accurate
+ sense of what was right and wrong, that she would not of herself have
+ adopted the bold uncompromising manner which struck me with so much
+ surprise on our first acquaintance, had she not been led to conceive that
+ a contempt of ceremony indicated at once superiority of understanding and
+ the confidence of conscious innocence. Her wily instructor had, no doubt,
+ his own views in levelling those outworks which reserve and caution erect
+ around virtue. But for these, and for his other crimes, he has long since
+ answered at a higher tribunal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the progress which Miss Vernon, whose powerful mind readily
+ adopted every means of information offered to it, had made in more
+ abstract science, I found her no contemptible linguist, and well
+ acquainted both with ancient and modern literature. Were it not that
+ strong talents will often go farthest when they seem to have least
+ assistance, it would be almost incredible to tell the rapidity of Miss
+ Vernon's progress in knowledge; and it was still more extraordinary, when
+ her stock of mental acquisitions from books was compared with her total
+ ignorance of actual life. It seemed as if she saw and knew everything,
+ except what passed in the world around her;&mdash;and I believe it was
+ this very ignorance and simplicity of thinking upon ordinary subjects, so
+ strikingly contrasted with her fund of general knowledge and information,
+ which rendered her conversation so irresistibly fascinating, and rivetted
+ the attention to whatever she said or did; since it was absolutely
+ impossible to anticipate whether her next word or action was to display
+ the most acute perception, or the most profound simplicity. The degree of
+ danger which necessarily attended a youth of my age and keen feelings from
+ remaining in close and constant intimacy with an object so amiable, and so
+ peculiarly interesting, all who remember their own sentiments at my age
+ may easily estimate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0014" id="linkCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER FOURTEENTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Yon lamp its line of quivering light
+ Shoots from my lady's bower;
+ But why should Beauty's lamp be bright
+ At midnight's lonely hour?
+ OLD BALLAD.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The mode of life at Osbaldistone Hall was too uniform to admit of
+ description. Diana Vernon and I enjoyed much of our time in our mutual
+ studies; the rest of the family killed theirs in such sports and pastimes
+ as suited the seasons, in which we also took a share. My uncle was a man
+ of habits, and by habit became so much accustomed to my presence and mode
+ of life, that, upon the whole, he was rather fond of me than otherwise. I
+ might probably have risen yet higher in his good graces, had I employed
+ the same arts for that purpose which were used by Rashleigh, who, availing
+ himself of his father's disinclination to business, had gradually
+ insinuated himself into the management of his property. But although I
+ readily gave my uncle the advantage of my pen and my arithmetic so often
+ as he desired to correspond with a neighbour, or settle with a tenant, and
+ was, in so far, a more useful inmate in his family than any of his sons,
+ yet I was not willing to oblige Sir Hildebrand by relieving him entirely
+ from the management of his own affairs; so that, while the good knight
+ admitted that nevoy Frank was a steady, handy lad, he seldom failed to
+ remark in the same breath, that he did not think he should ha' missed
+ Rashleigh so much as he was like to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As it is particularly unpleasant to reside in a family where we are at
+ variance with any part of it, I made some efforts to overcome the ill-will
+ which my cousins entertained against me. I exchanged my laced hat for a
+ jockey-cap, and made some progress in their opinion; I broke a young colt
+ in a manner which carried me further into their good graces. A bet or two
+ opportunely lost to Dickon, and an extra health pledged with Percie,
+ placed me on an easy and familiar footing with all the young squires,
+ except Thorncliff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have already noticed the dislike entertained against me by this young
+ fellow, who, as he had rather more sense, had also a much worse temper,
+ than any of his brethren. Sullen, dogged, and quarrelsome, he regarded my
+ residence at Osbaldistone Hall as an intrusion, and viewed with envious
+ and jealous eyes my intimacy with Diana Vernon, whom the effect proposed
+ to be given to a certain family-compact assigned to him as an intended
+ spouse. That he loved her, could scarcely be said, at least without much
+ misapplication of the word; but he regarded her as something appropriated
+ to himself, and resented internally the interference which he knew not how
+ to prevent or interrupt. I attempted a tone of conciliation towards
+ Thorncliff on several occasions; but he rejected my advances with a manner
+ about as gracious as that of a growling mastiff, when the animal shuns and
+ resents a stranger's attempts to caress him. I therefore abandoned him to
+ his ill-humour, and gave myself no further trouble about the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the footing upon which I stood with the family at Osbaldistone
+ Hall; but I ought to mention another of its inmates with whom I
+ occasionally held some discourse. This was Andrew Fairservice, the
+ gardener who (since he had discovered that I was a Protestant) rarely
+ suffered me to pass him without proffering his Scotch mull for a social
+ pinch. There were several advantages attending this courtesy. In the first
+ place, it was made at no expense, for I never took snuff; and secondly, it
+ afforded an excellent apology to Andrew (who was not particularly fond of
+ hard labour) for laying aside his spade for several minutes. But, above
+ all, these brief interviews gave Andrew an opportunity of venting the news
+ he had collected, or the satirical remarks which his shrewd northern
+ humour suggested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am saying, sir,&rdquo; he said to me one evening, with a face obviously
+ charged with intelligence, &ldquo;I hae been down at the Trinlay-knowe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Andrew, and I suppose you heard some news at the alehouse?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Na, sir; I never gang to the yillhouse&mdash;that is unless ony neighbour
+ was to gie me a pint, or the like o' that; but to gang there on ane's ain
+ coat-tail, is a waste o' precious time and hard-won siller.&mdash;But I
+ was doun at the Trinlay-knowe, as I was saying, about a wee bit business
+ o' my ain wi' Mattie Simpson, that wants a forpit or twa o' peers that
+ will never be missed in the Ha'-house&mdash;and when we were at the
+ thrangest o' our bargain, wha suld come in but Pate Macready the
+ travelling merchant?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pedlar, I suppose you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;E'en as your honour likes to ca' him; but it's a creditable calling and a
+ gainfu', and has been lang in use wi' our folk. Pate's a far-awa cousin o'
+ mine, and we were blythe to meet wi' ane anither.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you went and had a jug of ale together, I suppose, Andrew?&mdash;For
+ Heaven's sake, cut short your story.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bide a wee&mdash;bide a wee; you southrons are aye in sic a hurry, and
+ this is something concerns yourself, an ye wad tak patience to hear't&mdash;Yill?&mdash;deil
+ a drap o' yill did Pate offer me; but Mattie gae us baith a drap skimmed
+ milk, and ane o' her thick ait jannocks, that was as wat and raw as a
+ divot. O for the bonnie girdle cakes o' the north!&mdash;and sae we sat
+ doun and took out our clavers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish you would take them out just now. Pray, tell me the news, if you
+ have got any worth telling, for I can't stop here all night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Than, if ye maun hae't, the folk in Lunnun are a' clean wud about this
+ bit job in the north here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Clean wood! what's that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ou, just real daft&mdash;neither to haud nor to bind&mdash;a' hirdy-girdy&mdash;clean
+ through ither&mdash;the deil's ower Jock Wabster.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="image-0008" id="image-0008">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/pa194.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Frank and Andrew Fairservice " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what does all this mean? or what business have I with the devil or
+ Jack Webster?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Umph!&rdquo; said Andrew, looking extremely knowing, &ldquo;it's just because&mdash;just
+ that the dirdum's a' about yon man's pokmanty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whose portmanteau? or what do you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ou, just the man Morris's, that he said he lost yonder: but if it's no
+ your honour's affair, as little is it mine; and I mauna lose this gracious
+ evening.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, as if suddenly seized with a violent fit of industry, Andrew began to
+ labour most diligently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My attention, as the crafty knave had foreseen, was now arrested, and
+ unwilling, at the same time, to acknowledge any particular interest in
+ that affair, by asking direct questions, I stood waiting till the spirit
+ of voluntary communication should again prompt him to resume his story.
+ Andrew dug on manfully, and spoke at intervals, but nothing to the purpose
+ of Mr. Macready's news; and I stood and listened, cursing him in my heart,
+ and desirous at the same time to see how long his humour of contradiction
+ would prevail over his desire of speaking upon the subject which was
+ obviously uppermost in his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Am trenching up the sparry-grass, and am gaun to saw some Misegun beans;
+ they winna want them to their swine's flesh, I'se warrant&mdash;muckle
+ gude may it do them. And siclike dung as the grieve has gien me!&mdash;it
+ should be wheat-strae, or aiten at the warst o't, and it's pease dirt, as
+ fizzenless as chuckie-stanes. But the huntsman guides a' as he likes about
+ the stable-yard, and he's selled the best o' the litter, I'se warrant.
+ But, howsoever, we mauna lose a turn o' this Saturday at e'en, for the
+ wather's sair broken, and if there's a fair day in seven, Sunday's sure to
+ come and lick it up&mdash;Howsomever, I'm no denying that it may settle,
+ if it be Heaven's will, till Monday morning,&mdash;and what's the use o'
+ my breaking my back at this rate?&mdash;I think, I'll e'en awa' hame, for
+ yon's the curfew, as they ca' their jowing-in bell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, applying both his hands to his spade, he pitched it upright
+ in the trench which he had been digging and, looking at me with the air of
+ superiority of one who knows himself possessed of important information,
+ which he may communicate or refuse at his pleasure, pulled down the
+ sleeves of his shirt, and walked slowly towards his coat, which lay
+ carefully folded up upon a neighbouring garden-seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must pay the penalty of having interrupted the tiresome rascal,&rdquo;
+ thought I to myself, &ldquo;and even gratify Mr. Fairservice by taking his
+ communication on his own terms.&rdquo; Then raising my voice, I addressed him,&mdash;&ldquo;And
+ after all, Andrew, what are these London news you had from your kinsman,
+ the travelling merchant?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The pedlar, your honour means?&rdquo; retorted Andrew&mdash;&ldquo;but ca' him what
+ ye wull, they're a great convenience in a country-side that's scant o'
+ borough-towns like this Northumberland&mdash;That's no the case, now, in
+ Scotland;&mdash;there's the kingdom of Fife, frae Culross to the East
+ Nuik, it's just like a great combined city&mdash;sae mony royal boroughs
+ yoked on end to end, like ropes of ingans, with their hie-streets and
+ their booths, nae doubt, and their kraemes, and houses of stane and lime
+ and fore-stairs&mdash;Kirkcaldy, the sell o't, is langer than ony town in
+ England.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I daresay it is all very splendid and very fine&mdash;but you were
+ talking of the London news a little while ago, Andrew.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; replied Andrew; &ldquo;but I dinna think your honour cared to hear about
+ them&mdash;Howsoever&rdquo; (he continued, grinning a ghastly smile), &ldquo;Pate
+ Macready does say, that they are sair mistrysted yonder in their
+ Parliament House about this rubbery o' Mr. Morris, or whatever they ca'
+ the chiel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the House of Parliament, Andrew!&mdash;how came they to mention it
+ there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ou, that's just what I said to Pate; if it like your honour, I'll tell
+ you the very words; it's no worth making a lie for the matter&mdash;'Pate,'
+ said I, 'what ado had the lords and lairds and gentles at Lunnun wi' the
+ carle and his walise?&mdash;When we had a Scotch Parliament, Pate,' says I
+ (and deil rax their thrapples that reft us o't!) 'they sate dousely down
+ and made laws for a haill country and kinrick, and never fashed their
+ beards about things that were competent to the judge ordinar o' the
+ bounds; but I think,' said I, 'that if ae kailwife pou'd aff her
+ neighbour's mutch they wad hae the twasome o' them into the Parliament
+ House o' Lunnun. It's just,' said I, 'amaist as silly as our auld daft
+ laird here and his gomerils o' sons, wi' his huntsmen and his hounds, and
+ his hunting cattle and horns, riding haill days after a bit beast that
+ winna weigh sax punds when they hae catched it.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You argued most admirably, Andrew,&rdquo; said I, willing to encourage him to
+ get into the marrow of his intelligence; &ldquo;and what said Pate?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ou,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;what better could be expected of a wheen pock-pudding
+ English folk?&mdash;But as to the robbery, it's like that when they're a'
+ at the thrang o' their Whig and Tory wark, and ca'ing ane anither, like
+ unhanged blackguards&mdash;up gets ae lang-tongued chield, and he says,
+ that a' the north of England were rank Jacobites (and, quietly, he wasna
+ far wrang maybe), and that they had levied amaist open war, and a king's
+ messenger had been stoppit and rubbit on the highway, and that the best
+ bluid o' Northumberland had been at the doing o't&mdash;and mickle gowd
+ ta'en aff him, and mony valuable papers; and that there was nae redress to
+ be gotten by remeed of law for the first justice o' the peace that the
+ rubbit man gaed to, he had fund the twa loons that did the deed birling
+ and drinking wi' him, wha but they; and the justice took the word o' the
+ tane for the compearance o' the tither; and that they e'en gae him
+ leg-bail, and the honest man that had lost his siller was fain to leave
+ the country for fear that waur had come of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can this be really true?&rdquo; said I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pate swears it's as true as that his ellwand is a yard lang&mdash;(and so
+ it is, just bating an inch, that it may meet the English measure)&mdash;And
+ when the chield had said his warst, there was a terrible cry for names,
+ and out comes he wi' this man Morris's name, and your uncle's, and Squire
+ Inglewood's, and other folk's beside&rdquo; (looking sly at me)&mdash;&ldquo;And then
+ another dragon o' a chield got up on the other side, and said, wad they
+ accuse the best gentleman in the land on the oath of a broken coward?&mdash;for
+ it's like that Morris had been drummed out o' the army for rinning awa in
+ Flanders; and he said, it was like the story had been made up between the
+ minister and him or ever he had left Lunnun; and that, if there was to be
+ a search-warrant granted, he thought the siller wad be fund some gate near
+ to St. James's Palace. Aweel, they trailed up Morris to their bar, as they
+ ca't, to see what he could say to the job; but the folk that were again
+ him, gae him sic an awfu' throughgaun about his rinnin' awa, and about a'
+ the ill he had ever dune or said for a' the forepart o' his life, that
+ Patie says he looked mair like ane dead than living; and they cou'dna get
+ a word o' sense out o' him, for downright fright at their growling and
+ routing. He maun be a saft sap, wi' a head nae better than a fozy frosted
+ turnip&mdash;it wad hae ta'en a hantle o' them to scaur Andrew Fairservice
+ out o' his tale.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And how did it all end, Andrew? did your friend happen to learn?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ou, ay; for as his walk is in this country, Pate put aff his journey for
+ the space of a week or thereby, because it wad be acceptable to his
+ customers to bring down the news. It's just a' gaed aft like moonshine in
+ water. The fallow that began it drew in his horns, and said, that though
+ he believed the man had been rubbit, yet he acknowledged he might hae been
+ mista'en about the particulars. And then the other chield got up, and
+ said, he caredna whether Morris was rubbed or no, provided it wasna to
+ become a stain on ony gentleman's honour and reputation, especially in the
+ north of England; for, said he before them, I come frae the north mysell,
+ and I carena a boddle wha kens it. And this is what they ca' explaining&mdash;the
+ tane gies up a bit, and the tither gies up a bit, and a' friends again.
+ Aweel, after the Commons' Parliament had tuggit, and rived, and rugged at
+ Morris and his rubbery till they were tired o't, the Lords' Parliament
+ they behoved to hae their spell o't. In puir auld Scotland's Parliament
+ they a' sate thegither, cheek by choul, and than they didna need to hae
+ the same blethers twice ower again. But till't their lordships went wi' as
+ muckle teeth and gude-will, as if the matter had been a' speck and span
+ new. Forbye, there was something said about ane Campbell, that suld hae
+ been concerned in the rubbery, mair or less, and that he suld hae had a
+ warrant frae the Duke of Argyle, as a testimonial o' his character. And
+ this put MacCallum More's beard in a bleize, as gude reason there was; and
+ he gat up wi' an unco bang, and garr'd them a' look about them, and wad
+ ram it even doun their throats, there was never ane o' the Campbells but
+ was as wight, wise, warlike, and worthy trust, as auld Sir John the
+ Graeme. Now, if your honour's sure ye arena a drap's bluid a-kin to a
+ Campbell, as I am nane mysell, sae far as I can count my kin, or hae had
+ it counted to me, I'll gie ye my mind on that matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may be assured I have no connection whatever with any gentleman of
+ the name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ou, than we may speak it quietly amang oursells. There's baith gude and
+ bad o' the Campbells, like other names, But this MacCallum More has an
+ unco sway and say baith, amang the grit folk at Lunnun even now; for he
+ canna preceesely be said to belang to ony o' the twa sides o' them, sae
+ deil any o' them likes to quarrel wi' him; sae they e'en voted Morris's
+ tale a fause calumnious libel, as they ca't, and if he hadna gien them
+ leg-bail, he was likely to hae ta'en the air on the pillory for
+ leasing-making.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So speaking, honest Andrew collected his dibbles, spades, and hoes, and
+ threw them into a wheel-barrow,&mdash;leisurely, however, and allowing me
+ full time to put any further questions which might occur to me before he
+ trundled them off to the tool-house, there to repose during the ensuing
+ day. I thought it best to speak out at once, lest this meddling fellow
+ should suppose there were more weighty reasons for my silence than
+ actually existed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should like to see this countryman of yours, Andrew and to hear his
+ news from himself directly. You have probably heard that I had some
+ trouble from the impertinent folly of this man Morris&rdquo; (Andrew grinned a
+ most significant grin), &ldquo;and I should wish to see your cousin the
+ merchant, to ask him the particulars of what he heard in London, if it
+ could be done without much trouble.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Naething mair easy,&rdquo; Andrew observed; &ldquo;he had but to hint to his cousin
+ that I wanted a pair or twa o' hose, and he wad be wi' me as fast as he
+ could lay leg to the grund.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O yes, assure him I shall be a customer; and as the night is, as you say,
+ settled and fair, I shall walk in the garden until he comes; the moon will
+ soon rise over the fells. You may bring him to the little back-gate; and I
+ shall have pleasure, in the meanwhile, in looking on the bushes and
+ evergreens by the bright frosty moonlight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vara right, vara right&mdash;that's what I hae aften said; a kail-blade,
+ or a colliflour, glances sae glegly by moonlight, it's like a leddy in her
+ diamonds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, off went Andrew Fairservice with great glee. He had to walk
+ about two miles, a labour he undertook with the greatest pleasure, in
+ order to secure to his kinsman the sale of some articles of his trade,
+ though it is probable he would not have given him sixpence to treat him to
+ a quart of ale. &ldquo;The good will of an Englishman would have displayed
+ itself in a manner exactly the reverse of Andrew's,&rdquo; thought I, as I paced
+ along the smooth-cut velvet walks, which, embowered with high, hedges of
+ yew and of holly, intersected the ancient garden of Osbaldistone Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I turned to retrace my steps, it was natural that I should lift up my
+ eyes to the windows of the old library; which, small in size, but several
+ in number, stretched along the second story of that side of the house
+ which now faced me. Light glanced from their casements. I was not
+ surprised at this, for I knew Miss Vernon often sat there of an evening,
+ though from motives of delicacy I put a strong restraint upon myself, and
+ never sought to join her at a time when I knew, all the rest of the family
+ being engaged for the evening, our interviews must necessarily have been
+ strictly <i>tete-a'-tete.</i> In the mornings we usually read together in
+ the same room; but then it often happened that one or other of our cousins
+ entered to seek some parchment duodecimo that could be converted into a
+ fishing-book, despite its gildings and illumination, or to tell us of some
+ &ldquo;sport toward,&rdquo; or from mere want of knowing where else to dispose of
+ themselves. In short, in the mornings the library was a sort of public
+ room, where man and woman might meet as on neutral ground. In the evening
+ it was very different and bred in a country where much attention is paid,
+ or was at least then paid, to <i>biense'ance,</i> I was desirous to think
+ for Miss Vernon concerning those points of propriety where her experience
+ did not afford her the means of thinking for herself. I made her therefore
+ comprehend, as delicately as I could, that when we had evening lessons,
+ the presence of a third party was proper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Vernon first laughed, then blushed, and was disposed to be
+ displeased; and then, suddenly checking herself, said, &ldquo;I believe you are
+ very right; and when I feel inclined to be a very busy scholar, I will
+ bribe old Martha with a cup of tea to sit by me and be my screen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Martha, the old housekeeper, partook of the taste of the family at the
+ Hall. A toast and tankard would have pleased her better than all the tea
+ in China. However, as the use of this beverage was then confined to the
+ higher ranks, Martha felt some vanity in being asked to partake of it; and
+ by dint of a great deal of sugar, many words scarce less sweet, and
+ abundance of toast and butter, she was sometimes prevailed upon to give us
+ her countenance. On other occasions, the servants almost unanimously
+ shunned the library after nightfall, because it was their foolish pleasure
+ to believe that it lay on the haunted side of the house. The more timorous
+ had seen sights and heard sounds there when all the rest of the house was
+ quiet; and even the young squires were far from having any wish to enter
+ these formidable precincts after nightfall without necessity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the library had at one time been a favourite resource of Rashleigh&mdash;that
+ a private door out of one side of it communicated with the sequestered and
+ remote apartment which he chose for himself, rather increased than
+ disarmed the terrors which the household had for the dreaded library of
+ Osbaldistone Hall. His extensive information as to what passed in the
+ world&mdash;his profound knowledge of science of every kind&mdash;a few
+ physical experiments which he occasionally showed off, were, in a house of
+ so much ignorance and bigotry, esteemed good reasons for supposing him
+ endowed with powers over the spiritual world. He understood Greek, Latin,
+ and Hebrew; and, therefore, according to the apprehension, and in the
+ phrase of his brother Wilfred, needed not to care &ldquo;for ghaist or
+ bar-ghaist, devil or dobbie.&rdquo; Yea, the servants persisted that they had
+ heard him hold conversations in the library, when every varsal soul in the
+ family were gone to bed; and that he spent the night in watching for
+ bogles, and the morning in sleeping in his bed, when he should have been
+ heading the hounds like a true Osbaldistone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these absurd rumours I had heard in broken hints and imperfect
+ sentences, from which I was left to draw the inference; and, as easily may
+ be supposed, I laughed them to scorn. But the extreme solitude to which
+ this chamber of evil fame was committed every night after curfew time, was
+ an additional reason why I should not intrude on Miss Vernon when she
+ chose to sit there in the evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To resume what I was saying,&mdash;I was not surprised to see a glimmering
+ of light from the library windows: but I was a little struck when I
+ distinctly perceived the shadows of two persons pass along and intercept
+ the light from the first of the windows, throwing the casement for a
+ moment into shade. &ldquo;It must be old Martha,&rdquo; thought I, &ldquo;whom Diana has
+ engaged to be her companion for the evening; or I must have been mistaken,
+ and taken Diana's shadow for a second person. No, by Heaven! it appears on
+ the second window,&mdash;two figures distinctly traced; and now it is lost
+ again&mdash;it is seen on the third&mdash;on the fourth&mdash;the darkened
+ forms of two persons distinctly seen in each window as they pass along the
+ room, betwixt the windows and the lights. Whom can Diana have got for a
+ companion?&rdquo;&mdash;The passage of the shadows between the lights and the
+ casements was twice repeated, as if to satisfy me that my observation
+ served me truly; after which the lights were extinguished, and the shades,
+ of course, were seen no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trifling as this circumstance was, it occupied my mind for a considerable
+ time. I did not allow myself to suppose that my friendship for Miss Vernon
+ had any directly selfish view; yet it is incredible the displeasure I felt
+ at the idea of her admitting any one to private interviews, at a time, and
+ in a place, where, for her own sake, I had been at some trouble to show
+ her that it was improper for me to meet with her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Silly, romping, incorrigible girl!&rdquo; said I to myself, &ldquo;on whom all good
+ advice and delicacy are thrown away! I have been cheated by the simplicity
+ of her manner, which I suppose she can assume just as she could a straw
+ bonnet, were it the fashion, for the mere sake of celebrity. I suppose,
+ notwithstanding the excellence of her understanding, the society of half a
+ dozen of clowns to play at whisk and swabbers would give her more pleasure
+ than if Ariosto himself were to awake from the dead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This reflection came the more powerfully across my mind, because, having
+ mustered up courage to show to Diana my version of the first books of
+ Ariosto, I had requested her to invite Martha to a tea-party in the
+ library that evening, to which arrangement Miss Vernon had refused her
+ consent, alleging some apology which I thought frivolous at the time. I
+ had not long speculated on this disagreeable subject, when the back
+ garden-door opened, and the figures of Andrew and his country-man&mdash;bending
+ under his pack&mdash;crossed the moonlight alley, and called my attention
+ elsewhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I found Mr. Macready, as I expected, a tough, sagacious, long-headed
+ Scotchman, and a collector of news both from choice and profession. He was
+ able to give me a distinct account of what had passed in the House of
+ Commons and House of Lords on the affair of Morris, which, it appears, had
+ been made by both parties a touchstone to ascertain the temper of the
+ Parliament. It appeared also, that, as I had learned from Andrew, by
+ second hand, the ministry had proved too weak to support a story involving
+ the character of men of rank and importance, and resting upon the credit
+ of a person of such indifferent fame as Morris, who was, moreover,
+ confused and contradictory in his mode of telling the story. Macready was
+ even able to supply me with a copy of a printed journal, or News-Letter,
+ seldom extending beyond the capital, in which the substance of the debate
+ was mentioned; and with a copy of the Duke of Argyle's speech, printed
+ upon a broadside, of which he had purchased several from the hawkers,
+ because, he said, it would be a saleable article on the north of the
+ Tweed. The first was a meagre statement, full of blanks and asterisks, and
+ which added little or nothing to the information I had from the Scotchman;
+ and the Duke's speech, though spirited and eloquent, contained chiefly a
+ panegyric on his country, his family, and his clan, with a few
+ compliments, equally sincere, perhaps, though less glowing, which he took
+ so favourable an opportunity of paying to himself. I could not learn
+ whether my own reputation had been directly implicated, although I
+ perceived that the honour of my uncle's family had been impeached, and
+ that this person Campbell, stated by Morris to have been the most active
+ robber of the two by whom he was assailed, was said by him to have
+ appeared in the behalf of a Mr. Osbaldistone, and by the connivance of the
+ Justice procured his liberation. In this particular, Morris's story jumped
+ with my own suspicions, which had attached to Campbell from the moment I
+ saw him appear at Justice Inglewood's. Vexed upon the whole, as well as
+ perplexed, with this extraordinary story, I dismissed the two Scotchmen,
+ after making some purchases from Macready, and a small compliment to
+ Fairservice, and retired to my own apartment to consider what I ought to
+ do in defence of my character thus publicly attacked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0015" id="linkCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER FIFTEENTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Whence, and what art you?
+ Milton.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After exhausting a sleepless night in meditating on the intelligence I had
+ received, I was at first inclined to think that I ought, as speedily as
+ possible, to return to London, and by my open appearance repel the calumny
+ which had been spread against me. But I hesitated to take this course on
+ recollection of my father's disposition, singularly absolute in his
+ decisions as to all that concerned his family. He was most able,
+ certainly, from experience, to direct what I ought to do, and from his
+ acquaintance with the most distinguished Whigs then in power, had
+ influence enough to obtain a hearing for my cause. So, upon the whole, I
+ judged it most safe to state my whole story in the shape of a narrative,
+ addressed to my father; and as the ordinary opportunities of intercourse
+ between the Hall and the post-town recurred rarely, I determined to ride
+ to the town, which was about ten miles' distance, and deposit my letter in
+ the post-office with my own hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed I began to think it strange that though several weeks had elapsed
+ since my departure from home, I had received no letter, either from my
+ father or Owen, although Rashleigh had written to Sir Hildebrand of his
+ safe arrival in London, and of the kind reception he had met with from his
+ uncle. Admitting that I might have been to blame, I did not deserve, in my
+ own opinion at least, to be so totally forgotten by my father; and I
+ thought my present excursion might have the effect of bringing a letter
+ from him to hand more early than it would otherwise have reached me. But
+ before concluding my letter concerning the affair of Morris, I failed not
+ to express my earnest hope and wish that my father would honour me with a
+ few lines, were it but to express his advice and commands in an affair of
+ some difficulty, and where my knowledge of life could not be supposed
+ adequate to my own guidance. I found it impossible to prevail on myself to
+ urge my actual return to London as a place of residence, and I disguised
+ my unwillingness to do so under apparent submission to my father's will,
+ which, as I imposed it on myself as a sufficient reason for not urging my
+ final departure from Osbaldistone Hall, would, I doubted not, be received
+ as such by my parent. But I begged permission to come to London, for a
+ short time at least, to meet and refute the infamous calumnies which had
+ been circulated concerning me in so public a manner. Having made up my
+ packet, in which my earnest desire to vindicate my character was strangely
+ blended with reluctance to quit my present place of residence, I rode over
+ to the post-town, and deposited my letter in the office. By doing so, I
+ obtained possession, somewhat earlier than I should otherwise have done,
+ of the following letter from my friend Mr. Owen:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear Mr. Francis,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yours received per favour of Mr. R. Osbaldistone, and note the contents.
+ Shall do Mr. R. O. such civilities as are in my power, and have taken him
+ to see the Bank and Custom-house. He seems a sober, steady young
+ gentleman, and takes to business; so will be of service to the firm. Could
+ have wished another person had turned his mind that way; but God's will be
+ done. As cash may be scarce in those parts, have to trust you will excuse
+ my enclosing a goldsmith's bill at six days' sight, on Messrs. Hooper and
+ Girder of Newcastle, for L100, which I doubt not will be duly honoured.&mdash;I
+ remain, as in duty bound, dear Mr. Frank, your very respectful and
+ obedient servant,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Joseph Owen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Postscriptum.</i>&mdash;Hope you will advise the above coming safe to
+ hand. Am sorry we have so few of yours. Your father says he is as usual,
+ but looks poorly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this epistle, written in old Owen's formal style, I was rather
+ surprised to observe that he made no acknowledgment of that private letter
+ which I had written to him, with a view to possess him of Rashleigh's real
+ character, although, from the course of post, it seemed certain that he
+ ought to have received it. Yet I had sent it by the usual conveyance from
+ the Hall, and had no reason to suspect that it could miscarry upon the
+ road. As it comprised matters of great importance both to my father and to
+ myself, I sat down in the post-office and again wrote to Owen,
+ recapitulating the heads of my former letter, and requesting to know, in
+ course of post, if it had reached him in safety. I also acknowledged the
+ receipt of the bill, and promised to make use of the contents if I should
+ have any occasion for money. I thought, indeed, it was odd that my father
+ should leave the care of supplying my necessities to his clerk; but I
+ concluded it was a matter arranged between them. At any rate, Owen was a
+ bachelor, rich in his way, and passionately attached to me, so that I had
+ no hesitation in being obliged to him for a small sum, which I resolved to
+ consider as a loan, to be returned with my earliest ability, in case it
+ was not previously repaid by my father; and I expressed myself to this
+ purpose to Mr. Owen. A shopkeeper in a little town, to whom the
+ post-master directed me, readily gave me in gold the amount of my bill on
+ Messrs. Hooper and Girder, so that I returned to Osbaldistone Hall a good
+ deal richer than I had set forth. This recruit to my finances was not a
+ matter of indifference to me, as I was necessarily involved in some
+ expenses at Osbaldistone Hall; and I had seen, with some uneasy
+ impatience, that the sum which my travelling expenses had left unexhausted
+ at my arrival there was imperceptibly diminishing. This source of anxiety
+ was for the present removed. On my arrival at the Hall I found that Sir
+ Hildebrand and all his offspring had gone down to the little hamlet,
+ called Trinlay-knowes, &ldquo;to see,&rdquo; as Andrew Fairservice expressed it, &ldquo;a
+ wheen midden cocks pike ilk ither's barns out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is indeed a brutal amusement, Andrew; I suppose you have none such in
+ Scotland?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Na, na,&rdquo; answered Andrew boldly; then shaded away his negative with,
+ &ldquo;unless it be on Fastern's-e'en, or the like o' that&mdash;But indeed it's
+ no muckle matter what the folk do to the midden pootry, for they had
+ siccan a skarting and scraping in the yard, that there's nae getting a
+ bean or pea keepit for them.&mdash;But I am wondering what it is that
+ leaves that turret-door open;&mdash;now that Mr. Rashleigh's away, it
+ canna be him, I trow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The turret-door to which he alluded opened to the garden at the bottom of
+ a winding stair, leading down from Mr. Rashleigh's apartment. This, as I
+ have already mentioned, was situated in a sequestered part of the house,
+ communicating with the library by a private entrance, and by another
+ intricate and dark vaulted passage with the rest of the house. A long
+ narrow turf walk led, between two high holly hedges, from the turret-door
+ to a little postern in the wall of the garden. By means of these
+ communications Rashleigh, whose movements were very independent of those
+ of the rest of his family, could leave the Hall or return to it at
+ pleasure, without his absence or presence attracting any observation. But
+ during his absence the stair and the turret-door were entirely disused,
+ and this made Andrew's observation somewhat remarkable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you often observed that door open?&rdquo; was my question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No just that often neither; but I hae noticed it ance or twice. I'm
+ thinking it maun hae been the priest, Father Vaughan, as they ca' him.
+ Ye'll no catch ane o' the servants gauging up that stair, puir frightened
+ heathens that they are, for fear of bogles and brownies, and lang-nebbit
+ things frae the neist warld. But Father Vaughan thinks himself a
+ privileged person&mdash;set him up and lay him down!&mdash;I'se be caution
+ the warst stibbler that ever stickit a sermon out ower the Tweed yonder,
+ wad lay a ghaist twice as fast as him, wi' his holy water and his
+ idolatrous trinkets. I dinna believe he speaks gude Latin neither; at
+ least he disna take me up when I tell him the learned names o' the
+ plants.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Father Vaughan, who divided his time and his ghostly care between
+ Osbaldistone Hall and about half a dozen mansions of Catholic gentlemen in
+ the neighbourhood, I have as yet said nothing, for I had seen but little.
+ He was aged about sixty&mdash;of a good family, as I was given to
+ understand, in the north&mdash;of a striking and imposing presence, grave
+ in his exterior, and much respected among the Catholics of Northumberland
+ as a worthy and upright man. Yet Father Vaughan did not altogether lack
+ those peculiarities which distinguish his order. There hung about him an
+ air of mystery, which, in Protestant eyes, savoured of priestcraft. The
+ natives (such they might be well termed) of Osbaldistone Hall looked up to
+ him with much more fear, or at least more awe, than affection. His
+ condemnation of their revels was evident, from their being discontinued in
+ some measure when the priest was a resident at the Hall. Even Sir
+ Hildebrand himself put some restraint upon his conduct at such times,
+ which, perhaps, rendered Father Vaughan's presence rather irksome than
+ otherwise. He had the well-bred, insinuating, and almost flattering
+ address peculiar to the clergy of his persuasion, especially in England,
+ where the lay Catholic, hemmed in by penal laws, and by the restrictions
+ of his sect and recommendation of his pastor, often exhibits a reserved,
+ and almost a timid manner in the society of Protestants; while the priest,
+ privileged by his order to mingle with persons of all creeds, is open,
+ alert, and liberal in his intercourse with them, desirous of popularity,
+ and usually skilful in the mode of obtaining it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Father Vaughan was a particular acquaintance of Rashleigh's, otherwise, in
+ all probability, he would scarce have been able to maintain his footing at
+ Osbaldistone Hall. This gave me no desire to cultivate his intimacy, nor
+ did he seem to make any advances towards mine; so our occasional
+ intercourse was confined to the exchange of mere civility. I considered it
+ as extremely probable that Mr. Vaughan might occupy Rashleigh's apartment
+ during his occasional residence at the Hall; and his profession rendered
+ it likely that he should occasionally be a tenant of the library. Nothing
+ was more probable than that it might have been his candle which had
+ excited my attention on a preceding evening. This led me involuntarily to
+ recollect that the intercourse between Miss Vernon and the priest was
+ marked with something like the same mystery which characterised her
+ communications with Rashleigh. I had never heard her mention Vaughan's
+ name, or even allude to him, excepting on the occasion of our first
+ meeting, when she mentioned the old priest and Rashleigh as the only
+ conversable beings, besides herself, in Osbaldistone Hall. Yet although
+ silent with respect to Father Vaughan, his arrival at the Hall never
+ failed to impress Miss Vernon with an anxious and fluttering tremor, which
+ lasted until they had exchanged one or two significant glances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever the mystery might be which overclouded the destinies of this
+ beautiful and interesting female, it was clear that Father Vaughan was
+ implicated in it; unless, indeed, I could suppose that he was the agent
+ employed to procure her settlement in the cloister, in the event of her
+ rejecting a union with either of my cousins,&mdash;an office which would
+ sufficiently account for her obvious emotion at his appearance. As to the
+ rest, they did not seem to converse much together, or even to seek each
+ other's society. Their league, if any subsisted between them, was of a
+ tacit and understood nature, operating on their actions without any
+ necessity of speech. I recollected, however, on reflection, that I had
+ once or twice discovered signs pass betwixt them, which I had at the time
+ supposed to bear reference to some hint concerning Miss Vernon's religious
+ observances, knowing how artfully the Catholic clergy maintain, at all
+ times and seasons, their influence over the minds of their followers. But
+ now I was disposed to assign to these communications a deeper and more
+ mysterious import. Did he hold private meetings with Miss Vernon in the
+ library? was a question which occupied my thoughts; and if so, for what
+ purpose? And why should she have admitted an intimate of the deceitful
+ Rashleigh to such close confidence?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These questions and difficulties pressed on my mind with an interest which
+ was greatly increased by the impossibility of resolving them. I had
+ already begun to suspect that my friendship for Diana Vernon was not
+ altogether so disinterested as in wisdom it ought to have been. I had
+ already felt myself becoming jealous of the contemptible lout Thorncliff,
+ and taking more notice, than in prudence or dignity of feeling I ought to
+ have done, of his silly attempts to provoke me. And now I was scrutinising
+ the conduct of Miss Vernon with the most close and eager observation,
+ which I in vain endeavoured to palm on myself as the offspring of idle
+ curiosity. All these, like Benedick's brushing his hat of a morning, were
+ signs that the sweet youth was in love; and while my judgment still denied
+ that I had been guilty of forming an attachment so imprudent, she
+ resembled those ignorant guides, who, when they have led the traveller and
+ themselves into irretrievable error, persist in obstinately affirming it
+ to be impossible that they can have missed the way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0016" id="linkCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER SIXTEENTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ It happened one day about noon, going to my boat, I was exceedingly
+ surprised with the print of a man's naked foot on the shore, which
+ was very plain to be seen on the sand.
+ Robinson Crusoe.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ With the blended feelings of interest and jealousy which were engendered
+ by Miss Vernon's singular situation, my observations of her looks and
+ actions became acutely sharpened, and that to a degree which,
+ notwithstanding my efforts to conceal it, could not escape her
+ penetration. The sense that she was observed, or, more properly speaking,
+ that she was watched by my looks, seemed to give Diana a mixture of
+ embarrassment, pain, and pettishness. At times it seemed that she sought
+ an opportunity of resenting a conduct which she could not but feel as
+ offensive, considering the frankness with which she had mentioned the
+ difficulties that surrounded her. At other times she seemed prepared to
+ expostulate upon the subject. But either her courage failed, or some other
+ sentiment impeded her seeking an <i>e'claircissement.</i> Her displeasure
+ evaporated in repartee, and her expostulations died on her lips. We stood
+ in a singular relation to each other,&mdash;spending, and by mutual
+ choice, much of our time in close society with each other, yet disguising
+ our mutual sentiments, and jealous of, or offended by, each other's
+ actions. There was betwixt us intimacy without confidence;&mdash;on one
+ side, love without hope or purpose, and curiosity without any rational or
+ justifiable motive; and on the other, embarrassment and doubt,
+ occasionally mingled with displeasure. Yet I believe that this agitation
+ of the passions (such is the nature of the human bosom), as it continued
+ by a thousand irritating and interesting, though petty circumstances, to
+ render Miss Vernon and me the constant objects of each other's thoughts,
+ tended, upon the whole, to increase the attachment with which we were
+ naturally disposed to regard each other. But although my vanity early
+ discovered that my presence at Osbaldistone Hall had given Diana some
+ additional reason for disliking the cloister, I could by no means confide
+ in an affection which seemed completely subordinate to the mysteries of
+ her singular situation. Miss Vernon was of a character far too formed and
+ determined, to permit her love for me to overpower either her sense of
+ duty or of prudence, and she gave me a proof of this in a conversation
+ which we had together about this period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were sitting together in the library. Miss Vernon, in turning over a
+ copy of the Orlando Furioso, which belonged to me, shook a piece of
+ writing paper from between the leaves. I hastened to lift it, but she
+ prevented me.&mdash;&ldquo;It is verse,&rdquo; she said, on glancing at the paper; and
+ then unfolding it, but as if to wait my answer before proceeding&mdash;&ldquo;May
+ I take the liberty?&mdash;Nay, nay, if you blush and stammer, I must do
+ violence to your modesty, and suppose that permission is granted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not worthy your perusal&mdash;a scrap of a translation&mdash;My
+ dear Miss Vernon, it would be too severe a trial, that you, who understand
+ the original so well, should sit in judgment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mine honest friend,&rdquo; replied Diana, &ldquo;do not, if you will be guided by my
+ advice, bait your hook with too much humility; for, ten to one, it will
+ not catch a single compliment. You know I belong to the unpopular family
+ of Tell-truths, and would not flatter Apollo for his lyre.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She proceeded to read the first stanza, which was nearly to the following
+ purpose:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Ladies, and knights, and arms, and love's fair flame,
+ Deeds of emprize and courtesy, I sing;
+ What time the Moors from sultry Africk came,
+ Led on by Agramant, their youthful king&mdash;
+ He whom revenge and hasty ire did bring
+ O'er the broad wave, in France to waste and war;
+ Such ills from old Trojano's death did spring,
+ Which to avenge he came from realms afar,
+ And menaced Christian Charles, the Roman Emperor.
+ Of dauntless Roland, too, my strain shall sound,
+ In import never known in prose or rhyme,
+ How He, the chief, of judgment deemed profound,
+ For luckless love was crazed upon a time&rdquo;&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is a great deal of it,&rdquo; said she, glancing along the paper, and
+ interrupting the sweetest sounds which mortal ears can drink in,&mdash;those
+ of a youthful poet's verses, namely, read by the lips which are dearest to
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Much more than ought to engage your attention, Miss Vernon,&rdquo; I replied,
+ something mortified; and I took the verses from her unreluctant hand&mdash;
+ &ldquo;And yet,&rdquo; I continued, &ldquo;shut up as I am in this retired situation, I have
+ felt sometimes I could not amuse myself better than by carrying on&mdash;merely
+ for my own amusement, you will of course understand&mdash;the version of
+ this fascinating author, which I began some months since when I was on the
+ banks of the Garonne.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The question would only be,&rdquo; said Diana, gravely, &ldquo;whether you could not
+ spend your time to better purpose?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean in original composition?&rdquo; said I, greatly flattered&mdash;&ldquo;But,
+ to say truth, my genius rather lies in finding words and rhymes than
+ ideas; and therefore I am happy to use those which Ariosto has prepared to
+ my hand. However, Miss Vernon, with the encouragement you give&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, Frank&mdash;it is encouragement not of my giving, but of your
+ taking. I meant neither original composition nor translation, since I
+ think you might employ your time to far better purpose than in either. You
+ are mortified,&rdquo; she continued, &ldquo;and I am sorry to be the cause.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not mortified,&mdash;certainly not mortified,&rdquo; said I, with the best
+ grace I could muster, and it was but indifferently assumed; &ldquo;I am too much
+ obliged by the interest you take in me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but,&rdquo; resumed the relentless Diana, &ldquo;there is both mortification and
+ a little grain of anger in that constrained tone of voice; do not be angry
+ if I probe your feelings to the bottom&mdash;perhaps what I am about to
+ say will affect them still more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I felt the childishness of my own conduct, and the superior manliness of
+ Miss Vernon's, and assured her, that she need not fear my wincing under
+ criticism which I knew to be kindly meant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was honestly meant and said,&rdquo; she replied; &ldquo;I knew full well that
+ the fiend of poetical irritability flew away with the little preluding
+ cough which ushered in the declaration. And now I must be serious&mdash;Have
+ you heard from your father lately?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a word,&rdquo; I replied; &ldquo;he has not honoured me with a single line during
+ the several months of my residence here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is strange!&mdash;you are a singular race, you bold Osbaldistones.
+ Then you are not aware that he has gone to Holland, to arrange some
+ pressing affairs which required his own immediate presence?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never heard a word of it until this moment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And farther, it must be news to you, and I presume scarcely the most
+ agreeable, that he has left Rashleigh in the almost uncontrolled
+ management of his affairs until his return.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I started, and could not suppress my surprise and apprehension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have reason for alarm,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon, very gravely; &ldquo;and were I
+ you, I would endeavour to meet and obviate the dangers which arise from so
+ undesirable an arrangement.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And how is it possible for me to do so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Everything is possible for him who possesses courage and activity,&rdquo; she
+ said, with a look resembling one of those heroines of the age of chivalry,
+ whose encouragement was wont to give champions double valour at the hour
+ of need; &ldquo;and to the timid and hesitating, everything is impossible,
+ because it seems so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what would you advise, Miss Vernon?&rdquo; I replied, wishing, yet
+ dreading, to hear her answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She paused a moment, then answered firmly&mdash;&ldquo;That you instantly leave
+ Osbaldistone Hall, and return to London. You have perhaps already,&rdquo; she
+ continued, in a softer tone, &ldquo;been here too long; that fault was not
+ yours. Every succeeding moment you waste here will be a crime. Yes, a
+ crime: for I tell you plainly, that if Rashleigh long manages your
+ father's affairs, you may consider his ruin as consummated.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How is this possible?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ask no questions,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;but believe me, Rashleigh's views extend
+ far beyond the possession or increase of commercial wealth: he will only
+ make the command of Mr. Osbaldistone's revenues and property the means of
+ putting in motion his own ambitious and extensive schemes. While your
+ father was in Britain this was impossible; during his absence, Rashleigh
+ will possess many opportunities, and he will not neglect to use them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But how can I, in disgrace with my father, and divested of all control
+ over his affairs, prevent this danger by my mere presence in London?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That presence alone will do much. Your claim to interfere is a part of
+ your birthright, and it is inalienable. You will have the countenance,
+ doubtless, of your father's head-clerk, and confidential friends and
+ partners. Above all, Rashleigh's schemes are of a nature that&rdquo;&mdash;(she
+ stopped abruptly, as if fearful of saying too much)&mdash;&ldquo;are, in short,&rdquo;
+ she resumed, &ldquo;of the nature of all selfish and unconscientious plans,
+ which are speedily abandoned as soon as those who frame them perceive
+ their arts are discovered and watched. Therefore, in the language of your
+ favourite poet&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ To horse! to horse! Urge doubts to those that fear.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ A feeling, irresistible in its impulse, induced me to reply&mdash;&ldquo;Ah!
+ Diana, can <i>you</i> give me advice to leave Osbaldistone Hall?&mdash;then
+ indeed I have already been a resident here too long!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Vernon coloured, but proceeded with great firmness&mdash;&ldquo;Indeed, I
+ do give you this advice&mdash;not only to quit Osbaldistone Hall, but
+ never to return to it more. You have only one friend to regret here,&rdquo; she
+ continued, forcing a smile, &ldquo;and she has been long accustomed to sacrifice
+ her friendships and her comforts to the welfare of others. In the world
+ you will meet a hundred whose friendship will be as disinterested&mdash;more
+ useful&mdash;less encumbered by untoward circumstances&mdash;less
+ influenced by evil tongues and evil times.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never!&rdquo; I exclaimed, &ldquo;never!&mdash;the world can afford me nothing to
+ repay what I must leave behind me.&rdquo; Here I took her hand, and pressed it
+ to my lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is folly!&rdquo; she exclaimed&mdash;&ldquo;this is madness!&rdquo; and she struggled
+ to withdraw her hand from my grasp, but not so stubbornly as actually to
+ succeed until I had held it for nearly a minute. &ldquo;Hear me, sir!&rdquo; she said,
+ &ldquo;and curb this unmanly burst of passion. I am, by a solemn contract, the
+ bride of Heaven, unless I could prefer being wedded to villany in the
+ person of Rashleigh Osbaldistone, or brutality in that of his brother. I
+ am, therefore, the bride of Heaven,&mdash;betrothed to the convent from
+ the cradle. To me, therefore, these raptures are misapplied&mdash;they
+ only serve to prove a farther necessity for your departure, and that
+ without delay.&rdquo; At these words she broke suddenly off, and said, but in a
+ suppressed tone of voice, &ldquo;Leave me instantly&mdash;we will meet here
+ again, but it must be for the last time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My eyes followed the direction of hers as she spoke, and I thought I saw
+ the tapestry shake, which covered the door of the secret passage from
+ Rashleigh's room to the library. I conceived we were observed, and turned
+ an inquiring glance on Miss Vernon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is nothing,&rdquo; said she, faintly; &ldquo;a rat behind the arras.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dead for a ducat,&rdquo; would have been my reply, had I dared to give way to
+ the feelings which rose indignant at the idea of being subjected to an
+ eaves-dropper on such an occasion. Prudence, and the necessity of
+ suppressing my passion, and obeying Diana's reiterated command of &ldquo;Leave
+ me! leave me!&rdquo; came in time to prevent my rash action. I left the
+ apartment in a wild whirl and giddiness of mind, which I in vain attempted
+ to compose when I returned to my own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A chaos of thoughts intruded themselves on me at once, passing hastily
+ through my brain, intercepting and overshadowing each other, and
+ resembling those fogs which in mountainous countries are wont to descend
+ in obscure volumes, and disfigure or obliterate the usual marks by which
+ the traveller steers his course through the wilds. The dark and undefined
+ idea of danger arising to my father from the machinations of such a man as
+ Rashleigh Osbaldistone&mdash;the half declaration of love that I had
+ offered to Miss Vernon's acceptance&mdash;the acknowledged difficulties of
+ her situation, bound by a previous contract to sacrifice herself to a
+ cloister or to an ill-assorted marriage,&mdash;all pressed themselves at
+ once upon my recollection, while my judgment was unable deliberately to
+ consider any of them in their just light and bearings. But chiefly and
+ above all the rest, I was perplexed by the manner in which Miss Vernon had
+ received my tender of affection, and by her manner, which, fluctuating
+ betwixt sympathy and firmness, seemed to intimate that I possessed an
+ interest in her bosom, but not of force sufficient to counterbalance the
+ obstacles to her avowing a mutual affection. The glance of fear, rather
+ than surprise, with which she had watched the motion of the tapestry over
+ the concealed door, implied an apprehension of danger which I could not
+ but suppose well grounded; for Diana Vernon was little subject to the
+ nervous emotions of her sex, and totally unapt to fear without actual and
+ rational cause. Of what nature could those mysteries be, with which she
+ was surrounded as with an enchanter's spell, and which seemed continually
+ to exert an active influence over her thoughts and actions, though their
+ agents were never visible? On this subject of doubt my mind finally
+ rested, as if glad to shake itself free from investigating the propriety
+ or prudence of my own conduct, by transferring the inquiry to what
+ concerned Miss Vernon. I will be resolved, I concluded, ere I leave
+ Osbaldistone Hall, concerning the light in which I must in future regard
+ this fascinating being, over whose life frankness and mystery seem to have
+ divided their reign,&mdash;the former inspiring her words and sentiments&mdash;the
+ latter spreading in misty influence over all her actions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joined to the obvious interests which arose from curiosity and anxious
+ passion, there mingled in my feelings a strong, though unavowed and
+ undefined, infusion of jealousy. This sentiment, which springs up with
+ love as naturally as the tares with the wheat, was excited by the degree
+ of influence which Diana appeared to concede to those unseen beings by
+ whom her actions were limited. The more I reflected upon her character,
+ the more I was internally though unwillingly convinced, that she was
+ formed to set at defiance all control, excepting that which arose from
+ affection; and I felt a strong, bitter, and gnawing suspicion, that such
+ was the foundation of that influence by which she was overawed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These tormenting doubts strengthened my desire to penetrate into the
+ secret of Miss Vernon's conduct, and in the prosecution of this sage
+ adventure, I formed a resolution, of which, if you are not weary of these
+ details, you will find the result in the next chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCH0017" id="linkCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER SEVENTEENTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I hear a voice you cannot hear,
+ Which says, I must not stay;
+ I see a hand you cannot see,
+ Which beckons me awry.
+ Tickell.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I have already told you, Tresham, if you deign to bear it in remembrance,
+ that my evening visits to the library had seldom been made except by
+ appointment, and under the sanction of old Dame Martha's presence. This,
+ however, was entirely a tacit conventional arrangement of my own
+ instituting. Of late, as the embarrassments of our relative situation had
+ increased, Miss Vernon and I had never met in the evening at all. She had
+ therefore no reason to suppose that I was likely to seek a renewal of
+ these interviews, and especially without some previous notice or
+ appointment betwixt us, that Martha might, as usual, be placed upon duty;
+ but, on the other hand, this cautionary provision was a matter of
+ understanding, not of express enactment. The library was open to me, as to
+ the other members of the family, at all hours of the day and night, and I
+ could not be accused of intrusion, however suddenly and unexpectedly I
+ might made my appearance in it. My belief was strong, that in this
+ apartment Miss Vernon occasionally received Vaughan, or some other person,
+ by whose opinion she was accustomed to regulate her conduct, and that at
+ the times when she could do so with least chance of interruption. The
+ lights which gleamed in the library at unusual hours&mdash;the passing
+ shadows which I had myself remarked&mdash;the footsteps which might be
+ traced in the morning-dew from the turret-door to the postern-gate in the
+ garden&mdash;sounds and sights which some of the servants, and Andrew
+ Fairservice in particular, had observed, and accounted for in their own
+ way,&mdash;all tended to show that the place was visited by some one
+ different from the ordinary inmates of the hall. Connected as this
+ visitant probably must be with the fates of Diana Vernon, I did not
+ hesitate to form a plan of discovering who or what he was,&mdash;how far
+ his influence was likely to produce good or evil consequences to her on
+ whom he acted;&mdash;above all, though I endeavoured to persuade myself
+ that this was a mere subordinate consideration, I desired to know by what
+ means this person had acquired or maintained his influence over Diana, and
+ whether he ruled over her by fear or by affection. The proof that this
+ jealous curiosity was uppermost in my mind, arose from my imagination
+ always ascribing Miss Vernon's conduct to the influence of some one
+ individual agent, although, for aught I knew about the matter, her
+ advisers might be as numerous am Legion. I remarked this over and over to
+ myself; but I found that my mind still settled back in my original
+ conviction, that one single individual, of the masculine sex, and in all
+ probability young and handsome, was at the bottom of Miss Vernon's
+ conduct; and it was with a burning desire of discovering, or rather of
+ detecting, such a rival, that I stationed myself in the garden to watch
+ the moment when the lights should appear in the library windows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So eager, however, was my impatience, that I commenced my watch for a
+ phenomenon, which could not appear until darkness, a full hour before the
+ daylight disappeared, on a July evening. It was Sabbath, and all the walks
+ were still and solitary. I walked up and down for some time, enjoying the
+ refreshing coolness of a summer evening, and meditating on the probable
+ consequences of my enterprise. The fresh and balmy air of the garden,
+ impregnated with fragrance, produced its usual sedative effects on my
+ over-heated and feverish blood. As these took place, the turmoil of my
+ mind began proportionally to abate, and I was led to question the right I
+ had to interfere with Miss Vernon's secrets, or with those of my uncle's
+ family. What was it to me whom my uncle might choose to conceal in his
+ house, where I was myself a guest only by tolerance? And what title had I
+ to pry into the affairs of Miss Vernon, fraught, as she had avowed them to
+ be, with mystery, into which she desired no scrutiny?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Passion and self-will were ready with their answers to these questions. In
+ detecting this secret, I was in all probability about to do service to Sir
+ Hildebrand, who was probably ignorant of the intrigues carried on in his
+ family&mdash;and a still more important service to Miss Vernon, whose
+ frank simplicity of character exposed her to so many risks in maintaining
+ a private correspondence, perhaps with a person of doubtful or dangerous
+ character. If I seemed to intrude myself on her confidence, it was with
+ the generous and disinterested (yes, I even ventured to call it the <i>disinterested</i>)
+ intention of guiding, defending, and protecting her against craft&mdash;against
+ malice,&mdash;above all, against the secret counsellor whom she had chosen
+ for her confidant. Such were the arguments which my will boldly preferred
+ to my conscience, as coin which ought to be current, and which conscience,
+ like a grumbling shopkeeper, was contented to accept, rather than come to
+ an open breach with a customer, though more than doubting that the tender
+ was spurious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While I paced the green alleys, debating these things <i>pro</i> and <i>con,</i>
+ I suddenly alighted upon Andrew Fairservice, perched up like a statue by a
+ range of bee-hives, in an attitude of devout contemplation&mdash;one eye,
+ however, watching the motions of the little irritable citizens, who were
+ settling in their straw-thatched mansion for the evening, and the other
+ fixed on a book of devotion, which much attrition had deprived of its
+ corners, and worn into an oval shape; a circumstance which, with the close
+ print and dingy colour of the volume in question, gave it an air of most
+ respectable antiquity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was e'en taking a spell o' worthy Mess John Quackleben's Flower of a
+ Sweet Savour sawn on the Middenstead of this World,&rdquo; said Andrew, closing
+ his book at my appearance, and putting his horn spectacles, by way of
+ mark, at the place where he had been reading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the bees, I observe, were dividing your attention, Andrew, with the
+ learned author?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are a contumacious generation,&rdquo; replied the gardener; &ldquo;they hae sax
+ days in the week to hive on, and yet it's a common observe that they will
+ aye swarm on the Sabbath-day, and keep folk at hame frae hearing the word&mdash;But
+ there's nae preaching at Graneagain chapel the e'en&mdash;that's aye ae
+ mercy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You might have gone to the parish church as I did, Andrew, and heard an
+ excellent discourse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Clauts o' cauld parritch&mdash;clauts o' cauld parritch,&rdquo; replied Andrew,
+ with a most supercilious sneer,&mdash;&ldquo;gude aneueh for dogs, begging your
+ honour's pardon&mdash;Ay! I might nae doubt hae heard the curate linking
+ awa at it in his white sark yonder, and the musicians playing on whistles,
+ mair like a penny-wedding than a sermon&mdash;and to the boot of that, I
+ might hae gaen to even-song, and heard Daddie Docharty mumbling his mass&mdash;muckle
+ the better I wad hae been o' that!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Docharty!&rdquo; said I (this was the name of an old priest, an Irishman, I
+ think, who sometimes officiated at Osbaldistone Hall)&mdash;&ldquo;I thought
+ Father Vaughan had been at the Hall. He was here yesterday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; replied Andrew; &ldquo;but he left it yestreen, to gang to Greystock, or
+ some o' thae west-country haulds. There's an unco stir among them a'
+ e'enow. They are as busy as my bees are&mdash;God sain them! that I suld
+ even the puir things to the like o' papists. Ye see this is the second
+ swarm, and whiles they will swarm off in the afternoon. The first swarm
+ set off sune in the morning.&mdash;But I am thinking they are settled in
+ their skeps for the night; sae I wuss your honour good-night, and grace,
+ and muckle o't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, Andrew retreated, but often cast a parting glance upon the <i>skeps,</i>
+ as he called the bee-hives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had indirectly gained from him an important piece of information, that
+ Father Vaughan, namely, was not supposed to be at the Hall. If, therefore,
+ there appeared light in the windows of the library this evening, it either
+ could not be his, or he was observing a very secret and suspicious line of
+ conduct. I waited with impatience the time of sunset and of twilight. It
+ had hardly arrived, ere a gleam from the windows of the library was seen,
+ dimly distinguishable amidst the still enduring light of the evening. I
+ marked its first glimpse, however, as speedily as the benighted sailor
+ descries the first distant twinkle of the lighthouse which marks his
+ course. The feelings of doubt and propriety, which had hitherto contended
+ with my curiosity and jealousy, vanished when an opportunity of gratifying
+ the former was presented to me. I re-entered the house, and avoiding the
+ more frequented apartments with the consciousness of one who wishes to
+ keep his purpose secret, I reached the door of the library&mdash;hesitated
+ for a moment as my hand was upon the latch&mdash;heard a suppressed step
+ within&mdash;opened the door&mdash;and found Miss Vernon alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Diana appeared surprised,&mdash;whether at my sudden entrance, or from
+ some other cause, I could not guess; but there was in her appearance a
+ degree of flutter, which I had never before remarked, and which I knew
+ could only be produced by unusual emotion. Yet she was calm in a moment;
+ and such is the force of conscience, that I, who studied to surprise her,
+ seemed myself the surprised, and was certainly the embarrassed person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has anything happened?&rdquo; said Miss Vernon&mdash;&ldquo;has any one arrived at
+ the Hall?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No one that I know of,&rdquo; I answered, in some confusion; &ldquo;I only sought the
+ Orlando.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It lies there,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon, pointing to the table. In removing one
+ or two books to get at that which I pretended to seek, I was, in truth,
+ meditating to make a handsome retreat from an investigation to which I
+ felt my assurance inadequate, when I perceived a man's glove lying upon
+ the table. My eyes encountered those of Miss Vernon, who blushed deeply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is one of my relics,&rdquo; she said with hesitation, replying not to my
+ words but to my looks; &ldquo;it is one of the gloves of my grandfather, the
+ original of the superb Vandyke which you admire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As if she thought something more than her bare assertion was necessary to
+ prove her statement true, she opened a drawer of the large oaken table,
+ and taking out another glove, threw it towards me.&mdash;When a temper
+ naturally ingenuous stoops to equivocate, or to dissemble, the anxious
+ pain with which the unwonted task is laboured, often induces the hearer to
+ doubt the authenticity of the tale. I cast a hasty glance on both gloves,
+ and then replied gravely&mdash;&ldquo;The gloves resemble each other, doubtless,
+ in form and embroidery; but they cannot form a pair, since they both
+ belong to the right hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She bit her lip with anger, and again coloured deeply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do right to expose me,&rdquo; she replied, with bitterness: &ldquo;some friends
+ would have only judged from what I said, that I chose to give no
+ particular explanation of a circumstance which calls for none&mdash;at
+ least to a stranger. You have judged better, and have made me feel, not
+ only the meanness of duplicity, but my own inadequacy to sustain the task
+ of a dissembler. I now tell you distinctly, that that glove is not the
+ fellow, as you have acutely discerned, to the one which I just now
+ produced;&mdash;it belongs to a friend yet dearer to me than the original
+ of Vandyke's picture&mdash;a friend by whose counsels I have been, and
+ will be, guided&mdash;whom I honour&mdash;whom I&rdquo;&mdash;she paused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was irritated at her manner, and filled up the blank in my own way&mdash;
+ &ldquo;Whom she <i>loves</i>, Miss Vernon would say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if I do say so,&rdquo; she replied haughtily, &ldquo;by whom shall my affection
+ be called to account?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="image-0009" id="image-0009">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/pa234.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Die Vernon and Frank in Library " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not by me, Miss Vernon, assuredly&mdash;I entreat you to hold me
+ acquitted of such presumption.&mdash;<i>But,</i>&rdquo; I continued, with some
+ emphasis, for I was now piqued in return, &ldquo;I hope Miss Vernon will pardon
+ a friend, from whom she seems disposed to withdraw the title, for
+ observing&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Observe nothing, sir,&rdquo; she interrupted with some vehemence, &ldquo;except that
+ I will neither be doubted nor questioned. There does not exist one by whom
+ I will be either interrogated or judged; and if you sought this unusual
+ time of presenting yourself in order to spy upon my privacy, the
+ friendship or interest with which you pretend to regard me, is a poor
+ excuse for your uncivil curiosity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I relieve you of my presence,&rdquo; said I, with pride equal to her own; for
+ my temper has ever been a stranger to stooping, even in cases where my
+ feelings were most deeply interested&mdash;&ldquo;I relieve you of my presence.
+ I awake from a pleasant, but a most delusive dream; and&mdash;but we
+ understand each other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had reached the door of the apartment, when Miss Vernon, whose movements
+ were sometimes so rapid as to seem almost instinctive, overtook me, and,
+ catching hold of my arm, stopped me with that air of authority which she
+ could so whimsically assume, and which, from the <i>naivete</i> and
+ simplicity of her manner, had an effect so peculiarly interesting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop, Mr. Frank,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you are not to leave me in that way neither;
+ I am not so amply provided with friends, that I can afford to throw away
+ even the ungrateful and the selfish. Mark what I say, Mr. Francis
+ Osbaldistone. You shall know nothing of this mysterious glove,&rdquo; and she
+ held it up as she spoke&mdash;&ldquo;nothing&mdash;no, not a single iota more
+ than you know already; and yet I will not permit it to be a gauntlet of
+ strife and defiance betwixt us. My time here,&rdquo; she said, sinking into a
+ tone somewhat softer, &ldquo;must necessarily be very short; yours must be still
+ shorter: we are soon to part never to meet again; do not let us quarrel,
+ or make any mysterious miseries the pretext for farther embittering the
+ few hours we shall ever pass together on this side of eternity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not know, Tresham, by what witchery this fascinating creature
+ obtained such complete management over a temper which I cannot at all
+ times manage myself. I had determined on entering the library, to seek a
+ complete explanation with Miss Vernon. I had found that she refused it
+ with indignant defiance, and avowed to my face the preference of a rival;
+ for what other construction could I put on her declared preference of her
+ mysterious confidant? And yet, while I was on the point of leaving the
+ apartment, and breaking with her for ever, it cost her but a change of
+ look and tone, from that of real and haughty resentment to that of kind
+ and playful despotism, again shaded off into melancholy and serious
+ feeling, to lead me back to my seat, her willing subject, on her own hard
+ terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What does this avail?&rdquo; said I, as I sate down. &ldquo;What can this avail, Miss
+ Vernon? Why should I witness embarrassments which I cannot relieve, and
+ mysteries which I offend you even by attempting to penetrate?
+ Inexperienced as you are in the world, you must still be aware that a
+ beautiful young woman can have but one male friend. Even in a male friend
+ I will be jealous of a confidence shared with a third party unknown and
+ concealed; but with <i>you,</i> Miss Vernon&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are, of course, jealous, in all the tenses and moods of that amiable
+ passion? But, my good friend, you have all this time spoke nothing but the
+ paltry gossip which simpletons repeat from play-books and romances, till
+ they give mere cant a real and powerful influence over their minds. Boys
+ and girls prate themselves into love; and when their love is like to fall
+ asleep, they prate and tease themselves into jealousy. But you and I,
+ Frank, are rational beings, and neither silly nor idle enough to talk
+ ourselves into any other relation than that of plain honest disinterested
+ friendship. Any other union is as far out of our reach as if I were man,
+ or you woman&mdash;To speak truth,&rdquo; she added, after a moment's
+ hesitation, &ldquo;even though I am so complaisant to the decorum of my sex as
+ to blush a little at my own plain dealing, we cannot marry if we would;
+ and we ought not if we could.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And certainly, Tresham, she did blush most angelically, as she made this
+ cruel declaration. I was about to attack both her positions, entirely
+ forgetting those very suspicions which had been confirmed in the course of
+ the evening, but she proceeded with a cold firmness which approached to
+ severity&mdash;&ldquo;What I say is sober and indisputable truth, on which I
+ will neither hear question nor explanation. We are therefore friends, Mr.
+ Osbaldistone&mdash;are we not?&rdquo; She held out her hand, and taking mine,
+ added&mdash;&ldquo;And nothing to each other now, or henceforward, except as
+ friends.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She let go my hand. I sunk it and my head at once, fairly <i>overcrowed,</i>
+ as Spenser would have termed it, by the mingled kindness and firmness of
+ her manner. She hastened to change the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is a letter,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;directed for you, Mr. Osbaldistone, very
+ duly and distinctly; but which, notwithstanding the caution of the person
+ who wrote and addressed it, might perhaps never have reached your hands,
+ had it not fallen into the possession of a certain Pacolet, or enchanted
+ dwarf of mine, whom, like all distressed damsels of romance, I retain in
+ my secret service.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I opened the letter and glanced over the contents. The unfolded sheet of
+ paper dropped from my hands, with the involuntary exclamation of &ldquo;Gracious
+ Heaven! my folly and disobedience have ruined my father!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Vernon rose with looks of real and affectionate alarm&mdash;&ldquo;You grow
+ pale&mdash;you are ill&mdash;shall I bring you a glass of water? Be a man,
+ Mr. Osbaldistone, and a firm one. Is your father&mdash;is he no more?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He lives,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;thank God! but to what distress and difficulty&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If that be all, despair not. May I read this letter?&rdquo; she said, taking it
+ up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I assented, hardly knowing what I said. She read it with great attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is this Mr. Tresham, who signs the letter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My father's partner&rdquo;&mdash;(your own good father, Will)&mdash;&ldquo;but he is
+ little in the habit of acting personally in the business of the house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He writes here,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon, &ldquo;of various letters sent to you
+ previously.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have received none of them,&rdquo; I replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And it appears,&rdquo; she continued, &ldquo;that Rashleigh, who has taken the full
+ management of affairs during your father's absence in Holland, has some
+ time since left London for Scotland, with effects and remittances to take
+ up large bills granted by your father to persons in that country, and that
+ he has not since been heard of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is but too true.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And here has been,&rdquo; she added, looking at the letter, &ldquo;a head-clerk, or
+ some such person,&mdash;Owenson&mdash;Owen&mdash;despatched to Glasgow, to
+ find out Rashleigh, if possible, and you are entreated to repair to the
+ same place, and assist him in his researches.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is even so, and I must depart instantly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay but one moment,&rdquo; said Miss Vernon. &ldquo;It seems to me that the worst
+ which can come of this matter, will be the loss of a certain sum of money;&mdash;and
+ can that bring tears into your eyes? For shame, Mr. Osbaldistone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do me injustice, Miss Vernon,&rdquo; I answered. &ldquo;I grieve not for the loss
+ of the money, but for the effect which I know it will produce on the
+ spirits and health of my father, to whom mercantile credit is as honour;
+ and who, if declared insolvent, would sink into the grave, oppressed by a
+ sense of grief, remorse, and despair, like that of a soldier convicted of
+ cowardice or a man of honour who had lost his rank and character in
+ society. All this I might have prevented by a trifling sacrifice of the
+ foolish pride and indolence which recoiled from sharing the labours of his
+ honourable and useful profession. Good Heaven! how shall I redeem the
+ consequences of my error?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By instantly repairing to Glasgow, as you are conjured to do by the
+ friend who writes this letter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if Rashleigh,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;has really formed this base and
+ unconscientious scheme of plundering his benefactor, what prospect is
+ there that I can find means of frustrating a plan so deeply laid?'
+ </p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The prospect,&rdquo; she replied, &ldquo;indeed, may be uncertain; but, on the other
+hand, there is no possibility of your doing any service to your father by
+remaining here. Remember, had you been on the post destined for you, this
+disaster could not have happened: hasten to that which is now pointed
+out, and it may possibly be retrieved.&mdash;Yet stay&mdash;do not leave this room
+until I return.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+She left me in confusion and amazement; amid which, however, I could
+find a lucid interval to admire the firmness, composure, and presence of
+mind which Miss Vernon seemed to possess on every crisis, however sudden.
+</p>
+ <p>
+ In a few minutes she returned with a sheet of paper in her hand, folded
+ and sealed like a letter, but without address. &ldquo;I trust you,&rdquo; she said,
+ &ldquo;with this proof of my friendship, because I have the most perfect
+ confidence in your honour. If I understand the nature of your distress
+ rightly, the funds in Rashleigh's possession must be recovered by a
+ certain day&mdash;the 12th of September, I think is named&mdash;in order
+ that they may be applied to pay the bills in question; and, consequently,
+ that if adequate funds be provided before that period, your father's
+ credit is safe from the apprehended calamity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly&mdash;I so understand Mr. Tresham&rdquo;&mdash;I looked at your
+ father's letter again, and added, &ldquo;There cannot be a doubt of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Diana, &ldquo;in that case my little Pacolet may be of use to you.
+ You have heard of a spell contained in a letter. Take this packet; do not
+ open it until other and ordinary means have failed. If you succeed by your
+ own exertions, I trust to your honour for destroying it without opening or
+ suffering it to be opened;&mdash;but if not, you may break the seal within
+ ten days of the fated day, and you will find directions which may possibly
+ be of service to you. Adieu, Frank; we never meet more&mdash;but sometimes
+ think of your friend Die Vernon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She extended her hand, but I clasped her to my bosom. She sighed as she
+ extricated herself from the embrace which she permitted&mdash;escaped to
+ the door which led to her own apartment&mdash;and I saw her no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /> <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ VOLUME TWO
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Aimage-0003" id="Aimage-0003">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/frontispiece2.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Helen Macgregor--frontispiece " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0001" id="AlinkCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER FIRST
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And hurry, hurry, off they rode,
+ As fast as fast might be;
+ Hurra, hurra, the dead can ride,
+ Dost fear to ride with me?
+ Burger.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There is one advantage in an accumulation of evils, differing in cause and
+ character, that the distraction which they afford by their contradictory
+ operation prevents the patient from being overwhelmed under either. I was
+ deeply grieved at my separation from Miss Vernon, yet not so much so as I
+ should have been, had not my father's apprehended distresses forced
+ themselves on my attention; and I was distressed by the news of Mr.
+ Tresham, yet less so than if they had fully occupied my mind. I was
+ neither a false lover nor an unfeeling son; but man can give but a certain
+ portion of distressful emotions to the causes which demand them; and if
+ two operate at once, our sympathy, like the funds of a compounding
+ bankrupt, can only be divided between them. Such were my reflections when
+ I gained my apartment&mdash;it seems, from the illustration, they already
+ began to have a twang of commerce in them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I set myself seriously to consider your father's letter. It was not very
+ distinct, and referred for several particulars to Owen, whom I was
+ entreated to meet with as soon as possible at a Scotch town called
+ Glasgow; being informed, moreover, that my old friend was to be heard of
+ at Messrs. MacVittie, MacFin, and Company, merchants in the Gallowgate of
+ the said town. It likewise alluded to several letters,&mdash;which, as it
+ appeared to me, must have miscarried or have been intercepted, and
+ complained of my obdurate silence, in terms which would have, been highly
+ unjust, had my letters reached their purposed destination. I was amazed as
+ I read. That the spirit of Rashleigh walked around me, and conjured up
+ these doubts and difficulties by which I was surrounded, I could not doubt
+ for one instant; yet it was frightful to conceive the extent of combined
+ villany and power which he must have employed in the perpetration of his
+ designs. Let me do myself justice in one respect. The evil of parting from
+ Miss Vernon, however distressing it might in other respects and at another
+ time have appeared to me, sunk into a subordinate consideration when I
+ thought of the dangers impending over my father. I did not myself set a
+ high estimation on wealth, and had the affectation of most young men of
+ lively imagination, who suppose that they can better dispense with the
+ possession of money, than resign their time and faculties to the labour
+ necessary to acquire it. But in my father's case, I knew that bankruptcy
+ would be considered as an utter and irretrievable disgrace, to which life
+ would afford no comfort, and death the speediest and sole relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My mind, therefore, was bent on averting this catastrophe, with an
+ intensity which the interest could not have produced had it referred to my
+ own fortunes; and the result of my deliberation was a firm resolution to
+ depart from Osbaldistone Hall the next day and wend my way without loss of
+ time to meet Owen at Glasgow. I did not hold it expedient to intimate my
+ departure to my uncle, otherwise than by leaving a letter of thanks for
+ his hospitality, assuring him that sudden and important business prevented
+ my offering them in person. I knew the blunt old knight would readily
+ excuse ceremony; and I had such a belief in the extent and decided
+ character of Rashleigh's machinations, that I had some apprehension of his
+ having provided means to intercept a journey which was undertaken with a
+ view to disconcert them, if my departure were publicly announced at
+ Osbaldistone Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I therefore determined to set off on my journey with daylight on the
+ ensuing morning, and to gain the neighbouring kingdom of Scotland before
+ any idea of my departure was entertained at the Hall. But one impediment
+ of consequence was likely to prevent that speed which was the soul of my
+ expedition. I did not know the shortest, nor indeed any road to Glasgow;
+ and as, in the circumstances in which I stood, despatch was of the
+ greatest consequence, I determined to consult Andrew Fairservice on the
+ subject, as the nearest and most authentic authority within my reach. Late
+ as it was, I set off with the intention of ascertaining this important
+ point, and after a few minutes' walk reached the dwelling of the gardener.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrew's dwelling was situated at no great distance from the exterior wall
+ of the garden&mdash;a snug comfortable Northumbrian cottage, built of
+ stones roughly dressed with the hammer, and having the windows and doors
+ decorated with huge heavy architraves, or lintels, as they are called, of
+ hewn stone, and its roof covered with broad grey flags, instead of slates,
+ thatch, or tiles. A jargonelle pear-tree at one end of the cottage, a
+ rivulet and flower-plot of a rood in extent in front, and a kitchen-garden
+ behind; a paddock for a cow, and a small field, cultivated with several
+ crops of grain, rather for the benefit of the cottager than for sale,
+ announced the warm and cordial comforts which Old England, even at her
+ most northern extremity, extends to her meanest inhabitants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I approached the mansion of the sapient Andrew, I heard a noise, which,
+ being of a nature peculiarly solemn, nasal, and prolonged, led me to think
+ that Andrew, according to the decent and meritorious custom of his
+ countrymen, had assembled some of his neighbours to join in family
+ exercise, as he called evening devotion. Andrew had indeed neither wife,
+ child, nor female inmate in his family. &ldquo;The first of his trade,&rdquo; he said,
+ &ldquo;had had eneugh o'thae cattle.&rdquo; But, notwithstanding, he sometimes
+ contrived to form an audience for himself out of the neighbouring Papists
+ and Church-of-Englandmen&mdash;brands, as he expressed it, snatched out of
+ the burning, on whom he used to exercise his spiritual gifts, in defiance
+ alike of Father Vaughan, Father Docharty, Rashleigh, and all the world of
+ Catholics around him, who deemed his interference on such occasions an act
+ of heretical interloping. I conceived it likely, therefore, that the
+ well-disposed neighbours might have assembled to hold some chapel of ease
+ of this nature. The noise, however, when I listened to it more accurately,
+ seemed to proceed entirely from the lungs of the said Andrew; and when I
+ interrupted it by entering the house, I found Fairservice alone, combating
+ as he best could, with long words and hard names, and reading aloud, for
+ the purpose of his own edification, a volume of controversial divinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was just taking a spell,&rdquo; said he, laying aside the huge folio volume
+ as I entered, &ldquo;of the worthy Doctor Lightfoot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lightfoot!&rdquo; I replied, looking at the ponderous volume with some
+ surprise; &ldquo;surely your author was unhappily named.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lightfoot was his name, sir; a divine he was, and another kind of a
+ divine than they hae now-adays. Always, I crave your pardon for keeping ye
+ standing at the door, but having been mistrysted (gude preserve us!) with
+ ae bogle the night already, I was dubious o' opening the yett till I had
+ gaen through the e'ening worship; and I had just finished the fifth
+ chapter of Nehemiah&mdash;if that winna gar them keep their distance, I
+ wotna what will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Trysted with a bogle!&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;what do you mean by that, Andrew?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I said mistrysted,&rdquo; replied Andrew; &ldquo;that is as muckle as to say, fley'd
+ wi' a ghaist&mdash;Gude preserve us, I say again!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Flay'd by a ghost, Andrew! how am I to understand that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not say flay'd,&rdquo; replied Andrew, &ldquo;but <i>fley'd,</i>&mdash;that is,
+ I got a fleg, and was ready to jump out o' my skin, though naebody offered
+ to whirl it aff my body as a man wad bark a tree.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg a truce to your terrors in the present case, Andrew, and I wish to
+ know whether you can direct me the nearest way to a town in your country
+ of Scotland, called Glasgow?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A town ca'd Glasgow!&rdquo; echoed Andrew Fairservice. &ldquo;Glasgow's a ceety, man.&mdash;And
+ is't the way to Glasgow ye were speering if I ken'd?&mdash;What suld ail
+ me to ken it?&mdash;it's no that dooms far frae my ain parish of
+ Dreepdaily, that lies a bittock farther to the west. But what may your
+ honour be gaun to Glasgow for?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Particular business,&rdquo; replied I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's as muckle as to say, Speer nae questions, and I'll tell ye nae
+ lees.&mdash;To Glasgow?&rdquo;&mdash;he made a short pause&mdash;&ldquo;I am thinking
+ ye wad be the better o' some ane to show you the road.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly, if I could meet with any person going that way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And your honour, doubtless, wad consider the time and trouble?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unquestionably&mdash;my business is pressing, and if you can find any
+ guide to accompany me, I'll pay him handsomely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is no a day to speak o' carnal matters,&rdquo; said Andrew, casting his
+ eyes upwards; &ldquo;but if it werena Sabbath at e'en, I wad speer what ye wad
+ be content to gie to ane that wad bear ye pleasant company on the road,
+ and tell ye the names of the gentlemen's and noblemen's seats and castles,
+ and count their kin to ye?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell you, all I want to know is the road I must travel; I will pay the
+ fellow to his satisfaction&mdash;I will give him anything in reason.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Onything,&rdquo; replied Andrew, &ldquo;is naething; and this lad that I am speaking
+ o' kens a' the short cuts and queer by-paths through the hills, and&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no time to talk about it, Andrew; do you make the bargain for me
+ your own way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha! that's speaking to the purpose,&rdquo; answered Andrew.&mdash;&ldquo;I am
+ thinking, since sae be that sae it is, I'll be the lad that will guide you
+ mysell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You, Andrew?&mdash;how will you get away from your employment?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell'd your honour a while syne, that it was lang that I hae been
+ thinking o' flitting, maybe as lang as frae the first year I came to
+ Osbaldistone Hall; and now I am o' the mind to gang in gude earnest&mdash;better
+ soon as syne&mdash;better a finger aff as aye wagging.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You leave your service, then?&mdash;but will you not lose your wages?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nae doubt there will be a certain loss; but then I hae siller o' the
+ laird's in my hands that I took for the apples in the auld orchyard&mdash;and
+ a sair bargain the folk had that bought them&mdash;a wheen green trash&mdash;and
+ yet Sir Hildebrand's as keen to hae the siller (that is, the steward is as
+ pressing about it) as if they had been a' gowden pippins&mdash;and then
+ there's the siller for the seeds&mdash;I'm thinking the wage will be in a
+ manner decently made up.&mdash;But doubtless your honour will consider my
+ risk of loss when we win to Glasgow&mdash;and ye'll be for setting out
+ forthwith?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By day-break in the morning,&rdquo; I answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's something o' the suddenest&mdash;whare am I to find a naig?&mdash;Stay&mdash;I
+ ken just the beast that will answer me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At five in the morning, then, Andrew, you will meet me at the head of the
+ avenue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Deil a fear o' me (that I suld say sae) missing my tryste,&rdquo; replied
+ Andrew, very briskly; &ldquo;and if I might advise, we wad be aff twa hours
+ earlier. I ken the way, dark or light, as weel as blind Ralph Ronaldson,
+ that's travelled ower every moor in the country-side, and disna ken the
+ colour of a heather-cowe when a's dune.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I highly approved of Andrew's amendment on my original proposal, and we
+ agreed to meet at the place appointed at three in the morning. At once,
+ however, a reflection came across the mind of my intended travelling
+ companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The bogle! the bogle! what if it should come out upon us?&mdash;I downa
+ forgather wi' thae things twice in the four-and-twenty hours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh! pooh!&rdquo; I exclaimed, breaking away from him, &ldquo;fear nothing from the
+ next world&mdash;the earth contains living fiends, who can act for
+ themselves without assistance, were the whole host that fell with Lucifer
+ to return to aid and abet them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these words, the import of which was suggested by my own situation, I
+ left Andrew's habitation, and returned to the Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I made the few preparations which were necessary for my proposed journey,
+ examined and loaded my pistols, and then threw myself on my bed, to
+ obtain, if possible, a brief sleep before the fatigue of a long and
+ anxious journey. Nature, exhausted by the tumultuous agitations of the
+ day, was kinder to me than I expected, and I sank into a deep and
+ profound slumber, from which, however, I started as the old clock struck
+ two from a turret adjoining to my bedchamber. I instantly arose, struck a
+ light, wrote the letter I proposed to leave for my uncle, and leaving
+ behind me such articles of dress as were cumbrous in carriage, I deposited
+ the rest of my wardrobe in my valise, glided down stairs, and gained the
+ stable without impediment. Without being quite such a groom as any of my
+ cousins, I had learned at Osbaldistone Hall to dress and saddle my own
+ horse, and in a few minutes I was mounted and ready for my sally.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I paced up the old avenue, on which the waning moon threw its light
+ with a pale and whitish tinge, I looked back with a deep and boding sigh
+ towards the walls which contained Diana Vernon, under the despondent
+ impression that we had probably parted to meet no more. It was impossible,
+ among the long and irregular lines of Gothic casements, which now looked
+ ghastly white in the moonlight, to distinguish that of the apartment which
+ she inhabited. &ldquo;She is lost to me already,&rdquo; thought I, as my eye wandered
+ over the dim and indistinguishable intricacies of architecture offered by
+ the moonlight view of Osbaldistone Hall&mdash;&ldquo;She is lost to me already,
+ ere I have left the place which she inhabits! What hope is there of my
+ maintaining any correspondence with her, when leagues shall lie between?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While I paused in a reverie of no very pleasing nature, the &ldquo;iron tongue
+ of time told three upon the drowsy ear of night,&rdquo; and reminded me of the
+ necessity of keeping my appointment with a person of a less interesting
+ description and appearance&mdash;Andrew Fairservice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the gate of the avenue I found a horseman stationed in the shadow of
+ the wall, but it was not until I had coughed twice, and then called
+ &ldquo;Andrew,&rdquo; that the horticulturist replied, &ldquo;I'se warrant it's Andrew.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lead the way, then,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;and be silent if you can, till we are past
+ the hamlet in the valley.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrew led the way accordingly, and at a much brisker pace than I would
+ have recommended.&mdash;and so well did he obey my injunctions of keeping
+ silence, that he would return no answer to my repeated inquiries into the
+ cause of such unnecessary haste. Extricating ourselves by short cuts,
+ known to Andrew, from the numerous stony lanes and by-paths which
+ intersected each other in the vicinity of the Hall, we reached the open
+ heath and riding swiftly across it, took our course among the barren hills
+ which divide England from Scotland on what are called the Middle Marches.
+ The way, or rather the broken track which we occupied, was a happy
+ interchange of bog and shingles; nevertheless, Andrew relented nothing of
+ his speed, but trotted manfully forward at the rate of eight or ten miles
+ an hour. I was both surprised and provoked at the fellow's obstinate
+ persistence, for we made abrupt ascents and descents over ground of a very
+ break-neck character, and traversed the edge of precipices, where a slip
+ of the horse's feet would have consigned the rider to certain death. The
+ moon, at best, afforded a dubious and imperfect light; but in some places
+ we were so much under the shade of the mountain as to be in total
+ darkness, and then I could only trace Andrew by the clatter of his horse's
+ feet, and the fire which they struck from the flints. At first, this rapid
+ motion, and the attention which, for the sake of personal safety, I was
+ compelled to give to the conduct of my horse, was of service, by forcibly
+ diverting my thoughts from the various painful reflections which must
+ otherwise have pressed on my mind. But at length, after hallooing
+ repeatedly to Andrew to ride slower, I became seriously incensed at his
+ impudent perseverance in refusing either to obey or to reply to me. My
+ anger was, however, quite impotent. I attempted once or twice to get up
+ alongside of my self-willed guide, with the purpose of knocking him off
+ his horse with the butt-end of my whip; but Andrew was better mounted than
+ I, and either the spirit of the animal which he bestrode, or more probably
+ some presentiment of my kind intentions towards him, induced him to
+ quicken his pace whenever I attempted to make up to him. On the other
+ hand, I was compelled to exert my spurs to keep him in sight, for without
+ his guidance I was too well aware that I should never find my way through
+ the howling wilderness which we now traversed at such an unwonted pace. I
+ was so angry at length, that I threatened to have recourse to my pistols,
+ and send a bullet after the Hotspur Andrew, which should stop his
+ fiery-footed career, if he did not abate it of his own accord. Apparently
+ this threat made some impression on the tympanum of his ear, however deaf
+ to all my milder entreaties; for he relaxed his pace upon hearing it, and,
+ suffering me to close up to him, observed, &ldquo;There wasna muckle sense in
+ riding at sic a daft-like gate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what did you mean by doing so at all, you self-willed scoundrel?&rdquo;
+ replied I; for I was in a towering passion,&mdash;to which, by the way,
+ nothing contributes more than the having recently undergone a spice of
+ personal fear, which, like a few drops of water flung on a glowing fire,
+ is sure to inflame the ardour which it is insufficient to quench.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's your honour's wull?&rdquo; replied Andrew, with impenetrable gravity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My will, you rascal?&mdash;I have been roaring to you this hour to ride
+ slower, and you have never so much as answered me&mdash;Are you drunk or
+ mad to behave so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An it like your honour, I am something dull o' hearing; and I'll no deny
+ but I might have maybe taen a stirrup-cup at parting frae the auld bigging
+ whare I hae dwelt sae lang; and having naebody to pledge, nae doubt I was
+ obliged to do mysell reason, or else leave the end o' the brandy stoup to
+ thae papists&mdash;and that wad be a waste, as your honour kens.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This might be all very true,&mdash;and my circumstances required that I
+ should be on good terms with my guide; I therefore satisfied myself with
+ requiring of him to take his directions from me in future concerning the
+ rate of travelling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrew, emboldened by the mildness of my tone, elevated his own into the
+ pedantic, conceited octave, which was familiar to him on most occasions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your honour winna persuade me, and naebody shall persuade me, that it's
+ either halesome or prudent to tak the night air on thae moors without a
+ cordial o' clow-gilliflower water, or a tass of brandy or aquavitae, or
+ sic-like creature-comfort. I hae taen the bent ower the Otterscrape-rigg a
+ hundred times, day and night, and never could find the way unless I had
+ taen my morning; mair by token that I had whiles twa bits o' ankers o'
+ brandy on ilk side o' me.&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In other words, Andrew,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;you were a smuggler&mdash;how does a
+ man of your strict principles reconcile yourself to cheat the revenue?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a mere spoiling o' the Egyptians,&rdquo; replied Andrew; &ldquo;puir auld
+ Scotland suffers eneugh by thae blackguard loons o' excisemen and gaugers,
+ that hae come down on her like locusts since the sad and sorrowfu' Union;
+ it's the part of a kind son to bring her a soup o' something that will
+ keep up her auld heart,&mdash;and that will they nill they, the ill-fa'ard
+ thieves!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon more particular inquiry, I found Andrew had frequently travelled
+ these mountain-paths as a smuggler, both before and after his
+ establishment at Osbaldistone Hall&mdash;a circumstance which was so far
+ of importance to me, as it proved his capacity as a guide, notwithstanding
+ the escapade of which he had been guilty at his outset. Even now, though
+ travelling at a more moderate pace, the stirrup-cup, or whatever else had
+ such an effect in stimulating Andrew's motions, seemed not totally to have
+ lost its influence. He often cast a nervous and startled look behind him;
+ and whenever the road seemed at all practicable, showed symptoms of a
+ desire to accelerate his pace, as if he feared some pursuit from the rear.
+ These appearances of alarm gradually diminished as we reached the top of a
+ high bleak ridge, which ran nearly east and west for about a mile, with a
+ very steep descent on either side. The pale beams of the morning were now
+ enlightening the horizon, when Andrew cast a look behind him, and not
+ seeing the appearance of a living being on the moors which he had
+ travelled, his hard features gradually unbent, as he first whistled, then
+ sung, with much glee and little melody, the end of one of his native songs&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Jenny, lass! I think I hae her
+ Ower the muir amang the heather,
+ All their clan shall never get her.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ He patted at the same time the neck of the horse which had carried him so
+ gallantly; and my attention being directed by that action to the animal, I
+ instantly recognised a favourite mare of Thorncliff Osbaldistone. &ldquo;How is
+ this, sir?&rdquo; said I sternly; &ldquo;that is Mr. Thorncliff's mare!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll no say but she may aiblins hae been his honour's Squire Thorncliff's
+ in her day&mdash;but she's mine now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have stolen her, you rascal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Na, na, sir&mdash;nae man can wyte me wi' theft. The thing stands this
+ gate, ye see. Squire Thorncliff borrowed ten punds o' me to gang to York
+ Races&mdash;deil a boddle wad he pay me back again, and spake o' raddling
+ my banes, as he ca'd it, when I asked him but for my ain back again;&mdash;now
+ I think it will riddle him or he gets his horse ower the Border again&mdash;unless
+ he pays me plack and bawbee, he sall never see a hair o' her tail. I ken a
+ canny chield at Loughmaben, a bit writer lad, that will put me in the way
+ to sort him. Steal the mear! na, na, far be the sin o' theft frae Andrew
+ Fairservice&mdash;I have just arrested her <i>jurisdictionis fandandy
+ causey.</i> Thae are bonny writer words&mdash;amaist like the language o'
+ huz gardeners and other learned men&mdash;it's a pity they're sae dear;&mdash;thae
+ three words were a' that Andrew got for a lang law-plea and four ankers o'
+ as gude brandy as was e'er coupit ower craig&mdash;Hech, sirs! but law's a
+ dear thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are likely to find it much dearer than you suppose, Andrew, if you
+ proceed in this mode of paying yourself, without legal authority.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hout tout, we're in Scotland now (be praised for't!) and I can find baith
+ friends and lawyers, and judges too, as weel as ony Osbaldistone o' them
+ a'. My mither's mither's third cousin was cousin to the Provost o'
+ Dumfries, and he winna see a drap o' her blude wranged. Hout awa! the laws
+ are indifferently administered here to a' men alike; it's no like on yon
+ side, when a chield may be whuppit awa' wi' ane o' Clerk Jobson's
+ warrants, afore he kens where he is. But they will hae little enough law
+ amang them by and by, and that is ae grand reason that I hae gi'en them
+ gude-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was highly provoked at the achievement of Andrew, and considered it as a
+ hard fate, which a second time threw me into collision with a person of
+ such irregular practices. I determined, however, to buy the mare of him,
+ when he should reach the end of our journey, and send her back to my
+ cousin at Osbaldistone Hall; and with this purpose of reparation I
+ resolved to make my uncle acquainted from the next post-town. It was
+ needless, I thought, to quarrel with Andrew in the meantime, who had,
+ after all, acted not very unnaturally for a person in his circumstances. I
+ therefore smothered my resentment, and asked him what he meant by his last
+ expressions, that there would be little law in Northumberland by and by?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Law!&rdquo; said Andrew, &ldquo;hout, ay&mdash;there will be club-law eneugh. The
+ priests and the Irish officers, and thae papist cattle that hae been
+ sodgering abroad, because they durstna bide at hame, are a' fleeing thick
+ in Northumberland e'enow; and thae corbies dinna gather without they smell
+ carrion. As sure as ye live, his honour Sir Hildebrand is gaun to stick
+ his horn in the bog&mdash;there's naething but gun and pistol, sword and
+ dagger, amang them&mdash;and they'll be laying on, I'se warrant; for
+ they're fearless fules the young Osbaldistone squires, aye craving your
+ honour's pardon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This speech recalled to my memory some suspicions that I myself had
+ entertained, that the Jacobites were on the eve of some desperate
+ enterprise. But, conscious it did not become me to be a spy on my uncle's
+ words and actions, I had rather avoided than availed myself of any
+ opportunity which occurred of remarking upon the signs of the times.&mdash;
+ Andrew Fairservice felt no such restraint, and doubtless spoke very truly
+ in stating his conviction that some desperate plots were in agitation, as
+ a reason which determined his resolution to leave the Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The servants,&rdquo; he stated, &ldquo;with the tenantry and others, had been all
+ regularly enrolled and mustered, and they wanted me to take arms also. But
+ I'll ride in nae siccan troop&mdash;they little ken'd Andrew that asked
+ him. I'll fight when I like mysell, but it sall neither be for the hure o'
+ Babylon, nor any hure in England.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0002" id="AlinkCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER SECOND.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Where longs to fall yon rifted spire,
+ As weary of the insulting air,&mdash;
+ The poet's thoughts, the warrior's fire,
+ The lover's sighs, are sleeping there.
+ Langhorne.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At the first Scotch town which we reached, my guide sought out his friend
+ and counsellor, to consult upon the proper and legal means of converting
+ into his own lawful property the &ldquo;bonny creature,&rdquo; which was at present
+ his own only by one of those sleight-of-hand arrangements which still
+ sometimes took place in that once lawless district. I was somewhat
+ diverted with the dejection of his looks on his return. He had, it seems,
+ been rather too communicative to his confidential friend, the attorney;
+ and learned with great dismay, in return for his unsuspecting frankness,
+ that Mr. Touthope had, during his absence, been appointed clerk to the
+ peace of the county, and was bound to communicate to justice all such
+ achievements as that of his friend Mr. Andrew Fairservice. There was a
+ necessity, this alert member of the police stated, for arresting the
+ horse, and placing him in Bailie Trumbull's stable, therein to remain at
+ livery, at the rate of twelve shillings (Scotch) per diem, until the
+ question of property was duly tried and debated. He even talked as if, in
+ strict and rigorous execution of his duty, he ought to detain honest
+ Andrew himself; but on my guide's most piteously entreating his
+ forbearance, he not only desisted from this proposal, but made a present
+ to Andrew of a broken-winded and spavined pony, in order to enable him to
+ pursue his journey. It is true, he qualified this act of generosity by
+ exacting from poor Andrew an absolute cession of his right and interest in
+ the gallant palfrey of Thorncliff Osbaldistone&mdash;a transference which
+ Mr. Touthope represented as of very little consequence, since his
+ unfortunate friend, as he facetiously observed, was likely to get nothing
+ of the mare excepting the halter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrew seemed woeful and disconcerted, as I screwed out of him these
+ particulars; for his northern pride was cruelly pinched by being compelled
+ to admit that attorneys were attorneys on both sides of the Tweed; and
+ that Mr. Clerk Touthope was not a farthing more sterling coin than Mr.
+ Clerk Jobson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It wadna hae vexed him half sae muckle to hae been cheated out o' what
+ might amaist be said to be won with the peril o' his craig, had it
+ happened amang the Inglishers; but it was an unco thing to see hawks pike
+ out hawks' e'en, or ae kindly Scot cheat anither. But nae doubt things
+ were strangely changed in his country sin' the sad and sorrowfu' Union;&rdquo;
+ an event to which Andrew referred every symptom of depravity or degeneracy
+ which he remarked among his countrymen, more especially the inflammation
+ of reckonings, the diminished size of pint-stoups, and other grievances,
+ which he pointed out to me during our journey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For my own part, I held myself, as things had turned out, acquitted of all
+ charge of the mare, and wrote to my uncle the circumstances under which
+ she was carried into Scotland, concluding with informing him that she was
+ in the hands of justice, and her worthy representatives, Bailie Trumbull
+ and Mr. Clerk Touthope, to whom I referred him for farther particulars.
+ Whether the property returned to the Northumbrian fox-hunter, or continued
+ to bear the person of the Scottish attorney, it is unnecessary for me at
+ present to say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We now pursued our journey to the north-westward, at a rate much slower
+ than that at which we had achieved our nocturnal retreat from England. One
+ chain of barren and uninteresting hills succeeded another, until the more
+ fertile vale of Clyde opened upon us; and, with such despatch as we might,
+ we gained the town, or, as my guide pertinaciously termed it, the city, of
+ Glasgow. Of late years, I understand, it has fully deserved the name,
+ which, by a sort of political second sight, my guide assigned to it. An
+ extensive and increasing trade with the West Indies and American colonies,
+ has, if I am rightly informed, laid the foundation of wealth and
+ prosperity, which, if carefully strengthened and built upon, may one day
+ support an immense fabric of commercial prosperity; but in the earlier
+ time of which I speak, the dawn of this splendour had not arisen. The
+ Union had, indeed, opened to Scotland the trade of the English colonies;
+ but, betwixt want of capital, and the national jealousy of the English,
+ the merchants of Scotland were as yet excluded, in a great measure, from
+ the exercise of the privileges which that memorable treaty conferred on
+ them. Glasgow lay on the wrong side of the island for participating in the
+ east country or continental trade, by which the trifling commerce as yet
+ possessed by Scotland chiefly supported itself. Yet, though she then gave
+ small promise of the commercial eminence to which, I am informed, she
+ seems now likely one day to attain, Glasgow, as the principal central town
+ of the western district of Scotland, was a place of considerable rank and
+ importance. The broad and brimming Clyde, which flows so near its walls,
+ gave the means of an inland navigation of some importance. Not only the
+ fertile plains in its immediate neighbourhood, but the districts of Ayr
+ and Dumfries regarded Glasgow as their capital, to which they transmitted
+ their produce, and received in return such necessaries and luxuries as
+ their consumption required.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dusky mountains of the western Highlands often sent forth wilder
+ tribes to frequent the marts of St. Mungo's favourite city. Hordes of wild
+ shaggy, dwarfish cattle and ponies, conducted by Highlanders, as wild, as
+ shaggy, and sometimes as dwarfish, as the animals they had in charge,
+ often traversed the streets of Glasgow. Strangers gazed with surprise on
+ the antique and fantastic dress, and listened to the unknown and dissonant
+ sounds of their language, while the mountaineers, armed, even while
+ engaged in this peaceful occupation, with musket and pistol, sword,
+ dagger, and target, stared with astonishment on the articles of luxury of
+ which they knew not the use, and with an avidity which seemed somewhat
+ alarming on the articles which they knew and valued. It is always with
+ unwillingness that the Highlander quits his deserts, and at this early
+ period it was like tearing a pine from its rock, to plant him elsewhere.
+ Yet even then the mountain glens were over-peopled, although thinned
+ occasionally by famine or by the sword, and many of their inhabitants
+ strayed down to Glasgow&mdash;there formed settlements&mdash;there sought
+ and found employment, although different, indeed, from that of their
+ native hills. This supply of a hardy and useful population was of
+ consequence to the prosperity of the place, furnished the means of
+ carrying on the few manufactures which the town already boasted, and laid
+ the foundation of its future prosperity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The exterior of the city corresponded with these promising circumstances.
+ The principal street was broad and important, decorated with public
+ buildings, of an architecture rather striking than correct in point of
+ taste, and running between rows of tall houses, built of stone, the fronts
+ of which were occasionally richly ornamented with mason-work&mdash;a
+ circumstance which gave the street an imposing air of dignity and
+ grandeur, of which most English towns are in some measure deprived, by the
+ slight, insubstantial, and perishable quality and appearance of the bricks
+ with which they are constructed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the western metropolis of Scotland, my guide and I arrived on a
+ Saturday evening, too late to entertain thoughts of business of any kind.
+ We alighted at the door of a jolly hostler-wife, as Andrew called her,&mdash;the
+ Ostelere of old father Chaucer,&mdash;by whom we were civilly received.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the following morning the bells pealed from every steeple, announcing
+ the sanctity of the day. Notwithstanding, however, what I had heard of the
+ severity with which the Sabbath is observed in Scotland, my first impulse,
+ not unnaturally, was to seek out Owen; but on inquiry I found that my
+ attempt would be in vain, &ldquo;until kirk time was ower.&rdquo; Not only did my
+ landlady and guide jointly assure me that &ldquo;there wadna be a living soul
+ either in the counting-house or dwelling-house of Messrs. MacVittie,
+ MacFin, and Company,&rdquo; to which Owen's letter referred me, but, moreover,
+ &ldquo;far less would I find any of the partners there. They were serious men,
+ and wad be where a' gude Christians ought to be at sic a time, and that
+ was in the Barony Laigh Kirk.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * [The Laigh Kirk or Crypt of the Cathedral of Glasgow served for more *
+ than two centuries as the church of the Barony Parish, and, for a time,
+ was * converted into a burial-place. In the restorations of this grand
+ building * the crypt was cleared out, and is now admired as one of the
+ richest specimens * of Early English architecture existing in Scotland.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrew Fairservice, whose disgust at the law of his country had
+ fortunately not extended itself to the other learned professions of his
+ native land, now sung forth the praises of the preacher who was to perform
+ the duty, to which my hostess replied with many loud amens. The result
+ was, that I determined to go to this popular place of worship, as much
+ with the purpose of learning, if possible, whether Owen had arrived in
+ Glasgow, as with any great expectation of edification. My hopes were
+ exalted by the assurance, that if Mr. Ephraim MacVittie (worthy man) were
+ in the land of life, he would surely honour the Barony Kirk that day with
+ his presence; and if he chanced to have a stranger within his gates,
+ doubtless he would bring him to the duty along with him. This probability
+ determined my motions, and under the escort of my faithful Andrew, I set
+ forth for the Barony Kirk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this occasion, however, I had little need of his guidance; for the
+ crowd, which forced its way up a steep and rough-paved street, to hear the
+ most popular preacher in the west of Scotland, would of itself have swept
+ me along with it. On attaining the summit of the hill, we turned to the
+ left, and a large pair of folding doors admitted us, amongst others, into
+ the open and extensive burying-place which surrounds the Minster or
+ Cathedral Church of Glasgow. The pile is of a gloomy and massive, rather
+ than of an elegant, style of Gothic architecture; but its peculiar
+ character is so strongly preserved, and so well suited with the
+ accompaniments that surround it, that the impression of the first view was
+ awful and solemn in the extreme. I was indeed so much struck, that I
+ resisted for a few minutes all Andrew's efforts to drag me into the
+ interior of the building, so deeply was I engaged in surveying its outward
+ character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Situated in a populous and considerable town, this ancient and massive
+ pile has the appearance of the most sequestered solitude. High walls
+ divide it from the buildings of the city on one side; on the other it is
+ bounded by a ravine, at the bottom of which, and invisible to the eye,
+ murmurs a wandering rivulet, adding, by its gentle noise, to the imposing
+ solemnity of the scene. On the opposite side of the ravine rises a steep
+ bank, covered with fir-trees closely planted, whose dusky shade extends
+ itself over the cemetery with an appropriate and gloomy effect. The
+ churchyard itself had a peculiar character; for though in reality
+ extensive, it is small in proportion to the number of respectable
+ inhabitants who are interred within it, and whose graves are almost all
+ covered with tombstones. There is therefore no room for the long rank
+ grass, which, in most cases, partially clothes the surface of those
+ retreats where the wicked cease from troubling, and the weary are at rest.
+ The broad flat monumental stones are placed so close to each other, that
+ the precincts appear to be flagged with them, and, though roofed only by
+ the heavens, resemble the floor of one of our old English churches, where
+ the pavement is covered with sepulchral inscriptions. The contents of
+ these sad records of mortality, the vain sorrows which they preserve, the
+ stern lesson which they teach of the nothingness of humanity, the extent
+ of ground which they so closely cover, and their uniform and melancholy
+ tenor, reminded me of the roll of the prophet, which was &ldquo;written within
+ and without, and there was written therein lamentations and mourning and
+ woe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Cathedral itself corresponds in impressive majesty with these
+ accompaniments. We feel that its appearance is heavy, yet that the effect
+ produced would be destroyed were it lighter or more ornamental. It is the
+ only metropolitan church in Scotland, excepting, as I am informed, the
+ Cathedral of Kirkwall, in the Orkneys, which remained uninjured at the
+ Reformation; and Andrew Fairservice, who saw with great pride the effect
+ which it produced upon my mind, thus accounted for its preservation&mdash;&ldquo;Ah!
+ it's a brave kirk&mdash;nane o' yere whig-maleeries and curliewurlies and
+ opensteek hems about it&mdash;a' solid, weel-jointed mason-wark, that will
+ stand as lang as the warld, keep hands and gunpowther aff it. It had
+ amaist a douncome lang syne at the Reformation, when they pu'd doun the
+ kirks of St. Andrews and Perth, and thereawa', to cleanse them o' Papery,
+ and idolatry, and image worship, and surplices, and sic like rags o' the
+ muckle hure that sitteth on seven hills, as if ane wasna braid eneugh for
+ her auld hinder end. Sae the commons o' Renfrew, and o' the Barony, and
+ the Gorbals and a' about, they behoved to come into Glasgow no fair
+ morning, to try their hand on purging the High Kirk o' Popish
+ nick-nackets. But the townsmen o' Glasgow, they were feared their auld
+ edifice might slip the girths in gaun through siccan rough physic, sae
+ they rang the common bell, and assembled the train-bands wi' took o' drum.
+ By good luck, the worthy James Rabat was Dean o' Guild that year&mdash;(and
+ a gude mason he was himself, made him the keener to keep up the auld
+ bigging)&mdash;and the trades assembled, and offered downright battle to
+ the commons, rather than their kirk should coup the crans as others had
+ done elsewhere. It wasna for luve o' Paperie&mdash;na, na!&mdash;nane
+ could ever say that o' the trades o' Glasgow&mdash;Sae they sune came to
+ an agreement to take a' the idolatrous statues of sants (sorrow be on
+ them) out o' their neuks&mdash;and sae the bits o' stane idols were broken
+ in pieces by Scripture warrant, and flung into the Molendinar burn, and
+ the auld kirk stood as crouse as a cat when the flaes are kaimed aff her,
+ and a' body was alike pleased. And I hae heard wise folk say, that if the
+ same had been done in ilka kirk in Scotland, the Reform wad just hae been
+ as pure as it is e'en now, and we wad hae mair Christian-like kirks; for I
+ hae been sae lang in England, that naething will drived out o' my head,
+ that the dog-kennel at Osbaldistone Hall is better than mony a house o'
+ God in Scotland.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus saying, Andrew led the way into the place of worship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0003" id="AlinkCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER THIRD.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;It strikes an awe
+ And terror on my aching sight; the tombs
+ And monumental caves of death look cold,
+ And shoot a chillness to the trembling heart.
+ Mourning Bride.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding the impatience of my conductor, I could not forbear to
+ pause and gaze for some minutes on the exterior of the building, rendered
+ more impressively dignified by the solitude which ensued when its hitherto
+ open gates were closed, after having, as it were, devoured the multitude
+ which had lately crowded the churchyard, but now, enclosed within the
+ building, were engaged, as the choral swell of voices from within
+ announced to us, in the solemn exercises of devotion. The sound of so many
+ voices united by the distance into one harmony, and freed from those harsh
+ discordances which jar the ear when heard more near, combining with the
+ murmuring brook, and the wind which sung among the old firs, affected me
+ with a sense of sublimity. All nature, as invoked by the Psalmist whose
+ verses they chanted, seemed united in offering that solemn praise in which
+ trembling is mixed with joy as she addressed her Maker. I had heard the
+ service of high mass in France, celebrated with all the <i>e'clat</i>
+ which the choicest music, the richest dresses, the most imposing
+ ceremonies, could confer on it; yet it fell short in effect of the
+ simplicity of the Presbyterian worship. The devotion in which every one
+ took a share seemed so superior to that which was recited by musicians as
+ a lesson which they had learned by rote, that it gave the Scottish worship
+ all the advantage of reality over acting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I lingered to catch more of the solemn sound, Andrew, whose impatience
+ became ungovernable, pulled me by the sleeve&mdash;&ldquo;Come awa', sir&mdash;come
+ awa'; we maunna be late o' gaun in to disturb the worship; if we bide here
+ the searchers will be on us, and carry us to the guard-house for being
+ idlers in kirk-time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus admonished, I followed my guide, but not, as I had supposed, into the
+ body of the cathedral. &ldquo;This gate&mdash;this gate, sir,&rdquo; he exclaimed,
+ dragging me off as I made towards the main entrance of the building&mdash;&ldquo;There's
+ but cauldrife law-work gaun on yonder&mdash;carnal morality, as dow'd and
+ as fusionless as rue leaves at Yule&mdash;Here's the real savour of
+ doctrine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, we entered a small low-arched door, secured by a wicket, which
+ a grave-looking person seemed on the point of closing, and descended
+ several steps as if into the funeral vaults beneath the church. It was
+ even so; for in these subterranean precincts,&mdash;why chosen for such a
+ purpose I knew not,&mdash;was established a very singular place of
+ worship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Conceive, Tresham, an extensive range of low-browed, dark, and twilight
+ vaults, such as are used for sepulchres in other countries, and had long
+ been dedicated to the same purpose in this, a portion of which was seated
+ with pews, and used as a church. The part of the vaults thus occupied,
+ though capable of containing a congregation of many hundreds, bore a small
+ proportion to the darker and more extensive caverns which yawned around
+ what may be termed the inhabited space. In those waste regions of
+ oblivion, dusky banners and tattered escutcheons indicated the graves of
+ those who were once, doubtless, &ldquo;princes in Israel.&rdquo; Inscriptions, which
+ could only be read by the painful antiquary, in language as obsolete as
+ the act of devotional charity which they employed, invited the passengers
+ to pray for the souls of those whose bodies rested beneath. Surrounded by
+ these receptacles of the last remains of mortality, I found a numerous
+ congregation engaged in the act of prayer. The Scotch perform this duty in
+ a standing instead of a kneeling posture&mdash;more, perhaps, to take as
+ broad a distinction as possible from the ritual of Rome than for any
+ better reason; since I have observed, that in their family worship, as
+ doubtless in their private devotions, they adopt, in their immediate
+ address to the Deity, that posture which other Christians use as the
+ humblest and most reverential. Standing, therefore, the men being
+ uncovered, a crowd of several hundreds of both sexes, and all ages,
+ listened with great reverence and attention to the extempore, at least the
+ unwritten, prayer of an aged clergyman,* who was very popular in the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * I have in vain laboured to discover this gentleman's name, and the
+ period of his incumbency. I do not, however, despair to see these points,
+ with some others which may elude my sagacity, satisfactorily elucidated by
+ one or other of the periodical publications which have devoted their pages
+ to explanatory commentaries on my former volumes; and whose research and
+ ingenuity claim my peculiar gratitude, for having discovered many persons
+ and circumstances connected with my narratives, of which I myself never so
+ much as dreamed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Educated in the same religious persuasion, I seriously bent my mind to
+ join in the devotion of the day; and it was not till the congregation
+ resumed their seats, that my attention was diverted to the consideration
+ of the appearance of all around me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the conclusion of the prayer, most of the men put on their hats or
+ bonnets, and all who had the happiness to have seats sate down. Andrew and
+ I were not of this number, having been too late of entering the church to
+ secure such accommodation. We stood among a number of other persons in the
+ same situation, forming a sort of ring around the seated part of the
+ congregation. Behind and around us were the vaults I have already
+ described; before us the devout audience, dimly shown by the light which
+ streamed on their faces through one or two low Gothic windows, such as
+ give air and light to charnel-houses. By this were seen the usual variety
+ of countenances which are generally turned towards a Scotch pastor on such
+ occasions, almost all composed to attention, unless where a father or
+ mother here and there recalls the wandering eyes of a lively child, or
+ disturbs the slumbers of a dull one. The high-boned and harsh countenance
+ of the nation, with the expression of intelligence and shrewdness which it
+ frequently exhibits, is seen to more advantage in the act of devotion, or
+ in the ranks of war, than on lighter and more cheerful occasions of
+ assemblage. The discourse of the preacher was well qualified to call forth
+ the various feelings and faculties of his audience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Age and infirmities had impaired the powers of a voice originally strong
+ and sonorous. He read his text with a pronunciation somewhat inarticulate;
+ but when he closed the Bible, and commenced his sermon, his tones
+ gradually strengthened, as he entered with vehemence into the arguments
+ which he maintained. They related chiefly to the abstract points of the
+ Christian faith,&mdash;subjects grave, deep, and fathomless by mere human
+ reason, but for which, with equal ingenuity and propriety, he sought a key
+ in liberal quotations from the inspired writings. My mind was unprepared
+ to coincide in all his reasoning, nor was I sure that in some instances I
+ rightly comprehended his positions. But nothing could be more impressive
+ than the eager enthusiastic manner of the good old man, and nothing more
+ ingenious than his mode of reasoning. The Scotch, it is well known, are
+ more remarkable for the exercise of their intellectual powers, than for
+ the keenness of their feelings; they are, therefore, more moved by logic
+ than by rhetoric, and more attracted by acute and argumentative reasoning
+ on doctrinal points, than influenced by the enthusiastic appeals to the
+ heart and to the passions, by which popular preachers in other countries
+ win the favour of their hearers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the attentive group which I now saw, might be distinguished various
+ expressions similar to those of the audience in the famous cartoon of Paul
+ preaching at Athens. Here sat a zealous and intelligent Calvinist, with
+ brows bent just as much as to indicate profound attention; lips slightly
+ compressed; eyes fixed on the minister with an expression of decent pride,
+ as if sharing the triumph of his argument; the forefinger of the right
+ hand touching successively those of the left, as the preacher, from
+ argument to argument, ascended towards his conclusion. Another, with
+ fiercer and sterner look, intimated at once his contempt of all who
+ doubted the creed of his pastor, and his joy at the appropriate punishment
+ denounced against them. A third, perhaps belonging to a different
+ congregation, and present only by accident or curiosity, had the
+ appearance of internally impeaching some link of the reasoning; and you
+ might plainly read, in the slight motion of his head, his doubts as to the
+ soundness of the preacher's argument. The greater part listened with a
+ calm, satisfied countenance, expressive of a conscious merit in being
+ present, and in listening to such an ingenious discourse, although perhaps
+ unable entirely to comprehend it. The women in general belonged to this
+ last division of the audience; the old, however, seeming more grimly
+ intent upon the abstract doctrines laid before them; while the younger
+ females permitted their eyes occasionally to make a modest circuit around
+ the congregation; and some of them, Tresham (if my vanity did not greatly
+ deceive me), contrived to distinguish your friend and servant, as a
+ handsome young stranger and an Englishman. As to the rest of the
+ congregation, the stupid gaped, yawned, or slept, till awakened by the
+ application of their more zealous neighbours' heels to their shins; and
+ the idle indicated their inattention by the wandering of their eyes, but
+ dared give no more decided token of weariness. Amid the Lowland costume of
+ coat and cloak, I could here and there discern a Highland plaid, the
+ wearer of which, resting on his basket-hilt, sent his eyes among the
+ audience with the unrestrained curiosity of savage wonder; and who, in all
+ probability, was inattentive to the sermon for a very pardonable reason&mdash;because
+ he did not understand the language in which it was delivered. The martial
+ and wild look, however, of these stragglers, added a kind of character
+ which the congregation could not have exhibited without them. They were
+ more numerous, Andrew afterwards observed, owing to some cattle-fair in
+ the neighbourhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the group of countenances, rising tier on tier, discovered to my
+ critical inspection by such sunbeams as forced their way through the
+ narrow Gothic lattices of the Laigh Kirk of Glasgow; and, having
+ illuminated the attentive congregation, lost themselves in the vacuity of
+ the vaults behind, giving to the nearer part of their labyrinth a sort of
+ imperfect twilight, and leaving their recesses in an utter darkness, which
+ gave them the appearance of being interminable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have already said that I stood with others in the exterior circle, with
+ my face to the preacher, and my back to those vaults which I have so often
+ mentioned. My position rendered me particularly obnoxious to any
+ interruption which arose from any slight noise occurring amongst these
+ retiring arches, where the least sound was multiplied by a thousand
+ echoes. The occasional sound of rain-drops, which, admitted through some
+ cranny in the ruined roof, fell successively, and splashed upon the
+ pavement beneath, caused me to turn my head more than once to the place
+ from whence it seemed to proceed, and when my eyes took that direction, I
+ found it difficult to withdraw them; such is the pleasure our imagination
+ receives from the attempt to penetrate as far as possible into an
+ intricate labyrinth, imperfectly lighted, and exhibiting objects which
+ irritate our curiosity, only because they acquire a mysterious interest
+ from being undefined and dubious. My eyes became habituated to the gloomy
+ atmosphere to which I directed them, and insensibly my mind became more
+ interested in their discoveries than in the metaphysical subtleties which
+ the preacher was enforcing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father had often checked me for this wandering mood of mind, arising
+ perhaps from an excitability of imagination to which he was a stranger;
+ and the finding myself at present solicited by these temptations to
+ inattention, recalled the time when I used to walk, led by his hand, to
+ Mr. Shower's chapel, and the earnest injunctions which he then laid on me
+ to redeem the time, because the days were evil. At present, the picture
+ which my thoughts suggested, far from fixing my attention, destroyed the
+ portion I had yet left, by conjuring up to my recollection the peril in
+ which his affairs now stood. I endeavoured, in the lowest whisper I could
+ frame, to request Andrew to obtain information, whether any of the
+ gentlemen of the firm of MacVittie &amp; Co. were at present in the
+ congregation. But Andrew, wrapped in profound attention to the sermon,
+ only replied to my suggestion by hard punches with his elbow, as signals
+ to me to remain silent. I next strained my eyes, with equally bad success,
+ to see if, among the sea of up-turned faces which bent their eyes on the
+ pulpit as a common centre, I could discover the sober and business-like
+ physiognomy of Owen. But not among the broad beavers of the Glasgow
+ citizens, or the yet broader brimmed Lowland bonnets of the peasants of
+ Lanarkshire, could I see anything resembling the decent periwig, starched
+ ruffles, or the uniform suit of light-brown garments appertaining to the
+ head-clerk of the establishment of Osbaldistone and Tresham. My anxiety
+ now returned on me with such violence as to overpower not only the novelty
+ of the scene around me, by which it had hitherto been diverted, but
+ moreover my sense of decorum. I pulled Andrew hard by the sleeve, and
+ intimated my wish to leave the church, and pursue my investigation as I
+ could. Andrew, obdurate in the Laigh Kirk of Glasgow as on the mountains
+ of Cheviot, for some time deigned me no answer; and it was only when he
+ found I could not otherwise be kept quiet, that he condescended to inform
+ me, that, being once in the church, we could not leave it till service was
+ over, because the doors were locked so soon as the prayers began. Having
+ thus spoken in a brief and peevish whisper, Andrew again assumed the air
+ of intelligent and critical importance, and attention to the preacher's
+ discourse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While I endeavoured to make a virtue of necessity, and recall my attention
+ to the sermon, I was again disturbed by a singular interruption. A voice
+ from behind whispered distinctly in my ear, &ldquo;You are in danger in this
+ city.&rdquo;&mdash;I turned round, as if mechanically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One or two starched and ordinary-looking mechanics stood beside and behind
+ me,&mdash;stragglers, who, like ourselves, had been too late in obtaining
+ entrance. But a glance at their faces satisfied me, though I could hardly
+ say why, that none of these was the person who had spoken to me. Their
+ countenances seemed all composed to attention to the sermon, and not one
+ of them returned any glance of intelligence to the inquisitive and
+ startled look with which I surveyed them. A massive round pillar, which
+ was close behind us, might have concealed the speaker the instant he
+ uttered his mysterious caution; but wherefore it was given in such a
+ place, or to what species of danger it directed my attention, or by whom
+ the warning was uttered, were points on which my imagination lost itself
+ in conjecture. It would, however, I concluded, be repeated, and I resolved
+ to keep my countenance turned towards the clergyman, that the whisperer
+ might be tempted to renew his communication under the idea that the first
+ had passed unobserved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My plan succeeded. I had not resumed the appearance of attention to the
+ preacher for five minutes, when the same voice whispered, &ldquo;Listen, but do
+ not look back.&rdquo; I kept my face in the same direction. &ldquo;You are in danger
+ in this place,&rdquo; the voice proceeded; &ldquo;so am I&mdash;meet me to-night on
+ the Brigg, at twelve preceesely&mdash;keep at home till the gloaming, and
+ avoid observation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the voice ceased, and I instantly turned my head. But the speaker
+ had, with still greater promptitude, glided behind the pillar, and escaped
+ my observation. I was determined to catch a sight of him, if possible, and
+ extricating myself from the outer circle of hearers, I also stepped behind
+ the column. All there was empty; and I could only see a figure wrapped in
+ a mantle, whether a Lowland cloak, or Highland plaid, I could not
+ distinguish, which traversed, like a phantom, the dreary vacuity of vaults
+ which I have described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I made a mechanical attempt to pursue the mysterious form, which glided
+ away and vanished in the vaulted cemetery, like the spectre of one of the
+ numerous dead who rested within its precincts. I had little chance of
+ arresting the course of one obviously determined not to be spoken with;
+ but that little chance was lost by my stumbling and falling before I had
+ made three steps from the column. The obscurity which occasioned my
+ misfortune, covered my disgrace; which I accounted rather lucky, for the
+ preacher, with that stern authority which the Scottish ministers assume
+ for the purpose of keeping order in their congregations, interrupted his
+ discourse, to desire the &ldquo;proper officer&rdquo; to take into custody the causer
+ of this disturbance in the place of worship. As the noise, however, was
+ not repeated, the beadle, or whatever else he was called, did not think it
+ necessary to be rigorous in searching out the offender, so that I was
+ enabled, without attracting farther observation, to place myself by
+ Andrew's side in my original position. The service proceeded, and closed
+ without the occurrence of anything else worthy of notice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the congregation departed and dispersed, my friend Andrew exclaimed,
+ &ldquo;See, yonder is worthy Mr. MacVittie, and Mrs. MacVittie, and Miss Alison
+ MacVittie, and Mr. Thamas MacFin, that they say is to marry Miss Alison,
+ if a' bowls row right&mdash;she'll hae a hantle siller, if she's no that
+ bonny.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My eyes took the direction he pointed out. Mr. MacVittie was a tall, thin,
+ elderly man, with hard features, thick grey eyebrows, light eyes, and, as
+ I imagined, a sinister expression of countenance, from which my heart
+ recoiled. I remembered the warning I had received in the church, and
+ hesitated to address this person, though I could not allege to myself any
+ rational ground of dislike or suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was yet in suspense, when Andrew, who mistook my hesitation for
+ bashfulness, proceeded to exhort me to lay it aside. &ldquo;Speak till him&mdash;speak
+ till him, Mr. Francis&mdash;he's no provost yet, though they say he'll be
+ my lord neist year. Speak till him, then&mdash;he'll gie ye a decent
+ answer for as rich as he is, unless ye were wanting siller frae him&mdash;they
+ say he's dour to draw his purse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It immediately occurred to me, that if this merchant were really of the
+ churlish and avaricious disposition which Andrew intimated, there might be
+ some caution necessary in making myself known, as I could not tell how
+ accounts might stand between my father and him. This consideration came in
+ aid of the mysterious hint which I had received, and the dislike which I
+ had conceived at the man's countenance. Instead of addressing myself
+ directly to him, as I had designed to have done, I contented myself with
+ desiring Andrew to inquire at Mr. MacVittie's house the address of Mr.
+ Owen, an English gentleman; and I charged him not to mention the person
+ from whom he received the commission, but to bring me the result to the
+ small inn where we lodged. This Andrew promised to do. He said something
+ of the duty of my attending the evening service; but added with a
+ causticity natural to him, that &ldquo;in troth, if folk couldna keep their legs
+ still, but wad needs be couping the creels ower through-stanes, as if they
+ wad raise the very dead folk wi' the clatter, a kirk wi' a chimley in't
+ was fittest for them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0004" id="AlinkCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER FOURTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ On the Rialto, every night at twelve,
+ I take my evening's walk of meditation:
+ There we two will meet.
+ Venice Preserved.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Full of sinister augury, for which, however, I could assign no
+ satisfactory cause, I shut myself up in my apartment at the inn, and
+ having dismissed Andrew, after resisting his importunity to accompany him
+ to St. Enoch's Kirk,* where, he said, &ldquo;a soul-searching divine was to haud
+ forth,&rdquo; I set myself seriously to consider what were best to be done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * This I believe to be an anachronism, as Saint Enoch's Church was not
+ built at the date of the story. [It was founded in 1780, and has since
+ been rebuilt.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I never was what is properly called superstitious; but I suppose that all
+ men, in situations of peculiar doubt and difficulty, when they have
+ exercised their reason to little purpose, are apt, in a sort of despair,
+ to abandon the reins to their imagination, and be guided altogether by
+ chance, or by those whimsical impressions which take possession of the
+ mind, and to which we give way as if to involuntary impulses. There was
+ something so singularly repulsive in the hard features of the Scotch
+ trader, that I could not resolve to put myself into his hands without
+ transgressing every caution which could be derived from the rules of
+ physiognomy; while, at the same time, the warning voice, the form which
+ flitted away like a vanishing shadow through those vaults, which might be
+ termed &ldquo;the valley of the shadow of death,&rdquo; had something captivating for
+ the imagination of a young man, who, you will farther please to remember,
+ was also a young poet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If danger was around me, as the mysterious communication intimated, how
+ could I learn its nature, or the means of averting it, but by meeting my
+ unknown counsellor, to whom I could see no reason for imputing any other
+ than kind intentions. Rashleigh and his machinations occurred more than
+ once to my remembrance;&mdash;but so rapid had my journey been, that I
+ could not suppose him apprised of my arrival in Glasgow, much less
+ prepared to play off any stratagem against my person. In my temper also I
+ was bold and confident, strong and active in person, and in some measure
+ accustomed to the use of arms, in which the French youth of all kinds were
+ then initiated. I did not fear any single opponent; assassination was
+ neither the vice of the age nor of the country; the place selected for our
+ meeting was too public to admit any suspicion of meditated violence. In a
+ word, I resolved to meet my mysterious counsellor on the bridge, as he had
+ requested, and to be afterwards guided by circumstances. Let me not
+ conceal from you, Tresham, what at the time I endeavoured to conceal from
+ myself&mdash;the subdued, yet secretly-cherished hope, that Diana Vernon
+ might&mdash;by what chance I knew not&mdash;through what means I could not
+ guess&mdash;have some connection with this strange and dubious intimation
+ conveyed at a time and place, and in a manner so surprising. She alone&mdash;whispered
+ this insidious thought&mdash;she alone knew of my journey; from her own
+ account, she possessed friends and influence in Scotland; she had
+ furnished me with a talisman, whose power I was to invoke when all other
+ aid failed me; who then but Diana Vernon possessed either means,
+ knowledge, or inclination, for averting the dangers, by which, as it
+ seemed, my steps were surrounded? This flattering view of my very doubtful
+ case pressed itself upon me again and again. It insinuated itself into my
+ thoughts, though very bashfully, before the hour of dinner; it displayed
+ its attractions more boldly during the course of my frugal meal, and
+ became so courageously intrusive during the succeeding half-hour (aided
+ perhaps by the flavour of a few glasses of most excellent claret), that,
+ with a sort of desperate attempt to escape from a delusive seduction, to
+ which I felt the danger of yielding, I pushed my glass from me, threw
+ aside my dinner, seized my hat, and rushed into the open air with the
+ feeling of one who would fly from his own thoughts. Yet perhaps I yielded
+ to the very feelings from which I seemed to fly, since my steps insensibly
+ led me to the bridge over the Clyde, the place assigned for the rendezvous
+ by my mysterious monitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although I had not partaken of my repast until the hours of evening
+ church-service were over,&mdash;in which, by the way, I complied with the
+ religious scruples of my landlady, who hesitated to dress a hot dinner
+ between sermons, and also with the admonition of my unknown friend, to
+ keep my apartment till twilight,&mdash;several hours had still to pass
+ away betwixt the time of my appointment and that at which I reached the
+ assigned place of meeting. The interval, as you will readily credit, was
+ wearisome enough; and I can hardly explain to you how it passed away.
+ Various groups of persons, all of whom, young and old, seemed impressed
+ with a reverential feeling of the sanctity of the day, passed along the
+ large open meadow which lies on the northern bank of the Clyde, and serves
+ at once as a bleaching-field and pleasure-walk for the inhabitants, or
+ paced with slow steps the long bridge which communicates with the southern
+ district of the county. All that I remember of them was the general, yet
+ not unpleasing, intimation of a devotional character impressed on each
+ little party&mdash;formally assumed perhaps by some, but sincerely
+ characterising the greater number&mdash;which hushed the petulant gaiety
+ of the young into a tone of more quiet, yet more interesting, interchange
+ of sentiments, and suppressed the vehement argument and protracted
+ disputes of those of more advanced age. Notwithstanding the numbers who
+ passed me, no general sound of the human voice was heard; few turned again
+ to take some minutes' voluntary exercise, to which the leisure of the
+ evening, and the beauty of the surrounding scenery, seemed to invite them:
+ all hurried to their homes and resting-places. To one accustomed to the
+ mode of spending Sunday evenings abroad, even among the French Calvinists,
+ there seemed something Judaical, yet, at the same time striking and
+ affecting, in this mode of keeping the Sabbath holy. Insensibly I felt my
+ mode of sauntering by the side of the river, and crossing successively the
+ various persons who were passing homeward, and without tarrying or delay,
+ must expose me to observation at least, if not to censure; and I slunk out
+ of the frequented path, and found a trivial occupation for my mind in
+ marshalling my revolving walk in such a manner as should least render me
+ obnoxious to observation. The different alleys lined out through this
+ extensive meadow, and which are planted with trees, like the Park of St.
+ James's in London, gave me facilities for carrying into effect these
+ childish manoeuvres.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I walked down one of these avenues, I heard, to my surprise, the sharp
+ and conceited voice of Andrew Fairservice, raised by a sense of
+ self-consequence to a pitch somewhat higher than others seemed to think
+ consistent with the solemnity of the day. To slip behind the row of trees
+ under which I walked was perhaps no very dignified proceeding; but it was
+ the easiest mode of escaping his observation, and perhaps his impertinent
+ assiduity, and still more intrusive curiosity. As he passed, I heard him
+ communicate to a grave-looking man, in a black coat, a slouched hat, and
+ Geneva cloak, the following sketch of a character, which my self-love,
+ while revolting against it as a caricature, could not, nevertheless,
+ refuse to recognise as a likeness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, ay, Mr. Hammorgaw, it's e'en as I tell ye. He's no a'thegither sae
+ void o' sense neither; he has a gloaming sight o' what's reasonable&mdash;that
+ is anes and awa'&mdash;a glisk and nae mair; but he's crack-brained and
+ cockle-headed about his nipperty-tipperty poetry nonsense&mdash;He'll
+ glowr at an auld-warld barkit aik-snag as if it were a queezmaddam in full
+ bearing; and a naked craig, wi' a bum jawing ower't, is unto him as a
+ garden garnisht with flowering knots and choice pot-herbs. Then he wad
+ rather claver wi' a daft quean they ca' Diana Vernon (weel I wet they
+ might ca' her Diana of the Ephesians, for she's little better than a
+ heathen&mdash;better? she's waur&mdash;a Roman, a mere Roman)&mdash;he'll
+ claver wi' her, or any ither idle slut, rather than hear what might do him
+ gude a' the days of his life, frae you or me, Mr. Hammorgaw, or ony ither
+ sober and sponsible person. Reason, sir, is what he canna endure&mdash;he's
+ a' for your vanities and volubilities; and he ance tell'd me (puir blinded
+ creature!) that the Psalms of David were excellent poetry! as if the holy
+ Psalmist thought o' rattling rhymes in a blether, like his ain silly
+ clinkum-clankum things that he ca's verse. Gude help him!&mdash;twa lines
+ o' Davie Lindsay would ding a' he ever clerkit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While listening to this perverted account of my temper and studies, you
+ will not be surprised if I meditated for Mr. Fairservice the unpleasant
+ surprise of a broken pate on the first decent opportunity. His friend only
+ intimated his attention by &ldquo;Ay, ay!&rdquo; and &ldquo;Is't e'en sae?&rdquo; and suchlike
+ expressions of interest, at the proper breaks in Mr. Fairservice's
+ harangue, until at length, in answer to some observation of greater
+ length, the import of which I only collected from my trusty guide's reply,
+ honest Andrew answered, &ldquo;Tell him a bit o'my mind, quoth ye? Wha wad be
+ fule then but Andrew? He's a red-wad deevil, man&mdash;He's like Giles
+ Heathertap's auld boar;&mdash;ye need but shake a clout at him to make him
+ turn and gore. Bide wi' him, say ye?&mdash;Troth, I kenna what for I bide
+ wi' him mysell. But the lad's no a bad lad after a'; and he needs some
+ carefu' body to look after him. He hasna the right grip o' his hand&mdash;the
+ gowd slips through't like water, man; and it's no that ill a thing to be
+ near him when his purse is in his hand, and it's seldom out o't. And then
+ he's come o' guid kith and kin&mdash;My heart warms to the poor
+ thoughtless callant, Mr. Hammorgaw&mdash;and then the penny fee&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the latter part of this instructive communication, Mr. Fairservice
+ lowered his voice to a tone better beseeming the conversation in a place
+ of public resort on a Sabbath evening, and his companion and he were soon
+ beyond my hearing. My feelings of hasty resentment soon subsided, under
+ the conviction that, as Andrew himself might have said, &ldquo;A harkener always
+ hears a bad tale of himself,&rdquo; and that whoever should happen to overhear
+ their character discussed in their own servants'-hall, must prepare to
+ undergo the scalpel of some such anatomist as Mr. Fairservice. The
+ incident was so far useful, as, including the feelings to which it gave
+ rise, it sped away a part of the time which hung so heavily on my hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evening had now closed, and the growing darkness gave to the broad, still,
+ and deep expanse of the brimful river, first a hue sombre and uniform&mdash;then
+ a dismal and turbid appearance, partially lighted by a waning and pallid
+ moon. The massive and ancient bridge which stretches across the Clyde was
+ now but dimly visible, and resembled that which Mirza, in his unequalled
+ vision, has described as traversing the valley of Bagdad. The low-browed
+ arches, seen as imperfectly as the dusky current which they bestrode,
+ seemed rather caverns which swallowed up the gloomy waters of the river,
+ than apertures contrived for their passage. With the advancing night the
+ stillness of the scene increased. There was yet a twinkling light
+ occasionally seen to glide along by the stream, which conducted home one
+ or two of the small parties, who, after the abstinence and religious
+ duties of the day, had partaken of a social supper&mdash;the only meal at
+ which the rigid Presbyterians made some advance to sociality on the
+ Sabbath. Occasionally, also, the hoofs of a horse were heard, whose rider,
+ after spending the Sunday in Glasgow, was directing his steps towards his
+ residence in the country. These sounds and sights became gradually of more
+ rare occurrence; at length they altogether ceased, and I was left to enjoy
+ my solitary walk on the shores of the Clyde in solemn silence, broken only
+ by the tolling of the successive hours from the steeples of the churches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as the night advanced my impatience at the uncertainty of the
+ situation in which I was placed increased every moment, and became nearly
+ ungovernable. I began to question whether I had been imposed upon by the
+ trick of a fool, the raving of a madman, or the studied machinations of a
+ villain, and paced the little quay or pier adjoining the entrance to the
+ bridge, in a state of incredible anxiety and vexation. At length the hour
+ of twelve o'clock swung its summons over the city from the belfry of the
+ metropolitan church of St. Mungo, and was answered and vouched by all the
+ others like dutiful diocesans. The echoes had scarcely ceased to repeat
+ the last sound, when a human form&mdash;the first I had seen for two hours&mdash;appeared
+ passing along the bridge from the southern shore of the river. I advanced
+ to meet him with a feeling as if my fate depended on the result of the
+ interview, so much had my anxiety been wound up by protracted expectation.
+ All that I could remark of the passenger as we advanced towards each
+ other, was that his frame was rather beneath than above the middle size,
+ but apparently strong, thick-set, and muscular; his dress a horseman's
+ wrapping coat. I slackened my pace, and almost paused as I advanced in
+ expectation that he would address me. But to my inexpressible
+ disappointment he passed without speaking, and I had no pretence for being
+ the first to address one who, notwithstanding his appearance at the very
+ hour of appointment, might nevertheless be an absolute stranger. I stopped
+ when he had passed me, and looked after him, uncertain whether I ought not
+ to follow him. The stranger walked on till near the northern end of the
+ bridge, then paused, looked back, and turning round, again advanced
+ towards me. I resolved that this time he should not have the apology for
+ silence proper to apparitions, who, it is vulgarly supposed, cannot speak
+ until they are spoken to. &ldquo;You walk late, sir,&rdquo; said I, as we met a second
+ time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I bide tryste,&rdquo; was the reply; &ldquo;and so I think do you, Mr. Osbaldistone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are then the person who requested to meet me here at this unusual
+ hour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;Follow me, and you shall know my reasons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Before following you, I must know your name and purpose,&rdquo; I answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am a man,&rdquo; was the reply; &ldquo;and my purpose is friendly to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A man!&rdquo; I repeated;&mdash;&ldquo;that is a very brief description.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will serve for one who has no other to give,&rdquo; said the stranger. &ldquo;He
+ that is without name, without friends, without coin, without country, is
+ still at least a man; and he that has all these is no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet this is still too general an account of yourself, to say the least of
+ it, to establish your credit with a stranger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is all I mean to give, howsoe'er; you may choose to follow me, or to
+ remain without the information I desire to afford you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can you not give me that information here?&rdquo; I demanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must receive it from your eyes, not from my tongue&mdash;you must
+ follow me, or remain in ignorance of the information which I have to give
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was something short, determined, and even stern, in the man's
+ manner, not certainly well calculated to conciliate undoubting confidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it you fear?&rdquo; he said impatiently. &ldquo;To whom, think ye, is your
+ life of such consequence, that they should seek to bereave ye of it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fear nothing,&rdquo; I replied firmly, though somewhat hastily. &ldquo;Walk on&mdash;I
+ attend you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We proceeded, contrary to my expectation, to re-enter the town, and glided
+ like mute spectres, side by side, up its empty and silent streets. The
+ high and gloomy stone fronts, with the variegated ornaments and pediments
+ of the windows, looked yet taller and more sable by the imperfect
+ moonshine. Our walk was for some minutes in perfect silence. At length my
+ conductor spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you afraid?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I retort your own words,&rdquo; I replied: &ldquo;wherefore should I fear?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because you are with a stranger&mdash;perhaps an enemy, in a place where
+ you have no friends and many enemies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I neither fear you nor them; I am young, active, and armed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not armed,&rdquo; replied my conductor: &ldquo;but no matter, a willing hand
+ never lacked weapon. You say you fear nothing; but if you knew who was by
+ your side, perhaps you might underlie a tremor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And why should I?&rdquo; replied I. &ldquo;I again repeat, I fear nought that you can
+ do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nought that I can do?&mdash;Be it so. But do you not fear the
+ consequences of being found with one whose very name whispered in this
+ lonely street would make the stones themselves rise up to apprehend him&mdash;on
+ whose head half the men in Glasgow would build their fortune as on a found
+ treasure, had they the luck to grip him by the collar&mdash;the sound of
+ whose apprehension were as welcome at the Cross of Edinburgh as ever the
+ news of a field stricken and won in Flanders?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And who then are you, whose name should create so deep a feeling of
+ terror?&rdquo; I replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No enemy of yours, since I am conveying you to a place, where, were I
+ myself recognised and identified, iron to the heels and hemp to the craig
+ would be my brief dooming.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I paused and stood still on the pavement, drawing back so as to have the
+ most perfect view of my companion which the light afforded me, and which
+ was sufficient to guard against any sudden motion of assault.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have said,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;either too much or too little&mdash;too much
+ to induce me to confide in you as a mere stranger, since you avow yourself
+ a person amenable to the laws of the country in which we are&mdash;and too
+ little, unless you could show that you are unjustly subjected to their
+ rigour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I ceased to speak, he made a step towards me. I drew back
+ instinctively, and laid my hand on the hilt of my sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; said he&mdash;&ldquo;on an unarmed man, and your friend?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am yet ignorant if you are either the one or the other,&rdquo; I replied;
+ &ldquo;and to say the truth, your language and manner might well entitle me to
+ doubt both.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is manfully spoken,&rdquo; replied my conductor; &ldquo;and I respect him whose
+ hand can keep his head.&mdash;I will be frank and free with you&mdash;I am
+ conveying you to prison.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To prison!&rdquo; I exclaimed&mdash;&ldquo;by what warrant or for what offence?&mdash;You
+ shall have my life sooner than my liberty&mdash;I defy you, and I will not
+ follow you a step farther.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;carry you there as a prisoner; I am,&rdquo; he added,
+ drawing himself haughtily up, &ldquo;neither a messenger nor sheriff's officer.
+ I carry you to see a prisoner from whose lips you will learn the risk in
+ which you presently stand. Your liberty is little risked by the visit;
+ mine is in some peril; but that I readily encounter on your account, for I
+ care not for risk, and I love a free young blood, that kens no protector
+ but the cross o' the sword.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he spoke thus, we had reached the principal street, and were pausing
+ before a large building of hewn stone, garnished, as I thought I could
+ perceive, with gratings of iron before the windows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Muckle,&rdquo; said the stranger, whose language became more broadly national
+ as he assumed a tone of colloquial freedom&mdash;&ldquo;Muckle wad the provost
+ and bailies o' Glasgow gie to hae him sitting with iron garters to his
+ hose within their tolbooth that now stands wi' his legs as free as the
+ red-deer's on the outside on't. And little wad it avail them; for an if
+ they had me there wi' a stane's weight o' iron at every ankle, I would
+ show them a toom room and a lost lodger before to-morrow&mdash;But come
+ on, what stint ye for?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke thus, he tapped at a low wicket, and was answered by a sharp
+ voice, as of one awakened from a dream or reverie,&mdash;&ldquo;Fa's tat?&mdash;Wha's
+ that, I wad say?&mdash;and fat a deil want ye at this hour at e'en?&mdash;Clean
+ again rules&mdash;clean again rules, as they ca' them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The protracted tone in which the last words were uttered, betokened that
+ the speaker was again composing himself to slumber. But my guide spoke in
+ a loud whisper&mdash;&ldquo;Dougal, man! hae ye forgotten Ha nun Gregarach?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Deil a bit, deil a bit,&rdquo; was the ready and lively response, and I heard
+ the internal guardian of the prison-gate bustle up with great alacrity. A
+ few words were exchanged between my conductor and the turnkey in a
+ language to which I was an absolute stranger. The bolts revolved, but with
+ a caution which marked the apprehension that the noise might be overheard,
+ and we stood within the vestibule of the prison of Glasgow,&mdash;a small,
+ but strong guard-room, from which a narrow staircase led upwards, and one
+ or two low entrances conducted to apartments on the same level with the
+ outward gate, all secured with the jealous strength of wickets, bolts, and
+ bars. The walls, otherwise naked, were not unsuitably garnished with iron
+ fetters, and other uncouth implements, which might be designed for
+ purposes still more inhuman, interspersed with partisans, guns, pistols of
+ antique manufacture, and other weapons of defence and offence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At finding myself so unexpectedly, fortuitously, and, as it were, by
+ stealth, introduced within one of the legal fortresses of Scotland, I
+ could not help recollecting my adventure in Northumberland, and fretting
+ at the strange incidents which again, without any demerits of my own,
+ threatened to place me in a dangerous and disagreeable collision with the
+ laws of a country which I visited only in the capacity of a stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0005" id="AlinkCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER FIFTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Look round thee, young Astolpho: Here's the place
+ Which men (for being poor) are sent to starve in;
+ Rude remedy, I trow, for sore disease.
+ Within these walls, stifled by damp and stench,
+ Doth Hope's fair torch expire; and at the snuff,
+ Ere yet 'tis quite extinct, rude, wild, and way-ward,
+ The desperate revelries of wild despair,
+ Kindling their hell-born cressets, light to deeds
+ That the poor captive would have died ere practised,
+ Till bondage sunk his soul to his condition.
+ The Prison, <i>Scene III. Act I.</i>
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At my first entrance I turned an eager glance towards my conductor; but
+ the lamp in the vestibule was too low in flame to give my curiosity any
+ satisfaction by affording a distinct perusal of his features. As the
+ turnkey held the light in his hand, the beams fell more full on his own
+ scarce less interesting figure. He was a wild shock-headed looking animal,
+ whose profusion of red hair covered and obscured his features, which were
+ otherwise only characterised by the extravagant joy that affected him at
+ the sight of my guide. In my experience I have met nothing so absolutely
+ resembling my idea of a very uncouth, wild, and ugly savage, adoring the
+ idol of his tribe. He grinned, he shivered, he laughed, he was near
+ crying, if he did not actually cry. He had a &ldquo;Where shall I go?&mdash;What
+ can I do for you?&rdquo; expression of face; the complete, surrendered, and
+ anxious subservience and devotion of which it is difficult to describe,
+ otherwise than by the awkward combination which I have attempted. The
+ fellow's voice seemed choking in his ecstasy, and only could express
+ itself in such interjections as &ldquo;Oigh! oigh!&mdash;Ay! ay!&mdash;it's lang
+ since she's seen ye!&rdquo; and other exclamations equally brief, expressed in
+ the same unknown tongue in which he had communicated with my conductor
+ while we were on the outside of the jail door. My guide received all this
+ excess of joyful gratulation much like a prince too early accustomed to
+ the homage of those around him to be much moved by it, yet willing to
+ requite it by the usual forms of royal courtesy. He extended his hand
+ graciously towards the turnkey, with a civil inquiry of &ldquo;How's a' wi' you,
+ Dougal?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oigh! oigh!&rdquo; exclaimed Dougal, softening the sharp exclamations of his
+ surprise as he looked around with an eye of watchful alarm&mdash;&ldquo;Oigh! to
+ see you here&mdash;to see you here!&mdash;Oigh!&mdash;what will come o' ye
+ gin the bailies suld come to get witting&mdash;ta filthy, gutty hallions,
+ tat they are?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My guide placed his finger on his lip, and said, &ldquo;Fear nothing, Dougal;
+ your hands shall never draw a bolt on me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tat sall they no,&rdquo; said Dougal; &ldquo;she suld&mdash;she wad&mdash;that is,
+ she wishes them hacked aff by the elbows first&mdash;But when are ye gaun
+ yonder again? and ye'll no forget to let her ken&mdash;she's your puir
+ cousin, God kens, only seven times removed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will let you ken, Dougal, as soon as my plans are settled.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And, by her sooth, when you do, an it were twal o' the Sunday at e'en,
+ she'll fling her keys at the provost's head or she gie them anither turn,
+ and that or ever Monday morning begins&mdash;see if she winna.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My mysterious stranger cut his acquaintance's ecstasies short by again
+ addressing him, in what I afterwards understood to be the Irish, Earse, or
+ Gaelic, explaining, probably, the services which he required at his hand.
+ The answer, &ldquo;Wi' a' her heart&mdash;wi' a' her soul,&rdquo; with a good deal of
+ indistinct muttering in a similar tone, intimated the turnkey's
+ acquiescence in what he proposed. The fellow trimmed his dying lamp, and
+ made a sign to me to follow him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you not go with us?&rdquo; said I, looking to my conductor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is unnecessary,&rdquo; he replied; &ldquo;my company may be inconvenient for you,
+ and I had better remain to secure our retreat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not suppose you mean to betray me to danger,&rdquo; said I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To none but what I partake in doubly,&rdquo; answered the stranger, with a
+ voice of assurance which it was impossible to mistrust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I followed the turnkey, who, leaving the inner wicket unlocked behind him,
+ led me up a <i>turnpike</i> (so the Scotch call a winding stair), then
+ along a narrow gallery&mdash;then opening one of several doors which led
+ into the passage, he ushered me into a small apartment, and casting his
+ eye on the pallet-bed which occupied one corner, said with an under voice,
+ as he placed the lamp on a little deal table, &ldquo;She's sleeping.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She!&mdash;who?&mdash;can it be Diana Vernon in this abode of misery?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I turned my eye to the bed, and it was with a mixture of disappointment
+ oddly mingled with pleasure, that I saw my first suspicion had deceived
+ me. I saw a head neither young nor beautiful, garnished with a grey beard
+ of two days' growth, and accommodated with a red nightcap. The first
+ glance put me at ease on the score of Diana Vernon; the second, as the
+ slumberer awoke from a heavy sleep, yawned, and rubbed his eyes, presented
+ me with features very different indeed&mdash;even those of my poor friend
+ Owen. I drew back out of view an instant, that he might have time to
+ recover himself; fortunately recollecting that I was but an intruder on
+ these cells of sorrow, and that any alarm might be attended with unhappy
+ consequences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, the unfortunate formalist, raising himself from the pallet-bed
+ with the assistance of one hand, and scratching his cap with the other,
+ exclaimed in a voice in which as much peevishness as he was capable of
+ feeling, contended with drowsiness, &ldquo;I'll tell you what, Mr. Dug-well, or
+ whatever your name may be, the sum-total of the matter is, that if my
+ natural rest is to be broken in this manner, I must complain to the lord
+ mayor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shentlemans to speak wi' her,&rdquo; replied Dougal, resuming the true dogged
+ sullen tone of a turnkey, in exchange for the shrill clang of Highland
+ congratulation with which he had welcomed my mysterious guide; and,
+ turning on his heel, he left the apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was some time before I could prevail upon the unfortunate sleeper
+ awakening to recognise me; and when he did so, the distress of the worthy
+ creature was extreme, at supposing, which he naturally did, that I had
+ been sent thither as a partner of his captivity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, Mr. Frank, what have you brought yourself and the house to?&mdash;I
+ think nothing of myself, that am a mere cipher, so to speak; but you, that
+ was your father's sum-total&mdash;his omnium,&mdash;you that might have
+ been the first man in the first house in the first city, to be shut up in
+ a nasty Scotch jail, where one cannot even get the dirt brushed off their
+ clothes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rubbed, with an air of peevish irritation, the once stainless brown
+ coat, which had now shared some of the impurities of the floor of his
+ prison-house,&mdash;his habits of extreme punctilious neatness acting
+ mechanically to increase his distress.&mdash;&ldquo;O Heaven be gracious to us!&rdquo;
+ he continued. &ldquo;What news this will be on 'Change! There has not the like
+ come there since the battle of Almanza, where the total of the British
+ loss was summed up to five thousand men killed and wounded, besides a
+ floating balance of missing&mdash;but what will that be to the news that
+ Osbaldistone and Tresham have stopped!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I broke in on his lamentations to acquaint him that I was no prisoner,
+ though scarce able to account for my being in that place at such an hour.
+ I could only silence his inquiries by persisting in those which his own
+ situation suggested; and at length obtained from him such information as
+ he was able to give me. It was none of the most distinct; for, however
+ clear-headed in his own routine of commercial business, Owen, you are well
+ aware, was not very acute in comprehending what lay beyond that sphere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sum of his information was, that of two correspondents of my father's
+ firm at Glasgow, where, owing to engagements in Scotland formerly alluded
+ to, he transacted a great deal of business, both my father and Owen had
+ found the house of MacVittie, MacFin, and Company, the most obliging and
+ accommodating. They had deferred to the great English house on every
+ possible occasion; and in their bargains and transactions acted, without
+ repining, the part of the jackall, who only claims what the lion is
+ pleased to leave him. However small the share of profit allotted to them,
+ it was always, as they expressed it, &ldquo;enough for the like of them;&rdquo;
+ however large the portion of trouble, &ldquo;they were sensible they could not
+ do too much to deserve the continued patronage and good opinion of their
+ honoured friends in Crane Alley.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dictates of my father were to MacVittie and MacFin the laws of the
+ Medes and Persians, not to be altered, innovated, or even discussed; and
+ the punctilios exacted by Owen in their business transactions, for he was
+ a great lover of form, more especially when he could dictate it <i>ex
+ cathedra,</i> seemed scarce less sanctimonious in their eyes. This tone of
+ deep and respectful observance went all currently down with Owen; but my
+ father looked a little closer into men's bosoms, and whether suspicious of
+ this excess of deference, or, as a lover of brevity and simplicity in
+ business, tired with these gentlemen's long-winded professions of regard,
+ he had uniformly resisted their desire to become his sole agents in
+ Scotland. On the contrary, he transacted many affairs through a
+ correspondent of a character perfectly different&mdash;a man whose good
+ opinion of himself amounted to self-conceit, and who, disliking the
+ English in general as much as my father did the Scotch, would hold no
+ communication but on a footing of absolute equality; jealous, moreover;
+ captious occasionally; as tenacious of his own opinions in point of form
+ as Owen could be of his; and totally indifferent though the authority of
+ all Lombard Street had stood against his own private opinion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As these peculiarities of temper rendered it difficult to transact
+ business with Mr. Nicol Jarvie,&mdash;as they occasioned at times disputes
+ and coldness between the English house and their correspondent, which were
+ only got over by a sense of mutual interest,&mdash;as, moreover, Owen's
+ personal vanity sometimes suffered a little in the discussions to which
+ they gave rise, you cannot be surprised, Tresham, that our old friend
+ threw at all times the weight of his influence in favour of the civil,
+ discreet, accommodating concern of MacVittie and MacFin, and spoke of
+ Jarvie as a petulant, conceited Scotch pedlar, with whom there was no
+ dealing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was also not surprising, that in these circumstances, which I only
+ learned in detail some time afterwards, Owen, in the difficulties to which
+ the house was reduced by the absence of my father, and the disappearance
+ of Rashleigh, should, on his arrival in Scotland, which took place two
+ days before mine, have recourse to the friendship of those correspondents,
+ who had always professed themselves obliged, gratified, and devoted to the
+ service of his principal. He was received at Messrs. MacVittie and
+ MacFin's counting-house in the Gallowgate, with something like the
+ devotion a Catholic would pay to his tutelar saint. But, alas! this
+ sunshine was soon overclouded, when, encouraged by the fair hopes which it
+ inspired, he opened the difficulties of the house to his friendly
+ correspondents, and requested their counsel and assistance. MacVittie was
+ almost stunned by the communication; and MacFin, ere it was completed, was
+ already at the ledger of their firm, and deeply engaged in the very bowels
+ of the multitudinous accounts between their house and that of Osbaldistone
+ and Tresham, for the purpose of discovering on which side the balance lay.
+ Alas! the scale depressed considerably against the English firm; and the
+ faces of MacVittie and MacFin, hitherto only blank and doubtful, became
+ now ominous, grim, and lowering. They met Mr. Owen's request of
+ countenance and assistance with a counter-demand of instant security
+ against imminent hazard of eventual loss; and at length, speaking more
+ plainly, required that a deposit of assets, destined for other purposes,
+ should be placed in their hands for that purpose. Owen repelled this
+ demand with great indignation, as dishonourable to his constituents,
+ unjust to the other creditors of Osbaldistone and Tresham, and very
+ ungrateful on the part of those by whom it was made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Scotch partners gained, in the course of this controversy, what is
+ very convenient to persons who are in the wrong, an opportunity and
+ pretext for putting themselves in a violent passion, and for taking, under
+ the pretext of the provocation they had received, measures to which some
+ sense of decency, if not of conscience, might otherwise have deterred them
+ from resorting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Owen had a small share, as I believe is usual, in the house to which he
+ acted as head-clerk, and was therefore personally liable for all its
+ obligations. This was known to Messrs. MacVittie and MacFin; and, with a
+ view of making him feel their power, or rather in order to force him, at
+ this emergency, into those measures in their favour, to which he had
+ expressed himself so repugnant, they had recourse to a summary process of
+ arrest and imprisonment,&mdash;which it seems the law of Scotland (therein
+ surely liable to much abuse) allows to a creditor, who finds his
+ conscience at liberty to make oath that the debtor meditates departing
+ from the realm. Under such a warrant had poor Owen been confined to
+ durance on the day preceding that when I was so strangely guided to his
+ prison-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus possessed of the alarming outline of facts, the question remained,
+ what was to be done and it was not of easy determination. I plainly
+ perceived the perils with which we were surrounded, but it was more
+ difficult to suggest any remedy. The warning which I had already received
+ seemed to intimate, that my own personal liberty might be endangered by an
+ open appearance in Owen's behalf. Owen entertained the same apprehension,
+ and, in the exaggeration of his terror, assured me that a Scotchman,
+ rather than run the risk of losing a farthing by an Englishman, would find
+ law for arresting his wife, children, man-servant, maidservant, and
+ stranger within his household. The laws concerning debt, in most
+ countries, are so unmercifully severe, that I could not altogether
+ disbelieve his statement; and my arrest, in the present circumstances,
+ would have been a <i>coup-de-grace</i> to my father's affairs. In this
+ dilemma, I asked Owen if he had not thought of having recourse to my
+ father's other correspondent in Glasgow, Mr. Nicol Jarvie?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He had sent him a letter,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;that morning; but if the
+ smooth-tongued and civil house in the Gallowgate* had used him thus, what
+ was to be expected from the cross-grained crab-stock in the Salt-Market?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * [A street in the old town of Glasgow.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You might as well ask a broker to give up his percentage, as expect a
+ favour from him without the <i>per contra.</i> He had not even,&rdquo; Owen
+ said, &ldquo;answered his letter though it was put into his hand that morning as
+ he went to church.&rdquo; And here the despairing man-of-figures threw himself
+ down on his pallet, exclaiming,&mdash;&ldquo;My poor dear master! My poor dear
+ master! O Mr. Frank, Mr. Frank, this is all your obstinacy!&mdash;But God
+ forgive me for saying so to you in your distress! It's God's disposing,
+ and man must submit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My philosophy, Tresham, could not prevent my sharing in the honest
+ creature's distress, and we mingled our tears,&mdash;the more bitter on my
+ part, as the perverse opposition to my father's will, with which the
+ kind-hearted Owen forbore to upbraid me, rose up to my conscience as the
+ cause of all this affliction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the midst of our mingled sorrow, we were disturbed and surprised by a
+ loud knocking at the outward door of the prison. I ran to the top of the
+ staircase to listen, but could only hear the voice of the turnkey,
+ alternately in a high tone, answering to some person without, and in a
+ whisper, addressed to the person who had guided me hither&mdash;&ldquo;She's
+ coming&mdash;she's coming,&rdquo; aloud; then in a low key, &ldquo;O hon-a-ri! O
+ hon-a-ri! what'll she do now?&mdash;Gang up ta stair, and hide yourself
+ ahint ta Sassenach shentleman's ped.&mdash;She's coming as fast as she
+ can.&mdash;Ahellanay! it's my lord provosts, and ta pailies, and ta guard&mdash;and
+ ta captain's coming toon stairs too&mdash;Got press her! gang up or he
+ meets her.&mdash;She's coming&mdash;she's coming&mdash;ta lock's sair
+ roosted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Dougal, unwillingly, and with as much delay as possible, undid the
+ various fastenings to give admittance to those without, whose impatience
+ became clamorous, my guide ascended the winding stair, and sprang into
+ Owen's apartment, into which I followed him. He cast his eyes hastily
+ round, as if looking for a place of concealment; then said to me, &ldquo;Lend me
+ your pistols&mdash;yet it's no matter, I can do without them&mdash;Whatever
+ you see, take no heed, and do not mix your hand in another man's feud&mdash;This
+ gear's mine, and I must manage it as I dow; but I have been as hard
+ bested, and worse, than I am even now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the stranger spoke these words, he stripped from his person the
+ cumbrous upper coat in which he was wrapt, confronted the door of the
+ apartment, on which he fixed a keen and determined glance, drawing his
+ person a little back to concentrate his force, like a fine horse brought
+ up to the leaping-bar. I had not a moment's doubt that he meant to
+ extricate himself from his embarrassment, whatever might be the cause of
+ it, by springing full upon those who should appear when the doors opened,
+ and forcing his way through all opposition into the street;&mdash;and such
+ was the appearance of strength and agility displayed in his frame, and of
+ determination in his look and manner, that I did not doubt a moment but
+ that he might get clear through his opponents, unless they employed fatal
+ means to stop his purpose. It was a period of awful suspense betwixt the
+ opening of the outward gate and that of the door of the apartment, when
+ there appeared&mdash;no guard with bayonets fixed, or watch with clubs,
+ bills, or partisans, but a good-looking young woman, with grogram
+ petticoats, tucked up for trudging through the streets, and holding a
+ lantern in her hand. This female ushered in a more important personage, in
+ form, stout, short, and somewhat corpulent; and by dignity, as it soon
+ appeared, a magistrate, bob-wigged, bustling, and breathless with peevish
+ impatience. My conductor, at his appearance, drew back as if to escape
+ observation; but he could not elude the penetrating twinkle with which
+ this dignitary reconnoitered the whole apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A bonny thing it is, and a beseeming, that I should be kept at the door
+ half an hour, Captain Stanchells,&rdquo; said he, addressing the principal
+ jailor, who now showed himself at the door as if in attendance on the
+ great man, &ldquo;knocking as hard to get into the tolbooth as onybody else wad
+ to get out of it, could that avail them, poor fallen creatures!&mdash;And
+ how's this?&mdash;how's this?&mdash;strangers in the jail after lock-up
+ hours, and on the Sabbath evening!&mdash;I shall look after this,
+ Stanchells, you may depend on't&mdash;Keep the door locked, and I'll speak
+ to these gentlemen in a gliffing&mdash;But first I maun hae a crack wi' an
+ auld acquaintance here.&mdash; Mr. Owen, Mr. Owen, how's a' wi' ye, man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pretty well in body, I thank you, Mr. Jarvie,&rdquo; drawled out poor Owen,
+ &ldquo;but sore afflicted in spirit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nae doubt, nae doubt&mdash;ay, ay&mdash;it's an awfu' whummle&mdash;and
+ for ane that held his head sae high too&mdash;human nature, human nature&mdash;Ay
+ ay, we're a' subject to a downcome. Mr. Osbaldistone is a gude honest
+ gentleman; but I aye said he was ane o' them wad make a spune or spoil a
+ horn, as my father the worthy deacon used to say. The deacon used to say
+ to me, 'Nick&mdash;young Nick' (his name was Nicol as weel as mine; sae
+ folk ca'd us in their daffin', young Nick and auld Nick)&mdash;'Nick,'
+ said he, 'never put out your arm farther than ye can draw it easily back
+ again.' I hae said sae to Mr. Osbaldistone, and he didna seem to take it
+ a'thegither sae kind as I wished&mdash;but it was weel meant&mdash;weel
+ meant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This discourse, delivered with prodigious volubility, and a great
+ appearance of self-complacency, as he recollected his own advice and
+ predictions, gave little promise of assistance at the hands of Mr. Jarvie.
+ Yet it soon appeared rather to proceed from a total want of delicacy than
+ any deficiency of real kindness; for when Owen expressed himself somewhat
+ hurt that these things should be recalled to memory in his present
+ situation, the Glaswegian took him by the hand, and bade him &ldquo;Cheer up a
+ gliff! D'ye think I wad hae comed out at twal o'clock at night, and amaist
+ broken the Lord's day, just to tell a fa'en man o' his backslidings? Na,
+ na, that's no Bailie Jarvie's gate, nor was't his worthy father's the
+ deacon afore him. Why, man! it's my rule never to think on warldly
+ business on the Sabbath, and though I did a' I could to keep your note
+ that I gat this morning out o' my head, yet I thought mair on it a' day,
+ than on the preaching&mdash;And it's my rule to gang to my bed wi' the
+ yellow curtains preceesely at ten o'clock&mdash;unless I were eating a
+ haddock wi' a neighbour, or a neighbour wi' me&mdash;ask the lass-quean
+ there, if it isna a fundamental rule in my household; and here hae I
+ sitten up reading gude books, and gaping as if I wad swallow St. Enox
+ Kirk, till it chappit twal, whilk was a lawfu' hour to gie a look at my
+ ledger, just to see how things stood between us; and then, as time and
+ tide wait for no man, I made the lass get the lantern, and came slipping
+ my ways here to see what can be dune anent your affairs. Bailie Jarvie can
+ command entrance into the tolbooth at ony hour, day or night;&mdash;sae
+ could my father the deacon in his time, honest man, praise to his memory.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although Owen groaned at the mention of the ledger, leading me grievously
+ to fear that here also the balance stood in the wrong column; and although
+ the worthy magistrate's speech expressed much self-complacency, and some
+ ominous triumph in his own superior judgment, yet it was blended with a
+ sort of frank and blunt good-nature, from which I could not help deriving
+ some hopes. He requested to see some papers he mentioned, snatched them
+ hastily from Owen's hand, and sitting on the bed, to &ldquo;rest his shanks,&rdquo; as
+ he was pleased to express the accommodation which that posture afforded
+ him, his servant girl held up the lantern to him, while, pshawing,
+ muttering, and sputtering, now at the imperfect light, now at the contents
+ of the packet, he ran over the writings it contained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeing him fairly engaged in this course of study, the guide who had
+ brought me hither seemed disposed to take an unceremonious leave. He made
+ a sign to me to say nothing, and intimated, by his change of posture, an
+ intention to glide towards the door in such a manner as to attract the
+ least possible observation. But the alert magistrate (very different from
+ my old acquaintance, Mr. Justice Inglewood) instantly detected and
+ interrupted his purposes. &ldquo;I say, look to the door, Stanchells&mdash;shut
+ and lock it, and keep watch on the outside.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger's brow darkened, and he seemed for an instant again to
+ meditate the effecting his retreat by violence; but ere he had determined,
+ the door closed, and the ponderous bolt revolved. He muttered an
+ exclamation in Gaelic, strode across the floor, and then, with an air of
+ dogged resolution, as if fixed and prepared to see the scene to an end,
+ sate himself down on the oak table, and whistled a strathspey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Jarvie, who seemed very alert and expeditious in going through
+ business, soon showed himself master of that which he had been
+ considering, and addressed himself to Mr. Owen in the following strain:&mdash;
+ &ldquo;Weel, Mr. Owen, weel&mdash;your house are awin' certain sums to Messrs.
+ MacVittie and MacFin (shame fa' their souple snouts! they made that and
+ mair out o' a bargain about the aik-woods at Glen-Cailziechat, that they
+ took out atween my teeth&mdash;wi' help o' your gude word, I maun needs
+ say, Mr. Owen&mdash;but that makes nae odds now)&mdash;Weel, sir, your
+ house awes them this siller; and for this, and relief of other engagements
+ they stand in for you, they hae putten a double turn o' Stanchells' muckle
+ key on ye.&mdash; Weel, sir, ye awe this siller&mdash;and maybe ye awe
+ some mair to some other body too&mdash;maybe ye awe some to myself, Bailie
+ Nicol Jarvie.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot deny, sir, but the balance may of this date be brought out
+ against us, Mr. Jarvie,&rdquo; said Owen; &ldquo;but you'll please to consider&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hae nae time to consider e'enow, Mr. Owen&mdash;Sae near Sabbath at
+ e'en, and out o' ane's warm bed at this time o' night, and a sort o' drow
+ in the air besides&mdash;there's nae time for considering&mdash;But, sir,
+ as I was saying, ye awe me money&mdash;it winna deny&mdash;ye awe me
+ money, less or mair, I'll stand by it. But then, Mr. Owen, I canna see how
+ you, an active man that understands business, can redd out the business
+ ye're come down about, and clear us a' aff&mdash;as I have gritt hope ye
+ will&mdash;if ye're keepit lying here in the tolbooth of Glasgow. Now,
+ sir, if you can find caution <i>judicio sisti,</i>&mdash;that is, that ye
+ winna flee the country, but appear and relieve your caution when ca'd for
+ in our legal courts, ye may be set at liberty this very morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Jarvie,&rdquo; said Owen, &ldquo;if any friend would become surety for me to that
+ effect, my liberty might be usefully employed, doubtless, both for the
+ house and all connected with it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aweel, sir,&rdquo; continued Jarvie, &ldquo;and doubtless such a friend wad expect ye
+ to appear when ca'd on, and relieve him o' his engagement.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I should do so as certainly, bating sickness or death, as that two
+ and two make four.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aweel, Mr. Owen,&rdquo; resumed the citizen of Glasgow, &ldquo;I dinna misdoubt ye,
+ and I'll prove it, sir&mdash;I'll prove it. I am a carefu' man, as is weel
+ ken'd, and industrious, as the hale town can testify; and I can win my
+ crowns, and keep my crowns, and count my crowns, wi' onybody in the Saut
+ Market, or it may be in the Gallowgate. And I'm a prudent man, as my
+ father the deacon was before me;&mdash;but rather than an honest civil
+ gentleman, that understands business, and is willing to do justice to all
+ men, should lie by the heels this gate, unable to help himsell or onybody
+ else&mdash;why, conscience, man! I'll be your bail myself&mdash;But ye'll
+ mind it's a bail <i>judicio sisti,</i> as our town-clerk says, not <i>judicatum
+ solvi;</i> ye'll mind that, for there's muckle difference.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Owen assured him, that as matters then stood, he could not expect any
+ one to become surety for the actual payment of the debt, but that there
+ was not the most distant cause for apprehending loss from his failing to
+ present himself when lawfully called upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe ye&mdash;I believe ye. Eneugh said&mdash;eneugh said. We'se hae
+ your legs loose by breakfast-time.&mdash;And now let's hear what thir
+ chamber chiels o' yours hae to say for themselves, or how, in the name of
+ unrule, they got here at this time o' night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Aimage-0004" id="Aimage-0004">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/pb068.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Rob Roy in Prison " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0006" id="AlinkCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER SIXTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Hame came our gudeman at e'en,
+ And hame came he,
+ And there he saw a man
+ Where a man suldna be.
+ &ldquo;How's this now, kimmer?
+ How's this?&rdquo; quo he,&mdash;
+ &ldquo;How came this carle here
+ Without the leave o' me?&rdquo;
+ Old Song.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The magistrate took the light out of the servant-maid's hand, and advanced
+ to his scrutiny, like Diogenes in the street of Athens, lantern-in-hand,
+ and probably with as little expectation as that of the cynic, that he was
+ likely to encounter any especial treasure in the course of his researches.
+ The first whom he approached was my mysterious guide, who, seated on a
+ table as I have already described him, with his eyes firmly fixed on the
+ wall, his features arranged into the utmost inflexibility of expression,
+ his hands folded on his breast with an air betwixt carelessness and
+ defiance, his heel patting against the foot of the table, to keep time
+ with the tune which he continued to whistle, submitted to Mr. Jarvie's
+ investigation with an air of absolute confidence and assurance which, for
+ a moment, placed at fault the memory and sagacity of the acute
+ investigator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&mdash;Eh!&mdash;Oh!&rdquo; exclaimed the Bailie. &ldquo;My conscience!&mdash;it's
+ impossible!&mdash;and yet&mdash;no!&mdash;Conscience!&mdash;it canna be!&mdash;and
+ yet again&mdash;Deil hae me, that I suld say sae!&mdash;Ye robber&mdash;ye
+ cateran&mdash;ye born deevil that ye are, to a' bad ends and nae gude ane!&mdash;can
+ this be you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;E'en as ye see, Bailie,&rdquo; was the laconic answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Conscience! if I am na clean bumbaized&mdash;<i>you</i>, ye
+ cheat-the-wuddy rogue&mdash;<i>you</i> here on your venture in the
+ tolbooth o' Glasgow?&mdash;What d'ye think's the value o' your head?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Umph!&mdash;why, fairly weighed, and Dutch weight, it might weigh down
+ one provost's, four bailies', a town-clerk's, six deacons', besides
+ stent-masters'&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, ye reiving villain!&rdquo; interrupted Mr. Jarvie. &ldquo;But tell ower your
+ sins, and prepare ye, for if I say the word&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, Bailie,&rdquo; said he who was thus addressed, folding his hands behind
+ him with the utmost <i>nonchalance,</i> &ldquo;but ye will never say that word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And why suld I not, sir?&rdquo; exclaimed the magistrate&mdash;&ldquo;Why suld I not?
+ Answer me that&mdash;why suld I not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For three sufficient reasons, Bailie Jarvie.&mdash;First, for auld
+ langsyne; second, for the sake of the auld wife ayont the fire at
+ Stuckavrallachan, that made some mixture of our bluids, to my own proper
+ shame be it spoken! that has a cousin wi' accounts, and yarn winnles, and
+ looms and shuttles, like a mere mechanical person; and lastly, Bailie,
+ because if I saw a sign o' your betraying me, I would plaster that wa'
+ with your harns ere the hand of man could rescue you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye're a bauld desperate villain, sir,&rdquo; retorted the undaunted Bailie;
+ &ldquo;and ye ken that I ken ye to be sae, and that I wadna stand a moment for
+ my ain risk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ken weel,&rdquo; said the other, &ldquo;ye hae gentle bluid in your veins, and I
+ wad be laith to hurt my ain kinsman. But I'll gang out here as free as I
+ came in, or the very wa's o' Glasgow tolbooth shall tell o't these ten
+ years to come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Weel, weel,&rdquo; said Mr. Jarvie, &ldquo;bluid's thicker than water; and it liesna
+ in kith, kin, and ally, to see motes in ilka other's een if other een see
+ them no. It wad be sair news to the auld wife below the Ben of
+ Stuckavrallachan, that you, ye Hieland limmer, had knockit out my harns,
+ or that I had kilted you up in a tow. But ye'll own, ye dour deevil, that
+ were it no your very sell, I wad hae grippit the best man in the
+ Hielands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye wad hae tried, cousin,&rdquo; answered my guide, &ldquo;that I wot weel; but I
+ doubt ye wad hae come aff wi' the short measure; for we gang-there-out
+ Hieland bodies are an unchancy generation when you speak to us o' bondage.
+ We downa bide the coercion of gude braid-claith about our hinderlans, let
+ a be breeks o' free-stone, and garters o' iron.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye'll find the stane breeks and the airn garters&mdash;ay, and the hemp
+ cravat, for a' that, neighbour,&rdquo; replied the Bailie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nae man in a civilised country ever played the pliskies ye hae done&mdash;but
+ e'en pickle in your ain pock-neuk&mdash;I hae gi'en ye wanting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, cousin,&rdquo; said the other, &ldquo;ye'll wear black at my burial.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Deil a black cloak will be there, Robin, but the corbies and the
+ hoodie-craws, I'se gie ye my hand on that. But whar's the gude thousand
+ pund Scots that I lent ye, man, and when am I to see it again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where it is,&rdquo; replied my guide, after the affectation of considering for
+ a moment, &ldquo;I cannot justly tell&mdash;probably where last year's snaw is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that's on the tap of Schehallion, ye Hieland dog,&rdquo; said Mr. Jarvie;
+ &ldquo;and I look for payment frae you where ye stand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; replied the Highlander, &ldquo;but I keep neither snaw nor dollars in my
+ sporran. And as to when you'll see it&mdash;why, just when the king enjoys
+ his ain again, as the auld sang says.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Warst of a', Robin,&rdquo; retorted the Glaswegian,&mdash;&ldquo;I mean, ye disloyal
+ traitor&mdash;Warst of a'!&mdash;Wad ye bring popery in on us, and
+ arbitrary power, and a foist and a warming-pan, and the set forms, and the
+ curates, and the auld enormities o' surplices and cerements? Ye had better
+ stick to your auld trade o' theft-boot, black-mail, spreaghs, and
+ gillravaging&mdash;better stealing nowte than ruining nations.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hout, man&mdash;whisht wi' your whiggery,&rdquo; answered the Celt; &ldquo;we hae
+ ken'd ane anither mony a lang day. I'se take care your counting-room is no
+ cleaned out when the Gillon-a-naillie* come to redd up the Glasgow buiths,
+ and clear them o' their auld shop-wares.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * The lads with the kilts or petticoats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, unless it just fa' in the preceese way o' your duty, ye maunna see me
+ oftener, Nicol, than I am disposed to be seen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye are a dauring villain, Rob,&rdquo; answered the Bailie; &ldquo;and ye will be
+ hanged, that will be seen and heard tell o'; but I'se ne'er be the ill
+ bird and foul my nest, set apart strong necessity and the skreigh of duty,
+ which no man should hear and be inobedient. And wha the deevil's this?&rdquo; he
+ continued, turning to me&mdash;&ldquo;Some gillravager that ye hae listed, I
+ daur say. He looks as if he had a bauld heart to the highway, and a lang
+ craig for the gibbet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This, good Mr. Jarvie,&rdquo; said Owen, who, like myself, had been struck dumb
+ during this strange recognition, and no less strange dialogue, which took
+ place betwixt these extraordinary kinsmen&mdash;&ldquo;This, good Mr. Jarvie, is
+ young Mr. Frank Osbaldistone, only child of the head of our house, who
+ should have been taken into our firm at the time Mr. Rashleigh
+ Osbaldistone, his cousin, had the luck to be taken into it&rdquo;&mdash;(Here
+ Owen could not suppress a groan)&mdash;&ldquo;But howsoever&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I have heard of that smaik,&rdquo; said the Scotch merchant, interrupting
+ him; &ldquo;it is he whom your principal, like an obstinate auld fule, wad make
+ a merchant o', wad he or wad he no,&mdash;and the lad turned a strolling
+ stage-player, in pure dislike to the labour an honest man should live by.
+ Weel, sir, what say you to your handiwork? Will Hamlet the Dane, or
+ Hamlet's ghost, be good security for Mr. Owen, sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't deserve your taunt,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;though I respect your motive,
+ and am too grateful for the assistance you have afforded Mr. Owen, to
+ resent it. My only business here was to do what I could (it is perhaps
+ very little) to aid Mr. Owen in the management of my father's affairs. My
+ dislike of the commercial profession is a feeling of which I am the best
+ and sole judge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I protest,&rdquo; said the Highlander, &ldquo;I had some respect for this callant
+ even before I ken'd what was in him; but now I honour him for his contempt
+ of weavers and spinners, and sic-like mechanical persons and their
+ pursuits.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye're mad, Rob,&rdquo; said the Bailie&mdash;&ldquo;mad as a March hare&mdash;though
+ wherefore a hare suld be mad at March mair than at Martinmas, is mair than
+ I can weel say. Weavers! Deil shake ye out o' the web the weaver craft
+ made. Spinners! ye'll spin and wind yourself a bonny pirn. And this young
+ birkie here, that ye're hoying and hounding on the shortest road to the
+ gallows and the deevil, will his stage-plays and his poetries help him
+ here, dye think, ony mair than your deep oaths and drawn dirks, ye
+ reprobate that ye are?&mdash;Will <i>Tityre tu patulae,</i> as they ca'
+ it, tell him where Rashleigh Osbaldistone is? or Macbeth, and all his
+ kernes and galla-glasses, and your awn to boot, Rob, procure him five
+ thousand pounds to answer the bills which fall due ten days hence, were
+ they a' rouped at the Cross,&mdash;basket-hilts, Andra-Ferraras, leather
+ targets, brogues, brochan, and sporrans?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ten days,&rdquo; I answered, and instinctively drew out Diana Vernon's packet;
+ and the time being elapsed during which I was to keep the seal sacred, I
+ hastily broke it open. A sealed letter fell from a blank enclosure, owing
+ to the trepidation with which I opened the parcel. A slight current of
+ wind, which found its way through a broken pane of the window, wafted the
+ letter to Mr. Jarvie's feet, who lifted it, examined the address with
+ unceremonious curiosity, and, to my astonishment, handed it to his
+ Highland kinsman, saying, &ldquo;Here's a wind has blown a letter to its right
+ owner, though there were ten thousand chances against its coming to hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Highlander, having examined the address, broke the letter open without
+ the least ceremony. I endeavoured to interrupt his proceeding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must satisfy me, sir,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;that the letter is intended for you
+ before I can permit you to peruse it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make yourself quite easy, Mr. Osbaldistone,&rdquo; replied the mountaineer with
+ great composure.&mdash;&ldquo;remember Justice Inglewood, Clerk Jobson, Mr.
+ Morris&mdash;above all, remember your vera humble servant, Robert Cawmil,
+ and the beautiful Diana Vernon. Remember all this, and doubt no longer
+ that the letter is for me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I remained astonished at my own stupidity.&mdash;Through the whole night,
+ the voice, and even the features of this man, though imperfectly seen,
+ haunted me with recollections to which I could assign no exact local or
+ personal associations. But now the light dawned on me at once; this man
+ was Campbell himself. His whole peculiarities flashed on me at once,&mdash;the
+ deep strong voice&mdash;the inflexible, stern, yet considerate cast of
+ features&mdash;the Scottish brogue, with its corresponding dialect and
+ imagery, which, although he possessed the power at times of laying them
+ aside, recurred at every moment of emotion, and gave pith to his sarcasm,
+ or vehemence to his expostulation. Rather beneath the middle size than
+ above it, his limbs were formed upon the very strongest model that is
+ consistent with agility, while from the remarkable ease and freedom of his
+ movements, you could not doubt his possessing the latter quality in a high
+ degree of perfection. Two points in his person interfered with the rules
+ of symmetry; his shoulders were so broad in proportion to his height, as,
+ notwithstanding the lean and lathy appearance of his frame, gave him
+ something the air of being too square in respect to his stature; and his
+ arms, though round, sinewy, and strong, were so very long as to be rather
+ a deformity. I afterwards heard that this length of arm was a circumstance
+ on which he prided himself; that when he wore his native Highland garb, he
+ could tie the garters of his hose without stooping; and that it gave him
+ great advantage in the use of the broad-sword, at which he was very
+ dexterous. But certainly this want of symmetry destroyed the claim he
+ might otherwise have set up, to be accounted a very handsome man; it gave
+ something wild, irregular, and, as it were, unearthly, to his appearance,
+ and reminded me involuntarily of the tales which Mabel used to tell of the
+ old Picts who ravaged Northumberland in ancient times, who, according to
+ her tradition, were a sort of half-goblin half-human beings,
+ distinguished, like this man, for courage, cunning, ferocity, the length
+ of their arms, and the squareness of their shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, however, I recollected the circumstances in which we formerly met, I
+ could not doubt that the billet was most probably designed for him. He had
+ made a marked figure among those mysterious personages over whom Diana
+ seemed to exercise an influence, and from whom she experienced an
+ influence in her turn. It was painful to think that the fate of a being so
+ amiable was involved in that of desperadoes of this man's description;&mdash;yet
+ it seemed impossible to doubt it. Of what use, however, could this person
+ be to my father's affairs?&mdash;I could think only of one. Rashleigh
+ Osbaldistone had, at the instigation of Miss Vernon, certainly found means
+ to produce Mr. Campbell when his presence was necessary to exculpate me
+ from Morris's accusation&mdash;Was it not possible that her influence, in
+ like manner, might prevail on Campbell to produce Rashleigh? Speaking on
+ this supposition, I requested to know where my dangerous kinsman was, and
+ when Mr. Campbell had seen him. The answer was indirect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a kittle cast she has gien me to play; but yet it's fair play, and I
+ winna baulk her. Mr. Osbaldistone, I dwell not very far from hence&mdash;my
+ kinsman can show you the way&mdash;Leave Mr. Owen to do the best he can in
+ Glasgow&mdash;do you come and see me in the glens, and it's like I may
+ pleasure you, and stead your father in his extremity. I am but a poor man;
+ but wit's better than wealth&mdash;and, cousin&rdquo; (turning from me to
+ address Mr. Jarvie), &ldquo;if ye daur venture sae muckle as to eat a dish of
+ Scotch collops, and a leg o' red-deer venison wi' me, come ye wi' this
+ Sassenach gentleman as far as Drymen or Bucklivie,&mdash;or the Clachan of
+ Aberfoil will be better than ony o' them,&mdash;and I'll hae somebody
+ waiting to weise ye the gate to the place where I may be for the time&mdash;What
+ say ye, man? There's my thumb, I'll ne'er beguile thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Na, na, Robin,&rdquo; said the cautious burgher, &ldquo;I seldom like to leave the
+ Gorbals;* I have nae freedom to gang among your wild hills, Robin, and
+ your kilted red-shanks&mdash;it disna become my place, man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * [The <i>Gorbals</i> or &ldquo;suburbs&rdquo; are situate on the south side of the
+ River.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The devil damn your place and you baith!&rdquo; reiterated Campbell. &ldquo;The only
+ drap o' gentle bluid that's in your body was our great-grand-uncle's that
+ was justified* at Dumbarton, and you set yourself up to say ye wad
+ derogate frae your place to visit me!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * [Executed for treason.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hark thee, man&mdash;I owe thee a day in harst&mdash;I'll pay up your
+ thousan pund Scots, plack and bawbee, gin ye'll be an honest fallow for
+ anes, and just daiker up the gate wi' this Sassenach.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hout awa' wi' your gentility,&rdquo; replied the Bailie; &ldquo;carry your gentle
+ bluid to the Cross, and see what ye'll buy wi't. But, if I <i>were</i> to
+ come, wad ye really and soothfastly pay me the siller?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I swear to ye,&rdquo; said the Highlander, &ldquo;upon the halidome of him that
+ sleeps beneath the grey stane at Inch-Cailleach.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Inch-Cailleach is an island in Lochlomond, where the clan of MacGregor
+ were wont to be interred, and where their sepulchres may still be seen. It
+ formerly contained a nunnery: hence the name of Inch-Cailleach, or the
+ island of Old Women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say nae mair, Robin&mdash;say nae mair&mdash;We'll see what may be dune.
+ But ye maunna expect me to gang ower the Highland line&mdash;I'll gae
+ beyond the line at no rate. Ye maun meet me about Bucklivie or the Clachan
+ of Aberfoil,&mdash;and dinna forget the needful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nae fear&mdash;nae fear,&rdquo; said Campbell; &ldquo;I'll be as true as the steel
+ blade that never failed its master. But I must be budging, cousin, for the
+ air o' Glasgow tolbooth is no that ower salutary to a Highlander's
+ constitution.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Troth,&rdquo; replied the merchant, &ldquo;and if my duty were to be dune, ye couldna
+ change your atmosphere, as the minister ca's it, this ae wee while.&mdash;Ochon,
+ that I sud ever be concerned in aiding and abetting an escape frae
+ justice! it will be a shame and disgrace to me and mine, and my very
+ father's memory, for ever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hout tout, man! let that flee stick in the wa',&rdquo; answered his kinsman;
+ &ldquo;when the dirt's dry it will rub out&mdash;Your father, honest man, could
+ look ower a friend's fault as weel as anither.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye may be right, Robin,&rdquo; replied the Bailie, after a moment's reflection;
+ &ldquo;he was a considerate man the deacon; he ken'd we had a' our frailties,
+ and he lo'ed his friends&mdash;Ye'll no hae forgotten him, Robin?&rdquo; This
+ question he put in a softened tone, conveying as much at least of the
+ ludicrous as the pathetic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forgotten him!&rdquo; replied his kinsman&mdash;&ldquo;what suld ail me to forget
+ him?&mdash;a wapping weaver he was, and wrought my first pair o' hose.&mdash;But
+ come awa', kinsman,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Come fill up my cap, come fill up my cann,
+ Come saddle my horses, and call up my man;
+ Come open your gates, and let me gae free,
+ I daurna stay langer in bonny Dundee.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whisht, sir!&rdquo; said the magistrate, in an authoritative tone&mdash;&ldquo;lilting
+ and singing sae near the latter end o' the Sabbath! This house may hear ye
+ sing anither tune yet&mdash;Aweel, we hae a' backslidings to answer for&mdash;Stanchells,
+ open the door.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The jailor obeyed, and we all sallied forth. Stanchells looked with some
+ surprise at the two strangers, wondering, doubtless, how they came into
+ these premises without his knowledge; but Mr. Jarvie's &ldquo;Friends o' mine,
+ Stanchells&mdash;friends o' mine,&rdquo; silenced all disposition to inquiries.
+ We now descended into the lower vestibule, and hallooed more than once for
+ Dougal, to which summons no answer was returned; when Campbell observed
+ with a sardonic smile, &ldquo;That if Dougal was the lad he kent him, he would
+ scarce wait to get thanks for his ain share of the night's wark, but was
+ in all probability on the full trot to the pass of Ballamaha&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And left us&mdash;and, abune a', me, mysell, locked up in the tolbooth a'
+ night!&rdquo; exclaimed the Bailie, in ire and perturbation. &ldquo;Ca' for
+ forehammers, sledge-hammers, pinches, and coulters; send for Deacon
+ Yettlin, the smith, an let him ken that Bailie Jarvie's shut up in the
+ tolbooth by a Highland blackguard, whom he'll hang up as high as Haman&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When ye catch him,&rdquo; said Campbell, gravely; &ldquo;but stay&mdash;the door is
+ surely not locked.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, on examination, we found that the door was not only left open, but
+ that Dougal in his retreat had, by carrying off the keys along with him,
+ taken care that no one should exercise his office of porter in a hurry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has glimmerings o' common sense now, that creature Dougal,&rdquo; said
+ Campbell.&mdash;&ldquo;he ken'd an open door might hae served me at a pinch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were by this time in the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell you, Robin,&rdquo; said the magistrate, &ldquo;in my puir mind, if ye live the
+ life ye do, ye suld hae ane o' your gillies door-keeper in every jail in
+ Scotland, in case o' the warst.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ane o' my kinsmen a bailie in ilka burgh will just do as weel, cousin
+ Nicol&mdash;So, gude-night or gude-morning to ye; and forget not the
+ Clachan of Aberfoil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And without waiting for an answer, he sprung to the other side of the
+ street, and was lost in darkness. Immediately on his disappearance, we
+ heard him give a low whistle of peculiar modulation, which was instantly
+ replied to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hear to the Hieland deevils,&rdquo; said Mr. Jarvie; &ldquo;they think themselves on
+ the skirts of Benlomond already, where they may gang whewingand whistling
+ about without minding Sunday or Saturday.&rdquo; Here he was interrupted by
+ something which fell with a heavy clash on the street before us&mdash;&ldquo;Gude
+ guide us what's this mair o't?&mdash;Mattie, haud up the lantern&mdash;Conscience
+ if it isna the keys!&mdash;Weel, that's just as weel&mdash;they cost the
+ burgh siller, and there might hae been some clavers about the loss o'
+ them. O, an Bailie Grahame were to get word o' this night's job, it would
+ be a sair hair in my neck!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we were still but a few steps from the tolbooth door, we carried back
+ these implements of office, and consigned them to the head jailor, who, in
+ lieu of the usual mode of making good his post by turning the keys, was
+ keeping sentry in the vestibule till the arrival of some assistant, whom
+ he had summoned in order to replace the Celtic fugitive Dougal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having discharged this piece of duty to the burgh, and my road lying the
+ same way with the honest magistrate's, I profited by the light of his
+ lantern, and he by my arm, to find our way through the streets, which,
+ whatever they may now be, were then dark, uneven, and ill-paved. Age is
+ easily propitiated by attentions from the young. The Bailie expressed
+ himself interested in me, and added, &ldquo;That since I was nane o' that
+ play-acting and play-ganging generation, whom his saul hated, he wad be
+ glad if I wad eat a reisted haddock or a fresh herring, at breakfast wi'
+ him the morn, and meet my friend, Mr. Owen, whom, by that time, he would
+ place at liberty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear sir,&rdquo; said I, when I had accepted of the invitation with thanks,
+ &ldquo;how could you possibly connect me with the stage?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I watna,&rdquo; replied Mr. Jarvie;&mdash;&ldquo;it was a bletherin' phrasin' chield
+ they ca' Fairservice, that cam at e'en to get an order to send the crier
+ through the toun for ye at skreigh o' day the morn. He tell't me whae ye
+ were, and how ye were sent frae your father's house because ye wadna be a
+ dealer, and that ye mightna disgrace your family wi' ganging on the stage.
+ Ane Hammorgaw, our precentor, brought him here, and said he was an auld
+ acquaintance; but I sent them both away wi' a flae in their lug for
+ bringing me sic an errand, on sic a night. But I see he's a fule-creature
+ a'thegither, and clean mistaen about ye. I like ye, man,&rdquo; he continued; &ldquo;I
+ like a lad that will stand by his friends in trouble&mdash;I aye did it
+ mysell, and sae did the deacon my father, rest and bless him! But ye
+ suldna keep ower muckle company wi' Hielandmen and thae wild cattle. Can a
+ man touch pitch and no be defiled?&mdash;aye mind that. Nae doubt, the
+ best and wisest may err&mdash;Once, twice, and thrice have I backslidden,
+ man, and dune three things this night&mdash;my father wadna hae believed
+ his een if he could hae looked up and seen me do them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was by this time arrived at the door of his own dwelling. He paused,
+ however, on the threshold, and went on in a solemn tone of deep
+ contrition,&mdash;&ldquo;Firstly, I hae thought my ain thoughts on the Sabbath&mdash;secondly,
+ I hae gi'en security for an Englishman&mdash;and, in the third and last
+ place, well-a-day! I hae let an ill-doer escape from the place of
+ imprisonment&mdash;But there's balm in Gilead, Mr. Osbaldistone&mdash;
+ Mattie, I can let mysell in&mdash;see Mr. Osbaldistone to Luckie Flyter's,
+ at the corner o' the wynd.&mdash;Mr. Osbaldistone&rdquo;&mdash;in a whisper&mdash;&ldquo;ye'll
+ offer nae incivility to Mattie&mdash;she's an honest man's daughter, and a
+ near cousin o' the Laird o' Limmerfield's.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0007" id="AlinkCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER SEVENTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Will it please your worship to accept of my poor service? I beseech
+ that I may feed upon your bread, though it be the brownest, and
+ drink of your drink, though it be of the smallest; for I will do
+ your Worship as much service for forty shillings as another man
+ shall for three pounds.&rdquo;
+ Greene's <i>Tu Quoque.</i>
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I remembered the honest Bailie's parting charge, but did not conceive
+ there was any incivility in adding a kiss to the half-crown with which I
+ remunerated Mattie's attendance;&mdash;nor did her &ldquo;Fie for shame, sir!&rdquo;
+ express any very deadly resentment of the affront. Repeated knocking at
+ Mrs. Flyter's gate awakened in due order, first, one or two stray dogs,
+ who began to bark with all their might; next two or three night-capped
+ heads, which were thrust out of the neighbouring windows to reprehend me
+ for disturbing the solemnity of the Sunday night by that untimely noise.
+ While I trembled lest the thunders of their wrath might dissolve in
+ showers like that of Xantippe, Mrs. Flyter herself awoke, and began, in a
+ tone of objurgation not unbecoming the philosophical spouse of Socrates,
+ to scold one or two loiterers in her kitchen, for not hastening to the
+ door to prevent a repetition of my noisy summons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These worthies were, indeed, nearly concerned in the fracas which their
+ laziness occasioned, being no other than the faithful Mr. Fairservice,
+ with his friend Mr. Hammorgaw, and another person, whom I afterwards found
+ to be the town-crier, who were sitting over a cog of ale, as they called
+ it (at my expense, as my bill afterwards informed me), in order to devise
+ the terms and style of a proclamation to be made through the streets the
+ next day, in order that &ldquo;the unfortunate young gentleman,&rdquo; as they had the
+ impudence to qualify me, might be restored to his friends without farther
+ delay. It may be supposed that I did not suppress my displeasure at this
+ impertinent interference with my affairs; but Andrew set up such
+ ejaculations of transport at my arrival, as fairly drowned my expressions
+ of resentment. His raptures, perchance, were partly political; and the
+ tears of joy which he shed had certainly their source in that noble
+ fountain of emotion, the tankard. However, the tumultuous glee which he
+ felt, or pretended to feel, at my return, saved Andrew the broken head
+ which I had twice destined him;&mdash;first, on account of the colloquy he
+ had held with the precentor on my affairs; and secondly, for the
+ impertinent history he had thought proper to give of me to Mr. Jarvie. I
+ however contented myself with slapping the door of my bedroom in his face
+ as he followed me, praising Heaven for my safe return, and mixing his joy
+ with admonitions to me to take care how I walked my own ways in future. I
+ then went to bed, resolving my first business in the morning should be to
+ discharge this troublesome, pedantic, self-conceited coxcomb, who seemed
+ so much disposed to constitute himself rather a preceptor than a domestic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly in the morning I resumed my purpose, and calling Andrew into
+ my apartment, requested to know his charge for guiding and attending me as
+ far as Glasgow. Mr. Fairservice looked very blank at this demand, justly
+ considering it as a presage to approaching dismission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your honour,&rdquo; he said, after some hesitation, &ldquo;wunna think&mdash;wunna
+ think&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak out, you rascal, or I'll break your head,&rdquo; said I, as Andrew,
+ between the double risk of losing all by asking too much, or a part, by
+ stating his demand lower than what I might be willing to pay, stood
+ gasping in the agony of doubt and calculation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out it came with a bolt, however, at my threat; as the kind violence of a
+ blow on the back sometimes delivers the windpipe from an intrusive morsel.&mdash;&ldquo;Aughteen
+ pennies sterling per diem&mdash;that is, by the day&mdash;your honour
+ wadna think unconscionable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is double what is usual, and treble what you merit, Andrew; but
+ there's a guinea for you, and get about your business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Lord forgi'e us! Is your honour mad?&rdquo; exclaimed Andrew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; but I think you mean to make me so&mdash;I give you a third above
+ your demand, and you stand staring and expostulating there as if I were
+ cheating you. Take your money, and go about your business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gude safe us!&rdquo; continued Andrew, &ldquo;in what can I hae offended your honour?
+ Certainly a' flesh is but as the flowers of the field; but if a bed of
+ camomile hath value in medicine, of a surety the use of Andrew Fairservice
+ to your honour is nothing less evident&mdash;it's as muckle as your life's
+ worth to part wi' me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Upon my honour,&rdquo; replied I, &ldquo;it is difficult to say whether you are more
+ knave or fool. So you intend then to remain with me whether I like it or
+ no?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Troth, I was e'en thinking sae,&rdquo; replied Andrew, dogmatically; &ldquo;for if
+ your honour disna ken when ye hae a gude servant, I ken when I hae a gude
+ master, and the deil be in my feet gin I leave ye&mdash;and there's the
+ brief and the lang o't besides I hae received nae regular warning to quit
+ my place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your place, sir!&rdquo; said I;&mdash;&ldquo;why, you are no hired servant of mine,&mdash;you
+ are merely a guide, whose knowledge of the country I availed myself of on
+ my road.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am no just a common servant, I admit, sir,&rdquo; remonstrated Mr.
+ Fairservice; &ldquo;but your honour kens I quitted a gude place at an hour's
+ notice, to comply wi' your honour's solicitations. A man might make
+ honestly, and wi' a clear conscience, twenty sterling pounds per annum,
+ weel counted siller, o' the garden at Osbaldistone Hall, and I wasna
+ likely to gi'e up a' that for a guinea, I trow&mdash;I reckoned on staying
+ wi' your honour to the term's end at the least o't; and I account my wage,
+ board-wage, fee and bountith,&mdash;ay, to that length o't at the least.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, come, sir,&rdquo; replied I, &ldquo;these impudent pretensions won't serve your
+ turn; and if I hear any more of them, I shall convince you that Squire
+ Thorncliff is not the only one of my name that can use his fingers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While I spoke thus, the whole matter struck me as so ridiculous, that,
+ though really angry, I had some difficulty to forbear laughing at the
+ gravity with which Andrew supported a plea so utterly extravagant. The
+ rascal, aware of the impression he had made on my muscles, was encouraged
+ to perseverance. He judged it safer, however, to take his pretensions a
+ peg lower, in case of overstraining at the same time both his plea and my
+ patience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Admitting that my honour could part with a faithful servant, that had
+ served me and mine by day and night for twenty years, in a strange place,
+ and at a moment's warning, he was weel assured,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it wasna in my
+ heart, nor in no true gentleman's, to pit a puir lad like himself, that
+ had come forty or fifty, or say a hundred miles out o' his road purely to
+ bear my honour company, and that had nae handing but his penny-fee, to sic
+ a hardship as this comes to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I think it was you, Will, who once told me, that, to be an obstinate man,
+ I am in certain things the most gullable and malleable of mortals. The
+ fact is, that it is only contradiction which makes me peremptory, and when
+ I do not feel myself called on to give battle to any proposition, I am
+ always willing to grant it, rather than give myself much trouble. I knew
+ this fellow to be a greedy, tiresome, meddling coxcomb; still, however, I
+ must have some one about me in the quality of guide and domestic, and I
+ was so much used to Andrew's humour, that on some occasions it was rather
+ amusing. In the state of indecision to which these reflections led me, I
+ asked Fairservice if he knew the roads, towns, etc., in the north of
+ Scotland, to which my father's concerns with the proprietors of Highland
+ forests were likely to lead me. I believe if I had asked him the road to
+ the terrestrial paradise, he would have at that moment undertaken to guide
+ me to it; so that I had reason afterwards to think myself fortunate in
+ finding that his actual knowledge did not fall very much short of that
+ which he asserted himself to possess. I fixed the amount of his wages, and
+ reserved to myself the privilege of dismissing him when I chose, on paying
+ him a week in advance. I gave him finally a severe lecture on his conduct
+ of the preceding day, and then dismissed him rejoicing at heart, though
+ somewhat crestfallen in countenance, to rehearse to his friend the
+ precentor, who was taking his morning draught in the kitchen, the mode in
+ which he had &ldquo;cuitled up the daft young English squire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Agreeable to appointment, I went next to Bailie Nicol Jarvie's, where a
+ comfortable morning's repast was arranged in the parlour, which served as
+ an apartment of all hours, and almost all work, to that honest gentleman.
+ The bustling and benevolent magistrate had been as good as his word. I
+ found my friend Owen at liberty, and, conscious of the refreshments and
+ purification of brush and basin, was of course a very different person
+ from Owen a prisoner, squalid, heart-broken, and hopeless. Yet the sense
+ of pecuniary difficulties arising behind, before, and around him, had
+ depressed his spirit, and the almost paternal embrace which the good man
+ gave me, was embittered by a sigh of the deepest anxiety. And when he sate
+ down, the heaviness in his eye and manner, so different from the quiet
+ composed satisfaction which they usually exhibited, indicated that he was
+ employing his arithmetic in mentally numbering up the days, the hours, the
+ minutes, which yet remained as an interval between the dishonour of bills
+ and the downfall of the great commercial establishment of Osbaldistone and
+ Tresham. It was left to me, therefore, to do honour to our landlord's
+ hospitable cheer&mdash;to his tea, right from China, which he got in a
+ present from some eminent ship's-husband at Wapping&mdash;to his coffee,
+ from a snug plantation of his own, as he informed us with a wink, called
+ Saltmarket Grove, in the island of Jamaica&mdash;to his English toast and
+ ale, his Scotch dried salmon, his Lochfine herrings, and even to the
+ double-damask table-cloth, &ldquo;wrought by no hand, as you may guess,&rdquo; save
+ that of his deceased father the worthy Deacon Jarvie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having conciliated our good-humoured host by those little attentions which
+ are great to most men, I endeavoured in my turn to gain from him some
+ information which might be useful for my guidance, as well as for the
+ satisfaction of my curiosity. We had not hitherto made the least allusion
+ to the transactions of the preceding night, a circumstance which made my
+ question sound somewhat abrupt, when, without any previous introduction of
+ the subject, I took advantage of a pause when the history of the
+ table-cloth ended, and that of the napkins was about to commence, to
+ inquire, &ldquo;Pray, by the by, Mr. Jarvie, who may this Mr. Robert Campbell
+ be, whom we met with last night?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interrogatory seemed to strike the honest magistrate, to use the
+ vulgar phrase, &ldquo;all of a heap,&rdquo; and instead of answering, he returned the
+ question&mdash;&ldquo;Whae's Mr. Robert Campbell?&mdash;ahem! ahay! Whae's Mr.
+ Robert Campbell, quo' he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;I mean who and what is he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, he's&mdash;ahay!&mdash;he's&mdash;ahem!&mdash;Where did ye meet with
+ Mr. Robert Campbell, as ye ca' him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I met him by chance,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;some months ago in the north of
+ England.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ou then, Mr. Osbaldistone,&rdquo; said the Bailie, doggedly, &ldquo;ye'll ken as
+ muckle about him as I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should suppose not, Mr. Jarvie,&rdquo; I replied;&mdash;&ldquo;you are his
+ relation, it seems, and his friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is some cousin-red between us, doubtless,&rdquo; said the Bailie
+ reluctantly; &ldquo;but we hae seen little o' ilk other since Rob gae tip the
+ cattle-line o' dealing, poor fallow! he was hardly guided by them might
+ hae used him better&mdash;and they haena made their plack a bawbee o't
+ neither. There's mony ane this day wad rather they had never chased puir
+ Robin frae the Cross o' Glasgow&mdash;there's mony ane wad rather see him
+ again at the tale o' three hundred kyloes, than at the head o' thirty waur
+ cattle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All this explains nothing to me, Mr. Jarvie, of Mr. Campbell's rank,
+ habits of life, and means of subsistence,&rdquo; I replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rank?&rdquo; said Mr. Jarvie; &ldquo;he's a Hieland gentleman, nae doubt&mdash;better
+ rank need nane to be;&mdash;and for habit, I judge he wears the Hieland
+ habit amang the hills, though he has breeks on when he comes to Glasgow;&mdash;and
+ as for his subsistence, what needs we care about his subsistence, sae lang
+ as he asks naething frae us, ye ken? But I hae nae time for clavering
+ about him e'en now, because we maun look into your father's concerns wi'
+ all speed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he put on his spectacles, and sate down to examine Mr. Owen's
+ states, which the other thought it most prudent to communicate to him
+ without reserve. I knew enough of business to be aware that nothing could
+ be more acute and sagacious than the views which Mr. Jarvie entertained of
+ the matters submitted to his examination; and, to do him justice, it was
+ marked by much fairness, and even liberality. He scratched his ear indeed
+ repeatedly on observing the balance which stood at the debit of
+ Osbaldistone and Tresham in account with himself personally.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It may be a dead loss,&rdquo; he observed; &ldquo;and, conscience! whate'er ane o'
+ your Lombard Street goldsmiths may say to it, it's a snell ane in the
+ Saut-Market* o' Glasgow. It will be a heavy deficit&mdash;a staff out o'
+ my bicker, I trow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * [The Saltmarket. This ancient street, situate in the heart of Glasgow,
+ has of late been almost entirely renovated.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what then?&mdash;I trust the house wunna coup the crane for a' that's
+ come and gane yet; and if it does, I'll never bear sae base a mind as thae
+ corbies in the Gallowgate&mdash;an I am to lose by ye, I'se ne'er deny I
+ hae won by ye mony a fair pund sterling&mdash;Sae, an it come to the
+ warst, I'se een lay the head o' the sow to the tail o' the grice.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * <i>Anglice,</i> the head of the sow to the tail of the pig.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I did not altogether understand the proverbial arrangement with which Mr.
+ Jarvie consoled himself, but I could easily see that he took a kind and
+ friendly interest in the arrangement of my father's affairs, suggested
+ several expedients, approved several plans proposed by Owen, and by his
+ countenance and counsel greatly abated the gloom upon the brow of that
+ afflicted delegate of my father's establishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I was an idle spectator on this occasion, and, perhaps, as I showed
+ some inclination more than once to return to the prohibited, and
+ apparently the puzzling subject of Mr. Campbell, Mr. Jarvie dismissed me
+ with little formality, with an advice to &ldquo;gang up the gate to the college,
+ where I wad find some chields could speak Greek and Latin weel&mdash;at
+ least they got plenty o' siller for doing deil haet else, if they didna do
+ that; and where I might read a spell o' the worthy Mr. Zachary Boyd's
+ translation o' the Scriptures&mdash;better poetry need nane to be, as he
+ had been tell'd by them that ken'd or suld hae ken'd about sic things.&rdquo;
+ But he seasoned this dismission with a kind and hospitable invitation &ldquo;to
+ come back and take part o' his family-chack at ane preceesely&mdash;there
+ wad be a leg o' mutton, and, it might be, a tup's head, for they were in
+ season;&rdquo; but above all, I was to return at &ldquo;ane o'clock preceesely&mdash;it
+ was the hour he and the deacon his father aye dined at&mdash;they pat it
+ off for naething nor for naebody.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0008" id="AlinkCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER EIGHTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ So stands the Thracian herdsman with his spear
+ Full in the gap, and hopes the hunted bear;
+ And hears him in the rustling wood, and sees
+ His course at distance by the bending trees,
+ And thinks&mdash;Here comes my mortal enemy,
+ And either he must fall in fight, or I.
+ Palamon and Arcite.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I took the route towards the college, as recommended by Mr. Jarvie, less
+ with the intention of seeking for any object of interest or amusement,
+ than to arrange my own ideas, and meditate on my future conduct. I
+ wandered from one quadrangle of old-fashioned buildings to another, and
+ from thence to the College-yards, or walking ground, where, pleased with
+ the solitude of the place, most of the students being engaged in their
+ classes, I took several turns, pondering on the waywardness of my own
+ destiny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could not doubt, from the circumstances attending my first meeting with
+ this person Campbell, that he was engaged in some strangely desperate
+ courses; and the reluctance with which Mr. Jarvie alluded to his person or
+ pursuits, as well as all the scene of the preceding night, tended to
+ confirm these suspicions. Yet to this man Diana Vernon had not, it would
+ seem, hesitated to address herself in my behalf; and the conduct of the
+ magistrate himself towards him showed an odd mixture of kindness, and even
+ respect, with pity and censure. Something there must be uncommon in
+ Campbell's situation and character; and what was still more extraordinary,
+ it seemed that his fate was doomed to have influence over, and connection
+ with, my own. I resolved to bring Mr. Jarvie to close quarters on the
+ first proper opportunity, and learn as much as was possible on the subject
+ of this mysterious person, in order that I might judge whether it was
+ possible for me, without prejudice to my reputation, to hold that degree
+ of farther correspondence with him to which he seemed to invite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While I was musing on these subjects, my attention was attracted by three
+ persons who appeared at the upper end of the walk through which I was
+ sauntering, seemingly engaged in very earnest conversation. That intuitive
+ impression which announces to us the approach of whomsoever we love or
+ hate with intense vehemence, long before a more indifferent eye can
+ recognise their persons, flashed upon my mind the sure conviction that the
+ midmost of these three men was Rashleigh Osbaldistone. To address him was
+ my first impulse;&mdash;my second was, to watch him until he was alone, or
+ at least to reconnoitre his companions before confronting him. The party
+ was still at such distance, and engaged in such deep discourse, that I had
+ time to step unobserved to the other side of a small hedge, which
+ imperfectly screened the alley in which I was walking. It was at this
+ period the fashion of the young and gay to wear, in their morning walks, a
+ scarlet cloak, often laced and embroidered, above their other dress, and
+ it was the trick of the time for gallants occasionally to dispose it so as
+ to muffle a part of the face. The imitating this fashion, with the degree
+ of shelter which I received from the hedge, enabled me to meet my cousin,
+ unobserved by him or the others, except perhaps as a passing stranger. I
+ was not a little startled at recognising in his companions that very
+ Morris on whose account I had been summoned before Justice Inglewood, and
+ Mr. MacVittie the merchant, from whose starched and severe aspect I had
+ recoiled on the preceding day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A more ominous conjunction to my own affairs, and those of my father,
+ could scarce have been formed. I remembered Morris's false accusation
+ against me, which he might be as easily induced to renew as he had been
+ intimidated to withdraw; I recollected the inauspicious influence of
+ MacVittie over my father's affairs, testified by the imprisonment of Owen;&mdash;and
+ I now saw both these men combined with one, whose talent for mischief I
+ deemed little inferior to those of the great author of all ill, and my
+ abhorrence of whom almost amounted to dread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they had passed me for some paces, I turned and followed them
+ unobserved. At the end of the walk they separated, Morris and MacVittie
+ leaving the gardens, and Rashleigh returning alone through the walks. I
+ was now determined to confront him, and demand reparation for the injuries
+ he had done my father, though in what form redress was likely to be
+ rendered remained to be known. This, however, I trusted to chance; and
+ flinging back the cloak in which I was muffled, I passed through a gap of
+ the low hedge, and presented myself before Rashleigh, as, in a deep
+ reverie, he paced down the avenue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rashleigh was no man to be surprised or thrown off his guard by sudden
+ occurrences. Yet he did not find me thus close to him, wearing undoubtedly
+ in my face the marks of that indignation which was glowing in my bosom,
+ without visibly starting at an apparition so sudden and menacing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are well met, sir,&rdquo; was my commencement; &ldquo;I was about to take a long
+ and doubtful journey in quest of you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know little of him you sought then,&rdquo; replied Rashleigh, with his
+ usual undaunted composure. &ldquo;I am easily found by my friends&mdash;still
+ more easily by my foes;&mdash;your manner compels me to ask in which class
+ I must rank Mr. Francis Osbaldistone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In that of your foes, sir,&rdquo; I answered&mdash;&ldquo;in that of your mortal
+ foes, unless you instantly do justice to your benefactor, my father, by
+ accounting for his property.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And to whom, Mr. Osbaldistone,&rdquo; answered Rashleigh, &ldquo;am I, a member of
+ your father's commercial establishment, to be compelled to give any
+ account of my proceedings in those concerns, which are in every respect
+ identified with my own?&mdash;Surely not to a young gentleman whose
+ exquisite taste for literature would render such discussions disgusting
+ and unintelligible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your sneer, sir, is no answer; I will not part with you until I have full
+ satisfaction concerning the fraud you meditate&mdash;you shall go with me
+ before a magistrate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be it so,&rdquo; said Rashleigh, and made a step or two as if to accompany me;
+ then pausing, proceeded&mdash;&ldquo;Were I inclined to do so as you would have
+ me, you should soon feel which of us had most reason to dread the presence
+ of a magistrate. But I have no wish to accelerate your fate. Go, young
+ man! amuse yourself in your world of poetical imaginations, and leave the
+ business of life to those who understand and can conduct it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His intention, I believe, was to provoke me, and he succeeded. &ldquo;Mr.
+ Osbaldistone,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;this tone of calm insolence shall not avail you.
+ You ought to be aware that the name we both bear never submitted to
+ insult, and shall not in my person be exposed to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You remind me,&rdquo; said Rashleigh, with one of his blackest looks, &ldquo;that it
+ was dishonoured in my person!&mdash;and you remind me also by whom! Do you
+ think I have forgotten the evening at Osbaldistone Hall when you cheaply
+ and with impunity played the bully at my expense? For that insult&mdash;never
+ to be washed out but by blood!&mdash;for the various times you have
+ crossed my path, and always to my prejudice&mdash;for the persevering
+ folly with which you seek to traverse schemes, the importance of which you
+ neither know nor are capable of estimating,&mdash;for all these, sir, you
+ owe me a long account, for which there shall come an early day of
+ reckoning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let it come when it will,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;I shall be willing and ready to
+ meet it. Yet you seem to have forgotten the heaviest article&mdash;that I
+ had the pleasure to aid Miss Vernon's good sense and virtuous feeling in
+ extricating her from your infamous toils.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I think his dark eyes flashed actual fire at this home-taunt, and yet his
+ voice retained the same calm expressive tone with which he had hitherto
+ conducted the conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had other views with respect to you, young man,&rdquo; was his answer: &ldquo;less
+ hazardous for you, and more suitable to my present character and former
+ education. But I see you will draw on yourself the personal chastisement
+ your boyish insolence so well merits. Follow me to a more remote spot,
+ where we are less likely to be interrupted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I followed him accordingly, keeping a strict eye on his motions, for I
+ believed him capable of the very worst actions. We reached an open spot in
+ a sort of wilderness, laid out in the Dutch taste, with clipped hedges,
+ and one or two statues. I was on my guard, and it was well with me that I
+ was so; for Rashleigh's sword was out and at my breast ere I could throw
+ down my cloak, or get my weapon unsheathed, so that I only saved my life
+ by springing a pace or two backwards. He had some advantage in the
+ difference of our weapons; for his sword, as I recollect, was longer than
+ mine, and had one of those bayonet or three-cornered blades which are now
+ generally worn; whereas mine was what we then called a Saxon blade&mdash;narrow,
+ flat, and two-edged, and scarcely so manageable as that of my enemy. In
+ other respects we were pretty equally matched: for what advantage I might
+ possess in superior address and agility, was fully counterbalanced by
+ Rashleigh's great strength and coolness. He fought, indeed, more like a
+ fiend than a man&mdash;with concentrated spite and desire of blood, only
+ allayed by that cool consideration which made his worst actions appear yet
+ worse from the air of deliberate premeditation which seemed to accompany
+ them. His obvious malignity of purpose never for a moment threw him off
+ his guard, and he exhausted every feint and stratagem proper to the
+ science of defence; while, at the same time, he meditated the most
+ desperate catastrophe to our rencounter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On my part, the combat was at first sustained with more moderation. My
+ passions, though hasty, were not malevolent; and the walk of two or three
+ minutes' space gave me time to reflect that Rashleigh was my father's
+ nephew, the son of an uncle, who after his fashion had been kind to me,
+ and that his falling by my hand could not but occasion much family
+ distress. My first resolution, therefore, was to attempt to disarm my
+ antagonist&mdash;a manoeuvre in which, confiding in my superiority of
+ skill and practice, I anticipated little difficulty. I found, however, I
+ had met my match; and one or two foils which I received, and from the
+ consequences of which I narrowly escaped, obliged me to observe more
+ caution in my mode of fighting. By degrees I became exasperated at the
+ rancour with which Rashleigh sought my life, and returned his passes with
+ an inveteracy resembling in some degree his own; so that the combat had
+ all the appearance of being destined to have a tragic issue. That issue
+ had nearly taken place at my expense. My foot slipped in a full lounge
+ which I made at my adversary, and I could not so far recover myself as
+ completely to parry the thrust with which my pass was repaid. Yet it took
+ but partial effect, running through my waistcoat, grazing my ribs, and
+ passing through my coat behind. The hilt of Rashleigh's sword, so great
+ was the vigour of his thrust, struck against my breast with such force as
+ to give me great pain, and confirm me in the momentary belief that I was
+ mortally wounded. Eager for revenge, I grappled with my enemy, seizing
+ with my left hand the hilt of his sword, and shortening my own with the
+ purpose of running him through the body. Our death-grapple was interrupted
+ by a man who forcibly threw himself between us, and pushing us separate
+ from each other, exclaimed, in a loud and commanding voice, &ldquo;What! the
+ sons of those fathers who sucked the same breast shedding each others
+ bluid as it were strangers'!&mdash;By the hand of my father, I will cleave
+ to the brisket the first man that mints another stroke!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I looked up in astonishment. The speaker was no other than Campbell. He
+ had a basket-hilted broadsword drawn in his hand, which he made to whistle
+ around his head as he spoke, as if for the purpose of enforcing his
+ mediation. Rashleigh and I stared in silence at this unexpected intruder,
+ who proceeded to exhort us alternately:&mdash;&ldquo;Do you, Maister Francis,
+ opine that ye will re-establish your father's credit by cutting your
+ kinsman's thrapple, or getting your ain sneckit instead thereof in the
+ College-yards of Glasgow?&mdash;Or do you, Mr Rashleigh, think men will
+ trust their lives and fortunes wi' ane, that, when in point of trust and
+ in point of confidence wi' a great political interest, gangs about
+ brawling like a drunken gillie?&mdash;Nay, never look gash or grim at me,
+ man&mdash;if ye're angry, ye ken how to turn the buckle o' your belt
+ behind you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You presume on my present situation,&rdquo; replied Rashleigh, &ldquo;or you would
+ have hardly dared to interfere where my honour is concerned.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Aimage-0005" id="Aimage-0005">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/pb100.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Rob Roy Parting the Duelists " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hout! tout! tout!&mdash;Presume? And what for should it be presuming?&mdash;Ye
+ may be the richer man, Mr. Osbaldistone, as is maist likely; and ye may be
+ the mair learned man, whilk I dispute not: but I reckon ye are neither a
+ prettier man nor a better gentleman than mysell&mdash;and it will be news
+ to me when I hear ye are as gude. And <i>dare</i> too? Muckle daring
+ there's about it&mdash;I trow, here I stand, that hae slashed as het a
+ haggis as ony o' the twa o' ye, and thought nae muckle o' my morning's
+ wark when it was dune. If my foot were on the heather as it's on the
+ causeway, or this pickle gravel, that's little better, I hae been waur
+ mistrysted than if I were set to gie ye baith your ser'ing o't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rashleigh had by this time recovered his temper completely. &ldquo;My kinsman,&rdquo;
+ he said, &ldquo;will acknowledge he forced this quarrel on me. It was none of my
+ seeking. I am glad we are interrupted before I chastised his forwardness
+ more severely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are ye hurt, lad?&rdquo; inquired Campbell of me, with some appearance of
+ interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A very slight scratch,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;which my kind cousin would not long
+ have boasted of had not you come between us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In troth, and that's true, Maister Rashleigh,&rdquo; said Campbell; &ldquo;for the
+ cauld iron and your best bluid were like to hae become acquaint when I
+ mastered Mr. Frank's right hand. But never look like a sow playing upon a
+ trump for the luve of that, man&mdash;come and walk wi' me. I hae news to
+ tell ye, and ye'll cool and come to yourself, like MacGibbon's crowdy,
+ when he set it out at the window-bole.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, sir,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;Your intentions have seemed friendly to me on
+ more occasions than one; but I must not, and will not, quit sight of this
+ person until he yields up to me those means of doing justice to my
+ father's engagements, of which he has treacherously possessed himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye're daft, man,&rdquo; replied Campbell; &ldquo;it will serve ye naething to follow
+ us e'enow; ye hae just enow o' ae man&mdash;wad ye bring twa on your head,
+ and might bide quiet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Twenty,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;if it be necessary.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I laid my hand on Rashleigh's collar, who made no resistance, but said,
+ with a sort of scornful smile, &ldquo;You hear him, MacGregor! he rushes on his
+ fate&mdash;will it be my fault if he falls into it?&mdash;The warrants are
+ by this time ready, and all is prepared.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Scotchman was obviously embarrassed. He looked around, and before, and
+ behind him, and then said&mdash;&ldquo;The ne'er a bit will I yield my consent
+ to his being ill-guided for standing up for the father that got him&mdash;and
+ I gie God's malison and mine to a' sort o' magistrates, justices,
+ bailies., sheriffs, sheriff-officers, constables, and sic-like black
+ cattle, that hae been the plagues o' puir auld Scotland this hunder year.&mdash;it
+ was a merry warld when every man held his ain gear wi' his ain grip, and
+ when the country side wasna fashed wi' warrants and poindings and
+ apprizings, and a' that cheatry craft. And ance mair I say it, my
+ conscience winna see this puir thoughtless lad ill-guided, and especially
+ wi' that sort o' trade. I wad rather ye fell till't again, and fought it
+ out like douce honest men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your conscience, MacGregor!&rdquo; said Rashleigh; &ldquo;you forget how long you and
+ I have known each other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, my conscience,&rdquo; reiterated Campbell, or MacGregor, or whatever was
+ his name; &ldquo;I hae such a thing about me, Maister Osbaldistone; and therein
+ it may weel chance that I hae the better o' you. As to our knowledge of
+ each other,&mdash;if ye ken what I am, ye ken what usage it was made me
+ what I am; and, whatever you may think, I would not change states with the
+ proudest of the oppressors that hae driven me to tak the heather-bush for
+ a beild. What <i>you</i> are, Maister Rashleigh, and what excuse ye hae
+ for being <i>what</i> you are, is between your ain heart and the lang day.&mdash;And
+ now, Maister Francis, let go his collar; for he says truly, that ye are in
+ mair danger from a magistrate than he is, and were your cause as straight
+ as an arrow, he wad find a way to put you wrang&mdash;So let go his craig,
+ as I was saying.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He seconded his words with an effort so sudden and unexpected, that he
+ freed Rashleigh from my hold, and securing me, notwithstanding my
+ struggles, in his own Herculean gripe, he called out&mdash;&ldquo;Take the bent,
+ Mr. Rashleigh&mdash;Make ae pair o' legs worth twa pair o' hands; ye hae
+ dune that before now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may thank this gentleman, kinsman,&rdquo; said Rashleigh, &ldquo;if I leave any
+ part of my debt to you unpaid; and if I quit you now, it is only in the
+ hope we shall soon meet again without the possibility of interruption.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took up his sword, wiped it, sheathed it, and was lost among the
+ bushes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Scotchman, partly by force, partly by remonstrance, prevented my
+ following him; indeed I began to be of opinion my doing so would be to
+ little purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As I live by bread,&rdquo; said Campbell, when, after one or two struggles in
+ which he used much forbearance towards me, he perceived me inclined to
+ stand quiet, &ldquo;I never saw sae daft a callant! I wad hae gien the best man
+ in the country the breadth o' his back gin he had gien me sic a kemping as
+ ye hae dune. What wad ye do?&mdash;Wad ye follow the wolf to his den? I
+ tell ye, man, he has the auld trap set for ye&mdash;He has got the
+ collector-creature Morris to bring up a' the auld story again, and ye maun
+ look for nae help frae me here, as ye got at Justice Inglewood's;&mdash;it
+ isna good for my health to come in the gate o' the whigamore bailie
+ bodies. Now gang your ways hame, like a gude bairn&mdash;jouk and let the
+ jaw gae by&mdash;Keep out o' sight o' Rashleigh, and Morris, and that
+ MacVittie animal&mdash;Mind the Clachan of Aberfoil, as I said before, and
+ by the word of a gentleman, I wunna see ye wranged. But keep a calm sough
+ till we meet again&mdash;I maun gae and get Rashleigh out o' the town
+ afore waur comes o't, for the neb o' him's never out o' mischief&mdash;Mind
+ the Clachan of Aberfoil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned upon his heel, and left me to meditate on the singular events
+ which had befallen me. My first care was to adjust my dress and reassume
+ my cloak, disposing it so as to conceal the blood which flowed down my
+ right side. I had scarcely accomplished this, when, the classes of the
+ college being dismissed, the gardens began to be filled with parties of
+ the students. I therefore left them as soon as possible; and in my way
+ towards Mr. Jarvie's, whose dinner hour was now approaching, I stopped at
+ a small unpretending shop, the sign of which intimated the indweller to be
+ Christopher Neilson, surgeon and apothecary. I requested of a little boy
+ who was pounding some stuff in a mortar, that he would procure me an
+ audience of this learned pharmacopolist. He opened the door of the back
+ shop, where I found a lively elderly man, who shook his head incredulously
+ at some idle account I gave him of having been wounded accidentally by the
+ button breaking off my antagonist's foil while I was engaged in a fencing
+ match. When he had applied some lint and somewhat else he thought proper
+ to the trifling wound I had received, he observed&mdash;&ldquo;There never was
+ button on the foil that made this hurt. Ah! young blood! young blood!&mdash;But
+ we surgeons are a secret generation&mdash;If it werena for hot blood and
+ ill blood, what wad become of the twa learned faculties?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With which moral reflection he dismissed me; and I experienced very little
+ pain or inconvenience afterwards from the scratch I had received.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0009" id="AlinkCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER NINTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ An iron race the mountain-cliffs maintain,
+ Foes to the gentler genius of the plain.
+ *******
+ Who while their rocky ramparts round they see,
+ The rough abode of want and liberty,
+ As lawless force from confidence will grow,
+ Insult the plenty of the vales below.
+ Gray.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What made ye sae late?&rdquo; said Mr. Jarvie, as I entered the dining-parlour
+ of that honest gentleman; &ldquo;it is chappit ane the best feek o' five minutes
+ by-gane. Mattie has been twice at the door wi' the dinner, and weel for
+ you it was a tup's head, for that canna suffer by delay. A sheep's head
+ ower muckle boiled is rank poison, as my worthy father used to say&mdash;he
+ likit the lug o' ane weel, honest man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I made a suitable apology for my breach of punctuality, and was soon
+ seated at table, where Mr. Jarvie presided with great glee and
+ hospitality, compelling, however, Owen and myself to do rather more
+ justice to the Scottish dainties with which his board was charged, than
+ was quite agreeable to our southern palates. I escaped pretty well, from
+ having those habits of society which enable one to elude this species of
+ well-meant persecution. But it was ridiculous enough to see Owen, whose
+ ideas of politeness were more rigorous and formal, and who was willing, in
+ all acts of lawful compliance, to evince his respect for the friend of the
+ firm, eating with rueful complaisance mouthful after mouthful of singed
+ wool, and pronouncing it excellent, in a tone in which disgust almost
+ overpowered civility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the cloth was removed, Mr. Jarvie compounded with his own hands a
+ very small bowl of brandy-punch, the first which I had ever the fortune to
+ see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The limes,&rdquo; he assured us, &ldquo;were from his own little farm yonder-awa&rdquo;
+ (indicating the West Indies with a knowing shrug of his shoulders), &ldquo;and
+ he had learned the art of composing the liquor from auld Captain
+ Coffinkey, who acquired it,&rdquo; he added in a whisper, &ldquo;'as maist folk
+ thought, among the Buccaniers. But it's excellent liquor,&rdquo; said he,
+ helping us round; &ldquo;and good ware has aften come frae a wicked market. And
+ as for Captain Coffinkey, he was a decent man when I kent him, only he
+ used to swear awfully&mdash;But he's dead, and gaen to his account, and I
+ trust he's accepted&mdash;I trust he's accepted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We found the liquor exceedingly palatable, and it led to a long
+ conversation between Owen and our host on the opening which the Union had
+ afforded to trade between Glasgow and the British Colonies in America and
+ the West Indies, and on the facilities which Glasgow possessed of making
+ up sortable cargoes for that market. Mr. Jarvie answered some objection
+ which Owen made on the difficulty of sorting a cargo for America, without
+ buying from England, with vehemence and volubility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Na, na, sir, we stand on our ain bottom&mdash;we pickle in our ain
+ pock-neuk&mdash;We hae our Stirling serges, Musselburgh stuffs, Aberdeen
+ hose, Edinburgh shalloons, and the like, for our woollen or worsted goods&mdash;and
+ we hae linens of a' kinds better and cheaper than you hae in Lunnon itsell&mdash;and
+ we can buy your north o' England wares, as Manchester wares, Sheffield
+ wares, and Newcastle earthenware, as cheap as you can at Liverpool&mdash;And
+ we are making a fair spell at cottons and muslins&mdash;Na, na! let every
+ herring hing by its ain head, and every sheep by its ain shank, and ye'll
+ find, sir, us Glasgow folk no sae far ahint but what we may follow.&mdash;This
+ is but poor entertainment for you, Mr. Osbaldistone&rdquo; (observing that I had
+ been for some time silent); &ldquo;but ye ken cadgers maun aye be speaking about
+ cart-saddles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I apologised, alleging the painful circumstances of my own situation, and
+ the singular adventures of the morning, as the causes of my abstraction
+ and absence of mind. In this manner I gained what I sought&mdash;an
+ opportunity of telling my story distinctly and without interruption. I
+ only omitted mentioning the wound I had received, which I did not think
+ worthy of notice. Mr. Jarvie listened with great attention and apparent
+ interest, twinkling his little grey eyes, taking snuff, and only
+ interrupting me by brief interjections. When I came to the account of the
+ rencounter, at which Owen folded his hands and cast up his eyes to Heaven,
+ the very image of woeful surprise, Mr. Jarvie broke in upon the narration
+ with &ldquo;Wrang now&mdash;clean wrang&mdash;to draw a sword on your kinsman is
+ inhibited by the laws o' God and man; and to draw a sword on the streets
+ of a royal burgh is punishable by fine and imprisonment&mdash;and the
+ College-yards are nae better privileged&mdash;they should be a place of
+ peace and quietness, I trow. The College didna get gude L600 a year out o'
+ bishops' rents (sorrow fa' the brood o' bishops and their rents too!), nor
+ yet a lease o' the archbishopric o' Glasgow the sell o't, that they suld
+ let folk tuilzie in their yards, or the wild callants bicker there wi'
+ snaw-ba's as they whiles do, that when Mattie and I gae through, we are
+ fain to make a baik and a bow, or run the risk o' our harns being knocked
+ out&mdash;it suld be looked to.*&mdash;But come awa'wi' your tale&mdash;what
+ fell neist?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * The boys in Scotland used formerly to make a sort of Saturnalia in a
+ snow-storm, by pelting passengers with snowballs. But those exposed to
+ that annoyance were excused from it on the easy penalty of a baik
+ (courtesy) from a female, or a bow from a man. It was only the refractory
+ who underwent the storm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On my mentioning the appearance of Mr. Campbell, Jarvie arose in great
+ surprise, and paced the room, exclaiming, &ldquo;Robin again!&mdash;Robert's mad&mdash;clean
+ wud, and waur&mdash;Rob will be hanged, and disgrace a' his kindred, and
+ that will be seen and heard tell o'. My father the deacon wrought him his
+ first hose&mdash;Od, I am thinking Deacon Threeplie, the rape-spinner,
+ will be twisting his last cravat. Ay, ay, puir Robin is in a fair way o'
+ being hanged&mdash;But come awa', come awa'&mdash;let's hear the lave
+ o't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told the whole story as pointedly as I could; but Mr. Jarvie still found
+ something lacking to make it clear, until I went back, though with
+ considerable reluctance, on the whole story of Morris, and of my meeting
+ with Campbell at the house of Justice Inglewood. Mr. Jarvie inclined a
+ serious ear to all this, and remained silent for some time after I had
+ finished my narrative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Upon all these matters I am now to ask your advice, Mr. Jarvie, which, I
+ have no doubt, will point out the best way to act for my father's
+ advantage and my own honour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye're right, young man&mdash;ye're right,&rdquo; said the Bailie. &ldquo;Aye take the
+ counsel of those who are aulder and wiser than yourself, and binna like
+ the godless Rehoboam, who took the advice o' a wheen beardless callants,
+ neglecting the auld counsellors who had sate at the feet o' his father
+ Solomon, and, as it was weel put by Mr. Meiklejohn, in his lecture on the
+ chapter, were doubtless partakers of his sapience. But I maun hear
+ naething about honour&mdash;we ken naething here but about credit. Honour
+ is a homicide and a bloodspiller, that gangs about making frays in the
+ street; but Credit is a decent honest man, that sits at hame and makes the
+ pat play.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Assuredly, Mr. Jarvie,&rdquo; said our friend Owen, &ldquo;credit is the sum total;
+ and if we can but save that, at whatever discount&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye are right, Mr. Owen&mdash;ye are right; ye speak weel and wisely; and
+ I trust bowls will row right, though they are a wee ajee e'enow. But
+ touching Robin, I am of opinion he will befriend this young man if it is
+ in his power. He has a gude heart, puir Robin; and though I lost a matter
+ o' twa hundred punds wi' his former engagements, and haena muckle
+ expectation ever to see back my thousand punds Scots that he promises me
+ e'enow, yet I will never say but what Robin means fair by men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am then to consider him,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;as an honest man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Umph!&rdquo; replied Jarvie, with a precautionary sort of cough&mdash;&ldquo;Ay, he
+ has a kind o' Hieland honesty&mdash;he's honest after a sort, as they say.
+ My father the deacon used aye to laugh when he tauld me how that by-word
+ came up. Ane Captain Costlett was cracking crouse about his loyalty to
+ King Charles, and Clerk Pettigrew (ye'll hae heard mony a tale about him)
+ asked him after what manner he served the king, when he was fighting again
+ him at Wor'ster in Cromwell's army; and Captain Costlett was a ready body,
+ and said that he served him <i>after a sort.</i> My honest father used to
+ laugh weel at that sport&mdash;and sae the by-word came up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But do you think,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;that this man will be able to serve me after
+ a sort, or should I trust myself to this place of rendezvous which he has
+ given me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Frankly and fairly, it's worth trying. Ye see yourself there's some risk
+ in your staying here. This bit body Morris has gotten a custom-house place
+ doun at Greenock&mdash;that's a port on the Firth doun by here; and tho'
+ a' the world kens him to be but a twa-leggit creature, wi' a goose's head
+ and a hen's heart, that goes about on the quay plaguing folk about
+ permits, and cockits, and dockits, and a' that vexatious trade, yet if he
+ lodge an information&mdash;ou, nae doubt a man in magisterial duty maun
+ attend to it, and ye might come to be clapped up between four wa's, whilk
+ wad be ill-convenient to your father's affairs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True,&rdquo; I observed; &ldquo;yet what service am I likely to render him by leaving
+ Glasgow, which, it is probable, will be the principal scene of Rashleigh's
+ machinations, and committing myself to the doubtful faith of a man of whom
+ I know little but that he fears justice, and has doubtless good reasons
+ for doing so; and that, for some secret, and probably dangerous purpose,
+ he is in close league and alliance with the very person who is like to be
+ the author of our ruin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, but ye judge Rob hardly,&rdquo; said the Bailie, &ldquo;ye judge him hardly, puir
+ chield; and the truth is, that ye ken naething about our hill country, or
+ Hielands, as we ca' them. They are clean anither set frae the like o' huz;&mdash;there's
+ nae bailie-courts amang them&mdash;nae magistrates that dinna bear the
+ sword in vain, like the worthy deacon that's awa', and, I may say't, like
+ mysell and other present magistrates in this city&mdash;But it's just the
+ laird's command, and the loon maun loup; and the never another law hae
+ they but the length o' their dirks&mdash;the broadsword's pursuer, or
+ plaintiff, as you Englishers ca' it, and the target is defender; the
+ stoutest head bears langest out;&mdash;and there's a Hieland plea for ye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Owen groaned deeply; and I allow that the description did not greatly
+ increase my desire to trust myself in a country so lawless as he described
+ these Scottish mountains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, sir,&rdquo; said Jarvie, &ldquo;we speak little o' thae things, because they are
+ familiar to oursells; and where's the use o' vilifying ane's country, and
+ bringing a discredit on ane's kin, before southrons and strangers? It's an
+ ill bird that files its ain nest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sir, but as it is no impertinent curiosity of mine, but real
+ necessity, that obliges me to make these inquiries, I hope you will not be
+ offended at my pressing for a little farther information. I have to deal,
+ on my father's account, with several gentlemen of these wild countries,
+ and I must trust your good sense and experience for the requisite lights
+ upon the subject.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This little morsel of flattery was not thrown out in vain. &ldquo;Experience!&rdquo;
+ said the Bailie&mdash;&ldquo;I hae had experience, nae doubt, and I hae made
+ some calculations&mdash;Ay, and to speak quietly amang oursells, I hae
+ made some perquisitions through Andrew Wylie, my auld clerk; he's wi'
+ MacVittie &amp; Co. now&mdash;but he whiles drinks a gill on the Saturday
+ afternoons wi' his auld master. And since ye say ye are willing to be
+ guided by the Glasgow weaver-body's advice, I am no the man that will
+ refuse it to the son of an auld correspondent, and my father the deacon
+ was nane sic afore me. I have whiles thought o' letting my lights burn
+ before the Duke of Argyle, or his brother Lord Ilay (for wherefore should
+ they be hidden under a bushel?), but the like o' thae grit men wadna mind
+ the like o' me, a puir wabster body&mdash;they think mair o' wha says a
+ thing, than o' what the thing is that's said. The mair's the pity&mdash;mair's
+ the pity. Not that I wad speak ony ill of this MacCallum More&mdash;'Curse
+ not the rich in your bedchamber,' saith the son of Sirach, 'for a bird of
+ the air shall carry the clatter, and pint-stoups hae lang lugs.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I interrupted these prolegomena, in which Mr. Jarvie was apt to be
+ somewhat diffuse, by praying him to rely upon Mr. Owen and myself as
+ perfectly secret and safe confidants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's no for that,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;for I fear nae man&mdash;what for suld I?&mdash;I
+ speak nae treason&mdash;Only thae Hielandmen hae lang grips, and I whiles
+ gang a wee bit up the glens to see some auld kinsfolks, and I wadna
+ willingly be in bad blude wi' ony o' their clans. Howsumever, to proceed&mdash;ye
+ maun understand I found my remarks on figures, whilk as Mr. Owen here weel
+ kens, is the only true demonstrable root of human knowledge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Owen readily assented to a proposition so much in his own way, and our
+ orator proceeded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These Hielands of ours, as we ca' them, gentlemen, are but a wild kind of
+ warld by themsells, full of heights and howes, woods, caverns, lochs,
+ rivers, and mountains, that it wad tire the very deevil's wings to flee to
+ the tap o' them. And in this country, and in the isles, whilk are little
+ better, or, to speak the truth, rather waur than the mainland, there are
+ about twa hunder and thirty parochines, including the Orkneys, where,
+ whether they speak Gaelic or no I wotna, but they are an uncivilised
+ people. Now, sirs, I sall haud ilk parochine at the moderate estimate of
+ eight hunder examinable persons, deducting children under nine years of
+ age, and then adding one-fifth to stand for bairns of nine years auld, and
+ under, the whole population will reach to the sum of&mdash;let us add
+ one-fifth to 800 to be the multiplier, and 230 being the multiplicand&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The product,&rdquo; said Mr. Owen, who entered delightedly into these
+ statistics of Mr. Jarvie, &ldquo;will be 230,000.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right, sir&mdash;perfectly right; and the military array of this Hieland
+ country, were a' the men-folk between aughteen and fifty-six brought out
+ that could bear arms, couldna come weel short of fifty-seven thousand five
+ hundred men. Now, sir, it's a sad and awfu' truth, that there is neither
+ wark, nor the very fashion nor appearance of wark, for the tae half of
+ thae puir creatures; that is to say, that the agriculture, the pasturage,
+ the fisheries, and every species of honest industry about the country,
+ cannot employ the one moiety of the population, let them work as lazily as
+ they like, and they do work as if a pleugh or a spade burnt their fingers.
+ Aweel, sir, this moiety of unemployed bodies, amounting to&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To one hundred and fifteen thousand souls,&rdquo; said Owen, &ldquo;being the half of
+ the above product.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye hae't, Mr. Owen&mdash;ye hae't&mdash;whereof there may be twenty-eight
+ thousand seven hundred able-bodied gillies fit to bear arms, and that do
+ bear arms, and will touch or look at nae honest means of livelihood even
+ if they could get it&mdash;which, lack-a-day! they cannot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But is it possible,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;Mr. Jarvie, that this can be a just picture
+ of so large a portion of the island of Britain?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, I'll make it as plain as Peter Pasley's pike-staff. I will allow
+ that ilk parochine, on an average, employs fifty pleughs, whilk is a great
+ proportion in sic miserable soil as thae creatures hae to labour, and that
+ there may be pasture enough for pleugh-horses, and owsen, and forty or
+ fifty cows; now, to take care o' the pleughs and cattle, we'se allow
+ seventy-five families of six lives in ilk family, and we'se add fifty mair
+ to make even numbers, and ye hae five hundred souls, the tae half o' the
+ population, employed and maintained in a sort o' fashion, wi' some chance
+ of sour-milk and crowdie; but I wad be glad to ken what the other five
+ hunder are to do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the name of God!&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;what <i>do</i> they do, Mr. Jarvie? It
+ makes me shudder to think of their situation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; replied the Bailie, &ldquo;ye wad maybe shudder mair if ye were living
+ near hand them. For, admitting that the tae half of them may make some
+ little thing for themsells honestly in the Lowlands by shearing in harst,
+ droving, hay-making, and the like; ye hae still mony hundreds and
+ thousands o' lang-legged Hieland gillies that will neither work nor want,
+ and maun gang thigging and sorning* about on their acquaintance, or live
+ by doing the laird's bidding, be't right or be't wrang.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * <i>Thigging</i> and <i>sorning</i> was a kind of genteel begging, or
+ rather something between begging and robbing, by which the needy in
+ Scotland used to extort cattle, or the means of subsistence, from those
+ who had any to give.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And mair especially, mony hundreds o' them come down to the borders of the
+ low country, where there's gear to grip, and live by stealing, reiving,
+ lifting cows, and the like depredations&mdash;a thing deplorable in ony
+ Christian country!&mdash;the mair especially, that they take pride in it,
+ and reckon driving a spreagh (whilk is, in plain Scotch, stealing a herd
+ of nowte) a gallant, manly action, and mair befitting of pretty* men (as
+ sic reivers will ca' themselves), than to win a day's wage by ony honest
+ thrift.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * The word <i>pretty</i> is or was used in Scotch, in the sense of the
+ German <i>prachtig,</i> and meant a gallant, alert fellow, prompt and
+ ready at his weapons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the lairds are as bad as the loons; for if they dinna bid them gae
+ reive and harry, the deil a bit they forbid them; and they shelter them,
+ or let them shelter themselves, in their woods and mountains, and
+ strongholds, whenever the thing's dune. And every ane o' them will
+ maintain as mony o' his ane name, or his clan, as we say, as he can rap
+ and rend means for; or, whilk's the same thing, as mony as can in ony
+ fashion, fair or foul, mainteen themsells. And there they are wi' gun and
+ pistol, dirk and dourlach, ready to disturb the peace o' the country
+ whenever the laird likes; and that's the grievance of the Hielands, whilk
+ are, and hae been for this thousand years by-past, a bike o' the maist
+ lawless unchristian limmers that ever disturbed a douce, quiet,
+ God-fearing neighbourhood, like this o' ours in the west here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And this kinsman of yours, and friend of mine, is he one of those great
+ proprietors who maintain the household troops you speak of?&rdquo; I inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Na, na,&rdquo; said Bailie Jarvie; &ldquo;he's nane o' your great grandees o' chiefs,
+ as they ca' them, neither. Though he is weel born, and lineally descended
+ frae auld Glenstrae&mdash;I ken his lineage&mdash;indeed he is a near
+ kinsman, and, as I said, of gude gentle Hieland blude, though ye may think
+ weel that I care little about that nonsense&mdash;it's a' moonshine in
+ water&mdash;waste threads and thrums, as we say&mdash;But I could show ye
+ letters frae his father, that was the third aff Glenstrae, to my father
+ Deacon Jarvie (peace be wi' his memory!) beginning, Dear Deacon, and
+ ending, your loving kinsman to command,&mdash;they are amaist a' about
+ borrowed siller, sae the gude deacon, that's dead and gane, keepit them as
+ documents and evidents&mdash;He was a carefu' man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if he is not,&rdquo; I resumed, &ldquo;one of their chiefs or patriarchal
+ leaders, whom I have heard my father talk of, this kinsman of yours has,
+ at least, much to say in the Highlands, I presume?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye may say that&mdash;nae name better ken'd between the Lennox and
+ Breadalbane. Robin was ance a weel-doing, painstaking drover, as ye wad
+ see amang ten thousand&mdash;It was a pleasure to see him in his belted
+ plaid and brogues, wi' his target at his back, and claymore and dirk at
+ his belt, following a hundred Highland stots, and a dozen o' the gillies,
+ as rough and ragged as the beasts they drave. And he was baith civil and
+ just in his dealings; and if he thought his chapman had made a hard
+ bargain, he wad gie him a luck-penny to the mends. I hae ken'd him gie
+ back five shillings out o' the pund sterling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Twenty-five per cent,&rdquo; said Owen&mdash;&ldquo;a heavy discount.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He wad gie it though, sir, as I tell ye; mair especially if he thought
+ the buyer was a puir man, and couldna stand by a loss. But the times cam
+ hard, and Rob was venturesome. It wasna my faut&mdash;it wasna my faut; he
+ canna wyte me&mdash;I aye tauld him o't&mdash;And the creditors, mair
+ especially some grit neighbours o' his, gripped to his living and land;
+ and they say his wife was turned out o' the house to the hill-side, and
+ sair misguided to the boot. Shamefu'! shamefu'!&mdash;I am a peacefu' man
+ and a magistrate, but if ony ane had guided sae muckle as my servant
+ quean, Mattie, as it's like they guided Rob's wife, I think it suld hae
+ set the shabble* that my father the deacon had at Bothwell brig a-walking
+ again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Cutlass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Weel, Rob cam hame, and fand desolation, God pity us! where he left
+ plenty; he looked east, west, south, north, and saw neither hauld nor hope&mdash;neither
+ beild nor shelter; sae he e'en pu'd the bonnet ower his brow, belted the
+ broadsword to his side, took to the brae-side, and became a broken man.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * An outlaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voice of the good citizen was broken by his contending feelings. He
+ obviously, while he professed to contemn the pedigree of his Highland
+ kinsman, attached a secret feeling of consequence to the connection, and
+ he spoke of his friend in his prosperity with an overflow of affection,
+ which deepened his sympathy for his misfortunes, and his regret for their
+ consequences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thus tempted and urged by despair,&rdquo; said I, seeing Mr. Jarvie did not
+ proceed in his narrative, &ldquo;I suppose your kinsman became one of those
+ depredators you have described to us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No sae bad as that,&rdquo; said the Glaswegian,&mdash;&ldquo;no a'thegither and
+ outright sae bad as that; but he became a levier of black-mail, wider and
+ farther than ever it was raised in our day, a through the Lennox and
+ Menteith, and up to the gates o' Stirling Castle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Black-mail?&mdash;I do not understand the phrase,&rdquo; I remarked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ou, ye see, Rob soon gathered an unco band o' blue-bonnets at his back,
+ for he comes o' a rough name when he's kent by his ain, and a name that's
+ held its ain for mony a lang year, baith again king and parliament, and
+ kirk too, for aught I ken&mdash;an auld and honourable name, for as sair
+ as it has been worried and hadden down and oppressed. My mother was a
+ MacGregor&mdash;I carena wha kens it&mdash;And Rob had soon a gallant
+ band; and as it grieved him (he said) to see sic <i>hership</i> and waste
+ and depredation to the south o' the Hieland line, why, if ony heritor or
+ farmer wad pay him four punds Scots out of each hundred punds of valued
+ rent, whilk was doubtless a moderate consideration, Rob engaged to keep
+ them scaithless;&mdash;let them send to him if they lost sae muckle as a
+ single cloot by thieving, and Rob engaged to get them again, or pay the
+ value&mdash;and he aye keepit his word&mdash;I canna deny but he keepit
+ his word&mdash;a' men allow Rob keeps his word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is a very singular contract of assurance,&rdquo; said Mr. Owen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's clean again our statute law, that must be owned,&rdquo; said Jarvie,
+ &ldquo;clean again law; the levying and the paying black-mail are baith
+ punishable: but if the law canna protect my barn and byre, whatfor suld I
+ no engage wi' a Hieland gentleman that can?&mdash;answer me that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;Mr. Jarvie, is this contract of black-mail, as you call
+ it, completely voluntary on the part of the landlord or farmer who pays
+ the insurance? or what usually happens, in case any one refuses payment of
+ this tribute?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha, lad!&rdquo; said the Bailie, laughing, and putting his finger to his nose,
+ &ldquo;ye think ye hae me there. Troth, I wad advise ony friends o' mine to gree
+ wi' Rob; for, watch as they like, and do what they like, they are sair apt
+ to be harried* when the lang nights come on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Plundered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some o' the Grahame and Cohoon gentry stood out; but what then?&mdash;they
+ lost their haill stock the first winter; sae maist folks now think it best
+ to come into Rob's terms. He's easy wi' a' body that will be easy wi' him;
+ but if ye thraw him, ye had better thraw the deevil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And by his exploits in these vocations,&rdquo; I continued, &ldquo;I suppose he has
+ rendered himself amenable to the laws of the country?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Amenable?&mdash;ye may say that; his craig wad ken the weight o' his
+ hurdies if they could get haud o' Rob. But he has gude friends amang the
+ grit folks; and I could tell ye o' ae grit family that keeps him up as far
+ as they decently can, to be a them in the side of another. And then he's
+ sic an auld-farran lang-headed chield as never took up the trade o'
+ cateran in our time; mony a daft reik he has played&mdash;mair than wad
+ fill a book, and a queer ane it wad be&mdash;as gude as Robin Hood, or
+ William Wallace&mdash;a' fu' o' venturesome deeds and escapes, sic as folk
+ tell ower at a winter ingle in the daft days. It's a queer thing o' me,
+ gentlemen, that am a man o' peace mysell, and a peacefu man's son&mdash;for
+ the deacon my father quarrelled wi' nane out o the town-council&mdash;it's
+ a queer thing, I say, but I think the Hieland blude o' me warms at thae
+ daft tales, and whiles I like better to hear them than a word o' profit,
+ gude forgie me! But they are vanities&mdash;sinfu' vanities&mdash;and,
+ moreover, again the statute law&mdash;again the statute and gospel law.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I now followed up my investigation, by inquiring what means of influence
+ this Mr. Robert Campbell could possibly possess over my affairs, or those
+ of my father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, ye are to understand,&rdquo; said Mr. Jarvie in a very subdued tone&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ speak amang friends, and under the rose&mdash;Ye are to understand, that
+ the Hielands hae been keepit quiet since the year aughty-nine&mdash;that
+ was Killiecrankie year. But how hae they been keepit quiet, think ye? By
+ siller, Mr. Owen&mdash;by siller, Mr. Osbaldistone. King William caused
+ Breadalbane distribute twenty thousand oude punds sterling amang them, and
+ it's said the auld Hieland Earl keepit a lang lug o't in his ain sporran.
+ And then Queen Anne, that's dead, gae the chiefs bits o' pensions, sae
+ they had wherewith to support their gillies and caterans that work nae
+ wark, as I said afore; and they lay by quiet eneugh, saying some
+ spreagherie on the Lowlands, whilk is their use and wont, and some cutting
+ o' thrapples amang themsells, that nae civilised body kens or cares
+ onything anent.&mdash;Weel, but there's a new warld come up wi' this King
+ George (I say, God bless him, for ane)&mdash;there's neither like to be
+ siller nor pensions gaun amang them; they haena the means o' mainteening
+ the clans that eat them up, as ye may guess frae what I said before; their
+ credit's gane in the Lowlands; and a man that can whistle ye up a thousand
+ or feifteen hundred linking lads to do his will, wad hardly get fifty
+ punds on his band at the Cross o' Glasgow&mdash;This canna stand lang&mdash;there
+ will be an outbreak for the Stuarts&mdash;there will be an outbreak&mdash;they
+ will come down on the low country like a flood, as they did in the waefu'
+ wars o' Montrose, and that will be seen and heard tell o' ere a twalmonth
+ gangs round.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet still,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;I do not see how this concerns Mr. Campbell, much
+ less my father's affairs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rob can levy five hundred men, sir, and therefore war suld concern him as
+ muckle as maist folk,&rdquo; replied the Bailie; &ldquo;for it is a faculty that is
+ far less profitable in time o' peace. Then, to tell ye the truth, I doubt
+ he has been the prime agent between some o' our Hieland chiefs and the
+ gentlemen in the north o' England. We a' heard o' the public money that
+ was taen frae the chield Morris somewhere about the fit o' Cheviot by Rob
+ and ane o' the Osbaldistone lads; and, to tell ye the truth, word gaed
+ that it was yoursell Mr. Francis,&mdash;and sorry was I that your father's
+ son suld hae taen to sic practices&mdash;Na, ye needna say a word about it&mdash;I
+ see weel I was mistaen; but I wad believe onything o' a stage-player,
+ whilk I concluded ye to be. But now, I doubtna, it has been Rashleigh
+ himself or some other o' your cousins&mdash;they are a' tarred wi' the
+ same stick&mdash;rank Jacobites and papists, and wad think the government
+ siller and government papers lawfu' prize. And the creature Morris is sic
+ a cowardly caitiff, that to this hour he daurna say that it was Rob took
+ the portmanteau aff him; and troth he's right, for your custom-house and
+ excise cattle are ill liket on a' sides, and Rob might get a back-handed
+ lick at him, before the Board, as they ca't, could help him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have long suspected this, Mr. Jarvie,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;and perfectly agree
+ with you. But as to my father's affairs&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Suspected it?&mdash;it's certain&mdash;it's certain&mdash;I ken them that
+ saw some of the papers that were taen aff Morris&mdash;it's needless to
+ say where. But to your father's affairs&mdash;Ye maun think that in thae
+ twenty years by-gane, some o' the Hieland lairds and chiefs hae come to
+ some sma' sense o' their ain interest&mdash;your father and others hae
+ bought the woods of Glen-Disseries, Glen Kissoch, Tober-na-Kippoch, and
+ mony mair besides, and your father's house has granted large bills in
+ payment,&mdash;and as the credit o' Osbaldistone and Tresham was gude&mdash;for
+ I'll say before Mr. Owen's face, as I wad behind his back, that, bating
+ misfortunes o' the Lord's sending, nae men could be mair honourable in
+ business&mdash;the Hieland gentlemen, holders o' thae bills, hae found
+ credit in Glasgow and Edinburgh&mdash;(I might amaist say in Glasgow
+ wholly, for it's little the pridefu' Edinburgh folk do in real business)&mdash;for
+ all, or the greater part of the contents o' thae bills. So that&mdash;Aha!
+ d'ye see me now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I confessed I could not quite follow his drift.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;if these bills are not paid, the Glasgow merchant comes
+ on the Hieland lairds, whae hae deil a boddle o' siller, and will like ill
+ to spew up what is item a' spent&mdash;They will turn desperate&mdash;five
+ hundred will rise that might hae sitten at hame&mdash;the deil will gae
+ ower Jock Wabster&mdash;and the stopping of your father's house will
+ hasten the outbreak that's been sae lang biding us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You think, then,&rdquo; said I, surprised at this singular view of the case,
+ &ldquo;that Rashleigh Osbaldistone has done this injury to my father, merely to
+ accelerate a rising in the Highlands, by distressing the gentlemen to whom
+ these bills were originally granted?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Doubtless&mdash;doubtless&mdash;it has been one main reason, Mr.
+ Osbaldistone. I doubtna but what the ready money he carried off wi' him
+ might be another. But that makes comparatively but a sma' part o' your
+ father's loss, though it might make the maist part o' Rashleigh's direct
+ gain. The assets he carried off are of nae mair use to him than if he were
+ to light his pipe wi' them. He tried if MacVittie &amp; Co. wad gie him
+ siller on them&mdash;that I ken by Andro Wylie&mdash;but they were ower
+ auld cats to draw that strae afore them&mdash;they keepit aff, and gae
+ fair words. Rashleigh Osbaldistone is better ken'd than trusted in
+ Glasgow, for he was here about some jacobitical papistical troking in
+ seventeen hundred and seven, and left debt ahint him. Na, na&mdash;he
+ canna pit aff the paper here; folk will misdoubt him how he came by it.
+ Na, na&mdash;he'll hae the stuff safe at some o' their haulds in the
+ Hielands, and I daur say my cousin Rob could get at it gin he liked.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But would he be disposed to serve us in this pinch, Mr. Jarvie?&rdquo; said I.
+ &ldquo;You have described him as an agent of the Jacobite party, and deeply
+ connected in their intrigues: will he be disposed for my sake, or, if you
+ please, for the sake of justice, to make an act of restitution, which,
+ supposing it in his power, would, according to your view of the case,
+ materially interfere with their plans?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I canna preceesely speak to that: the grandees among them are doubtfu' o'
+ Rob, and he's doubtfu' o' them.&mdash;And he's been weel friended wi' the
+ Argyle family, wha stand for the present model of government. If he was
+ freed o' his hornings and captions, he would rather be on Argyle's side
+ than he wad be on Breadalbane's, for there's auld ill-will between the
+ Breadalbane family and his kin and name. The truth is, that Rob is for his
+ ain hand, as Henry Wynd feught*&mdash;he'll take the side that suits him
+ best; if the deil was laird, Rob wad be for being tenant; and ye canna
+ blame him, puir fallow, considering his circumstances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Two great clans fought out a quarrel with thirty men of a side, in
+ presence of the king, on the North Inch of Perth, on or about the year
+ 1392; a man was amissing on one side, whose room was filled by a little
+ bandy-legged citizen of Perth. This substitute, Henry Wynd&mdash;or, as
+ the Highlanders called him, <i>Gow Chrom,</i> that is, the bandy-legged
+ smith&mdash;fought well, and contributed greatly to the fate of the
+ battle, without knowing which side he fought on;&mdash;so, &ldquo;To fight for
+ your own hand, like Henry Wynd,&rdquo; passed into a proverb. [This incident
+ forms a conspicuous part of the subsequent novel, &ldquo;The Fair Maid of
+ Perth.&rdquo;]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there's ae thing sair again ye&mdash;Rob has a grey mear in his stable
+ at hame.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A grey mare?&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;What is that to the purpose?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The wife, man&mdash;the wife,&mdash;an awfu' wife she is. She downa bide
+ the sight o' a kindly Scot, if he come frae the Lowlands, far less of an
+ Inglisher, and she'll be keen for a' that can set up King James, and ding
+ down King George.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is very singular,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;that the mercantile transactions of
+ London citizens should become involved with revolutions and rebellions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at a', man&mdash;not at a',&rdquo; returned Mr. Jarvie; &ldquo;that's a' your
+ silly prejudications. I read whiles in the lang dark nights, and I hae
+ read in Baker's Chronicle* that the merchants o'London could gar the Bank
+ of Genoa break their promise to advance a mighty sum to the King o' Spain,
+ whereby the sailing of the Grand Spanish Armada was put aff for a haill
+ year&mdash;What think you of that, sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * [<i>The Chronicle of the Kings of England,</i> by Sir Richard Baker,
+ with continuations, passed through several editions between 1641 and 1733.
+ Whether any of them contain the passage alluded to is doubtful.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That the merchants did their country golden service, which ought to be
+ honourably remembered in our histories.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think sae too; and they wad do weel, and deserve weal baith o' the
+ state and o' humanity, that wad save three or four honest Hieland
+ gentlemen frae louping heads ower heels into destruction, wi' a' their
+ puir sackless* followers, just because they canna pay back the siller they
+ had reason to count upon as their ain&mdash;and save your father's credit&mdash;and
+ my ain gude siller that Osbaldistone and Tresham awes me into the bargain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Sackless, that is, innocent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I say, if ane could manage a' this, I think it suld be done and said unto
+ him, even if he were a puir ca'-the-shuttle body, as unto one whom the
+ king delighteth to honour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot pretend to estimate the extent of public gratitude,&rdquo; I replied;
+ &ldquo;but our own thankfulness, Mr. Jarvie, would be commensurate with the
+ extent of the obligation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which,&rdquo; added Mr. Owen, &ldquo;we would endeavour to balance with a <i>per
+ contra,</i> the instant our Mr. Osbaldistone returns from Holland.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I doubtna&mdash;I doubtna&mdash;he is a very worthy gentleman, and a
+ sponsible, and wi' some o' my lights might do muckle business in Scotland&mdash;Weel,
+ sir, if these assets could be redeemed out o' the hands o' the
+ Philistines, they are gude paper&mdash;they are the right stuff when they
+ are in the right hands, and that's yours, Mr. Owen. And I'se find ye three
+ men in Glasgow, for as little as ye may think o' us, Mr. Owen&mdash;that's
+ Sandie Steenson in the Trade's-Land, and John Pirie in Candleriggs, and
+ another that sall be nameless at this present, sall advance what soums are
+ sufficient to secure the credit of your house, and seek nae better
+ security.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Owen's eyes sparkled at this prospect of extrication; but his countenance
+ instantly fell on recollecting how improbable it was that the recovery of
+ the assets, as he technically called them, should be successfully
+ achieved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dinna despair, sir&mdash;dinna despair,&rdquo; said Mr. Jarvie; &ldquo;I hae taen sae
+ muckle concern wi' your affairs already, that it maun een be ower shoon
+ ower boots wi' me now. I am just like my father the deacon (praise be wi'
+ him!) I canna meddle wi' a friend's business, but I aye end wi' making it
+ my ain&mdash;Sae, I'll e'en pit on my boots the morn, and be jogging ower
+ Drymen Muir wi' Mr. Frank here; and if I canna mak Rob hear reason, and
+ his wife too, I dinna ken wha can&mdash;I hae been a kind freend to them
+ afore now, to say naething o' ower-looking him last night, when naming his
+ name wad hae cost him his life&mdash;I'll be hearing o' this in the
+ council maybe frae Bailie Grahame and MacVittie, and some o' them. They
+ hae coost up my kindred to Rob to me already&mdash;set up their nashgabs!
+ I tauld them I wad vindicate nae man's faults; but set apart what he had
+ done again the law o' the country, and the hership o' the Lennox, and the
+ misfortune o' some folk losing life by him, he was an honester man than
+ stood on ony o' their shanks&mdash;And whatfor suld I mind their clavers?
+ If Rob is an outlaw, to himsell be it said&mdash;there is nae laws now
+ about reset of inter-communed persons, as there was in the ill times o'
+ the last Stuarts&mdash;I trow I hae a Scotch tongue in my head&mdash;if
+ they speak, I'se answer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was with great pleasure that I saw the Bailie gradually surmount the
+ barriers of caution, under the united influence of public spirit and
+ good-natured interest in our affairs, together with his natural wish to
+ avoid loss and acquire gain, and not a little harmless vanity. Through the
+ combined operation of these motives, he at length arrived at the doughty
+ resolution of taking the field in person, to aid in the recovery of my
+ father's property. His whole information led me to believe, that if the
+ papers were in possession of this Highland adventurer, it might be
+ possible to induce him to surrender what he could not keep with any
+ prospect of personal advantage; and I was conscious that the presence of
+ his kinsman was likely to have considerable weight with him. I therefore
+ cheerfully acquiesced in Mr. Jarvie's proposal that we should set out
+ early next morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That honest gentleman was indeed as vivacious and alert in preparing to
+ carry his purpose into execution, as he had been slow and cautious in
+ forming it. He roared to Mattie to &ldquo;air his trot-cosey, to have his
+ jack-boots greased and set before the kitchen-fire all night, and to see
+ that his beast be corned, and a' his riding gear in order.&rdquo; Having agreed
+ to meet him at five o'clock next morning, and having settled that Owen,
+ whose presence could be of no use to us upon this expedition, should await
+ our return at Glasgow, we took a kind farewell of this unexpectedly
+ zealous friend. I installed Owen in an apartment in my lodgings,
+ contiguous to my own, and, giving orders to Andrew Fairservice to attend
+ me next morning at the hour appointed, I retired to rest with better hopes
+ than it had lately been my fortune to entertain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0010" id="AlinkCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER TENTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Far as the eye could reach no tree was seen,
+ Earth, clad in russet, scorned the lively green;
+ No birds, except as birds of passage flew;
+ No bee was heard to hum, no dove to coo;
+ No streams, as amber smooth-as amber clear,
+ Were seen to glide, or heard to warble here.
+ Prophecy of Famine.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It was in the bracing atmosphere of a harvest morning, that I met by
+ appointment Fairservice, with the horses, at the door of Mr. Jarvie's
+ house, which was but little space distant from Mrs. Flyter's hotel. The
+ first matter which caught my attention was, that whatever were the
+ deficiencies of the pony which Mr. Fairservice's legal adviser, Clerk
+ Touthope, generously bestowed upon him in exchange for Thorncliff's mare,
+ he had contrived to part with it, and procure in its stead an animal with
+ so curious and complete a lameness, that it seemed only to make use of
+ three legs for the purpose of progression, while the fourth appeared as if
+ meant to be flourished in the air by way of accompaniment. &ldquo;What do you
+ mean by bringing such a creature as that here, sir? and where is the pony
+ you rode to Glasgow upon?&rdquo; were my very natural and impatient inquiries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I sell't it, sir. It was a slink beast, and wad hae eaten its head aff,
+ standing at Luckie Flyter's at livery. And I hae bought this on your
+ honour's account. It's a grand bargain&mdash;cost but a pund sterling the
+ foot&mdash;that's four a'thegither. The stringhalt will gae aff when it's
+ gaen a mile; it's a weel-ken'd ganger; they call it Souple Tam.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On my soul, sir,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;you will never rest till my supple-jack and
+ your shoulders become acquainted. If you do not go instantly and procure
+ the other brute, you shall pay the penalty of your ingenuity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrew, notwithstanding my threats, continued to battle the point, as he
+ said it would cost him a guinea of rue-bargain to the man who had bought
+ his pony, before he could get it back again. Like a true Englishman,
+ though sensible I was duped by the rascal, I was about to pay his exaction
+ rather than lose time, when forth sallied Mr. Jarvie, cloaked, mantled,
+ hooded, and booted, as if for a Siberian winter, while two apprentices,
+ under the immediate direction of Mattie, led forth the decent ambling
+ steed which had the honour on such occasions to support the person of the
+ Glasgow magistrate. Ere he &ldquo;clombe to the saddle,&rdquo; an expression more
+ descriptive of the Bailie's mode of mounting than that of the
+ knights-errant to whom Spenser applies it, he inquired the cause of the
+ dispute betwixt my servant and me. Having learned the nature of honest
+ Andrew's manoeuvre he instantly cut short all debate, by pronouncing, that
+ if Fairservice did not forthwith return the three-legged palfrey, and
+ produce the more useful quadruped which he had discarded, he would send
+ him to prison, and amerce him in half his wages. &ldquo;Mr. Osbaldistone,&rdquo; said
+ he, &ldquo;contracted for the service of both your horse and you&mdash;twa
+ brutes at ance&mdash;ye unconscionable rascal!&mdash;but I'se look weel
+ after you during this journey.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will be nonsense fining me,&rdquo; said Andrew, doughtily, &ldquo;that hasna a
+ grey groat to pay a fine wi'&mdash;it's ill taking the breeks aff a
+ Hielandman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If ye hae nae purse to fine, ye hae flesh to pine,&rdquo; replied the Bailie,
+ &ldquo;and I will look weel to ye getting your deserts the tae way or the
+ tither.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the commands of Mr. Jarvie, therefore, Andrew was compelled to submit,
+ only muttering between his teeth, &ldquo;Ower mony maisters,&mdash;ower mony
+ maisters, as the paddock said to the harrow, when every tooth gae her a
+ tig.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apparently he found no difficulty in getting rid of Supple Tam, and
+ recovering possession of his former Bucephalus, for he accomplished the
+ exchange without being many minutes absent; nor did I hear further of his
+ having paid any smart-money for breach of bargain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We now set forward, but had not reached the top of the street in which Mr.
+ Jarvie dwelt, when a loud hallooing and breathless call of &ldquo;Stop, stop!&rdquo;
+ was heard behind us. We stopped accordingly, and were overtaken by Mr.
+ Jarvie's two lads, who bore two parting tokens of Mattie's care for her
+ master. The first was conveyed in the form of a voluminous silk
+ handkerchief, like the mainsail of one of his own West-Indiamen, which
+ Mrs. Mattie particularly desired he would put about his neck, and which,
+ thus entreated, he added to his other integuments. The second youngster
+ brought only a verbal charge (I thought I saw the rogue disposed to laugh
+ as he delivered it) on the part of the housekeeper, that her master would
+ take care of the waters. &ldquo;Pooh! pooh! silly hussy,&rdquo; answered Mr. Jarvie;
+ but added, turning to me, &ldquo;it shows a kind heart though&mdash;it shows a
+ kind heart in sae young a quean&mdash;Mattie's a carefu' lass.&rdquo; So
+ speaking, he pricked the sides of his palfrey, and we left the town
+ without farther interruption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While we paced easily forward, by a road which conducted us north-eastward
+ from the town, I had an opportunity to estimate and admire the good
+ qualities of my new friend. Although, like my father, he considered
+ commercial transactions the most important objects of human life, he was
+ not wedded to them so as to undervalue more general knowledge. On the
+ contrary, with much oddity and vulgarity of manner,&mdash;with a vanity
+ which he made much more ridiculous by disguising it now and then under a
+ thin veil of humility, and devoid as he was of all the advantages of a
+ learned education, Mr. Jarvie's conversation showed tokens of a shrewd,
+ observing, liberal, and, to the extent of its opportunities, a
+ well-improved mind. He was a good local antiquary, and entertained me, as
+ we passed along, with an account of remarkable events which had formerly
+ taken place in the scenes through which we passed. And as he was well
+ acquainted with the ancient history of his district, he saw with the
+ prospective eye of an enlightened patriot, the buds of many of those
+ future advantages which have only blossomed and ripened within these few
+ years. I remarked also, and with great pleasure, that although a keen
+ Scotchman, and abundantly zealous for the honour of his country, he was
+ disposed to think liberally of the sister kingdom. When Andrew Fairservice
+ (whom, by the way, the Bailie could not abide) chose to impute the
+ accident of one of the horses casting his shoe to the deteriorating
+ influence of the Union, he incurred a severe rebuke from Mr. Jarvie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whisht, sir!&mdash;whisht! it's ill-scraped tongues like yours, that make
+ mischief atween neighbourhoods and nations. There's naething sae gude on
+ this side o' time but it might hae been better, and that may be said o'
+ the Union. Nane were keener against it than the Glasgow folk, wi' their
+ rabblings and their risings, and their mobs, as they ca' them now-a-days.
+ But it's an ill wind blaws naebody gude&mdash;Let ilka ane roose the ford
+ as they find it&mdash;I say let Glasgow flourish! whilk is judiciously and
+ elegantly putten round the town's arms, by way of by-word.&mdash;Now,
+ since St. Mungo catched herrings in the Clyde, what was ever like to gar
+ us flourish like the sugar and tobacco trade? Will onybody tell me that,
+ and grumble at the treaty that opened us a road west-awa' yonder?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrew Fairservice was far from acquiescing in these arguments of
+ expedience, and even ventured to enter a grumbling protest, &ldquo;That it was
+ an unco change to hae Scotland's laws made in England; and that, for his
+ share, he wadna for a' the herring-barrels in Glasgow, and a' the
+ tobacco-casks to boot, hae gien up the riding o' the Scots Parliament, or
+ sent awa' our crown, and our sword, and our sceptre, and Mons Meg,* to be
+ keepit by thae English pock-puddings in the Tower o' Lunnon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Note G. Mons Meg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What wad Sir William Wallace, or auld Davie Lindsay, hae said to the
+ Union, or them that made it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The road which we travelled, while diverting the way with these
+ discussions, had become wild and open, as soon as we had left Glasgow a
+ mile or two behind us, and was growing more dreary as we advanced. Huge
+ continuous heaths spread before, behind, and around us, in hopeless
+ barrenness&mdash;now level and interspersed with swamps, green with
+ treacherous verdure, or sable with turf, or, as they call them in
+ Scotland, peat-bogs,&mdash;and now swelling into huge heavy ascents, which
+ wanted the dignity and form of hills, while they were still more toilsome
+ to the passenger. There were neither trees nor bushes to relieve the eye
+ from the russet livery of absolute sterility. The very heath was of that
+ stinted imperfect kind which has little or no flower, and affords the
+ coarsest and meanest covering, which, as far as my experience enables me
+ to judge, mother Earth is ever arrayed in. Living thing we saw none,
+ except occasionally a few straggling sheep of a strange diversity of
+ colours, as black, bluish, and orange. The sable hue predominated,
+ however, in their faces and legs. The very birds seemed to shun these
+ wastes, and no wonder, since they had an easy method of escaping from
+ them;&mdash;at least I only heard the monotonous and plaintive cries of
+ the lapwing and curlew, which my companions denominated the peasweep and
+ whaup.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At dinner, however, which we took about noon, at a most miserable
+ alehouse, we had the good fortune to find that these tiresome screamers of
+ the morass were not the only inhabitants of the moors. The goodwife told
+ us, that &ldquo;the gudeman had been at the hill;&rdquo; and well for us that he had
+ been so, for we enjoyed the produce of his <i>chasse</i> in the shape of
+ some broiled moor-game,&mdash;a dish which gallantly eked out the ewe-milk
+ cheese, dried salmon, and oaten bread, being all besides that the house
+ afforded. Some very indifferent two-penny ale, and a glass of excellent
+ brandy, crowned our repast; and as our horses had, in the meantime,
+ discussed their corn, we resumed our journey with renovated vigour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had need of all the spirits a good dinner could give, to resist the
+ dejection which crept insensibly on my mind, when I combined the strange
+ uncertainty of my errand with the disconsolate aspect of the country
+ through which it was leading me. Our road continued to be, if possible,
+ more waste and wild than that we had travelled in the forenoon. The few
+ miserable hovels that showed some marks of human habitation, were now of
+ still rarer occurrence; and at length, as we began to ascend an
+ uninterrupted swell of moorland, they totally disappeared. The only
+ exercise which my imagination received was, when some particular turn of
+ the road gave us a partial view, to the left, of a large assemblage of
+ dark-blue mountains stretching to the north and north-west, which promised
+ to include within their recesses a country as wild perhaps, but certainly
+ differing greatly in point of interest, from that which we now travelled.
+ The peaks of this screen of mountains were as wildly varied and
+ distinguished, as the hills which we had seen on the right were tame and
+ lumpish; and while I gazed on this Alpine region, I felt a longing to
+ explore its recesses, though accompanied with toil and danger, similar to
+ that which a sailor feels when he wishes for the risks and animation of a
+ battle or a gale, in exchange for the insupportable monotony of a
+ protracted calm. I made various inquiries of my friend Mr. Jarvie
+ respecting the names and positions of these remarkable mountains; but it
+ was a subject on which he had no information, or did not choose to be
+ communicative. &ldquo;They're the Hieland hills&mdash;the Hieland hills&mdash;Ye'll
+ see and hear eneugh about them before ye see Glasgow Cross again&mdash;I
+ downa look at them&mdash;I never see them but they gar me grew. It's no
+ for fear&mdash;no for fear, but just for grief, for the puir blinded
+ half-starved creatures that inhabit them&mdash;but say nae mair about it&mdash;it's
+ ill speaking o' Hielandmen sae near the line. I hae ken'd mony an honest
+ man wadna hae ventured this length without he had made his last will and
+ testament&mdash;Mattie had ill-will to see me set awa' on this ride, and
+ grat awee, the sillie tawpie; but it's nae mair ferlie to see a woman
+ greet than to see a goose gang barefit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I next attempted to lead the discourse on the character and history of the
+ person whom we were going to visit; but on this topic Mr. Jarvie was
+ totally inaccessible, owing perhaps in part to the attendance of Mr.
+ Andrew Fairservice, who chose to keep so close in our rear that his ears
+ could not fail to catch every word which was spoken, while his tongue
+ assumed the freedom of mingling in our conversation as often as he saw an
+ opportunity. For this he occasionally incurred Mr. Jarvie's reproof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Keep back, sir, as best sets ye,&rdquo; said the Bailie, as Andrew pressed
+ forward to catch the answer to some question I had asked about Campbell.
+ &mdash;&ldquo;ye wad fain ride the fore-horse, an ye wist how.&mdash;That
+ chield's aye for being out o' the cheese-fat he was moulded in.&mdash;Now,
+ as for your questions, Mr. Osbaldistone, now that chield's out of
+ ear-shot, I'll just tell you it's free to you to speer, and it's free to
+ me to answer, or no&mdash;Gude I canna say muckle o' Rob, puir chield; ill
+ I winna say o' him, for, forby that he's my cousin, we're coming near his
+ ain country, and there may be ane o' his gillies ahint every whin-bush,
+ for what I ken&mdash;And if ye'll be guided by my advice, the less ye
+ speak about him, or where we are gaun, or what we are gaun to do, we'll be
+ the mair likely to speed us in our errand. For it's like we may fa' in wi'
+ some o' his unfreends&mdash;there are e'en ower mony o' them about&mdash;and
+ his bonnet sits even on his brow yet for a' that; but I doubt they'll be
+ upsides wi' Rob at the last&mdash;air day or late day, the fox's hide
+ finds aye the flaying knife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will certainly,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;be entirely guided by your experience.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right, Mr. Osbaldistone&mdash;right. But I maun speak to this gabbling
+ skyte too, for bairns and fules speak at the Cross what they hear at the
+ ingle-side.&mdash;D'ye hear, you, Andrew&mdash;what's your name?&mdash;Fairservice!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrew, who at the last rebuff had fallen a good way behind, did not
+ choose to acknowledge the summons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Andrew, ye scoundrel!&rdquo; repeated Mr. Jarvie; &ldquo;here, sir here!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is for the dog.&rdquo; said Andrew, coming up sulkily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll gie you dog's wages, ye rascal, if ye dinna attend to what I say
+ t'ye&mdash;We are gaun into the Hielands a bit&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I judged as muckle,&rdquo; said Andrew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Haud your peace, ye knave, and hear what I have to say till ye&mdash;We
+ are gaun a bit into the Hielands&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye tauld me sae already,&rdquo; replied the incorrigible Andrew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll break your head,&rdquo; said the Bailie, rising in wrath, &ldquo;if ye dinna
+ haud your tongue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A hadden tongue,&rdquo; replied Andrew, &ldquo;makes a slabbered mouth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was now necessary I should interfere, which I did by commanding Andrew,
+ with an authoritative tone, to be silent at his peril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am silent,&rdquo; said Andrew. &ldquo;I'se do a' your lawfu' bidding without a
+ nay-say. My puir mother used aye to tell me,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Be it better, be it worse,
+ Be ruled by him that has the purse.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Sae ye may e'en speak as lang as ye like, baith the tane and the tither o'
+ you, for Andrew.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Jarvie took the advantage of his stopping after quoting the above
+ proverb, to give him the requisite instructions. &ldquo;Now, sir, it's as muckle
+ as your life's worth&mdash;that wad be dear o' little siller, to be sure&mdash;but
+ it is as muckle as a' our lives are worth, if ye dinna mind what I sae to
+ ye. In this public whar we are gaun to, and whar it is like we may hae to
+ stay a' night, men o' a' clans and kindred&mdash;Hieland and Lawland&mdash;tak
+ up their quarters&mdash;And whiles there are mair drawn dirks than open
+ Bibles amang them, when the usquebaugh gets uppermost. See ye neither
+ meddle nor mak, nor gie nae offence wi' that clavering tongue o' yours,
+ but keep a calm sough, and let ilka cock fight his ain battle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Muckle needs to tell me that,&rdquo; said Andrew, contemptuously, &ldquo;as if I had
+ never seen a Hielandman before, and ken'd nae how to manage them. Nae man
+ alive can cuitle up Donald better than mysell&mdash;I hae bought wi' them,
+ sauld wi' them, eaten wi' them, drucken wi' them&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did ye ever fight wi' them?&rdquo; said Mr. Jarvie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Na, na,&rdquo; answered Andrew, &ldquo;I took care o' that: it wad ill hae set me,
+ that am an artist and half a scholar to my trade, to be fighting amang a
+ wheen kilted loons that dinna ken the name o' a single herb or flower in
+ braid Scots, let abee in the Latin tongue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said Mr. Jarvie, &ldquo;as ye wad keep either your tongue in your mouth,
+ or your lugs in your head (and ye might miss them, for as saucy members as
+ they are), I charge ye to say nae word, gude or bad, that ye can weel get
+ by, to onybody that may be in the Clachan. And ye'll specially understand
+ that ye're no to be bleezing and blasting about your master's name and
+ mine, or saying that this is Mr. Bailie Nicol Jarvie o' the Saut Market,
+ son o' the worthy Deacon Nicol Jarvie, that a' body has heard about; and
+ this is Mr. Frank Osbaldistone, son of the managing partner of the great
+ house of Osbaldistone and Tresham, in the City.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eneueh said,&rdquo; answered Andrew&mdash;&ldquo;eneueh said. What need ye think I
+ wad be speaking about your names for?&mdash;I hae mony things o' mair
+ importance to speak about, I trow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's thae very things of importance that I am feared for, ye blethering
+ goose; ye maunna speak ony thing, gude or bad, that ye can by any
+ possibility help.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If ye dinna think me fit,&rdquo; replied Andrew, in a huff, &ldquo;to speak like
+ ither folk, gie me my wages and my board-wages, and I'se gae back to
+ Glasgow&mdash;There's sma' sorrow at our parting, as the auld mear said to
+ the broken cart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding Andrew's perverseness again rising to a point which threatened to
+ occasion me inconvenience, I was under the necessity of explaining to him,
+ that he might return if he thought proper, but that in that case I would
+ not pay him a single farthing for his past services. The argument <i>ad
+ crumenam,</i> as it has been called by jocular logicians, has weight with
+ the greater part of mankind, and Andrew was in that particular far from
+ affecting any trick of singularity. He &ldquo;drew in his horns,&rdquo; to use the
+ Bailie's phrase, on the instant, professed no intention whatever to
+ disoblige, and a resolution to be guided by my commands, whatever they
+ might be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Concord being thus happily restored to our small party, we continued to
+ pursue our journey. The road, which had ascended for six or seven English
+ miles, began now to descend for about the same space, through a country
+ which neither in fertility nor interest could boast any advantage over
+ that which we had passed already, and which afforded no variety, unless
+ when some tremendous peak of a Highland mountain appeared at a distance.
+ We continued, however, to ride on without pause and even when night fell
+ and overshadowed the desolate wilds which we traversed, we were, as I
+ understood from Mr. Jarvie, still three miles and a bittock distant from
+ the place where we were to spend the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0011" id="AlinkCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER ELEVENTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Baron of Bucklivie,
+ May the foul fiend drive ye,
+ And a' to pieces rive ye,
+ For building sic a town,
+ Where there's neither horse meat,
+ Nor man's meat,
+ Nor a chair to sit down.
+ Scottish Popular Rhymes on a bad Inn.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The night was pleasant, and the moon afforded us good light for our
+ journey. Under her rays, the ground over which we passed assumed a more
+ interesting appearance than during the broad daylight, which discovered
+ the extent of its wasteness. The mingled light and shadows gave it an
+ interest which naturally did not belong to it; and, like the effect of a
+ veil flung over a plain woman, irritated our curiosity on a subject which
+ had in itself nothing gratifying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The descent, however, still continued, turned, winded, left the more open
+ heaths, and got into steeper ravines, which promised soon to lead us to
+ the banks of some brook or river, and ultimately made good their presage.
+ We found ourselves at length on the bank of a stream, which rather
+ resembled one of my native English rivers than those I had hitherto seen
+ in Scotland. It was narrow, deep, still, and silent; although the
+ imperfect light, as it gleamed on its placid waters, showed also that we
+ were now among the lofty mountains which formed its cradle. &ldquo;That's the
+ Forth,&rdquo; said the Bailie, with an air of reverence, which I have observed
+ the Scotch usually pay to their distinguished rivers. The Clyde, the
+ Tweed, the Forth, the Spey, are usually named by those who dwell on their
+ banks with a sort of respect and pride, and I have known duels occasioned
+ by any word of disparagement. I cannot say I have the least quarrel with
+ this sort of harmless enthusiasm. I received my friend's communication
+ with the importance which he seemed to think appertained to it. In fact, I
+ was not a little pleased, after so long and dull a journey, to approach a
+ region which promised to engage the imagination. My faithful squire,
+ Andrew, did not seem to be quite of the same opinion, for he received the
+ solemn information, &ldquo;That is the Forth,&rdquo; with a &ldquo;Umph!&mdash;an he had
+ said that's the public-house, it wad hae been mair to the purpose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Forth, however, as far as the imperfect light permitted me to judge,
+ seemed to merit the admiration of those who claimed an interest in its
+ stream. A beautiful eminence of the most regular round shape, and clothed
+ with copsewood of hazels, mountain-ash, and dwarf-oak, intermixed with a
+ few magnificent old trees, which, rising above the underwood, exposed
+ their forked and bared branches to the silver moonshine, seemed to protect
+ the sources from which the river sprung. If I could trust the tale of my
+ companion, which, while professing to disbelieve every word of it, he told
+ under his breath, and with an air of something like intimidation, this
+ hill, so regularly formed, so richly verdant, and garlanded with such a
+ beautiful variety of ancient trees and thriving copsewood, was held by the
+ neighbourhood to contain, within its unseen caverns, the palaces of the
+ fairies&mdash;a race of airy beings, who formed an intermediate class
+ between men and demons, and who, if not positively malignant to humanity,
+ were yet to be avoided and feared, on account of their capricious,
+ vindictive, and irritable disposition.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Note H. Fairy Superstition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They ca' them,&rdquo; said Mr. Jarvie, in a whisper, &ldquo;<i>Daoine Schie,</i>&mdash;whilk
+ signifies, as I understand, men of peace; meaning thereby to make their
+ gudewill. And we may e'en as weel ca' them that too, Mr. Osbaldistone, for
+ there's nae gude in speaking ill o' the laird within his ain bounds.&rdquo; But
+ he added presently after, on seeing one or two lights which twinkled
+ before us, &ldquo;It's deceits o' Satan, after a', and I fearna to say it&mdash;for
+ we are near the manse now, and yonder are the lights in the Clachan of
+ Aberfoil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I own I was well pleased at the circumstance to which Mr. Jarvie alluded;
+ not so much that it set his tongue at liberty, in his opinion, with all
+ safety to declare his real sentiments with respect to the <i>Daoine Schie,</i>
+ or fairies, as that it promised some hours' repose to ourselves and our
+ horses, of which, after a ride of fifty miles and upwards, both stood in
+ some need.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We crossed the infant Forth by an old-fashioned stone bridge, very high
+ and very narrow. My conductor, however, informed me, that to get through
+ this deep and important stream, and to clear all its tributary
+ dependencies, the general pass from the Highlands to the southward lay by
+ what was called the Fords of Frew, at all times deep and difficult of
+ passage, and often altogether unfordable. Beneath these fords, there was
+ no pass of general resort until so far east as the bridge of Stirling; so
+ that the river of Forth forms a defensible line between the Highlands and
+ Lowlands of Scotland, from its source nearly to the Firth, or inlet of the
+ ocean, in which it terminates. The subsequent events which we witnessed
+ led me to recall with attention what the shrewdness of Bailie Jarvie
+ suggested in his proverbial expression, that &ldquo;Forth bridles the wild
+ Highlandman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About half a mile's riding, after we crossed the bridge, placed us at the
+ door of the public-house where we were to pass the evening. It was a hovel
+ rather worse than better than that in which we had dined; but its little
+ windows were lighted up, voices were heard from within, and all intimated
+ a prospect of food and shelter, to which we were by no means indifferent.
+ Andrew was the first to observe that there was a peeled willow-wand placed
+ across the half-open door of the little inn. He hung back and advised us
+ not to enter. &ldquo;For,&rdquo; said Andrew, &ldquo;some of their chiefs and grit men are
+ birling at the usquebaugh in by there, and dinna want to be disturbed; and
+ the least we'll get, if we gang ramstam in on them, will be a broken head,
+ to learn us better havings, if we dinna come by the length of a cauld dirk
+ in our wame, whilk is just as likely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I looked at the Bailie, who acknowledged, in a whisper, &ldquo;that the gowk had
+ some reason for singing, ance in the year.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime a staring half-clad wench or two came out of the inn and the
+ neighbouring cottages, on hearing the sound of our horses' feet. No one
+ bade us welcome, nor did any one offer to take our horses, from which we
+ had alighted; and to our various inquiries, the hopeless response of &ldquo;Ha
+ niel Sassenach,&rdquo; was the only answer we could extract. The Bailie,
+ however, found (in his experience) a way to make them speak English. &ldquo;If I
+ gie ye a bawbee,&rdquo; said he to an urchin of about ten years old, with a
+ fragment of a tattered plaid about him, &ldquo;will you understand Sassenach?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, ay, that will I,&rdquo; replied the brat, in very decent English. &ldquo;Then
+ gang and tell your mammy, my man, there's twa Sassenach gentlemen come to
+ speak wi' her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The landlady presently appeared, with a lighted piece of split fir blazing
+ in her hand. The turpentine in this species of torch (which is generally
+ dug from out the turf-bogs) makes it blaze and sparkle readily, so that it
+ is often used in the Highlands in lieu of candles. On this occasion such a
+ torch illuminated the wild and anxious features of a female, pale, thin,
+ and rather above the usual size, whose soiled and ragged dress, though
+ aided by a plaid or tartan screen, barely served the purposes of decency,
+ and certainly not those of comfort. Her black hair, which escaped in
+ uncombed elf-locks from under her coif, as well as the strange and
+ embarrassed look with which she regarded us, gave me the idea of a witch
+ disturbed in the midst of her unlawful rites. She plainly refused to admit
+ us into the house. We remonstrated anxiously, and pleaded the length of
+ our journey, the state of our horses, and the certainty that there was not
+ another place where we could be received nearer than Callander, which the
+ Bailie stated to be seven Scots miles distant. How many these may exactly
+ amount to in English measurement, I have never been able to ascertain, but
+ I think the double <i>ratio</i> may be pretty safely taken as a medium
+ computation. The obdurate hostess treated our expostulation with contempt.
+ &ldquo;Better gang farther than fare waur,&rdquo; she said, speaking the Scottish
+ Lowland dialect, and being indeed a native of the Lennox district&mdash;&ldquo;Her
+ house was taen up wi' them wadna like to be intruded on wi' strangers. She
+ didna ken wha mair might be there&mdash;red-coats, it might be, frae the
+ garrison.&rdquo; (These last words she spoke under her breath, and with very
+ strong emphasis.) &ldquo;The night,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;was fair abune head&mdash;a
+ night amang the heather wad caller our bloods&mdash;we might sleep in our
+ claes, as mony a gude blade does in the scabbard&mdash;there wasna muckle
+ flowmoss in the shaw, if we took up our quarters right, and we might pit
+ up our horses to the hill, naebody wad say naething against it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, my good woman,&rdquo; said I, while the Bailie groaned and remained
+ undecided, &ldquo;it is six hours since we dined, and we have not taken a morsel
+ since. I am positively dying with hunger, and I have no taste for taking
+ up my abode supperless among these mountains of yours. I positively must
+ enter; and make the best apology you can to your guests for adding a
+ stranger or two to their number. Andrew, you will see the horses put up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hecate looked at me with surprise, and then ejaculated&mdash;&ldquo;A wilfu'
+ man will hae his way&mdash;them that will to Cupar maun to Cupar!&mdash;To
+ see thae English belly-gods! he has had ae fu' meal the day already, and
+ he'll venture life and liberty, rather than he'll want a het supper! Set
+ roasted beef and pudding on the opposite side o' the pit o' Tophet, and an
+ Englishman will mak a spang at it&mdash;But I wash my hands o't&mdash;Follow
+ me sir&rdquo; (to Andrew), &ldquo;and I'se show ye where to pit the beasts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I own I was somewhat dismayed at my landlady's expressions, which seemed
+ to be ominous of some approaching danger. I did not, however, choose to
+ shrink back after having declared my resolution, and accordingly I boldly
+ entered the house; and after narrowly escaping breaking my shins over a
+ turf back and a salting tub, which stood on either side of the narrow
+ exterior passage, I opened a crazy half-decayed door, constructed not of
+ plank, but of wicker, and, followed by the Bailie, entered into the
+ principal apartment of this Scottish caravansary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interior presented a view which seemed singular enough to southern
+ eyes. The fire, fed with blazing turf and branches of dried wood, blazed
+ merrily in the centre; but the smoke, having no means to escape but
+ through a hole in the roof, eddied round the rafters of the cottage, and
+ hung in sable folds at the height of about five feet from the floor. The
+ space beneath was kept pretty clear by innumerable currents of air which
+ rushed towards the fire from the broken panel of basket-work which served
+ as a door&mdash;from two square holes, designed as ostensible windows,
+ through one of which was thrust a plaid, and through the other a tattered
+ great-coat&mdash;and moreover, through various less distinguishable
+ apertures in the walls of the tenement, which, being built of round stones
+ and turf, cemented by mud, let in the atmosphere at innumerable crevices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At an old oaken table, adjoining to the fire, sat three men, guests
+ apparently, whom it was impossible to regard with indifference. Two were
+ in the Highland dress; the one, a little dark-complexioned man, with a
+ lively, quick, and irritable expression of features, wore the trews, or
+ close pantaloons wove out of a sort of chequered stocking stuff. The
+ Bailie whispered me, that &ldquo;he behoved to be a man of some consequence, for
+ that naebody but their Duinhe'wassels wore the trews&mdash;they were ill
+ to weave exactly to their Highland pleasure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other mountaineer was a very tall, strong man, with a quantity of
+ reddish hair, freckled face, high cheek-bones, and long chin&mdash;a sort
+ of caricature of the national features of Scotland. The tartan which he
+ wore differed from that of his companion, as it had much more scarlet in
+ it, whereas the shades of black and dark-green predominated in the
+ chequers of the other. The third, who sate at the same table, was in the
+ Lowland dress,&mdash;a bold, stout-looking man, with a cast of military
+ daring in his eye and manner, his riding-dress showily and profusely
+ laced, and his cocked hat of formidable dimensions. His hanger and a pair
+ of pistols lay on the table before him. Each of the Highlanders had their
+ naked dirks stuck upright in the board beside him,&mdash;an emblem, I was
+ afterwards informed, but surely a strange one, that their computation was
+ not to be interrupted by any brawl. A mighty pewter measure, containing
+ about an English quart of usquebaugh, a liquor nearly as strong as brandy,
+ which the Highlanders distil from malt, and drink undiluted in excessive
+ quantities, was placed before these worthies. A broken glass, with a
+ wooden foot, served as a drinking cup to the whole party, and circulated
+ with a rapidity, which, considering the potency of the liquor, seemed
+ absolutely marvellous. These men spoke loudly and eagerly together,
+ sometimes in Gaelic, at other times in English. Another Highlander, wrapt
+ in his plaid, reclined on the floor, his head resting on a stone, from
+ which it was only separated by a wisp of straw, and slept or seemed to
+ sleep, without attending to what was going on around him. He also was
+ probably a stranger, for he lay in full dress, and accoutred with the
+ sword and target, the usual arms of his countrymen when on a journey.
+ Cribs there were of different dimensions beside the walls, formed, some of
+ fractured boards, some of shattered wicker-work or plaited boughs, in
+ which slumbered the family of the house, men, women, and children, their
+ places of repose only concealed by the dusky wreaths of vapour which arose
+ above, below, and around them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our entrance was made so quietly, and the carousers I have described were
+ so eagerly engaged in their discussions, that we escaped their notice for
+ a minute or two. But I observed the Highlander who lay beside the fire
+ raise himself on his elbow as we entered, and, drawing his plaid over the
+ lower part of his face, fix his look on us for a few seconds, after which
+ he resumed his recumbent posture, and seemed again to betake himself to
+ the repose which our entrance had interrupted,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We advanced to the fire, which was an agreeable spectacle after our late
+ ride, during the chillness of an autumn evening among the mountains, and
+ first attracted the attention of the guests who had preceded us, by
+ calling for the landlady. She approached, looking doubtfully and timidly,
+ now at us, now at the other party, and returned a hesitating and doubtful
+ answer to our request to have something to eat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She didna ken,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;she wasna sure there was onything in the
+ house,&rdquo; and then modified her refusal with the qualification&mdash;&ldquo;that
+ is, onything fit for the like of us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I assured her we were indifferent to the quality of our supper; and
+ looking round for the means of accommodation, which were not easily to be
+ found, I arranged an old hen-coop as a seat for Mr. Jarvie, and turned
+ down a broken tub to serve for my own. Andrew Fairservice entered
+ presently afterwards, and took a place in silence behind our backs. The
+ natives, as I may call them, continued staring at us with an air as if
+ confounded by our assurance, and we, at least I myself, disguised as well
+ as we could, under an appearance of indifference, any secret anxiety we
+ might feel concerning the mode in which we were to be received by those
+ whose privacy we had disturbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length, the lesser Highlander, addressing himself to me said, in very
+ good English, and in a tone of great haughtiness, &ldquo;Ye make yourself at
+ home, sir, I see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I usually do so,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;when I come into a house of public
+ entertainment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And did she na see,&rdquo; said the taller man, &ldquo;by the white wand at the door,
+ that gentlemans had taken up the public-house on their ain business?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not pretend to understand the customs of this country but I am yet
+ to learn,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;how three persons should be entitled to exclude all
+ other travellers from the only place of shelter and refreshment for miles
+ round.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's nae reason for't, gentlemen,&rdquo; said the Bailie; &ldquo;we mean nae
+ offence&mdash;but there's neither law nor reason for't; but as far as a
+ stoup o' gude brandy wad make up the quarrel, we, being peaceable folk,
+ wad be willing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Damn your brandy, sir!&rdquo; said the Lowlander, adjusting his cocked hat
+ fiercely upon his head; &ldquo;we desire neither your brandy nor your company,&rdquo;
+ and up he rose from his seat. His companions also arose, muttering to each
+ other, drawing up their plaids, and snorting and snuffing the air after
+ the mariner of their countrymen when working themselves into a passion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tauld ye what wad come, gentlemen,&rdquo; said the landlady, &ldquo;an ye wad hae
+ been tauld:&mdash;get awa' wi' ye out o' my house, and make nae
+ disturbance here&mdash;there's nae gentleman be disturbed at Jeanie
+ MacAlpine's an she can hinder. A wheen idle English loons, gaun about the
+ country under cloud o' night, and disturbing honest peaceable gentlemen
+ that are drinking their drap drink at the fireside!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At another time I should have thought of the old Latin adage,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dat veniam corvis, vexat censure columbas&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I had not any time for classical quotation, for there was obviously a
+ fray about to ensue, at which, feeling myself indiginant at the
+ inhospitable insolence with which I was treated, I was totally
+ indifferent, unless on the Bailie's account, whose person and qualities
+ were ill qualified for such an adventure. I started up, however, on seeing
+ the others rise, and dropped my cloak from my shoulders, that I might be
+ ready to stand on the defensive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are three to three,&rdquo; said the lesser Highlander, glancing his eyes at
+ our party: &ldquo;if ye be pretty men, draw!&rdquo; and unsheathing his broadsword, he
+ advanced on me. I put myself in a posture of defence, and aware of the
+ superiority of my weapon, a rapier or small-sword, was little afraid of
+ the issue of the contest. The Bailie behaved with unexpected mettle. As he
+ saw the gigantic Highlander confront him with his weapon drawn, he tugged
+ for a second or two at the hilt of his <i>shabble,</i> as he called it;
+ but finding it loth to quit the sheath, to which it had long been secured
+ by rust and disuse, he seized, as a substitute, on the red-hot coulter of
+ a plough which had been employed in arranging the fire by way of a poker,
+ and brandished it with such effect, that at the first pass he set the
+ Highlander's plaid on fire, and compelled him to keep a respectful
+ distance till he could get it extinguished. Andrew, on the contrary, who
+ ought to have faced the Lowland champion, had, I grieve to say it,
+ vanished at the very commencement of the fray. But his antagonist, crying
+ &ldquo;Fair play, fair play!&rdquo; seemed courteously disposed to take no share in
+ the scuffle. Thus we commenced our rencontre on fair terms as to numbers.
+ My own aim was, to possess myself, if possible, of my antagonist's weapon;
+ but I was deterred from closing, for fear of the dirk which he held in his
+ left hand, and used in parrying the thrusts of my rapier. Meantime the
+ Bailie, notwithstanding the success of his first onset, was sorely bested.
+ The weight of his weapon, the corpulence of his person, the very
+ effervescence of his own passions, were rapidly exhausting both his
+ strength and his breath, and he was almost at the mercy of his antagonist,
+ when up started the sleeping Highlander from the floor on which he
+ reclined, with his naked sword and target in his hand, and threw himself
+ between the discomfited magistrate and his assailant, exclaiming, &ldquo;Her
+ nainsell has eaten the town pread at the Cross o' Glasgow, and py her
+ troth she'll fight for Bailie Sharvie at the Clachan of Aberfoil&mdash;tat
+ will she e'en!&rdquo; And seconding his words with deeds, this unexpected
+ auxiliary made his sword whistle about the ears of his tall countryman,
+ who, nothing abashed, returned his blows with interest. But being both
+ accoutred with round targets made of wood, studded with brass, and covered
+ with leather, with which they readily parried each other's strokes, their
+ combat was attended with much more noise and clatter than serious risk of
+ damage. It appeared, indeed, that there was more of bravado than of
+ serious attempt to do us any injury; for the Lowland gentleman, who, as I
+ mentioned, had stood aside for want of an antagonist when the brawl
+ commenced, was now pleased to act the part of moderator and peacemaker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Aimage-0006" id="Aimage-0006">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/pb154.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Fray at Jeannie Macalpine's " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hand your hands! haud your hands!&mdash;eneugh done!&mdash;eneugh done!
+ the quarrel's no mortal. The strange gentlemen have shown themselves men
+ of honour, and gien reasonable satisfaction. I'll stand on mine honour as
+ kittle as ony man, but I hate unnecessary bloodshed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not, of course, my wish to protract the fray&mdash;my adversary
+ seemed equally disposed to sheathe his sword&mdash;the Bailie, gasping for
+ breath, might be considered as <i>hors de combat,</i> and our two
+ sword-and-buckler men gave up their contest with as much indifference as
+ they had entered into it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now,&rdquo; said the worthy gentleman who acted as umpire, &ldquo;let us drink
+ and gree like honest fellows&mdash;The house will haud us a'. I propose
+ that this good little gentleman, that seems sair forfoughen, as I may say,
+ in this tuilzie, shall send for a tass o' brandy and I'll pay for another,
+ by way of archilowe,* and then we'll birl our bawbees a' round about, like
+ brethren.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And fa's to pay my new ponnie plaid,&rdquo; said the larger Highlander, &ldquo;wi' a
+ hole burnt in't ane might put a kail-pat through? Saw ever onybody a
+ decent gentleman fight wi' a firebrand before?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let that be nae hinderance,&rdquo; said the Bailie, who had now recovered his
+ breath, and was at once disposed to enjoy the triumph of having behaved
+ with spirit, and avoid the necessity of again resorting to such hard and
+ doubtful arbitrament&mdash;&ldquo;Gin I hae broken the head,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I sall
+ find the plaister. A new plaid sall ye hae, and o' the best&mdash;your ain
+ clan-colours, man,&mdash;an ye will tell me where it can be sent t'ye frae
+ Glasco.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I needna name my clan&mdash;I am of a king's clan, as is weel ken'd,&rdquo;
+ said the Highlander; &ldquo;but ye may tak a bit o' the plaid&mdash;figh! she
+ smells like a singit sheep's head!&mdash;and that'll learn ye the sett&mdash;and
+ a gentleman, that's a cousin o' my ain, that carries eggs doun frae
+ Glencroe, will ca' for't about Martimas, an ye will tell her where ye
+ bide. But, honest gentleman, neist time ye fight, an ye hae ony respect
+ for your athversary, let it be wi' your sword, man, since ye wear ane, and
+ no wi' thae het culters and fireprands, like a wild Indian.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Conscience!&rdquo; replied the Bailie, &ldquo;every man maun do as he dow. My sword
+ hasna seen the light since Bothwell Brigg, when my father that's dead and
+ gane, ware it; and I kenna weel if it was forthcoming then either, for the
+ battle was o' the briefest&mdash;At ony rate, it's glued to the scabbard
+ now beyond my power to part them; and, finding that, I e'en grippit at the
+ first thing I could make a fend wi'. I trow my fighting days is done,
+ though I like ill to take the scorn, for a' that.&mdash;But where's the
+ honest lad that tuik my quarrel on himself sae frankly?&mdash;I'se bestow
+ a gill o' aquavitae on him, an I suld never ca' for anither.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Archilowe, of unknown derivation, signifies a peace-offering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The champion for whom he looked around was, however, no longer to be seen.
+ He had escaped unobserved by the Bailie, immediately when the brawl was
+ ended, yet not before I had recognised, in his wild features and shaggy
+ red hair, our acquaintance Dougal, the fugitive turnkey of the Glasgow
+ jail. I communicated this observation in a whisper to the Bailie, who
+ answered in the same tone, &ldquo;Weel, weel,&mdash;I see that him that ye ken
+ o' said very right; there <i>is</i> some glimmering o' common sense about
+ that creature Dougal; I maun see and think o' something will do him some
+ gude.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus saying, he sat down, and fetching one or two deep aspirations, by way
+ of recovering his breath, called to the landlady&mdash;&ldquo;I think, Luckie,
+ now that I find that there's nae hole in my wame, whilk I had muckle
+ reason to doubt frae the doings o' your house, I wad be the better o'
+ something to pit intill't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dame, who was all officiousness so soon as the storm had blown over,
+ immediately undertook to broil something comfortable for our supper.
+ Indeed, nothing surprised me more, in the course of the whole matter, than
+ the extreme calmness with which she and her household seemed to regard the
+ martial tumult that had taken place. The good woman was only heard to call
+ to some of her assistants&mdash;&ldquo;Steek the door! steek the door! kill or
+ be killed, let naebody pass out till they hae paid the lawin.&rdquo; And as for
+ the slumberers in those lairs by the wall, which served the family for
+ beds, they only raised their shirtless bodies to look at the fray,
+ ejaculated, &ldquo;Oigh! oigh!&rdquo; in the tone suitable to their respective sex and
+ ages, and were, I believe, fast asleep again, ere our swords were well
+ returned to their scabbards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our landlady, however, now made a great bustle to get some victuals ready,
+ and, to my surprise, very soon began to prepare for us in the frying-pan a
+ savoury mess of venison collops, which she dressed in a manner that might
+ well satisfy hungry men, if not epicures. In the meantime the brandy was
+ placed on the table, to which the Highlanders, however partial to their
+ native strong waters, showed no objection, but much the contrary; and the
+ Lowland gentleman, after the first cup had passed round, became desirous
+ to know our profession, and the object of our journey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are bits o' Glasgow bodies, if it please your honour,&rdquo; said the
+ Bailie, with an affectation of great humility, &ldquo;travelling to Stirling to
+ get in some siller that is awing us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was so silly as to feel a little disconcerted at the unassuming account
+ which he chose to give of us; but I recollected my promise to be silent,
+ and allow the Bailie to manage the matter his own way. And really, when I
+ recollected, Will, that I had not only brought the honest man a long
+ journey from home, which even in itself had been some inconvenience (if I
+ were to judge from the obvious pain and reluctance with which he took his
+ seat, or arose from it), but had also put him within a hair's-breadth of
+ the loss of his life, I could hardly refuse him such a compliment. The
+ spokesman of the other party, snuffing up his breath through his nose,
+ repeated the words with a sort of sneer;&mdash;&ldquo;You Glasgow tradesfolks
+ hae naething to do but to gang frae the tae end o' the west o' Scotland to
+ the ither, to plague honest folks that may chance to be awee ahint the
+ hand, like me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If our debtors were a' sic honest gentlemen as I believe you to be,
+ Garschattachin,&rdquo; replied the Bailie, &ldquo;conscience! we might save ourselves
+ a labour, for they wad come to seek us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eh! what! how!&rdquo; exclaimed the person whom he had addressed,&mdash;&ldquo;as I
+ shall live by bread (not forgetting beef and brandy), it's my auld friend
+ Nicol Jarvie, the best man that ever counted doun merks on a band till a
+ distressed gentleman. Were ye na coming up my way?&mdash;were ye na coming
+ up the Endrick to Garschattachin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Troth no, Maister Galbraith,&rdquo; replied the Bailie, &ldquo;I had other eggs on
+ the spit&mdash;and I thought ye wad be saying I cam to look about the
+ annual rent that's due on the bit heritable band that's between us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Damn the annual rent!&rdquo; said the laird, with an appearance of great
+ heartiness&mdash;&ldquo;Deil a word o' business will you or I speak, now that
+ ye're so near my country. To see how a trot-cosey and a joseph can
+ disguise a man&mdash;that I suldna ken my auld feal friend the deacon!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Bailie, if ye please,&rdquo; resumed my companion; &ldquo;but I ken what gars ye
+ mistak&mdash;the band was granted to my father that's happy, and he was
+ deacon; but his name was Nicol as weel as mine. I dinna mind that there's
+ been a payment of principal sum or annual rent on it in my day, and
+ doubtless that has made the mistake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Weel, the devil take the mistake and all that occasioned it!&rdquo; replied Mr.
+ Galbraith. &ldquo;But I am glad ye are a bailie. Gentlemen, fill a brimmer&mdash;this
+ is my excellent friend, Bailie Nicol Jarvie's health&mdash;I ken'd him and
+ his father these twenty years. Are ye a' cleared kelty aff?&mdash;Fill
+ anither. Here's to his being sune provost&mdash;I say provost&mdash;Lord
+ Provost Nicol Jarvie!&mdash;and them that affirms there's a man walks the
+ Hie-street o' Glasgow that's fitter for the office, they will do weel not
+ to let me, Duncan Galbraith of Garschattachin, hear them say sae&mdash;that's
+ all.&rdquo; And therewith Duncan Galbraith martially cocked his hat, and placed
+ it on one side of his head with an air of defiance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The brandy was probably the best recommendation of there complimentary
+ toasts to the two Highlanders, who drank them without appearing anxious to
+ comprehend their purport. They commenced a conversation with Mr. Galbraith
+ in Gaelic, which he talked with perfect fluency, being, as I afterwards
+ learned, a near neighbour to the Highlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ken'd that Scant-o'-grace weel eneugh frae the very outset,&rdquo; said the
+ Bailie, in a whisper to me; &ldquo;but when blude was warm, and swords were out
+ at ony rate, wha kens what way he might hae thought o' paying his debts?
+ it will be lang or he does it in common form. But he's an honest lad, and
+ has a warm heart too; he disna come often to the Cross o' Glasgow, but
+ mony a buck and blackcock he sends us doun frae the hills. And I can want
+ my siller weel eneugh. My father the deacon had a great regard for the
+ family of Garschattachin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Supper being now nearly ready, I looked round for Andrew Fairservice; but
+ that trusty follower had not been seen by any one since the beginning of
+ the rencontre. The hostess, however, said that she believed our servant
+ had gone into the stable, and offered to light me to the place, saying
+ that &ldquo;no entreaties of the bairns or hers could make him give any answer;
+ and that truly she caredna to gang into the stable herself at this hour.
+ She was a lone woman, and it was weel ken'd how the Brownie of Ben-ye-gask
+ guided the gudewife of Ardnagowan; and it was aye judged there was a
+ Brownie in our stable, which was just what garr'd me gie ower keeping an
+ hostler.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As, however, she lighted me towards the miserable hovel into which they
+ had crammed our unlucky steeds, to regale themselves on hay, every fibre
+ of which was as thick as an ordinary goose-quill, she plainly showed me
+ that she had another reason for drawing me aside from the company than
+ that which her words implied. &ldquo;Read that,&rdquo; she said, slipping a piece of
+ paper into my hand, as we arrived at the door of the shed; &ldquo;I bless God I
+ am rid o't. Between sogers and Saxons, and caterans and cattle-lifters,
+ and hership and bluidshed, an honest woman wad live quieter in hell than
+ on the Hieland line.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, she put the pine-torch into my hand, and returned into the
+ house,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0012" id="AlinkCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER TWELFTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Bagpipes, not lyres, the Highland hills adorn,
+ MacLean's loud hollo, and MacGregor's horn.
+ John Cooper's Reply to Allan Ramsay.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I stopped in the entrance of the stable, if indeed a place be entitled to
+ that name where horses were stowed away along with goats, poultry, pigs,
+ and cows, under the same roof with the mansion-house; although, by a
+ degree of refinement unknown to the rest of the hamlet, and which I
+ afterwards heard was imputed to an overpride on the part of Jeanie
+ MacAlpine, our landlady, the apartment was accommodated with an entrance
+ different from that used by her biped customers. By the light of my torch,
+ I deciphered the following billet, written on a wet, crumpled, and dirty
+ piece of paper, and addressed&mdash;&ldquo;For the honoured hands of Mr. F. O.,
+ a Saxon young gentleman&mdash;These.&rdquo; The contents were as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are night-hawks abroad, so that I cannot give you and my respected
+ kinsman, B. N. J., the meeting at the Clachan of Aberfoil, whilk was my
+ purpose. I pray you to avoid unnecessary communication with those you may
+ find there, as it may give future trouble. The person who gives you this
+ is faithful and may be trusted, and will guide you to a place where, God
+ willing, I may safely give you the meeting, when I trust my kinsman and
+ you will visit my poor house, where, in despite of my enemies, I can still
+ promise sic cheer as ane Hielandman may gie his friends, and where we will
+ drink a solemn health to a certain D. V., and look to certain affairs
+ whilk I hope to be your aidance in; and I rest, as is wont among
+ gentlemen,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ your servant to command, R. M. C.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was a good deal mortified at the purport of this letter, which seemed to
+ adjourn to a more distant place and date the service which I had hoped to
+ receive from this man Campbell. Still, however, it was some comfort to
+ know that he continued to be in my interest, since without him I could
+ have no hope of recovering my father's papers. I resolved, therefore, to
+ obey his instructions; and, observing all caution before the guests, to
+ take the first good opportunity I could find to procure from the landlady
+ directions how I was to obtain a meeting with this mysterious person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My next business was to seek out Andrew Fairservice, whom I called several
+ times by name, without receiving any answer, surveying the stable all
+ round, at the same time, not without risk of setting the premises on fire,
+ had not the quantity of wet litter and mud so greatly counterbalanced two
+ or three bunches of straw and hay. At length my repeated cries of &ldquo;Andrew
+ Fairservice! Andrew! fool!&mdash;ass! where are you?&rdquo; produced a doleful
+ &ldquo;Here,&rdquo; in a groaning tone, which might have been that of the Brownie
+ itself. Guided by this sound, I advanced to the corner of a shed, where,
+ ensconced in the angle of the wall, behind a barrel full of the feathers
+ of all the fowls which had died in the cause of the public for a month
+ past, I found the manful Andrew; and partly by force, partly by command
+ and exhortation, compelled him forth into the open air. The first words he
+ spoke were, &ldquo;I am an honest lad, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who the devil questions your honesty?&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;or what have we to do
+ with it at present? I desire you to come and attend us at supper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; reiterated Andrew, without apparently understanding what I said to
+ him, &ldquo;I am an honest lad, whatever the Bailie may say to the contrary. I
+ grant the warld and the warld's gear sits ower near my heart whiles, as it
+ does to mony a ane&mdash;But I am an honest lad; and, though I spak o'
+ leaving ye in the muir, yet God knows it was far frae my purpose, but just
+ like idle things folk says when they're driving a bargain, to get it as
+ far to their ain side as they can&mdash;And I like your honour weel for
+ sae young a lad, and I wadna part wi' ye lightly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What the deuce are you driving at now?&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;Has not everything
+ been settled again and again to your satisfaction? And are you to talk of
+ leaving me every hour, without either rhyme or reason?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&mdash;but I was only making fashion before,&rdquo; replied Andrew; &ldquo;but
+ it's come on me in sair earnest now&mdash;Lose or win, I daur gae nae
+ farther wi' your honour; and if ye'll tak my foolish advice, ye'll bide by
+ a broken tryste, rather than gang forward yoursell. I hae a sincere regard
+ for ye, and I'm sure ye'll be a credit to your friends if ye live to saw
+ out your wild aits, and get some mair sense and steadiness&mdash;But I can
+ follow ye nae farther, even if ye suld founder and perish from the way for
+ lack of guidance and counsel. To gang into Rob Roy's country is a mere
+ tempting o' Providence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rob Roy?&rdquo; said I, in some surprise; &ldquo;I know no such person. What new
+ trick is this, Andrew?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's hard,&rdquo; said Andrew&mdash;&ldquo;very hard, that a man canna be believed
+ when he speaks Heaven's truth, just because he's whiles owercome, and
+ tells lees a little when there is necessary occasion. Ye needna ask whae
+ Rob Roy is, the reiving lifter that he is&mdash;God forgie me! I hope
+ naebody hears us&mdash;when ye hae a letter frae him in your pouch. I
+ heard ane o' his gillies bid that auld rudas jaud of a gudewife gie ye
+ that. They thought I didna understand their gibberish; but, though I canna
+ speak it muckle, I can gie a gude guess at what I hear them say&mdash;I
+ never thought to hae tauld ye that, but in a fright a' things come out
+ that suld be keepit in. O, Maister Frank! a' your uncle's follies, and a'
+ your cousin's pliskies, were naething to this! Drink clean cap out, like
+ Sir Hildebrand; begin the blessed morning with brandy sops, like Squire
+ Percy; swagger, like Squire Thorncliff; rin wud amang the lasses, like
+ Squire John; gamble, like Richard; win souls to the Pope and the deevil,
+ like Rashleigh; rive, rant, break the Sabbath, and do the Pope's bidding,
+ like them a' put thegither&mdash;But, merciful Providence! take care o'
+ your young bluid, and gang nae near Rob Roy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrew's alarm was too sincere to permit me to suppose he counterfeited. I
+ contented myself, however, with telling him, that I meant to remain in the
+ alehouse that night, and desired to have the horses well looked after. As
+ to the rest, I charged him to observe the strictest silence upon the
+ subject of his alarm, and he might rely upon it I would not incur any
+ serious danger without due precaution. He followed me with a dejected air
+ into the house, observing between his teeth, &ldquo;Man suld be served afore
+ beast&mdash;I haena had a morsel in my mouth, but the rough legs o' that
+ auld muircock, this haill blessed day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The harmony of the company seemed to have suffered some interruption since
+ my departure, for I found Mr. Galbraith and my friend the Bailie high in
+ dispute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll hear nae sic language,&rdquo; said Mr. Jarvie, as I entered, &ldquo;respecting
+ the Duke o' Argyle and the name o' Campbell. He's a worthy public-spirited
+ nobleman, and a credit to the country, and a friend and benefactor to the
+ trade o' Glasgow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll sae naething against MacCallum More and the Slioch-nan-Diarmid,&rdquo;
+ said the lesser Highlander, laughing. &ldquo;I live on the wrang side of
+ Glencroe to quarrel with Inverara.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our loch ne'er saw the Cawmil lymphads,&rdquo; * said the bigger Highlander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * <i>Lymphads.</i> The galley which the family of Argyle and others of the
+ * Clan Campbell carry in their arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She'll speak her mind and fear naebody&mdash;She doesna value a Cawmil
+ mair as a Cowan, and ye may tell MacCallum More that Allan Iverach said
+ sae&mdash; It's a far cry to Lochow.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Lochow and the adjacent districts formed the original seat of the *
+ Campbells. The expression of a &ldquo;far cry to Lochow&rdquo; was proverbial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Galbraith, on whom the repeated pledges which he had quaffed had
+ produced some influence, slapped his hand on the table with great force,
+ and said, in a stern voice, &ldquo;There's a bloody debt due by that family, and
+ they will pay it one day&mdash;The banes of a loyal and a gallant Grahame
+ hae lang rattled in their coffin for vengeance on thae Dukes of Guile and
+ Lords for Lorn. There ne'er was treason in Scotland but a Cawmil was at
+ the bottom o't; and now that the wrang side's uppermost, wha but the
+ Cawmils for keeping down the right? But this warld winna last lang, and it
+ will be time to sharp the maiden* for shearing o' craigs and thrapples. I
+ hope to see the auld rusty lass linking at a bluidy harst again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * A rude kind of guillotine formerly used in Scotland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For shame, Garschattachin!&rdquo; exclaimed the Bailie; &ldquo;fy for shame, sir! Wad
+ ye say sic things before a magistrate, and bring yoursell into trouble?&mdash;How
+ d'ye think to mainteen your family and satisfy your creditors (mysell and
+ others), if ye gang on in that wild way, which cannot but bring you under
+ the law, to the prejudice of a' that's connected wi' ye?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;D&mdash;n my creditors!&rdquo; retorted the gallant Galbraith, &ldquo;and you if ye
+ be ane o' them! I say there will be a new warld sune&mdash;And we shall
+ hae nae Cawmils cocking their bonnet sae hie, and hounding their dogs
+ where they daurna come themsells, nor protecting thieves, nor murderers,
+ and oppressors, to harry and spoil better men and mair loyal clans than
+ themsells.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bailie had a great mind to have continued the dispute, when the
+ savoury vapour of the broiled venison, which our landlady now placed
+ before us, proved so powerful a mediator, that he betook himself to his
+ trencher with great eagerness, leaving the strangers to carry on the
+ dispute among themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And tat's true,&rdquo; said the taller Highlander&mdash;whose name I found was
+ Stewart&mdash;&ldquo;for we suldna be plagued and worried here wi' meetings to
+ pit down Rob Roy, if the Cawmils didna gie him refutch. I was ane o'
+ thirty o' my ain name&mdash;part Glenfinlas, and part men that came down
+ frae Appine. We shased the MacGregors as ye wad shase rae-deer, till we
+ came into Glenfalloch's country, and the Cawmils raise, and wadna let us
+ pursue nae farder, and sae we lost our labour; but her wad gie twa and a
+ plack to be as near Rob as she was tat day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed to happen very unfortunately, that in every topic of discourse
+ which these warlike gentlemen introduced, my friend the Bailie found some
+ matter of offence. &ldquo;Ye'll forgie me speaking my mind, sir; but ye wad
+ maybe hae gien the best bowl in your bonnet to hae been as far awae frae
+ Rob as ye are e'en now&mdash;Od! my het pleugh-culter wad hae been
+ naething to his claymore.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She had better speak nae mair about her culter, or, by G&mdash;! her will
+ gar her eat her words, and twa handfuls o' cauld steel to drive them ower
+ wi'!&rdquo; And, with a most inauspicious and menacing look, the mountaineer
+ laid his hand on his dagger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We'll hae nae quarrelling, Allan,&rdquo; said his shorter companion; &ldquo;and if
+ the Glasgow gentleman has ony regard for Rob Roy, he'll maybe see him in
+ cauld irons the night, and playing tricks on a tow the morn; for this
+ country has been owre lang plagued wi' him, and his race is near-hand run&mdash;And
+ it's time, Allan, we were ganging to our lads.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hout awa, Inverashalloch,&rdquo; said Galbraith;&mdash;&ldquo;Mind the auld saw, man&mdash;
+ It's a bauld moon, quoth Bennygask&mdash;another pint, quoth Lesley;&mdash;we'll
+ no start for another chappin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hae had chappins eneugh,&rdquo; said Inverashalloch; &ldquo;I'll drink my quart of
+ usquebaugh or brandy wi' ony honest fellow, but the deil a drap mair when
+ I hae wark to do in the morning. And, in my puir thinking, Garschattachin,
+ ye had better be thinking to bring up your horsemen to the Clachan before
+ day, that we may ay start fair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What the deevil are ye in sic a hurry for?&rdquo; said Garschattachin; &ldquo;meat
+ and mass never hindered wark. An it had been my directing, deil a bit o'
+ me wad hae fashed ye to come down the glens to help us. The garrison and
+ our ain horse could hae taen Rob Roy easily enough. There's the hand,&rdquo; he
+ said, holding up his own, &ldquo;should lay him on the green, and never ask a
+ Hielandman o' ye a' for his help.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye might hae loot us bide still where we were, then,&rdquo; said
+ Inverashalloch. &ldquo;I didna come sixty miles without being sent for. But an
+ ye'll hae my opinion, I redd ye keep your mouth better steekit, if ye hope
+ to speed. Shored folk live lang, and sae may him ye ken o'. The way to
+ catch a bird is no to fling your bannet at her. And also thae gentlemen
+ hae heard some things they suldna hae heard, an the brandy hadna been ower
+ bauld for your brain, Major Galbraith. Ye needna cock your hat and bully
+ wi' me, man, for I will not bear it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hae said it,&rdquo; said Galbraith, with a solemn air of drunken gravity,
+ &ldquo;that I will quarrel no more this night either with broadcloth or tartan.
+ When I am off duty I'll quarrel with you or ony man in the Hielands or
+ Lowlands, but not on duty&mdash;no&mdash;no. I wish we heard o' these
+ red-coats. If it had been to do onything against King James, we wad hae
+ seen them lang syne&mdash;but when it's to keep the peace o' the country
+ they can lie as lound as their neighbours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke we heard the measured footsteps of a body of infantry on the
+ march; and an officer, followed by two or three files of soldiers, entered
+ the apartment. He spoke in an English accent, which was very pleasant to
+ my ears, now so long accustomed to the varying brogue of the Highland and
+ Lowland Scotch.&mdash;&ldquo;You are, I suppose, Major Galbraith, of the
+ squadron of Lennox Militia, and these are the two Highland gentlemen with
+ whom I was appointed to meet in this place?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They assented, and invited the officer to take some refreshments, which he
+ declined.&mdash;&ldquo;I have been too late, gentlemen, and am desirous to make
+ up time. I have orders to search for and arrest two persons guilty of
+ treasonable practices.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We'll wash our hands o' that,&rdquo; said Inverashalloch. &ldquo;I came here wi' my
+ men to fight against the red MacGregor that killed my cousin, seven times
+ removed, Duncan MacLaren, in Invernenty;* but I will hae nothing to do
+ touching honest gentlemen that may be gaun through the country on their
+ ain business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * This, as appears from the introductory matter to this Tale, is an
+ anachronism. The slaughter of MacLaren, a retainer of the chief of Appine,
+ by the MacGregors, did not take place till after Rob Roy's death, since it
+ happened in 1736.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor I neither,&rdquo; said Iverach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Galbraith took up the matter more solemnly, and, premising his
+ oration with a hiccup, spoke to the following purpose:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall say nothing against King George, Captain, because, as it happens,
+ my commission may rin in his name&mdash;But one commission being good,
+ sir, does not make another bad; and some think that James may be just as
+ good a name as George. There's the king that is&mdash;and there's the king
+ that suld of right be&mdash;I say, an honest man may and suld be loyal to
+ them both, Captain. But I am of the Lord Lieutenant's opinion for the
+ time, as it becomes a militia officer and a depute-lieutenant&mdash;and
+ about treason and all that, it's lost time to speak of it&mdash;least said
+ is sunest mended.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sorry to see how you have been employing your time, sir,&rdquo; replied
+ the English officer&mdash;as indeed the honest gentleman's reasoning had a
+ strong relish of the liquor he had been drinking&mdash;&ldquo;and I could wish,
+ sir, it had been otherwise on an occasion of this consequence. I would
+ recommend to you to try to sleep for an hour.&mdash;Do these gentlemen
+ belong to your party?&rdquo;&mdash;looking at the Bailie and me, who, engaged in
+ eating our supper, had paid little attention to the officer on his
+ entrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Travellers, sir,&rdquo; said Galbraith&mdash;&ldquo;lawful travellers by sea and
+ land, as the prayer-book hath it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My instructions.&rdquo; said the Captain, taking a light to survey us closer,
+ &ldquo;are to place under arrest an elderly and a young person&mdash;and I think
+ these gentlemen answer nearly the description.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take care what you say, sir,&rdquo; said Mr. Jarvie; &ldquo;it shall not be your red
+ coat nor your laced hat shall protect you, if you put any affront on me.
+ I'se convene ye baith in an action of scandal and false imprisonment&mdash;I
+ am a free burgess and a magistrate o' Glasgow; Nicol Jarvie is my name,
+ sae was my father's afore me&mdash;I am a bailie, be praised for the
+ honour, and my father was a deacon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was a prick-eared cur,&rdquo; said Major Galbraith, &ldquo;and fought agane the
+ King at Bothwell Brigg.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He paid what he ought and what he bought, Mr. Galbraith,&rdquo; said the
+ Bailie, &ldquo;and was an honester man than ever stude on your shanks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no time to attend to all this,&rdquo; said the officer; &ldquo;I must
+ positively detain you, gentlemen, unless you can produce some respectable
+ security that you are loyal subjects.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I desire to be carried before some civil magistrate,&rdquo; said the Bailie&mdash;&ldquo;the
+ sherra or the judge of the bounds;&mdash;I am not obliged to answer every
+ red-coat that speers questions at me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sir, I shall know how to manage you if you are silent&mdash;And
+ you, sir&rdquo; (to me), &ldquo;what may your name be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Francis Osbaldistone, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, a son of Sir Hildebrand Osbaldistone of Northumberland?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; interrupted the Bailie; &ldquo;a son of the great William
+ Osbaldistone of the House of Osbaldistone and Tresham, Crane-Alley,
+ London.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am afraid, sir,&rdquo; said the officer, &ldquo;your name only increases the
+ suspicions against you, and lays me under the necessity of requesting that
+ you will give up what papers you have in charge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I observed the Highlanders look anxiously at each other when this proposal
+ was made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had none,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;to surrender.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The officer commanded me to be disarmed and searched. To have resisted
+ would have been madness. I accordingly gave up my arms, and submitted to a
+ search, which was conducted as civilly as an operation of the kind well
+ could. They found nothing except the note which I had received that night
+ through the hand of the landlady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is different from what I expected,&rdquo; said the officer; &ldquo;but it
+ affords us good grounds for detaining you. Here I find you in written
+ communication with the outlawed robber, Robert MacGregor Campbell, who has
+ been so long the plague of this district&mdash;How do you account for
+ that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spies of Rob!&rdquo; said Inverashalloch. &ldquo;We wad serve them right to strap
+ them up till the neist tree.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are gaun to see after some gear o' our ain, gentlemen,&rdquo; said the
+ Bailie, &ldquo;that's fa'en into his hands by accident&mdash;there's nae law
+ agane a man looking after his ain, I hope?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How did you come by this letter?&rdquo; said the officer, addressing himself to
+ me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could not think of betraying the poor woman who had given it to me, and
+ remained silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know anything of it, fellow?&rdquo; said the officer, looking at Andrew,
+ whose jaws were chattering like a pair of castanets at the threats thrown
+ out by the Highlander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O ay, I ken a' about it&mdash;it was a Hieland loon gied the letter to
+ that lang-tongued jaud the gudewife there; I'll be sworn my maister ken'd
+ naething about it. But he's wilfu' to gang up the hills and speak wi' Rob;
+ and oh, sir, it wad be a charity just to send a wheen o' your red-coats to
+ see him safe back to Glasgow again whether he will or no&mdash;And ye can
+ keep Mr. Jarvie as lang as ye like&mdash;He's responsible enough for ony
+ fine ye may lay on him&mdash;and so's my master for that matter; for me,
+ I'm just a puir gardener lad, and no worth your steering.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe,&rdquo; said the officer, &ldquo;the best thing I can do is to send these
+ persons to the garrison under an escort. They seem to be in immediate
+ correspondence with the enemy, and I shall be in no respect answerable for
+ suffering them to be at liberty. Gentlemen, you will consider yourselves
+ as my prisoners. So soon as dawn approaches, I will send you to a place of
+ security. If you be the persons you describe yourselves, it will soon
+ appear, and you will sustain no great inconvenience from being detained a
+ day or two. I can hear no remonstrances,&rdquo; he continued, turning away from
+ the Bailie, whose mouth was open to address him; &ldquo;the service I am on
+ gives me no time for idle discussions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aweel, aweel, sir,&rdquo; said the Bailie, &ldquo;you're welcome to a tune on your
+ ain fiddle; but see if I dinna gar ye dance till't afore a's dune.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An anxious consultation now took place between the officer and the
+ Highlanders, but carried on in so low a tone, that it was impossible to
+ catch the sense. So soon as it was concluded they all left the house. At
+ their departure, the Bailie thus expressed himself:&mdash;&ldquo;Thae Hielandmen
+ are o' the westland clans, and just as light-handed as their neighbours,
+ an a' tales be true, and yet ye see they hae brought them frae the head o'
+ Argyleshire to make war wi' puir Rob for some auld ill-will that they hae
+ at him and his sirname. And there's the Grahames, and the Buchanans, and
+ the Lennox gentry, a' mounted and in order&mdash;It's weel ken'd their
+ quarrel; and I dinna blame them&mdash;naebody likes to lose his kye. And
+ then there's sodgers, puir things, hoyed out frae the garrison at a'
+ body's bidding&mdash;Puir Rob will hae his hands fu' by the time the sun
+ comes ower the hill. Weel&mdash;it's wrang for a magistrate to be wishing
+ onything agane the course o' justice, but deil o' me an I wad break my
+ heart to hear that Rob had gien them a' their paiks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0013" id="AlinkCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER THIRTEEN.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;General,
+ Hear me, and mark me well, and look upon me
+ Directly in my face&mdash;my woman's face&mdash;
+ See if one fear, one shadow of a terror,
+ One paleness dare appear, but from my anger,
+ To lay hold on your mercies.
+ Bonduca.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We were permitted to slumber out the remainder of the night in the best
+ manner that the miserable accommodations of the alehouse permitted. The
+ Bailie, fatigued with his journey and the subsequent scenes&mdash;less
+ interested also in the event of our arrest, which to him could only be a
+ matter of temporary inconvenience&mdash;perhaps less nice than habit had
+ rendered me about the cleanliness or decency of his couch,&mdash;tumbled
+ himself into one of the cribs which I have already described, and soon was
+ heard to snore soundly. A broken sleep, snatched by intervals, while I
+ rested my head upon the table, was my only refreshment. In the course of
+ the night I had occasion to observe that there seemed to be some doubt and
+ hesitation in the motions of the soldiery. Men were sent out, as if to
+ obtain intelligence, and returned apparently without bringing any
+ satisfactory information to their commanding officer. He was obviously
+ eager and anxious, and again despatched small parties of two or three men,
+ some of whom, as I could understand from what the others whispered to each
+ other, did not return again to the Clachan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The morning had broken, when a corporal and two men rushed into the hut,
+ dragging after them, in a sort of triumph, a Highlander, whom I
+ immediately recognised as my acquaintance the ex-turnkey. The Bailie, who
+ started up at the noise with which they entered, immediately made the same
+ discovery, and exclaimed&mdash;&ldquo;Mercy on us! they hae grippit the puir
+ creature Dougal.&mdash;Captain, I will put in bail&mdash;sufficient bail,
+ for that Dougal creature.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this offer, dictated undoubtedly by a grateful recollection of the late
+ interference of the Highlander in his behalf, the Captain only answered by
+ requesting Mr. Jarvie to &ldquo;mind his own affairs, and remember that he was
+ himself for the present a prisoner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I take you to witness, Mr. Osbaldistone,&rdquo; said the Bailie, who was
+ probably better acquainted with the process in civil than in military
+ cases, &ldquo;that he has refused sufficient bail. It's my opinion that the
+ creature Dougal will have a good action of wrongous imprisonment and
+ damages agane him, under the Act seventeen hundred and one, and I'll see
+ the creature righted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The officer, whose name I understood was Thornton, paying no attention to
+ the Bailie's threats or expostulations, instituted a very close inquiry
+ into Dougal's life and conversation, and compelled him to admit, though
+ with apparent reluctance, the successive facts,&mdash;that he knew Rob Roy
+ MacGregor&mdash;that he had seen him within these twelve months&mdash;within
+ these six months&mdash;within this month&mdash;within this week; in fine,
+ that he had parted from him only an hour ago. All this detail came like
+ drops of blood from the prisoner, and was, to all appearance, only
+ extorted by the threat of a halter and the next tree, which Captain
+ Thornton assured him should be his doom, if he did not give direct and
+ special information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, my friend,&rdquo; said the officer, &ldquo;you will please inform me how
+ many men your master has with him at present.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dougal looked in every direction except at the querist, and began to
+ answer, &ldquo;She canna just be sure about that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look at me, you Highland dog,&rdquo; said the officer, &ldquo;and remember your life
+ depends on your answer. How many rogues had that outlawed scoundrel with
+ him when you left him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ou, no aboon sax rogues when I was gane.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And where are the rest of his banditti?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gane wi' the Lieutenant agane ta westland carles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Against the westland clans?&rdquo; said the Captain. &ldquo;Umph&mdash;that is likely
+ enough; and what rogue's errand were you despatched upon?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just to see what your honour and ta gentlemen red-coats were doing doun
+ here at ta Clachan.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The creature will prove fause-hearted, after a',&rdquo; said the Bailie, who by
+ this time had planted himself close behind me; &ldquo;it's lucky I didna pit
+ mysell to expenses anent him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, my friend,&rdquo; said the Captain, &ldquo;let us understand each other. You
+ have confessed yourself a spy, and should string up to the next tree&mdash;But
+ come, if you will do me one good turn, I will do you another. You, Donald&mdash;you
+ shall just, in the way of kindness, carry me and a small party to the
+ place where you left your master, as I wish to speak a few words with him
+ on serious affairs; and I'll let you go about your business, and give you
+ five guineas to boot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oigh! oigh!&rdquo; exclaimed Dougal, in the extremity of distress and
+ perplexity; &ldquo;she canna do tat&mdash;she canna do tat; she'll rather be
+ hanged.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hanged, then, you shall be, my friend&rdquo; said the officer; &ldquo;and your blood
+ be upon your own head. Corporal Cramp, do you play Provost-Marshal&mdash;away
+ with him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The corporal had confronted poor Dougal for some time, ostentatiously
+ twisting a piece of cord which he had found in the house into the form of
+ a halter. He now threw it about the culprit's neck, and, with the
+ assistance of two soldiers, had dragged Dougal as far as the door, when,
+ overcome with the terror of immediate death, he exclaimed, &ldquo;Shentlemans,
+ stops&mdash;stops! She'll do his honour's bidding&mdash;stops!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Awa' wi' the creature!&rdquo; said the Bailie, &ldquo;he deserves hanging mair now
+ than ever; awa' wi' him, corporal. Why dinna ye tak him awa'?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's my belief and opinion, honest gentleman,&rdquo; said the corporal, &ldquo;that
+ if you were going to be hanged yourself, you would be in no such d&mdash;d
+ hurry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This by-dialogue prevented my hearing what passed between the prisoner and
+ Captain Thornton; but I heard the former snivel out, in a very subdued
+ tone, &ldquo;And ye'll ask her to gang nae farther than just to show ye where
+ the MacGregor is?&mdash;Ohon! ohon!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Silence your howling, you rascal&mdash;No; I give you my word I will ask
+ you to go no farther.&mdash;Corporal, make the men fall in, in front of
+ the houses. Get out these gentlemen's horses; we must carry them with us.
+ I cannot spare any men to guard them here. Come, my lads, get under arms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The soldiers bustled about, and were ready to move. We were led out, along
+ with Dougal, in the capacity of prisoners. As we left the hut, I heard our
+ companion in captivity remind the Captain of &ldquo;ta foive kuineas.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here they are for you,&rdquo; said the officer, putting gold into his hand;
+ &ldquo;but observe, that if you attempt to mislead me, I will blow your brains
+ out with my own hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The creature,&rdquo; said the Bailie, &ldquo;is waur than I judged him&mdash;it is a
+ warldly and a perfidious creature. O the filthy lucre of gain that men
+ gies themsells up to! My father the deacon used to say, the penny siller
+ slew mair souls than the naked sword slew bodies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The landlady now approached, and demanded payment of her reckoning,
+ including all that had been quaffed by Major Galbraith and his Highland
+ friends. The English officer remonstrated, but Mrs. MacAlpine declared, if
+ &ldquo;she hadna trusted to his honour's name being used in their company, she
+ wad never hae drawn them a stoup o' liquor; for Mr. Galbraith, she might
+ see him again, or she might no, but weel did she wot she had sma' chance
+ of seeing her siller&mdash;and she was a puir widow, had naething but her
+ custom to rely on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Thornton put a stop to her remonstrances by paying the charge,
+ which was only a few English shillings, though the amount sounded very
+ formidable in Scottish denominations. The generous officer would have
+ included Mr. Jarvie and me in this general acquittance; but the Bailie,
+ disregarding an intimation from the landlady to &ldquo;make as muckle of the
+ Inglishers as we could, for they were sure to gie us plague eneugh,&rdquo; went
+ into a formal accounting respecting our share of the reckoning, and paid
+ it accordingly. The Captain took the opportunity to make us some slight
+ apology for detaining us. &ldquo;If we were loyal and peaceable subjects,&rdquo; he
+ said, &ldquo;we would not regret being stopt for a day, when it was essential to
+ the king's service; if otherwise, he was acting according to his duty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were compelled to accept an apology which it would have served no
+ purpose to refuse, and we sallied out to attend him on his march.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I shall never forget the delightful sensation with which I exchanged the
+ dark, smoky, smothering atmosphere of the Highland hut, in which we had
+ passed the night so uncomfortably, for the refreshing fragrance of the
+ morning air, and the glorious beams of the rising sun, which, from a
+ tabernacle of purple and golden clouds, were darted full on such a scene
+ of natural romance and beauty as had never before greeted my eyes. To the
+ left lay the valley, down which the Forth wandered on its easterly course,
+ surrounding the beautiful detached hill, with all its garland of woods. On
+ the right, amid a profusion of thickets, knolls, and crags, lay the bed of
+ a broad mountain lake, lightly curled into tiny waves by the breath of the
+ morning breeze, each glittering in its course under the influence of the
+ sunbeams. High hills, rocks, and banks, waving with natural forests of
+ birch and oak, formed the borders of this enchanting sheet of water; and,
+ as their leaves rustled to the wind and twinkled in the sun, gave to the
+ depth of solitude a sort of life and vivacity. Man alone seemed to be
+ placed in a state of inferiority, in a scene where all the ordinary
+ features of nature were raised and exalted. The miserable little <i>bourocks,</i>
+ as the Bailie termed them, of which about a dozen formed the village
+ called the Clachan of Aberfoil, were composed of loose stones, cemented by
+ clay instead of mortar, and thatched by turfs, laid rudely upon rafters
+ formed of native and unhewn birches and oaks from the woods around. The
+ roofs approached the ground so nearly, that Andrew Fairservice observed we
+ might have ridden over the village the night before, and never found out
+ we were near it, unless our horses' feet had &ldquo;gane through the riggin'.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From all we could see, Mrs. MacAlpine's house, miserable as were the
+ quarters it afforded, was still by far the best in the hamlet; and I dare
+ say (if my description gives you any curiosity to see it) you will hardly
+ find it much improved at the present day, for the Scotch are not a people
+ who speedily admit innovation, even when it comes in the shape of
+ improvement.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Note I. Clachan of Aberfoil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inhabitants of these miserable dwellings were disturbed by the noise
+ of our departure; and as our party of about twenty soldiers drew up in
+ rank before marching off, we were reconnoitred by many a beldam from the
+ half-opened door of her cottage. As these sibyls thrust forth their grey
+ heads, imperfectly covered with close caps of flannel, and showed their
+ shrivelled brows, and long skinny arms, with various gestures, shrugs, and
+ muttered expressions in Gaelic addressed to each other, my imagination
+ recurred to the witches of Macbeth, and I imagined I read in the features
+ of these crones the malevolence of the weird sisters. The little children
+ also, who began to crawl forth, some quite naked, and others very
+ imperfectly covered with tatters of tartan stuff, clapped their tiny
+ hands, and grinned at the English soldiers, with an expression of national
+ hate and malignity which seemed beyond their years. I remarked
+ particularly that there were no men, nor so much as a boy of ten or twelve
+ years old, to be seen among the inhabitants of a village which seemed
+ populous in proportion to its extent; and the idea certainly occurred to
+ me, that we were likely to receive from them, in the course of our
+ journey, more effectual tokens of ill-will than those which lowered on the
+ visages, and dictated the murmurs, of the women and children. It was not
+ until we commenced our march that the malignity of the elder persons of
+ the community broke forth into expressions. The last file of men had left
+ the village, to pursue a small broken track, formed by the sledges in
+ which the natives transported their peats and turfs, and which led through
+ the woods that fringed the lower end of the lake, when a shrilly sound of
+ female exclamation broke forth, mixed with the screams of children, the
+ whooping of boys, and the clapping of hands, with which the Highland dames
+ enforce their notes, whether of rage or lamentation. I asked Andrew, who
+ looked as pale as death, what all this meant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I doubt we'll ken that ower sune,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Means? It means that the
+ Highland wives are cursing and banning the red-coats, and wishing ill-luck
+ to them, and ilka ane that ever spoke the Saxon tongue. I have heard wives
+ flyte in England and Scotland&mdash;it's nae marvel to hear them flyte ony
+ gate; but sic ill-scrapit tongues as thae Highland carlines'&mdash;and sic
+ grewsome wishes, that men should be slaughtered like sheep&mdash;and that
+ they may lapper their hands to the elbows in their heart's blude&mdash;and
+ that they suld dee the death of Walter Cuming of Guiyock,* wha hadna as
+ muckle o' him left thegither as would supper a messan-dog&mdash;sic awsome
+ language as that I ne'er heard out o' a human thrapple;&mdash;and, unless
+ the deil wad rise amang them to gie them a lesson, I thinkna that their
+ talent at cursing could be amended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * A great feudal oppressor, who, riding on some cruel purpose through the
+ forest of Guiyock, was thrown from his horse, and his foot being caught in
+ the stirrup, was dragged along by the frightened animal till he was torn
+ to pieces. The expression, &ldquo;Walter of Guiyock's curse,&rdquo; is proverbial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The warst o't is, they bid us aye gang up the loch, and see what we'll
+ land in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adding Andrew's information to what I had myself observed, I could scarce
+ doubt that some attack was meditated upon our party. The road, as we
+ advanced, seemed to afford every facility for such an unpleasant
+ interruption. At first it winded apart from the lake through marshy meadow
+ ground, overgrown with copsewood, now traversing dark and close thickets
+ which would have admitted an ambuscade to be sheltered within a few yards
+ of our line of march, and frequently crossing rough mountain torrents,
+ some of which took the soldiers up to the knees, and ran with such
+ violence, that their force could only be stemmed by the strength of two or
+ three men holding fast by each other's arms. It certainly appeared to me,
+ though altogether unacquainted with military affairs, that a sort of
+ half-savage warriors, as I had heard the Highlanders asserted to be,
+ might, in such passes as these, attack a party of regular forces with
+ great advantage. The Bailie's good sense and shrewd observation had led
+ him to the same conclusion, as I understood from his requesting to speak
+ with the captain, whom he addressed nearly in the following terms:&mdash;
+ &ldquo;Captain, it's no to fleech ony favour out o' ye, for I scorn it&mdash;and
+ it's under protest that I reserve my action and pleas of oppression and
+ wrongous imprisonment;&mdash;but, being a friend to King George and his
+ army, I take the liberty to speer&mdash;Dinna ye think ye might tak a
+ better time to gang up this glen? If ye are seeking Rob Roy, he's ken'd to
+ be better than half a hunder men strong when he's at the fewest; an if he
+ brings in the Glengyle folk, and the Glenfinlas and Balquhidder lads, he
+ may come to gie you your kail through the reek; and it's my sincere
+ advice, as a king's friend, ye had better tak back again to the Clachan,
+ for thae women at Aberfoil are like the scarts and seamaws at the Cumries&mdash;there's
+ aye foul weather follows their skirting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make yourself easy, sir,&rdquo; replied Captain Thornton; &ldquo;I am in the
+ execution of my orders. And as you say you are a friend to King George,
+ you will be glad to learn that it is impossible that this gang of
+ ruffians, whose license has disturbed the country so long, can escape the
+ measures now taken to suppress them. The horse squadron of militia,
+ commanded by Major Galbraith, is already joined by two or more troops of
+ cavalry, which will occupy all the lower passes of this wild country;
+ three hundred Highlanders, under the two gentlemen you saw at the inn, are
+ in possession of the upper part, and various strong parties from the
+ garrison are securing the hills and glens in different directions. Our
+ last accounts of Rob Roy correspond with what this fellow has confessed,
+ that, finding himself surrounded on all sides, he had dismissed the
+ greater part of his followers, with the purpose either of lying concealed,
+ or of making his escape through his superior knowledge of the passes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dinna ken,&rdquo; said the Bailie; &ldquo;there's mair brandy than brains in
+ Garschattachin's head this morning&mdash;And I wadna, an I were you,
+ Captain, rest my main dependence on the Hielandmen&mdash;hawks winna pike
+ out hawks' een. They may quarrel among themsells, and gie ilk ither ill
+ names, and maybe a slash wi' a claymore; but they are sure to join in the
+ lang run, against a' civilised folk, that wear breeks on their hinder
+ ends, and hae purses in their pouches.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apparently these admonitions were not altogether thrown away on Captain
+ Thornton. He reformed his line of march, commanded his soldiers to unsling
+ their firelocks and fix their bayonets, and formed an advanced and
+ rear-guard, each consisting of a non-commissioned officer and two
+ soldiers, who received strict orders to keep an alert look-out. Dougal
+ underwent another and very close examination, in which he steadfastly
+ asserted the truth of what he had before affirmed; and being rebuked on
+ account of the suspicious and dangerous appearance of the route by which
+ he was guiding them, he answered with a sort of testiness that seemed very
+ natural, &ldquo;Her nainsell didna mak ta road; an shentlemans likit grand
+ roads, she suld hae pided at Glasco.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this passed off well enough, and we resumed our progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our route, though leading towards the lake, had hitherto been so much
+ shaded by wood, that we only from time to time obtained a glimpse of that
+ beautiful sheet of water. But the road now suddenly emerged from the
+ forest ground, and, winding close by the margin of the loch, afforded us a
+ full view of its spacious mirror, which now, the breeze having totally
+ subsided, reflected in still magnificence the high dark heathy mountains,
+ huge grey rocks, and shaggy banks, by which it is encircled. The hills now
+ sunk on its margin so closely, and were so broken and precipitous, as to
+ afford no passage except just upon the narrow line of the track which we
+ occupied, and which was overhung with rocks, from which we might have been
+ destroyed merely by rolling down stones, without much possibility of
+ offering resistance. Add to this, that, as the road winded round every
+ promontory and bay which indented the lake, there was rarely a possibility
+ of seeing a hundred yards before us. Our commander appeared to take some
+ alarm at the nature of the pass in which he was engaged, which displayed
+ itself in repeated orders to his soldiers to be on the alert, and in many
+ threats of instant death to Dougal, if he should be found to have led them
+ into danger. Dougal received these threats with an air of stupid
+ impenetrability, which might arise either from conscious innocence, or
+ from dogged resolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If shentlemans were seeking ta Red Gregarach,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;to be sure they
+ couldna expect to find her without some wee danger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as the Highlander uttered these words, a halt was made by the
+ corporal commanding the advance, who sent back one of the file who formed
+ it, to tell the Captain that the path in front was occupied by
+ Highlanders, stationed on a commanding point of particular difficulty.
+ Almost at the same instant a soldier from the rear came to say, that they
+ heard the sound of a bagpipe in the woods through which we had just
+ passed. Captain Thornton, a man of conduct as well as courage, instantly
+ resolved to force the pass in front, without waiting till he was assailed
+ from the rear; and, assuring his soldiers that the bagpipes which they
+ heard were those of the friendly Highlanders who were advancing to their
+ assistance, he stated to them the importance of advancing and securing Rob
+ Roy, if possible, before these auxiliaries should come up to divide with
+ them the honour, as well as the reward which was placed on the head of
+ this celebrated freebooter. He therefore ordered the rearguard to join the
+ centre, and both to close up to the advance, doubling his files so as to
+ occupy with his column the whole practicable part of the road, and to
+ present such a front as its breadth admitted. Dougal, to whom he said in a
+ whisper, &ldquo;You dog, if you have deceived me, you shall die for it!&rdquo; was
+ placed in the centre, between two grenadiers, with positive orders to
+ shoot him if he attempted an escape. The same situation was assigned to
+ us, as being the safest, and Captain Thornton, taking his half-pike from
+ the soldier who carried it, placed himself at the head of his little
+ detachment, and gave the word to march forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The party advanced with the firmness of English soldiers. Not so Andrew
+ Fairservice, who was frightened out of his wits; and not so, if truth must
+ be told, either the Bailie or I myself, who, without feeling the same
+ degree of trepidation, could not with stoical indifference see our lives
+ exposed to hazard in a quarrel with which we had no concern. But there was
+ neither time for remonstrance nor remedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We approached within about twenty yards of the spot where the advanced
+ guard had seen some appearance of an enemy. It was one of those
+ promontories which run into the lake, and round the base of which the road
+ had hitherto winded in the manner I have described. In the present case,
+ however, the path, instead of keeping the water's edge, sealed the
+ promontory by one or two rapid zigzags, carried in a broken track along
+ the precipitous face of a slaty grey rock, which would otherwise have been
+ absolutely inaccessible. On the top of this rock, only to be approached by
+ a road so broken, so narrow, and so precarious, the corporal declared he
+ had seen the bonnets and long-barrelled guns of several mountaineers,
+ apparently couched among the long heath and brushwood which crested the
+ eminence. Captain Thornton ordered him to move forward with three files,
+ to dislodge the supposed ambuscade, while, at a more slow but steady pace,
+ he advanced to his support with the rest of his party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attack which he meditated was prevented by the unexpected apparition
+ of a female upon the summit of the rock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stand!&rdquo; she said, with a commanding tone, &ldquo;and tell me what ye seek in
+ MacGregor's country?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have seldom seen a finer or more commanding form than this woman. She
+ might be between the term of forty and fifty years, and had a countenance
+ which must once have been of a masculine cast of beauty; though now,
+ imprinted with deep lines by exposure to rough weather, and perhaps by the
+ wasting influence of grief and passion, its features were only strong,
+ harsh, and expressive. She wore her plaid, not drawn around her head and
+ shoulders, as is the fashion of the women in Scotland, but disposed around
+ her body as the Highland soldiers wear theirs. She had a man's bonnet,
+ with a feather in it, an unsheathed sword in her hand, and a pair of
+ pistols at her girdle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's Helen Campbell, Rob's wife,&rdquo; said the Bailie, in a whisper of
+ considerable alarm; &ldquo;and there will be broken heads amang us or it's
+ lang.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What seek ye here?&rdquo; she asked again of Captain Thornton, who had himself
+ advanced to reconnoitre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We seek the outlaw, Rob Roy MacGregor Campbell,&rdquo; answered the officer,
+ &ldquo;and make no war on women; therefore offer no vain opposition to the
+ king's troops, and assure yourself of civil treatment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; retorted the Amazon, &ldquo;I am no stranger to your tender mercies. Ye
+ have left me neither name nor fame&mdash;my mother's bones will shrink
+ aside in their grave when mine are laid beside them&mdash;Ye have left me
+ neither house nor hold, blanket nor bedding, cattle to feed us, or flocks
+ to clothe us&mdash;Ye have taken from us all&mdash;all!&mdash;The very
+ name of our ancestors have ye taken away, and now ye come for our lives.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I seek no man's life,&rdquo; replied the Captain; &ldquo;I only execute my orders. If
+ you are alone, good woman, you have nought to fear&mdash;if there are any
+ with you so rash as to offer useless resistance, their own blood be on
+ their own heads. Move forward, sergeant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forward! march!&rdquo; said the non-commissioned officer. &ldquo;Huzza, my boys, for
+ Rob Roy's head and a purse of gold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He quickened his pace into a run, followed by the six soldiers; but as
+ they attained the first traverse of the ascent, the flash of a dozen of
+ firelocks from various parts of the pass parted in quick succession and
+ deliberate aim. The sergeant, shot through the body, still struggled to
+ gain the ascent, raised himself by his hands to clamber up the face of the
+ rock, but relaxed his grasp, after a desperate effort, and falling, rolled
+ from the face of the cliff into the deep lake, where he perished. Of the
+ soldiers, three fell, slain or disabled; the others retreated on their
+ main body, all more or less wounded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Grenadiers, to the front!&rdquo; said Captain Thornton.&mdash;You are to
+ recollect, that in those days this description of soldiers actually
+ carried that destructive species of firework from which they derive their
+ name. The four grenadiers moved to the front accordingly. The officer
+ commanded the rest of the party to be ready to support them, and only
+ saying to us, &ldquo;Look to your safety, gentlemen,&rdquo; gave, in rapid succession,
+ the word to the grenadiers&mdash;&ldquo;Open your pouches&mdash;handle your
+ grenades&mdash;blow your matches&mdash;fall on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole advanced with a shout, headed by Captain Thornton,&mdash;the
+ grenadiers preparing to throw their grenades among the bushes where the
+ ambuscade lay, and the musketeers to support them by an instant and close
+ assault. Dougal, forgotten in the scuffle, wisely crept into the thicket
+ which overhung that part of the road where we had first halted, which he
+ ascended with the activity of a wild cat. I followed his example,
+ instinctively recollecting that the fire of the Highlanders would sweep
+ the open track. I clambered until out of breath; for a continued
+ spattering fire, in which every shot was multiplied by a thousand echoes,
+ the hissing of the kindled fusees of the grenades, and the successive
+ explosion of those missiles, mingled with the huzzas of the soldiers, and
+ the yells and cries of their Highland antagonists, formed a contrast which
+ added&mdash;I do not shame to own it&mdash;wings to my desire to reach a
+ place of safety. The difficulties of the ascent soon increased so much,
+ that I despaired of reaching Dougal, who seemed to swing himself from rock
+ to rock, and stump to stump, with the facility of a squirrel, and I turned
+ down my eyes to see what had become of my other companions. Both were
+ brought to a very awkward standstill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bailie, to whom I suppose fear had given a temporary share of agility,
+ had ascended about twenty feet from the path, when his foot slipping, as
+ he straddled from one huge fragment of rock to another, he would have
+ slumbered with his father the deacon, whose acts and words he was so fond
+ of quoting, but for a projecting branch of a ragged thorn, which, catching
+ hold of the skirts of his riding-coat, supported him in mid-air, where he
+ dangled not unlike to the sign of the Golden Fleece over the door of a
+ mercer in the Trongate of his native city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Andrew Fairservice, he had advanced with better success, until he
+ had attained the top of a bare cliff, which, rising above the wood,
+ exposed him, at least in his own opinion, to all the dangers of the
+ neighbouring skirmish, while, at the same time, it was of such a
+ precipitous and impracticable nature, that he dared neither to advance nor
+ retreat. Footing it up and down upon the narrow space which the top of the
+ cliff afforded (very like a fellow at a country-fair dancing upon a
+ trencher), he roared for mercy in Gaelic and English alternately,
+ according to the side on which the scale of victory seemed to predominate,
+ while his exclamations were only answered by the groans of the Bailie, who
+ suffered much, not only from apprehension, but from the pendulous posture
+ in which he hung suspended by the loins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On perceiving the Bailie's precarious situation, my first idea was to
+ attempt to render him assistance; but this was impossible without the
+ concurrence of Andrew, whom neither sign, nor entreaty, nor command, nor
+ expostulation, could inspire with courage to adventure the descent from
+ his painful elevation, where, like an unskilful and obnoxious minister of
+ state, unable to escape from the eminence to which he had presumptuously
+ ascended, he continued to pour forth piteous prayers for mercy, which no
+ one heard, and to skip to and fro, writhing his body into all possible
+ antic shapes to avoid the balls which he conceived to be whistling around
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few minutes this cause of terror ceased, for the fire, at first so
+ well sustained, now sunk at once&mdash;a sure sign that the conflict was
+ concluded. To gain some spot from which I could see how the day had gone
+ was now my object, in order to appeal to the mercy of the victors, who, I
+ trusted (whichever side might be gainers), would not suffer the honest
+ Bailie to remain suspended, like the coffin of Mahomet, between heaven and
+ earth, without lending a hand to disengage him. At length, by dint of
+ scrambling, I found a spot which commanded a view of the field of battle.
+ It was indeed ended; and, as my mind already augured, from the place and
+ circumstances attending the contest, it had terminated in the defeat of
+ Captain Thornton. I saw a party of Highlanders in the act of disarming
+ that officer, and the scanty remainder of his party. They consisted of
+ about twelve men most of whom were wounded, who, surrounded by treble
+ their number, and without the power either to advance or retreat, exposed
+ to a murderous and well-aimed fire, which they had no means of returning
+ with effect, had at length laid down their arms by the order of their
+ officer, when he saw that the road in his rear was occupied, and that
+ protracted resistance would be only wasting the lives of his brave
+ followers. By the Highlanders, who fought under cover, the victory was
+ cheaply bought, at the expense of one man slain and two wounded by the
+ grenades. All this I learned afterwards. At present I only comprehended
+ the general result of the day, from seeing the English officer, whose face
+ was covered with blood, stripped of his hat and arms, and his men, with
+ sullen and dejected countenances which marked their deep regret, enduring,
+ from the wild and martial figures who surrounded them, the severe measures
+ to which the laws of war subject the vanquished for security of the
+ victors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0014" id="AlinkCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER FOURTEEN.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Woe to the vanquished!&rdquo; was stern Brenno's word,
+ When sunk proud Rome beneath the Gallic sword&mdash;
+ &ldquo;Woe to the vanquished!&rdquo; when his massive blade
+ Bore down the scale against her ransom weigh'd;
+ And on the field of foughten battle still,
+ Woe knows no limits save the victor's will.
+ The Gaulliad.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I anxiously endeavoured to distinguish Dougal among the victors. I had
+ little doubt that the part he had played was assumed, on purpose to lead
+ the English officer into the defile, and I could not help admiring the
+ address with which the ignorant, and apparently half-brutal savage, had
+ veiled his purpose, and the affected reluctance with which he had suffered
+ to be extracted from him the false information which it must have been his
+ purpose from the beginning to communicate. I foresaw we should incur some
+ danger on approaching the victors in the first flush of their success,
+ which was not unstained with cruelty; for one or two of the soldiers,
+ whose wounds prevented them from rising, were poniarded by the victors, or
+ rather by some ragged Highland boys who had mingled with them. I
+ concluded, therefore, it would be unsafe to present ourselves without some
+ mediator; and as Campbell, whom I now could not but identify with the
+ celebrated freebooter Rob Roy, was nowhere to be seen, I resolved to claim
+ the protection of his emissary, Dougal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After gazing everywhere in vain, I at length retraced my steps to see what
+ assistance I could individually render to my unlucky friend, when, to my
+ great joy, I saw Mr. Jarvie delivered from his state of suspense; and
+ though very black in the face, and much deranged in the garments, safely
+ seated beneath the rock, in front of which he had been so lately
+ suspended. I hastened to join him and offer my congratulations, which he
+ was at first far from receiving in the spirit of cordiality with which
+ they were offered. A heavy fit of coughing scarce permitted him breath
+ enough to express the broken hints which he threw out against my
+ sincerity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uh! uh! uh! uh!&mdash;they say a friend&mdash;uh! uh!&mdash;a friend
+ sticketh closer than a brither&mdash;uh! uh! uh! When I came up here,
+ Maister Osbaldistone, to this country, cursed of God and man&mdash;uh! uh&mdash;Heaven
+ forgie me for swearing&mdash;on nae man's errand but yours, d'ye think it
+ was fair&mdash;uh! uh! uh!&mdash;to leave me, first, to be shot or drowned
+ atween red-wad Highlanders and red-coats; and next to be hung up between
+ heaven and earth, like an auld potato-bogle, without sae muckle as trying&mdash;uh!
+ uh!&mdash;sae muckle as trying to relieve me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I made a thousand apologies, and laboured so hard to represent the
+ impossibility of my affording him relief by my own unassisted exertions,
+ that at length I succeeded, and the Bailie, who was as placable as hasty
+ in his temper, extended his favour to me once more. I next took the
+ liberty of asking him how he had contrived to extricate himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Me extricate! I might hae hung there till the day of judgment or I could
+ hae helped mysell, wi' my head hinging down on the tae side, and my heels
+ on the tother, like the yarn-scales in the weigh-house. It was the
+ creature Dougal that extricated me, as he did yestreen; he cuttit aff the
+ tails o' my coat wi' his durk, and another gillie and him set me on my
+ legs as cleverly as if I had never been aff them. But to see what a thing
+ gude braid claith is! Had I been in ony o' your rotten French camlets now,
+ or your drab-de-berries, it would hae screeded like an auld rag wi' sic a
+ weight as mine. But fair fa' the weaver that wrought the weft o't&mdash;I
+ swung and bobbit yonder as safe as a gabbart* that's moored by a three-ply
+ cable at the Broomielaw.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * A kind of lighter used in the river Clyde,&mdash;probably from the
+ French * <i>abare.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I now inquired what had become of his preserver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The creature,&rdquo; so he continued to call the Highlandman, &ldquo;contrived to let
+ me ken there wad be danger in gaun near the leddy till he came back, and
+ bade me stay here. I am o' the mind,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;that he's seeking
+ after you&mdash;it's a considerate creature&mdash;and troth, I wad swear
+ he was right about the leddy, as he ca's her, too&mdash;Helen Campbell was
+ nane o' the maist douce maidens, nor meekest wives neither, and folk say
+ that Rob himsell stands in awe o' her. I doubt she winna ken me, for it's
+ mony years since we met&mdash;I am clear for waiting for the Dougal
+ creature or we gang near her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I signified my acquiescence in this reasoning; but it was not the will of
+ fate that day that the Bailie's prudence should profit himself or any one
+ else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrew Fairservice, though he had ceased to caper on the pinnacle upon the
+ cessation of the firing, which had given occasion for his whimsical
+ exercise, continued, as perched on the top of an exposed cliff, too
+ conspicuous an object to escape the sharp eyes of the Highlanders, when
+ they had time to look a little around them. We were apprized he was
+ discovered, by a wild and loud halloo set up among the assembled victors,
+ three or four of whom instantly plunged into the copsewood, and ascended
+ the rocky side of the hill in different directions towards the place where
+ they had discovered this whimsical apparition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those who arrived first within gunshot of poor Andrew, did not trouble
+ themselves to offer him any assistance in the ticklish posture of his
+ affairs, but levelling their long Spanish-barrelled guns, gave him to
+ understand, by signs which admitted of no misconstruction, that he must
+ contrive to come down and submit himself to their mercy, or to be marked
+ at from beneath, like a regimental target set up for ball-practice. With
+ such a formidable hint for venturous exertion, Andrew Fairservice could no
+ longer hesitate; the more imminent peril overcame his sense of that which
+ seemed less inevitable, and he began to descend the cliff at all risks,
+ clutching to the ivy and oak stumps, and projecting fragments of rock,
+ with an almost feverish anxiety, and never failing, as circumstances left
+ him a hand at liberty, to extend it to the plaided gentry below in an
+ attitude of supplication, as if to deprecate the discharge of their
+ levelled firearms. In a word, the fellow, under the influence of a
+ counteracting motive for terror, achieved a safe descent from his perilous
+ eminence, which, I verily believe, nothing but the fear of instant death
+ could have moved him to attempt. The awkward mode of Andrew's descent
+ greatly amused the Highlanders below, who fired a shot or two while he was
+ engaged in it, without the purpose of injuring him, as I believe, but
+ merely to enhance the amusement they derived from his extreme terror, and
+ the superlative exertions of agility to which it excited him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length he attained firm and comparatively level ground&mdash;or rather,
+ to speak more correctly, his foot slipping at the last point of descent,
+ he fell on the earth at his full length, and was raised by the assistance
+ of the Highlanders, who stood to receive him, and who, ere he gained his
+ legs, stripped him not only of the whole contents of his pockets, but of
+ periwig, hat, coat, doublet, stockings, and shoes, performing the feat
+ with such admirable celerity, that, although he fell on his back a
+ well-clothed and decent burgher-seeming serving-man, he arose a forked,
+ uncased, bald-pated, beggarly-looking scarecrow. Without respect to the
+ pain which his undefended toes experienced from the sharp encounter of the
+ rocks over which they hurried him, those who had detected Andrew proceeded
+ to drag him downward towards the road through all the intervening
+ obstacles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the course of their descent, Mr. Jarvie and I became exposed to their
+ lynx-eyed observation, and instantly half-a-dozen of armed Highlanders
+ thronged around us, with drawn dirks and swords pointed at our faces and
+ throats, and cocked pistols presented against our bodies. To have offered
+ resistance would have been madness, especially as we had no weapons
+ capable of supporting such a demonstration. We therefore submitted to our
+ fate; and with great roughness on the part of those who assisted at our
+ toilette, were in the act of being reduced to as unsophisticated a state
+ (to use King Lear's phrase) as the plume-less biped Andrew Fairservice,
+ who stood shivering between fear and cold at a few yards' distance. Good
+ chance, however, saved us from this extremity of wretchedness; for, just
+ as I had yielded up my cravat (a smart Steinkirk, by the way, and richly
+ laced), and the Bailie had been disrobed of the fragments of his
+ riding-coat&mdash;enter Dougal, and the scene was changed. By a high tone
+ of expostulation, mixed with oaths and threats, as far as I could
+ conjecture the tenor of his language from the violence of his gestures, he
+ compelled the plunderers, however reluctant, not only to give up their
+ further depredations on our property, but to restore the spoil they had
+ already appropriated. He snatched my cravat from the fellow who had seized
+ it, and twisted it (in the zeal of his restitution) around my neck with
+ such suffocating energy as made me think that he had not only been, during
+ his residence at Glasgow, a substitute of the jailor, but must moreover
+ have taken lessons as an apprentice of the hangman. He flung the tattered
+ remnants of Mr. Jarvie's coat around his shoulders, and as more
+ Highlanders began to flock towards us from the high road, he led the way
+ downwards, directing and commanding the others to afford us, but
+ particularly the Bailie, the assistance necessary to our descending with
+ comparative ease and safety. It was, however, in vain that Andrew
+ Fairservice employed his lungs in obsecrating a share of Dougal's
+ protection, or at least his interference to procure restoration of his
+ shoes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Na, na,&rdquo; said Dougal in reply, &ldquo;she's nae gentle pody, I trow; her
+ petters hae ganged parefoot, or she's muckle mista'en.&rdquo; And, leaving
+ Andrew to follow at his leisure, or rather at such leisure as the
+ surrounding crowd were pleased to indulge him with, he hurried us down to
+ the pathway in which the skirmish had been fought, and hastened to present
+ us as additional captives to the female leader of his band.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were dragged before her accordingly, Dougal fighting, struggling,
+ screaming, as if he were the party most apprehensive of hurt, and
+ repulsing, by threats and efforts, all those who attempted to take a
+ nearer interest in our capture than he seemed to do himself. At length we
+ were placed before the heroine of the day, whose appearance, as well as
+ those of the savage, uncouth, yet martial figures who surrounded us,
+ struck me, to own the truth, with considerable apprehension. I do not know
+ if Helen MacGregor had personally mingled in the fray, and indeed I was
+ afterwards given to understand the contrary; but the specks of blood on
+ her brow, her hands and naked arms, as well as on the blade of her sword
+ which she continued to hold in her hand&mdash;her flushed countenance, and
+ the disordered state of the raven locks which escaped from under the red
+ bonnet and plume that formed her head-dress, seemed all to intimate that
+ she had taken an immediate share in the conflict. Her keen black eyes and
+ features expressed an imagination inflamed by the pride of gratified
+ revenge, and the triumph of victory. Yet there was nothing positively
+ sanguinary, or cruel, in her deportment; and she reminded me, when the
+ immediate alarm of the interview was over, of some of the paintings I had
+ seen of the inspired heroines in the Catholic churches of France. She was
+ not, indeed, sufficiently beautiful for a Judith, nor had she the inspired
+ expression of features which painters have given to Deborah, or to the
+ wife of Heber the Kenite, at whose feet the strong oppressor of Israel,
+ who dwelled in Harosheth of the Gentiles, bowed down, fell, and lay a dead
+ man. Nevertheless, the enthusiasm by which she was agitated gave her
+ countenance and deportment, wildly dignified in themselves, an air which
+ made her approach nearly to the ideas of those wonderful artists who gave
+ to the eye the heroines of Scripture history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was uncertain in what terms to accost a personage so uncommon, when Mr.
+ Jarvie, breaking the ice with a preparatory cough (for the speed with
+ which he had been brought into her presence had again impeded his
+ respiration), addressed her as follows:&mdash;&ldquo;Uh! uh! &amp;c. &amp;c. I
+ am very happy to have this <i>joyful</i> opportunity&rdquo; (a quaver in his
+ voice strongly belied the emphasis which he studiously laid on the word
+ joyful)&mdash;&ldquo;this joyful occasion,&rdquo; he resumed, trying to give the
+ adjective a more suitable accentuation, &ldquo;to wish my kinsman Robin's wife a
+ very good morning&mdash;Uh! uh!&mdash;How's a' wi' ye?&rdquo; (by this time he
+ had talked himself into his usual jog-trot manner, which exhibited a
+ mixture of familiarity and self-importance)&mdash;&ldquo;How's a' wi' ye this
+ lang time? Ye'll hae forgotten me, Mrs. MacGregor Campbell, as your cousin&mdash;uh!
+ uh!&mdash;but ye'll mind my father, Deacon Nicol Jarvie, in the Saut
+ Market o' Glasgow?&mdash;an honest man he was, and a sponsible, and
+ respectit you and yours. Sae, as I said before, I am right glad to see
+ you, Mrs. MacGregor Campbell, as my kinsman's wife. I wad crave the
+ liberty of a kinsman to salute you, but that your gillies keep such a
+ dolefu' fast haud o' my arms, and, to speak Heaven's truth and a
+ magistrate's, ye wadna be the waur of a cogfu' o' water before ye welcomed
+ your friends.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was something in the familiarity of this introduction which ill
+ suited the exalted state of temper of the person to whom it was addressed,
+ then busied with distributing dooms of death, and warm from conquest in a
+ perilous encounter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What fellow are you,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that dare to claim kindred with the
+ MacGregor, and neither wear his dress nor speak his language?&mdash;What
+ are you, that have the tongue and the habit of the hound, and yet seek to
+ lie down with the deer?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dinna ken,&rdquo; said the undaunted Bailie, &ldquo;if the kindred has ever been
+ weel redd out to you yet, cousin&mdash;but it's ken'd, and can be prov'd.
+ My mother, Elspeth MacFarlane, was the wife of my father, Deacon Nicol
+ Jarvie&mdash;peace be wi' them baith!&mdash;and Elspeth was the daughter
+ of Parlane MacFarlane, at the Sheeling o' Loch Sloy. Now, this Parlane
+ MacFarlane, as his surviving daughter Maggy MacFarlane, <i>alias</i>
+ MacNab, wha married Duncan MacNab o' Stuckavrallachan, can testify, stood
+ as near to your gudeman, Robert MacGregor, as in the fourth degree of
+ kindred, for&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The virago lopped the genealogical tree, by demanding haughtily, &ldquo;If a
+ stream of rushing water acknowledged any relation with the portion
+ withdrawn from it for the mean domestic uses of those who dwelt on its
+ banks?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vera true, kinswoman,&rdquo; said the Bailie; &ldquo;but for a' that, the burn wad be
+ glad to hae the milldam back again in simmer, when the chuckie-stanes are
+ white in the sun. I ken weel eneugh you Hieland folk haud us Glasgow
+ people light and cheap for our language and our claes;&mdash;but everybody
+ speaks their native tongue that they learned in infancy; and it would be a
+ daft-like thing to see me wi' my fat wame in a short Hieland coat, and my
+ puir short houghs gartered below the knee, like ane o' your lang-legged
+ gillies. Mair by token, kinswoman,&rdquo; he continued, in defiance of various
+ intimations by which Dougal seemed to recommend silence, as well as of the
+ marks of impatience which the Amazon evinced at his loquacity, &ldquo;I wad hae
+ ye to mind that the king's errand whiles comes in the cadger's gate, and
+ that, for as high as ye may think o' the gudeman, as it's right every wife
+ should honour her husband&mdash;there's Scripture warrant for that&mdash;yet
+ as high as ye haud him, as I was saying, I hae been serviceable to Rob ere
+ now;&mdash;forbye a set o' pearlins I sent yourself when ye was gaun to be
+ married, and when Rob was an honest weel-doing drover, and nane o' this
+ unlawfu' wark, wi' fighting, and flashes, and fluff-gibs, disturbing the
+ king's peace and disarming his soldiers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had apparently touched on a key which his kinswoman could not brook.
+ She drew herself up to her full height, and betrayed the acuteness of her
+ feelings by a laugh of mingled scorn and bitterness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you, and such as you, might claim a relation to us, when
+ we stooped to be the paltry wretches fit to exist under your dominion, as
+ your hewers of wood and drawers of water&mdash;to find cattle for your
+ banquets, and subjects for your laws to oppress and trample on. But now we
+ are free&mdash;free by the very act which left us neither house nor
+ hearth, food nor covering&mdash;which bereaved me of all&mdash;of all&mdash;and
+ makes me groan when I think I must still cumber the earth for other
+ purposes than those of vengeance. And I will carry on the work, this day
+ has so well commenced, by a deed that shall break all bands between
+ MacGregor and the Lowland churls. Here Allan&mdash;Dougal&mdash;bind these
+ Sassenachs neck and heel together, and throw them into the Highland Loch
+ to seek for their Highland kinsfolk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bailie, alarmed at this mandate, was commencing an expostulation,
+ which probably would have only inflamed the violent passions of the person
+ whom he addressed, when Dougal threw himself between them, and in his own
+ language, which he spoke with a fluency and rapidity strongly contrasted
+ by the slow, imperfect, and idiot-like manner in which he expressed
+ himself in English, poured forth what I doubt not was a very animated
+ pleading in our behalf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His mistress replied to him, or rather cut short his harangue, by
+ exclaiming in English (as if determined to make us taste in anticipation
+ the full bitterness of death)&mdash;&ldquo;Base dog, and son of a dog, do you
+ dispute my commands? Should I tell ye to cut out their tongues and put
+ them into each other's throats, to try which would there best knap
+ Southron, or to tear out their hearts and put them into each other's
+ breasts, to see which would there best plot treason against the MacGregor&mdash;and
+ such things have been done of old in the day of revenge, when our fathers
+ had wrongs to redress&mdash;Should I command you to do this, would it be
+ your part to dispute my orders?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To be sure, to be sure,&rdquo; Dougal replied, with accents of profound
+ submission; &ldquo;her pleasure suld be done&mdash;tat's but reason; but an it
+ were&mdash;tat is, an it could be thought the same to her to coup the
+ ill-faured loon of ta red-coat Captain, and hims corporal Cramp, and twa
+ three o' the red-coats, into the loch, herself wad do't wi' muckle mair
+ great satisfaction than to hurt ta honest civil shentlemans as were
+ friends to the Gregarach, and came up on the Chiefs assurance, and not to
+ do no treason, as herself could testify.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady was about to reply, when a few wild strains of a pibroch were
+ heard advancing up the road from Aberfoil, the same probably which had
+ reached the ears of Captain Thornton's rear-guard, and determined him to
+ force his way onward rather than return to the village, on finding the
+ pass occupied. The skirmish being of very short duration, the armed men
+ who followed this martial melody, had not, although quickening their march
+ when they heard the firing, been able to arrive in time sufficient to take
+ any share in the rencontre. The victory, therefore, was complete without
+ them, and they now arrived only to share in the triumph of their
+ countrymen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a marked difference betwixt the appearance of these new comers
+ and that of the party by which our escort had been defeated&mdash;and it
+ was greatly in favour of the former. Among the Highlanders who surrounded
+ the Chieftainess, if I may presume to call her so without offence to
+ grammar, were men in the extremity of age, boys scarce able to bear a
+ sword, and even women&mdash;all, in short, whom the last necessity urges
+ to take up arms; and it added a shade of bitter shame to the defection
+ which clouded Thornton's manly countenance, when he found that the numbers
+ and position of a foe, otherwise so despicable, had enabled them to
+ conquer his brave veterans. But the thirty or forty Highlanders who now
+ joined the others, were all men in the prime of youth or manhood, active
+ clean-made fellows, whose short hose and belted plaids set out their
+ sinewy limbs to the best advantage. Their arms were as superior to those
+ of the first party as their dress and appearance. The followers of the
+ female Chief had axes, scythes, and other antique weapons, in aid of their
+ guns; and some had only clubs, daggers, and long knives. But of the second
+ party, most had pistols at the belt, and almost all had dirks hanging at
+ the pouches which they wore in front. Each had a good gun in his hand, and
+ a broadsword by his side, besides a stout round target, made of light
+ wood, covered with leather, and curiously studded with brass, and having a
+ steel spike screwed into the centre. These hung on their left shoulder
+ during a march, or while they were engaged in exchanging fire with the
+ enemy, and were worn on their left arm when they charged with sword in
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was easy to see that this chosen band had not arrived from a
+ victory such as they found their ill-appointed companions possessed of.
+ The pibroch sent forth occasionally a few wailing notes expressive of a
+ very different sentiment from triumph; and when they appeared before the
+ wife of their Chieftain, it was in silence, and with downcast and
+ melancholy looks. They paused when they approached her, and the pipes
+ again sent forth the same wild and melancholy strain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helen rushed towards them with a countenance in which anger was mingled
+ with apprehension.&mdash;&ldquo;What means this, Alaster?&rdquo; she said to the
+ minstrel&mdash;&ldquo;why a lament in the moment of victory?&mdash;Robert&mdash;Hamish&mdash;where's
+ the MacGregor?&mdash;where's your father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her sons, who led the band, advanced with slow and irresolute steps
+ towards her, and murmured a few words in Gaelic, at hearing which she set
+ up a shriek that made the rocks ring again, in which all the women and
+ boys joined, clapping their hands and yelling as if their lives had been
+ expiring in the sound. The mountain echoes, silent since the military
+ sounds of battle had ceased, had now to answer these frantic and
+ discordant shrieks of sorrow, which drove the very night-birds from their
+ haunts in the rocks, as if they were startled to hear orgies more hideous
+ and ill-omened than their own, performed in the face of open day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Taken!&rdquo; repeated Helen, when the clamour had subsided&mdash;&ldquo;Taken!&mdash;
+ captive!&mdash;and you live to say so?&mdash;Coward dogs! did I nurse you
+ for this, that you should spare your blood on your father's enemies? or
+ see him prisoner, and come back to tell it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sons of MacGregor, to whom this expostulation was addressed, were
+ youths, of whom the eldest had hardly attained his twentieth year. <i>Hamish,</i>
+ or James, the elder of these youths, was the tallest by a head, and much
+ handsomer than his brother; his light-blue eyes, with a profusion of fair
+ hair, which streamed from under his smart blue bonnet, made his whole
+ appearance a most favourable specimen of the Highland youth. The younger
+ was called Robert; but, to distinguish him from his father, the
+ Highlanders added the epithet <i>Oig,</i> or the young. Dark hair, and
+ dark features, with a ruddy glow of health and animation, and a form
+ strong and well-set beyond his years, completed the sketch of the young
+ mountaineer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both now stood before their mother with countenances clouded with grief
+ and shame, and listened, with the most respectful submission, to the
+ reproaches with which she loaded them. At length when her resentment
+ appeared in some degree to subside, the eldest, speaking in English,
+ probably that he might not be understood by their followers, endeavoured
+ respectfully to vindicate himself and his brother from his mother's
+ reproaches. I was so near him as to comprehend much of what he said; and,
+ as it was of great consequence to me to be possessed of information in
+ this strange crisis, I failed not to listen as attentively as I could.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The MacGregor,&rdquo; his son stated, &ldquo;had been called out upon a trysting with
+ a Lowland hallion, who came with a token from&rdquo;&mdash;he muttered the name
+ very low, but I thought it sounded like my own. &ldquo;The MacGregor,&rdquo; he said,
+ &ldquo;accepted of the invitation, but commanded the Saxon who brought the
+ message to be detained, as a hostage that good faith should be observed to
+ him. Accordingly he went to the place of appointment&rdquo; (which had some wild
+ Highland name that I cannot remember), &ldquo;attended only by Angus Breck and
+ Little Rory, commanding no one to follow him. Within half an hour Angus
+ Breck came back with the doleful tidings that the MacGregor had been
+ surprised and made prisoner by a party of Lennox militia, under Galbraith
+ of Garschattachin.&rdquo; He added, &ldquo;that Galbraith, on being threatened by
+ MacGregor, who upon his capture menaced him with retaliation on the person
+ of the hostage, had treated the threat with great contempt, replying, 'Let
+ each side hang his man; we'll hang the thief, and your catherans may hang
+ the gauger, Rob, and the country will be rid of two damned things at once,
+ a wild Highlander and a revenue officer.' Angus Breck, less carefully
+ looked to than his master, contrived to escape from the hands of the
+ captors, after having been in their custody long enough to hear this
+ discussion, and to bring off the news.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And did you learn this, you false-hearted traitor,&rdquo; said the wife of
+ MacGregor, &ldquo;and not instantly rush to your father's rescue, to bring him
+ off, or leave your body on the place?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young MacGregor modestly replied, by representing the very superior
+ force of the enemy, and stated, that as they made no preparation for
+ leaving the country, he had fallen back up the glen with the purpose of
+ collecting a band sufficient to attempt a rescue with some tolerable
+ chance of success. At length he said, &ldquo;the militiamen would quarter, he
+ understood, in the neighbouring house of Gartartan, or the old castle in
+ the port of Monteith, or some other stronghold, which, although strong and
+ defensible, was nevertheless capable of being surprised, could they but
+ get enough of men assembled for the purpose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I understood afterwards that the rest of the freebooter's followers were
+ divided into two strong bands, one destined to watch the remaining
+ garrison of Inversnaid, a party of which, under Captain Thornton, had been
+ defeated; and another to show front to the Highland clans who had united
+ with the regular troops and Lowlanders in this hostile and combined
+ invasion of that mountainous and desolate territory, which lying between
+ the lakes of Loch Lomond, Loch Katrine, and Loch Ard, was at this time
+ currently called Rob Roy's, or the MacGregor country. Messengers were
+ despatched in great haste, to concentrate, as I supposed, their forces,
+ with a view to the purposed attack on the Lowlanders; and the dejection
+ and despair, at first visible on each countenance, gave place to the hope
+ of rescuing their leader, and to the thirst of vengeance. It was under the
+ burning influence of the latter passion that the wife of MacGregor
+ commanded that the hostage exchanged for his safety should be brought into
+ her presence. I believe her sons had kept this unfortunate wretch out of
+ her sight, for fear of the consequences; but if it was so, their humane
+ precaution only postponed his fate. They dragged forward at her summons a
+ wretch already half dead with terror, in whose agonised features I
+ recognised, to my horror and astonishment, my old acquaintance Morris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He fell prostrate before the female Chief with an effort to clasp her
+ knees, from which she drew back, as if his touch had been pollution, so
+ that all he could do in token of the extremity of his humiliation, was to
+ kiss the hem of her plaid. I never heard entreaties for life poured forth
+ with such agony of spirit. The ecstasy of fear was such, that instead of
+ paralysing his tongue, as on ordinary occasions, it even rendered him
+ eloquent; and, with cheeks pale as ashes, hands compressed in agony, eyes
+ that seemed to be taking their last look of all mortal objects, he
+ protested, with the deepest oaths, his total ignorance of any design on
+ the person of Rob Roy, whom he swore he loved and honoured as his own
+ soul. In the inconsistency of his terror, he said he was but the agent of
+ others, and he muttered the name of Rashleigh. He prayed but for life&mdash;for
+ life he would give all he had in the world: it was but life he asked&mdash;life,
+ if it were to be prolonged under tortures and privations: he asked only
+ breath, though it should be drawn in the damps of the lowest caverns of
+ their hills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is impossible to describe the scorn, the loathing, and contempt, with
+ which the wife of MacGregor regarded this wretched petitioner for the poor
+ boon of existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I could have bid ye live,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;had life been to you the same weary
+ and wasting burden that it is to me&mdash;that it is to every noble and
+ generous mind. But you&mdash;wretch! you could creep through the world
+ unaffected by its various disgraces, its ineffable miseries, its
+ constantly accumulating masses of crime and sorrow: you could live and
+ enjoy yourself, while the noble-minded are betrayed&mdash;while nameless
+ and birthless villains tread on the neck of the brave and the
+ long-descended: you could enjoy yourself, like a butcher's dog in the
+ shambles, battening on garbage, while the slaughter of the oldest and best
+ went on around you! This enjoyment you shall not live to partake of!&mdash;you
+ shall die, base dog! and that before yon cloud has passed over the sun.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She gave a brief command in Gaelic to her attendants, two of whom seized
+ upon the prostrate suppliant, and hurried him to the brink of a cliff
+ which overhung the flood. He set up the most piercing and dreadful cries
+ that fear ever uttered&mdash;I may well term them dreadful, for they
+ haunted my sleep for years afterwards. As the murderers, or executioners,
+ call them as you will, dragged him along, he recognised me even in that
+ moment of horror, and exclaimed, in the last articulate words I ever heard
+ him utter, &ldquo;Oh, Mr. Osbaldistone, save me!&mdash;save me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was so much moved by this horrid spectacle, that, although in momentary
+ expectation of sharing his fate, I did attempt to speak in his behalf,
+ but, as might have been expected, my interference was sternly disregarded.
+ The victim was held fast by some, while others, binding a large heavy
+ stone in a plaid, tied it round his neck, and others again eagerly
+ stripped him of some part of his dress. Half-naked, and thus manacled,
+ they hurled him into the lake, there about twelve feet deep, with a loud
+ halloo of vindictive triumph,&mdash;above which, however, his last
+ death-shriek, the yell of mortal agony, was distinctly heard. The heavy
+ burden splashed in the dark-blue waters, and the Highlanders, with their
+ pole-axes and swords, watched an instant to guard, lest, extricating
+ himself from the load to which he was attached, the victim might have
+ struggled to regain the shore. But the knot had been securely bound&mdash;the
+ wretched man sunk without effort; the waters, which his fall had
+ disturbed, settled calmly over him, and the unit of that life for which he
+ had pleaded so strongly, was for ever withdrawn from the sum of human
+ existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0015" id="AlinkCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER FIFTEEN.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And be he safe restored ere evening set,
+ Or, if there's vengeance in an injured heart,
+ And power to wreak it in an armed hand,
+ Your land shall ache for't.
+ Old Play.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I know not why it is that a single deed of violence and cruelty affects
+ our nerves more than when these are exercised on a more extended scale. I
+ had seen that day several of my brave countrymen fall in battle: it seemed
+ to me that they met a lot appropriate to humanity, and my bosom, though
+ thrilling with interest, was affected with nothing of that sickening
+ horror with which I beheld the unfortunate Morris put to death without
+ resistance, and in cold blood. I looked at my companion, Mr. Jarvie, whose
+ face reflected the feelings which were painted in mine. Indeed he could
+ not so suppress his horror, but that the words escaped him in a low and
+ broken whisper,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I take up my protest against this deed, as a bloody and cruel murder&mdash;it
+ is a cursed deed, and God will avenge it in his due way and time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you do not fear to follow?&rdquo; said the virago, bending on him a look
+ of death, such as that with which a hawk looks at his prey ere he pounces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kinswoman,&rdquo; said the Bailie, &ldquo;nae man willingly wad cut short his thread
+ of life before the end o' his pirn was fairly measured off on the
+ yarn-winles&mdash;And I hae muckle to do, an I be spared, in this warld&mdash;public
+ and private business, as weel that belonging to the magistracy as to my
+ ain particular; and nae doubt I hae some to depend on me, as puir Mattie,
+ wha is an orphan&mdash;She's a far-awa' cousin o' the Laird o'
+ Limmerfield. Sae that, laying a' this thegither&mdash;skin for skin, yea
+ all that a man hath, will he give for his life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And were I to set you at liberty,&rdquo; said the imperious dame, &ldquo;what name
+ could you give to the drowning of that Saxon dog?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uh! uh!&mdash;hem! hem!&rdquo; said the Bailie, clearing his throat as well as
+ he could, &ldquo;I suld study to say as little on that score as might be&mdash;least
+ said is sunest mended.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if you were called on by the courts, as you term them, of justice,&rdquo;
+ she again demanded, &ldquo;what then would be your answer?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bailie looked this way and that way, like a person who meditates an
+ escape, and then answered in the tone of one who, seeing no means of
+ accomplishing a retreat, determines to stand the brunt of battle&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ see what you are driving me to the wa' about. But I'll tell you't plain,
+ kinswoman,&mdash;I behoved just to speak according to my ain conscience;
+ and though your ain gudeman, that I wish had been here for his ain sake
+ and mine, as wool as the puir Hieland creature Dougal, can tell ye that
+ Nicol Jarvie can wink as hard at a friend's failings as onybody, yet I'se
+ tell ye, kinswoman, mine's ne'er be the tongue to belie my thought; and
+ sooner than say that yonder puir wretch was lawfully slaughtered, I wad
+ consent to be laid beside him&mdash;though I think ye are the first
+ Hieland woman wad mint sic a doom to her husband's kinsman but four times
+ removed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is probable that the tone and firmness assumed by the Bailie in his
+ last speech was better suited to make an impression on the hard heart of
+ his kinswoman than the tone of supplication he had hitherto assumed, as
+ gems can be cut with steel, though they resist softer metals. She
+ commanded us both to be placed before her. &ldquo;Your name,&rdquo; she said to me,
+ &ldquo;is Osbaldistone?&mdash;the dead dog, whose death you have witnessed,
+ called you so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My name <i>is</i> Osbaldistone,&rdquo; was my answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rashleigh, then, I suppose, is your Christian name?&rdquo; she pursued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&mdash;my name is Francis.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you know Rashleigh Osbaldistone,&rdquo; she continued. &ldquo;He is your brother,
+ if I mistake not,&mdash;at least your kinsman and near friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is my kinsman,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;but not my friend. We were lately engaged
+ together in a rencontre, when we were separated by a person whom I
+ understand to be your husband. My blood is hardly yet dried on his sword,
+ and the wound on my side is yet green. I have little reason to acknowledge
+ him as a friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; she replied, &ldquo;if a stranger to his intrigues, you can go in safety
+ to Garschattachin and his party without fear of being detained, and carry
+ them a message from the wife of the MacGregor?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I answered that I knew no reasonable cause why the militia gentlemen
+ should detain me; that I had no reason, on my own account, to fear being
+ in their hands; and that if my going on her embassy would act as a
+ protection to my friend and servant, who were here prisoners, &ldquo;I was ready
+ to set out directly.&rdquo; I took the opportunity to say, &ldquo;That I had come into
+ this country on her husband's invitation, and his assurance that he would
+ aid me in some important matters in which I was interested; that my
+ companion, Mr. Jarvie, had accompanied me on the same errand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I wish Mr. Jarvie's boots had been fu' o' boiling water when he drew
+ them on for sic a purpose,&rdquo; interrupted the Bailie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may read your father,&rdquo; said Helen MacGregor, turning to her sons, &ldquo;in
+ what this young Saxon tells us&mdash;Wise only when the bonnet is on his
+ head, and the sword is in his hand, he never exchanges the tartan for the
+ broad-cloth, but he runs himself into the miserable intrigues of the
+ Lowlanders, and becomes again, after all he has suffered, their agent&mdash;their
+ tool&mdash;their slave.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Add, madam,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;and their benefactor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be it so,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;for it is the most empty title of them all, since
+ he has uniformly sown benefits to reap a harvest of the most foul
+ ingratitude.&mdash;But enough of this. I shall cause you to be guided to
+ the enemy's outposts. Ask for their commander, and deliver him this
+ message from me, Helen MacGregor;&mdash;that if they injure a hair of
+ MacGregor's head, and if they do not set him at liberty within the space
+ of twelve hours, there is not a lady in the Lennox but shall before
+ Christmas cry the coronach for them she will be loath to lose,&mdash;there
+ is not a farmer but shall sing well-a-wa over a burnt barnyard and an
+ empty byre,&mdash;there is not a laird nor heritor shall lay his head on
+ the pillow at night with the assurance of being a live man in the morning,&mdash;and,
+ to begin as we are to end, so soon as the term is expired, I will send
+ them this Glasgow Bailie, and this Saxon Captain, and all the rest of my
+ prisoners, each bundled in a plaid, and chopped into as many pieces as
+ there are checks in the tartan.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she paused in her denunciation, Captain Thornton, who was within
+ hearing, added, with great coolness, &ldquo;Present my compliments&mdash;Captain
+ Thornton's of the Royals, compliments&mdash;to the commanding officer, and
+ tell him to do his duty and secure his prisoner, and not waste a thought
+ upon me. If I have been fool enough to have been led into an ambuscade by
+ these artful savages, I am wise enough to know how to die for it without
+ disgracing the service. I am only sorry for my poor fellows,&rdquo; he said,
+ &ldquo;that have fallen into such butcherly hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whist! whist!&rdquo; exclaimed the Bailie; &ldquo;are ye weary o' your life?&mdash;Ye'll
+ gie <i>my</i> service to the commanding officer, Mr. Osbaldistone&mdash;Bailie
+ Nicol Jarvie's service, a magistrate o' Glasgow, as his father the deacon
+ was before him&mdash;and tell him, here are a wheen honest men in great
+ trouble, and like to come to mair; and the best thing he can do for the
+ common good, will be just to let Rob come his wa's up the glen, and nae
+ mair about it. There's been some ill dune here already; but as it has
+ lighted chiefly on the gauger, it winna be muckle worth making a stir
+ about.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these very opposite injunctions from the parties chiefly interested
+ in the success of my embassy, and with the reiterated charge of the wife
+ of MacGregor to remember and detail every word of her injunctions, I was
+ at length suffered to depart; and Andrew Fairservice, chiefly, I believe,
+ to get rid of his clamorous supplications, was permitted to attend me.
+ Doubtful, however, that I might use my horse as a means of escape from my
+ guides, or desirous to retain a prize of some value, I was given to
+ understand that I was to perform my journey on foot, escorted by Hamish
+ MacGregor, the elder brother, who, with two followers, attended, as well
+ to show me the way, as to reconnoitre the strength and position of the
+ enemy. Dougal had been at first ordered on this party, but he contrived to
+ elude the service, with the purpose, as we afterwards understood, of
+ watching over Mr. Jarvie, whom, according to his wild principles of
+ fidelity, he considered as entitled to his good offices, from having once
+ acted in some measure as his patron or master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After walking with great rapidity about an hour, we arrived at an eminence
+ covered with brushwood, which gave us a commanding prospect down the
+ valley, and a full view of the post which the militia occupied. Being
+ chiefly cavalry, they had judiciously avoided any attempt to penetrate the
+ pass which had been so unsuccessfully essayed by Captain Thornton. They
+ had taken up their situation with some military skill, on a rising ground
+ in the centre of the little valley of Aberfoil, through which the river
+ Forth winds its earliest course, and which is formed by two ridges of
+ hills, faced with barricades of limestone rock, intermixed with huge
+ masses of breecia, or pebbles imbedded in some softer substance which has
+ hardened around them like mortar; and surrounded by the more lofty
+ mountains in the distance. These ridges, however, left the valley of
+ breadth enough to secure the cavalry from any sudden surprise by the
+ mountaineers and they had stationed sentinels and outposts at proper
+ distances from this main body, in every direction, so that they might
+ secure full time to mount and get under arms upon the least alarm. It was
+ not, indeed, expected at that time, that Highlanders would attack cavalry
+ in an open plain, though late events have shown that they may do so with
+ success.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * The affairs of Prestonpans and Falkirk are probably alluded to, which *
+ marks the time of writing the Memoirs as subsequent to 1745.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I first knew the Highlanders, they had almost a superstitious dread
+ of a mounted trooper, the horse being so much more fierce and imposing in
+ his appearance than the little shelties of their own hills, and moreover
+ being trained, as the more ignorant mountaineers believed, to fight with
+ his feet and his teeth. The appearance of the piequeted horses, feeding in
+ this little vale&mdash;the forms of the soldiers, as they sate, stood, or
+ walked, in various groups in the vicinity of the beautiful river, and of
+ the bare yet romantic ranges of rock which hedge in the landscape on
+ either side,&mdash;formed a noble foreground; while far to the eastward
+ the eye caught a glance of the lake of Menteith; and Stirling Castle,
+ dimly seen along with the blue and distant line of the Ochil Mountains,
+ closed the scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After gazing on this landscape with great earnestness, young MacGregor
+ intimated to me that I was to descend to the station of the militia and
+ execute my errand to their commander,&mdash;enjoining me at the same time,
+ with a menacing gesture, neither to inform them who had guided me to that
+ place, nor where I had parted from my escort. Thus tutored, I descended
+ towards the military post, followed by Andrew, who, only retaining his
+ breeches and stockings of the English costume, without a hat, bare-legged,
+ with brogues on his feet, which Dougal had given him out of compassion,
+ and having a tattered plaid to supply the want of all upper garments,
+ looked as if he had been playing the part of a Highland Tom-of-Bedlam. We
+ had not proceeded far before we became visible to one of the videttes,
+ who, riding towards us, presented his carabine and commanded me to stand.
+ I obeyed, and when the soldier came up, desired to be conducted to his
+ commanding-officer. I was immediately brought where a circle of officers,
+ sitting upon the grass, seemed in attendance upon one of superior rank. He
+ wore a cuirass of polished steel, over which were drawn the insignia of
+ the ancient Order of the Thistle. My friend Garschattachin, and many other
+ gentlemen, some in uniform, others in their ordinary dress, but all armed
+ and well attended, seemed to receive their orders from this person of
+ distinction. Many servants in rich liveries, apparently a part of his
+ household, were also in waiting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having paid to this nobleman the respect which his rank appeared to
+ demand, I acquainted him that I had been an involuntary witness to the
+ king's soldiers having suffered a defeat from the Highlanders at the pass
+ of Loch-Ard (such I had learned was the name of the place where Mr.
+ Thornton was made prisoner), and that the victors threatened every species
+ of extremity to those who had fallen into their power, as well as to the
+ Low Country in general, unless their Chief, who had that morning been made
+ prisoner, were returned to them uninjured. The Duke (for he whom I
+ addressed was of no lower rank) listened to me with great composure, and
+ then replied, that he should be extremely sorry to expose the unfortunate
+ gentlemen who had been made prisoners to the cruelty of the barbarians
+ into whose hands they had fallen, but that it was folly to suppose that he
+ would deliver up the very author of all these disorders and offences, and
+ so encourage his followers in their license. &ldquo;You may return to those who
+ sent you,&rdquo; he proceeded, &ldquo;and inform them, that I shall certainly cause
+ Rob Roy Campbell, whom they call MacGregor, to be executed, by break of
+ day, as an outlaw taken in arms, and deserving death by a thousand acts of
+ violence; that I should be most justly held unworthy of my situation and
+ commission did I act otherwise; that I shall know how to protect the
+ country against their insolent threats of violence; and that if they
+ injure a hair of the head of any of the unfortunate gentlemen whom an
+ unlucky accident has thrown into their power, I will take such ample
+ vengeance, that the very stones of their glens shall sing woe for it this
+ hundred years to come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I humbly begged leave to remonstrate respecting the honourable mission
+ imposed on me, and touched upon the obvious danger attending it, when the
+ noble commander replied, &ldquo;that such being the case, I might send my
+ servant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The deil be in my feet,&rdquo; said Andrew, without either having respect to
+ the presence in which he stood, or waiting till I replied&mdash;&ldquo;the deil
+ be in my feet, if I gang my tae's length. Do the folk think I hae another
+ thrapple in my pouch after John Highlandman's sneeked this ane wi' his
+ joctaleg? or that I can dive doun at the tae side of a Highland loch and
+ rise at the tother, like a shell-drake? Na, na&mdash;ilk ane for himsell,
+ and God for us a'. Folk may just make a page o' their ain age, and serve
+ themsells till their bairns grow up, and gang their ain errands for
+ Andrew. Rob Roy never came near the parish of Dreepdaily, to steal either
+ pippin or pear frae me or mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silencing my follower with some difficulty, I represented to the Duke the
+ great danger Captain Thornton and Mr. Jarvie would certainly be exposed
+ to, and entreated he would make me the bearer of such modified terms as
+ might be the means of saving their lives. I assured him I should decline
+ no danger if I could be of service; but from what I had heard and seen, I
+ had little doubt they would be instantly murdered should the chief of the
+ outlaws suffer death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke was obviously much affected. &ldquo;It was a hard case,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and
+ he felt it as such; but he had a paramount duty to perform to the country&mdash;Rob
+ Roy must die!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I own it was not without emotion that I heard this threat of instant death
+ to my acquaintance Campbell, who had so often testified his good-will
+ towards me. Nor was I singular in the feeling, for many of those around
+ the Duke ventured to express themselves in his favour. &ldquo;It would be more
+ advisable,&rdquo; they said, &ldquo;to send him to Stirling Castle, and there detain
+ him a close prisoner, as a pledge for the submission and dispersion of his
+ gang. It were a great pity to expose the country to be plundered, which,
+ now that the long nights approached, it would be found very difficult to
+ prevent, since it was impossible to guard every point, and the Highlanders
+ were sure to select those that were left exposed.&rdquo; They added, that there
+ was great hardship in leaving the unfortunate prisoners to the almost
+ certain doom of massacre denounced against them, which no one doubted
+ would be executed in the first burst of revenge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Garschattachin ventured yet farther, confiding in the honour of the
+ nobleman whom he addressed, although he knew he had particular reasons for
+ disliking their prisoner. &ldquo;Rob Roy,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;though a kittle neighbour
+ to the Low Country, and particularly obnoxious to his Grace, and though he
+ maybe carried the catheran trade farther than ony man o' his day, was an
+ auld-farrand carle, and there might be some means of making him hear
+ reason; whereas his wife and sons were reckless fiends, without either
+ fear or mercy about them, and, at the head of a' his limmer loons, would
+ be a worse plague to the country than ever he had been.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh! pooh!&rdquo; replied his Grace, &ldquo;it is the very sense and cunning of this
+ fellow which has so long maintained his reign&mdash;a mere Highland robber
+ would have been put down in as many weeks as he has flourished years. His
+ gang, without him, is no more to be dreaded as a permanent annoyance&mdash;it
+ will no longer exist&mdash;than a wasp without its head, which may sting
+ once perhaps, but is instantly crushed into annihilation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Garschattachin was not so easily silenced. &ldquo;I am sure, my Lord Duke,&rdquo; he
+ replied, &ldquo;I have no favour for Rob, and he as little for me, seeing he has
+ twice cleaned out my ain byres, beside skaith amang my tenants; but,
+ however&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, however, Garschattachin,&rdquo; said the Duke, with a smile of peculiar
+ expression, &ldquo;I fancy you think such a freedom may be pardoned in a
+ friend's friend, and Rob's supposed to be no enemy to Major Galbraith's
+ friends over the water.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it be so, my lord,&rdquo; said Garschattachin, in the same tone of
+ jocularity, &ldquo;it's no the warst thing I have heard of him. But I wish we
+ heard some news from the clans, that we have waited for sae lang. I vow to
+ God they'll keep a Hielandman's word wi' us&mdash;I never ken'd them
+ better&mdash;it's ill drawing boots upon trews.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot believe it,&rdquo; said the Duke. &ldquo;These gentlemen are known to be men
+ of honour, and I must necessarily suppose they are to keep their
+ appointment. Send out two more horse-men to look for our friends. We
+ cannot, till their arrival, pretend to attack the pass where Captain
+ Thornton has suffered himself to be surprised, and which, to my knowledge,
+ ten men on foot might make good against a regiment of the best horse in
+ Europe&mdash;Meanwhile let refreshments be given to the men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had the benefit of this last order, the more necessary and acceptable,
+ as I had tasted nothing since our hasty meal at Aberfoil the evening
+ before. The videttes who had been despatched returned without tidings of
+ the expected auxiliaries, and sunset was approaching, when a Highlander
+ belonging to the clans whose co-operation was expected, appeared as the
+ bearer of a letter, which he delivered to the Duke with a most profound
+ conge'.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now will I wad a hogshead of claret,&rdquo; said Garschattachin, &ldquo;that this is
+ a message to tell us that these cursed Highlandmen, whom we have fetched
+ here at the expense of so much plague and vexation, are going to draw off,
+ and leave us to do our own business if we can.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is even so, gentlemen,&rdquo; said the Duke, reddening with indignation,
+ after having perused the letter, which was written upon a very dirty scrap
+ of paper, but most punctiliously addressed, &ldquo;For the much-honoured hands
+ of Ane High and Mighty Prince, the Duke,&rdquo; &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c. &ldquo;Our
+ allies,&rdquo; continued the Duke, &ldquo;have deserted us, gentlemen, and have made a
+ separate peace with the enemy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's just the fate of all alliances,&rdquo; said Garschattachin, &ldquo;the Dutch
+ were gaun to serve us the same gate, if we had not got the start of them
+ at Utrecht.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are facetious, air,&rdquo; said the Duke, with a frown which showed how
+ little he liked the pleasantry; &ldquo;but our business is rather of a grave cut
+ just now.&mdash;I suppose no gentleman would advise our attempting to
+ penetrate farther into the country, unsupported either by friendly
+ Highlanders, or by infantry from Inversnaid?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A general answer announced that the attempt would be perfect madness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor would there be great wisdom,&rdquo; the Duke added, &ldquo;in remaining exposed
+ to a night-attack in this place. I therefore propose that we should
+ retreat to the house of Duchray and that of Gartartan, and keep safe and
+ sure watch and ward until morning. But before we separate, I will examine
+ Rob Roy before you all, and make you sensible, by your own eyes and ears,
+ of the extreme unfitness of leaving him space for farther outrage.&rdquo; He
+ gave orders accordingly, and the prisoner was brought before him, his arms
+ belted down above the elbow, and secured to his body by a horse-girth
+ buckled tight behind him. Two non-commissioned officers had hold of him,
+ one on each side, and two file of men with carabines and fixed bayonets
+ attended for additional security.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had never seen this man in the dress of his country, which set in a
+ striking point of view the peculiarities of his form. A shock-head of red
+ hair, which the hat and periwig of the Lowland costume had in a great
+ measure concealed, was seen beneath the Highland bonnet, and verified the
+ epithet of <i>Roy,</i> or Red, by which he was much better known in the
+ Low Country than by any other, and is still, I suppose, best remembered.
+ The justice of the appellation was also vindicated by the appearance of
+ that part of his limbs, from the bottom of his kilt to the top of his
+ short hose, which the fashion of his country dress left bare, and which
+ was covered with a fell of thick, short, red hair, especially around his
+ knees, which resembled in this respect, as well as from their sinewy
+ appearance of extreme strength, the limbs of a red-coloured Highland bull.
+ Upon the whole, betwixt the effect produced by the change of dress, and by
+ my having become acquainted with his real and formidable character, his
+ appearance had acquired to my eyes something so much wilder and more
+ striking than it before presented, that I could scarce recognise him to be
+ the same person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His manner was bold, unconstrained unless by the actual bonds, haughty,
+ and even dignified. He bowed to the Duke, nodded to Garschattachin and
+ others, and showed some surprise at seeing me among the party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is long since we have met, Mr. Campbell,&rdquo; said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is so, my Lord Duke; I could have wished it had been&rdquo; (looking at the
+ fastening on his arms) &ldquo;when I could have better paid the compliments I
+ owe to your Grace;&mdash;but there's a gude time coming.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No time like the time present, Mr. Campbell,&rdquo; answered the Duke, &ldquo;for the
+ hours are fast flying that must settle your last account with all mortal
+ affairs. I do not say this to insult your distress; but you must be aware
+ yourself that you draw near the end of your career. I do not deny that you
+ may sometimes have done less harm than others of your unhappy trade, and
+ that you may occasionally have exhibited marks of talent, and even of a
+ disposition which promised better things. But you are aware how long you
+ have been the terror and the oppressor of a peaceful neighbourhood, and by
+ what acts of violence you have maintained and extended your usurped
+ authority. You know, in short, that you have deserved death, and that you
+ must prepare for it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Lord,&rdquo; said Rob Roy, &ldquo;although I may well lay my misfortunes at your
+ Grace's door, yet I will never say that you yourself have been the wilful
+ and witting author of them. My Lord, if I had thought sae, your Grace
+ would not this day have been sitting in judgment on me; for you have been
+ three times within good rifle distance of me when you were thinking but of
+ the red deer, and few people have ken'd me miss my aim. But as for them
+ that have abused your Grace's ear, and set you up against a man that was
+ ance as peacefu' a man as ony in the land, and made your name the warrant
+ for driving me to utter extremity,&mdash;I have had some amends of them,
+ and, for a' that your Grace now says, I expect to live to hae mair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know,&rdquo; said the Duke, in rising anger, &ldquo;that you are a determined and
+ impudent villain, who will keep his oath if he swears to mischief; but it
+ shall be my care to prevent you. You have no enemies but your own wicked
+ actions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Had I called myself Grahame, instead of Campbell, I might have heard less
+ about them,&rdquo; answered Rob Roy, with dogged resolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will do well, sir,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;to warn your wife and family and
+ followers, to beware how they use the gentlemen now in their hands, as I
+ will requite tenfold on them, and their kin and allies, the slightest
+ injury done to any of his Majesty's liege subjects.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Lord,&rdquo; said Roy in answer, &ldquo;none of my enemies will allege that I have
+ been a bloodthirsty man, and were I now wi' my folk, I could rule four or
+ five hundred wild Hielanders as easy as your Grace those eight or ten
+ lackeys and foot-boys&mdash;But if your Grace is bent to take the head
+ away from a house, ye may lay your account there will be misrule amang the
+ members.&mdash;However, come o't what like, there's an honest man, a
+ kinsman o' my ain, maun come by nae skaith. Is there ony body here wad do
+ a gude deed for MacGregor?&mdash;he may repay it, though his hands be now
+ tied.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Highlander who had delivered the letter to the Duke replied, &ldquo;I'll do
+ your will for you, MacGregor; and I'll gang back up the glen on purpose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He advanced, and received from the prisoner a message to his wife, which,
+ being in Gaelic, I did not understand, but I had little doubt it related
+ to some measures to be taken for the safety of Mr. Jarvie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you hear the fellow's impudence?&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;he confides in his
+ character of a messenger. His conduct is of a piece with his master's, who
+ invited us to make common cause against these freebooters, and have
+ deserted us so soon as the MacGregors have agreed to surrender the
+ Balquhidder lands they were squabbling about.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ No truth in plaids, no faith in tartan trews!
+ Chameleon-like, they change a thousand hues.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your great ancestor never said so, my Lord,&rdquo; answered Major Galbraith;&mdash;&ldquo;and,
+ with submission, neither would your Grace have occasion to say it, wad ye
+ but be for beginning justice at the well-head&mdash;Gie the honest man his
+ mear again&mdash;Let every head wear it's ane bannet, and the distractions
+ o' the Lennox wad be mended wi' them o'the land.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush! hush! Garschattachin,&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;this is language dangerous
+ for you to talk to any one, and especially to me; but I presume you reckon
+ yourself a privileged person. Please to draw off your party towards
+ Gartartan; I shall myself see the prisoner escorted to Duchray, and send
+ you orders tomorrow. You will please grant no leave of absence to any of
+ your troopers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here's auld ordering and counter-ordering,&rdquo; muttered Garschattachin
+ between his teeth. &ldquo;But patience! patience!&mdash;we may ae day play at
+ change seats, the king's coming.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two troops of cavalry now formed, and prepared to march off the
+ ground, that they might avail themselves of the remainder of daylight to
+ get to their evening quarters. I received an intimation, rather than an
+ invitation, to attend the party; and I perceived, that, though no longer
+ considered as a prisoner, I was yet under some sort of suspicion. The
+ times were indeed so dangerous,&mdash;the great party questions of
+ Jacobite and Hanoverian divided the country so effectually,&mdash;and the
+ constant disputes and jealousies between the Highlanders and Lowlanders,
+ besides a number of inexplicable causes of feud which separated the great
+ leading families in Scotland from each other, occasioned such general
+ suspicion, that a solitary and unprotected stranger was almost sure to
+ meet with something disagreeable in the course of his travels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I acquiesced, however, in my destination with the best grace I could,
+ consoling myself with the hope that I might obtain from the captive
+ freebooter some information concerning Rashleigh and his machinations. I
+ should do myself injustice did I not add, that my views were not merely
+ selfish. I was too much interested in my singular acquaintance not to be
+ desirous of rendering him such services as his unfortunate situation might
+ demand, or admit of his receiving.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0016" id="AlinkCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER SIXTEEN.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And when he came to broken brigg,
+ He bent his bow and swam;
+ And when he came to grass growing,
+ Set down his feet and ran.
+ Gil Morrice.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The echoes of the rocks and ravines, on either side, now rang to the
+ trumpets of the cavalry, which, forming themselves into two distinct
+ bodies, began to move down the valley at a slow trot. That commanded by
+ Major Galbraith soon took to the right hand, and crossed the Forth, for
+ the purpose of taking up the quarters assigned them for the night, when
+ they were to occupy, as I understood, an old castle in the vicinity. They
+ formed a lively object while crossing the stream, but were soon lost in
+ winding up the bank on the opposite side, which was clothed with wood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We continued our march with considerable good order. To ensure the safe
+ custody of the prisoner, the Duke had caused him to be placed on horseback
+ behind one of his retainers, called, as I was informed, Ewan of
+ Brigglands, one of the largest and strongest men who were present. A
+ horse-belt, passed round the bodies of both, and buckled before the
+ yeoman's breast, rendered it impossible for Rob Roy to free himself from
+ his keeper. I was directed to keep close beside them, and accommodated for
+ the purpose with a troop-horse. We were as closely surrounded by the
+ soldiers as the width of the road would permit, and had always at least
+ one, if not two, on each side, with pistol in hand. Andrew Fairservice,
+ furnished with a Highland pony, of which they had made prey somewhere or
+ other, was permitted to ride among the other domestics, of whom a great
+ number attended the line of march, though without falling into the ranks
+ of the more regularly trained troopers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this manner we travelled for a certain distance, until we arrived at a
+ place where we also were to cross the river. The Forth, as being the
+ outlet of a lake, is of considerable depth, even where less important in
+ point of width, and the descent to the ford was by a broken precipitous
+ ravine, which only permitted one horseman to descend at once. The rear and
+ centre of our small body halting on the bank while the front files passed
+ down in succession, produced a considerable delay, as is usual on such
+ occasions, and even some confusion; for a number of those riders, who made
+ no proper part of the squadron, crowded to the ford without regularity,
+ and made the militia cavalry, although tolerably well drilled, partake in
+ some degree of their own disorder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Aimage-0007" id="Aimage-0007">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/pb232.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Escape of Rob Roy at the Ford " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ It was while we were thus huddled together on the bank that I heard Rob
+ Roy whisper to the man behind whom he was placed on horseback, &ldquo;Your
+ father, Ewan, wadna hae carried an auld friend to the shambles, like a
+ calf, for a' the Dukes in Christendom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ewan returned no answer, but shrugged, as one who would express by that
+ sign that what he was doing was none of his own choice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And when the MacGregors come down the glen, and ye see toom faulds, a
+ bluidy hearthstone, and the fire flashing out between the rafters o' your
+ house, ye may be thinking then, Ewan, that were your friend Rob to the
+ fore, you would have had that safe which it will make your heart sair to
+ lose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ewan of Brigglands again shrugged and groaned, but remained silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a sair thing,&rdquo; continued Rob, sliding his insinuations so gently
+ into Ewan's ear that they reached no other but mine, who certainly saw
+ myself in no shape called upon to destroy his prospects of escape&mdash;&ldquo;It's
+ a sair thing, that Ewan of Brigglands, whom Roy MacGregor has helped with
+ hand, sword, and purse, suld mind a gloom from a great man mair than a
+ friend's life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ewan seemed sorely agitated, but was silent.&mdash;We heard the Duke's
+ voice from the opposite bank call, &ldquo;Bring over the prisoner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ewan put his horse in motion, and just as I heard Roy say, &ldquo;Never weigh a
+ MacGregor's bluid against a broken whang o' leather, for there will be
+ another accounting to gie for it baith here and hereafter,&rdquo; they passed me
+ hastily, and dashing forward rather precipitately, entered the water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not yet, sir&mdash;not yet,&rdquo; said some of the troopers to me, as I was
+ about to follow, while others pressed forward into the stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I saw the Duke on the other side, by the waning light, engaged in
+ commanding his people to get into order, as they landed dispersedly, some
+ higher, some lower. Many had crossed, some were in the water, and the rest
+ were preparing to follow, when a sudden splash warned me that MacGregor's
+ eloquence had prevailed on Ewan to give him freedom and a chance for life.
+ The Duke also heard the sound, and instantly guessed its meaning. &ldquo;Dog!&rdquo;
+ he exclaimed to Ewan as he landed, &ldquo;where is your prisoner?&rdquo; and, without
+ waiting to hear the apology which the terrified vassal began to falter
+ forth, he fired a pistol at his head, whether fatally I know not, and
+ exclaimed, &ldquo;Gentlemen, disperse and pursue the villain&mdash;An hundred
+ guineas for him that secures Rob Roy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All became an instant scene of the most lively confusion. Rob Roy,
+ disengaged from his bonds, doubtless by Ewan's slipping the buckle of his
+ belt, had dropped off at the horse's tail, and instantly dived, passing
+ under the belly of the troop-horse which was on his left hand. But as he
+ was obliged to come to the surface an instant for air, the glimpse of his
+ tartan plaid drew the attention of the troopers, some of whom plunged into
+ the river, with a total disregard to their own safety, rushing, according
+ to the expression of their country, through pool and stream, sometimes
+ swimming their horses, sometimes losing them and struggling for their own
+ lives. Others, less zealous or more prudent, broke off in different
+ directions, and galloped up and down the banks, to watch the places at
+ which the fugitive might possibly land. The hollowing, the whooping, the
+ calls for aid at different points, where they saw, or conceived they saw,
+ some vestige of him they were seeking,&mdash;the frequent report of
+ pistols and carabines, fired at every object which excited the least
+ suspicion,&mdash;the sight of so many horsemen riding about, in and out of
+ the river, and striking with their long broadswords at whatever excited
+ their attention, joined to the vain exertions used by their officers to
+ restore order and regularity,&mdash;and all this in so wild a scene, and
+ visible only by the imperfect twilight of an autumn evening, made the most
+ extraordinary hubbub I had hitherto witnessed. I was indeed left alone to
+ observe it, for our whole cavalcade had dispersed in pursuit, or at least
+ to see the event of the search. Indeed, as I partly suspected at the time,
+ and afterwards learned with certainty, many of those who seemed most
+ active in their attempts to waylay and recover the fugitive, were, in
+ actual truth, least desirous that he should be taken, and only joined in
+ the cry to increase the general confusion, and to give Rob Roy a better
+ opportunity of escaping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Escape, indeed, was not difficult for a swimmer so expert as the
+ freebooter, as soon as he had eluded the first burst of pursuit. At one
+ time he was closely pressed, and several blows were made which flashed in
+ the water around him; the scene much resembling one of the otter-hunts
+ which I had seen at Osbaldistone Hall, where the animal is detected by the
+ hounds from his being necessitated to put his nose above the stream to
+ vent or breathe, while he is enabled to elude them by getting under water
+ again so soon as he has refreshed himself by respiration. MacGregor,
+ however, had a trick beyond the otter; for he contrived, when very closely
+ pursued, to disengage himself unobserved from his plaid, and suffer it to
+ float down the stream, where in its progress it quickly attracted general
+ attention; many of the horsemen were thus put upon a false scent, and
+ several shots or stabs were averted from the party for whom they were
+ designed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once fairly out of view, the recovery of the prisoner became almost
+ impossible, since, in so many places, the river was rendered inaccessible
+ by the steepness of its banks, or the thickets of alders, poplars, and
+ birch, which, overhanging its banks, prevented the approach of horsemen.
+ Errors and accidents had also happened among the pursuers, whose task the
+ approaching night rendered every moment more hopeless. Some got themselves
+ involved in the eddies of the stream, and required the assistance of their
+ companions to save them from drowning. Others, hurt by shots or blows in
+ the confused mele'e, implored help or threatened vengeance, and in one or
+ two instances such accidents led to actual strife. The trumpets,
+ therefore, sounded the retreat, announcing that the commanding officer,
+ with whatsoever unwillingness, had for the present relinquished hopes of
+ the important prize which had thus unexpectedly escaped his grasp, and the
+ troopers began slowly, reluctantly, and brawling with each other as they
+ returned, again to assume their ranks. I could see them darkening, as they
+ formed on the southern bank of the river,&mdash;whose murmurs, long
+ drowned by the louder cries of vengeful pursuit, were now heard hoarsely
+ mingling with the deep, discontented, and reproachful voices of the
+ disappointed horsemen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hitherto I had been as it were a mere spectator, though far from an
+ uninterested one, of the singular scene which had passed. But now I heard
+ a voice suddenly exclaim, &ldquo;Where is the English stranger?&mdash;It was he
+ gave Rob Roy the knife to cut the belt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cleeve the pock-pudding to the chafts!&rdquo; cried one voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Weize a brace of balls through his harn-pan!&rdquo; said a second.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Drive three inches of cauld airn into his brisket!&rdquo; shouted a third.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And I heard several horses galloping to and fro, with the kind purpose,
+ doubtless, of executing these denunciations. I was immediately awakened to
+ the sense of my situation, and to the certainty that armed men, having no
+ restraint whatever on their irritated and inflamed passions, would
+ probably begin by shooting or cutting me down, and afterwards investigate
+ the justice of the action. Impressed by this belief, I leaped from my
+ horse, and turning him loose, plunged into a bush of alder-trees, where,
+ considering the advancing obscurity of the night, I thought there was
+ little chance of my being discovered. Had I been near enough to the Duke
+ to have invoked his personal protection, I would have done so; but he had
+ already commenced his retreat, and I saw no officer on the left bank of
+ the river, of authority sufficient to have afforded protection, in case of
+ my surrendering myself. I thought there was no point of honour which could
+ require, in such circumstances, an unnecessary exposure of my life. My
+ first idea, when the tumult began to be appeased, and the clatter of the
+ horses' feet was heard less frequently in the immediate vicinity of my
+ hiding-place, was to seek out the Duke's quarters when all should be
+ quiet, and give myself up to him, as a liege subject, who had nothing to
+ fear from his justice, and a stranger, who had every right to expect
+ protection and hospitality. With this purpose I crept out of my
+ hiding-place, and looked around me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The twilight had now melted nearly into darkness; a few or none of the
+ troopers were left on my side of the Forth, and of those who were already
+ across it, I only heard the distant trample of the horses' feet, and the
+ wailing and prolonged sound of their trumpets, which rung through the
+ woods to recall stragglers. Here, therefore, I was left in a situation of
+ considerable difficulty. I had no horse, and the deep and wheeling stream
+ of the river, rendered turbid by the late tumult of which its channel had
+ been the scene, and seeming yet more so under the doubtful influence of an
+ imperfect moonlight, had no inviting influence for a pedestrian by no
+ means accustomed to wade rivers, and who had lately seen horsemen
+ weltering, in this dangerous passage, up to the very saddle-laps. At the
+ same time, my prospect, if I remained on the side of the river on which I
+ then stood, could be no other than of concluding the various fatigues of
+ this day and the preceding night, by passing that which was now closing
+ in, <i>al fresco</i> on the side of a Highland hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a moment's reflection, I began to consider that Fairservice, who had
+ doubtless crossed the river with the other domestics, according to his
+ forward and impertinent custom of putting himself always among the
+ foremost, could not fail to satisfy the Duke, or the competent
+ authorities, respecting my rank and situation; and that, therefore, my
+ character did not require my immediate appearance, at the risk of being
+ drowned in the river&mdash;of being unable to trace the march of the
+ squadron in case of my reaching the other side in safety&mdash;or,
+ finally, of being cut down, right or wrong, by some straggler, who might
+ think such a piece of good service a convenient excuse for not sooner
+ rejoining his ranks. I therefore resolved to measure my steps back to the
+ little inn, where I had passed the preceding night. I had nothing to
+ apprehend from Rob Roy. He was now at liberty, and I was certain, in case
+ of my falling in with any of his people, the news of his escape would
+ ensure me protection. I might thus also show, that I had no intention to
+ desert Mr. Jarvie in the delicate situation in which he had engaged
+ himself chiefly on my account. And lastly, it was only in this quarter
+ that I could hope to learn tidings concerning Rashleigh and my father's
+ papers, which had been the original cause of an expedition so fraught with
+ perilous adventure. I therefore abandoned all thoughts of crossing the
+ Forth that evening; and, turning my back on the Fords of Frew, began to
+ retrace my steps towards the little village of Aberfoil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sharp frost-wind, which made itself heard and felt from time to time,
+ removed the clouds of mist which might otherwise have slumbered till
+ morning on the valley; and, though it could not totally disperse the
+ clouds of vapour, yet threw them in confused and changeful masses, now
+ hovering round the heads of the mountains, now filling, as with a dense
+ and voluminous stream of smoke, the various deep gullies where masses of
+ the composite rock, or breccia, tumbling in fragments from the cliffs,
+ have rushed to the valley, leaving each behind its course a rent and torn
+ ravine resembling a deserted water-course. The moon, which was now high,
+ and twinkled with all the vivacity of a frosty atmosphere, silvered the
+ windings of the river and the peaks and precipices which the mist left
+ visible, while her beams seemed as it were absorbed by the fleecy
+ whiteness of the mist, where it lay thick and condensed; and gave to the
+ more light and vapoury specks, which were elsewhere visible, a sort of
+ filmy transparency resembling the lightest veil of silver gauze. Despite
+ the uncertainty of my situation, a view so romantic, joined to the active
+ and inspiring influence of the frosty atmosphere, elevated my spirits
+ while it braced my nerves. I felt an inclination to cast care away, and
+ bid defiance to danger, and involuntarily whistled, by way of cadence to
+ my steps, which my feeling of the cold led me to accelerate, and I felt
+ the pulse of existence beat prouder and higher in proportion as I felt
+ confidence in my own strength, courage, and resources. I was so much lost
+ in these thoughts, and in the feelings which they excited, that two
+ horsemen came up behind me without my hearing their approach, until one
+ was on each side of me, when the left-hand rider, pulling up his horse,
+ addressed me in the English tongue&mdash;&ldquo;So ho, friend! whither so late?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To my supper and bed at Aberfoil,&rdquo; I replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are the passes open?&rdquo; he inquired, with the same commanding tone of
+ voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not know,&rdquo; I replied; &ldquo;I shall learn when I get there. But,&rdquo; I
+ added, the fate of Morris recurring to my recollection, &ldquo;if you are an
+ English stranger, I advise you to turn back till daylight; there has been
+ some disturbance in this neighbourhood, and I should hesitate to say it is
+ perfectly safe for strangers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The soldiers had the worst?&mdash;had they not?&rdquo; was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They had indeed; and an officer's party were destroyed or made
+ prisoners.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you sure of that?&rdquo; replied the horseman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As sure as that I hear you speak,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;I was an unwilling
+ spectator of the skirmish.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unwilling!&rdquo; continued the interrogator. &ldquo;Were you not engaged in it
+ then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly no,&rdquo; I replied; &ldquo;I was detained by the king's officer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On what suspicion? and who are you? or what is your name?&rdquo; he continued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I really do not know, sir,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;why I should answer so many
+ questions to an unknown stranger. I have told you enough to convince you
+ that you are going into a dangerous and distracted country. If you choose
+ to proceed, it is your own affair; but as I ask you no questions
+ respecting your name and business, you will oblige me by making no
+ inquiries after mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Francis Osbaldistone,&rdquo; said the other rider, in a voice the tones of
+ which thrilled through every nerve of my body, &ldquo;should not whistle his
+ favourite airs when he wishes to remain undiscovered.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Diana Vernon&mdash;for she, wrapped in a horseman's cloak, was the
+ last speaker&mdash;whistled in playful mimicry the second part of the tune
+ which was on my lips when they came up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good God!&rdquo; I exclaimed, like one thunderstruck, &ldquo;can it be you, Miss
+ Vernon, on such a spot&mdash;at such an hour&mdash;in such a lawless
+ country&mdash;in such&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In such a masculine dress, you would say.&mdash;But what would you have?
+ The philosophy of the excellent Corporal Nym is the best after all; things
+ must be as they may&mdash;<i>pauca verba.</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While she was thus speaking, I eagerly took advantage of an unusually
+ bright gleam of moonshine, to study the appearance of her companion; for
+ it may be easily supposed, that finding Miss Vernon in a place so
+ solitary, engaged in a journey so dangerous, and under the protection of
+ one gentleman only, were circumstances to excite every feeling of
+ jealousy, as well as surprise. The rider did not speak with the deep
+ melody of Rashleigh's voice; his tones were more high and commanding; he
+ was taller, moreover, as he sate on horseback, than that first-rate object
+ of my hate and suspicion. Neither did the stranger's address resemble that
+ of any of my other cousins; it had that indescribable tone and manner by
+ which we recognise a man of sense and breeding, even in the first few
+ sentences he speaks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The object of my anxiety seemed desirous to get rid of my investigation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Diana,&rdquo; he said, in a tone of mingled kindness and authority, &ldquo;give your
+ cousin his property, and let us not spend time here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Vernon had in the meantime taken out a small case, and leaning down
+ from her horse towards me, she said, in a tone in which an effort at her
+ usual quaint lightness of expression contended with a deeper and more
+ grave tone of sentiment, &ldquo;You see, my dear coz, I was born to be your
+ better angel. Rashleigh has been compelled to yield up his spoil, and had
+ we reached this same village of Aberfoil last night, as we purposed, I
+ should have found some Highland sylph to have wafted to you all these
+ representatives of commercial wealth. But there were giants and dragons in
+ the way; and errant-knights and damsels of modern times, bold though they
+ be, must not, as of yore, run into useless danger&mdash;Do not you do so
+ either, my dear coz.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Diana,&rdquo; said her companion, &ldquo;let me once more warn you that the evening
+ waxes late, and we are still distant from our home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am coming, sir, I am coming&mdash;Consider,&rdquo; she added, with a sigh,
+ &ldquo;how lately I have been subjected to control&mdash;besides, I have not yet
+ given my cousin the packet, and bid him fare-well&mdash;for ever. Yes,
+ Frank,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;for ever!&mdash;there is a gulf between us&mdash;a gulf
+ of absolute perdition;&mdash;where we go, you must not follow&mdash;what
+ we do, you must not share in&mdash;Farewell&mdash;be happy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Aimage-0008" id="Aimage-0008">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/pb242.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Parting of Die and Frank on the Moor " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ In the attitude in which she bent from her horse, which was a Highland
+ pony, her face, not perhaps altogether unwillingly, touched mine. She
+ pressed my hand, while the tear that trembled in her eye found its way to
+ my cheek instead of her own. It was a moment never to be forgotten&mdash;inexpressibly
+ bitter, yet mixed with a sensation of pleasure so deeply soothing and
+ affecting, as at once to unlock all the flood-gates of the heart. It was
+ <i>but</i> a moment, however; for, instantly recovering from the feeling
+ to which she had involuntarily given way, she intimated to her companion
+ she was ready to attend him, and putting their horses to a brisk pace,
+ they were soon far distant from the place where I stood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heaven knows, it was not apathy which loaded my frame and my tongue so
+ much, that I could neither return Miss Vernon's half embrace, nor even
+ answer her farewell. The word, though it rose to my tongue, seemed to
+ choke in my throat like the fatal <i>guilty,</i> which the delinquent who
+ makes it his plea, knows must be followed by the doom of death. The
+ surprise&mdash;the sorrow, almost stupified me. I remained motionless with
+ the packet in my hand, gazing after them, as if endeavouring to count the
+ sparkles which flew from the horses' hoofs. I continued to look after even
+ these had ceased to be visible, and to listen for their footsteps long
+ after the last distant trampling had died in my ears. At length, tears
+ rushed to my eyes, glazed as they were by the exertion of straining after
+ what was no longer to be seen. I wiped them mechanically, and almost
+ without being aware that they were flowing&mdash;but they came thicker and
+ thicker; I felt the tightening of the throat and breast&mdash;the <i>hysterica
+ passio</i> of poor Lear; and sitting down by the wayside, I shed a flood
+ of the first and most bitter tears which had flowed from my eyes since
+ childhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0017" id="AlinkCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER SEVENTEEN.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Dangle.</i>&mdash;Egad, I think the interpreter is the harder to be
+ understood of the two.
+ Critic.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I had scarce given vent to my feelings in this paroxysm, ere was ashamed
+ of my weakness. I remembered that I had been for some time endeavouring to
+ regard Diana Vernon, when her idea intruded itself on my remembrance, as a
+ friend, for whose welfare I should indeed always be anxious, but with whom
+ I could have little further communication. But the almost unrepressed
+ tenderness of her manner, joined to the romance of our sudden meeting
+ where it was so little to have been expected, were circumstances which
+ threw me entirely off my guard. I recovered, however, sooner than might
+ have been expected, and without giving myself time accurately to examine
+ my motives. I resumed the path on which I had been travelling when
+ overtaken by this strange and unexpected apparition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not,&rdquo; was my reflection, &ldquo;transgressing her injunction so
+ pathetically given, since I am but pursuing my own journey by the only
+ open route.&mdash;If I have succeeded in recovering my father's property,
+ it still remains incumbent on me to see my Glasgow friend delivered from
+ the situation in which he has involved himself on my account; besides,
+ what other place of rest can I obtain for the night excepting at the
+ little inn of Aberfoil? They also must stop there, since it is impossible
+ for travellers on horseback to go farther&mdash;Well, then, we shall meet
+ again&mdash;meet for the last time perhaps&mdash;But I shall see and hear
+ her&mdash;I shall learn who this happy man is who exercises over her the
+ authority of a husband&mdash;I shall learn if there remains, in the
+ difficult course in which she seems engaged, any difficulty which my
+ efforts may remove, or aught that I can do to express my gratitude for her
+ generosity&mdash;for her disinterested friendship.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I reasoned thus with myself, colouring with every plausible pretext
+ which occurred to my ingenuity my passionate desire once more to see and
+ converse with my cousin, I was suddenly hailed by a touch on the shoulder;
+ and the deep voice of a Highlander, who, walking still faster than I,
+ though I was proceeding at a smart pace, accosted me with, &ldquo;A braw night,
+ Maister Osbaldistone&mdash;we have met at the mirk hour before now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no mistaking the tone of MacGregor; he had escaped the pursuit
+ of his enemies, and was in full retreat to his own wilds and to his
+ adherents. He had also contrived to arm himself, probably at the house of
+ some secret adherent, for he had a musket on his shoulder, and the usual
+ Highland weapons by his side. To have found myself alone with such a
+ character in such a situation, and at this late hour in the evening, might
+ not have been pleasant to me in any ordinary mood of mind; for, though
+ habituated to think of Rob Roy in rather a friendly point of view, I will
+ confess frankly that I never heard him speak but that it seemed to thrill
+ my blood. The intonation of the mountaineers gives a habitual depth and
+ hollowness to the sound of their words, owing to the guttural expression
+ so common in their native language, and they usually speak with a good
+ deal of emphasis. To these national peculiarities Rob Roy added a sort of
+ hard indifference of accent and manner, expressive of a mind neither to be
+ daunted, nor surprised, nor affected by what passed before him, however
+ dreadful, however sudden, however afflicting. Habitual danger, with
+ unbounded confidence in his own strength and sagacity, had rendered him
+ indifferent to fear, and the lawless and precarious life he led had
+ blunted, though its dangers and errors had not destroyed, his feelings for
+ others. And it was to be remembered that I had very lately seen the
+ followers of this man commit a cruel slaughter on an unarmed and suppliant
+ individual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet such was the state of my mind, that I welcomed the company of the
+ outlaw leader as a relief to my own overstrained and painful thoughts; and
+ was not without hopes that through his means I might obtain some clew of
+ guidance through the maze in which my fate had involved me. I therefore
+ answered his greeting cordially, and congratulated him on his late escape
+ in circumstances when escape seemed impossible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;there is as much between the craig and the woodie* as
+ there is between the cup and the lip. But my peril was less than you may
+ think, being a stranger to this country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * <i>i.e.</i> The throat and the withy. Twigs of willow, such as bind
+ faggots, were often used for halters in Scotland and Ireland, being a sage
+ economy of hemp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of those that were summoned to take me, and to keep me, and to retake me
+ again, there was a moiety, as cousin Nicol Jarvie calls it, that had nae
+ will that I suld be either taen, or keepit fast, or retaen; and of tother
+ moiety, there was as half was feared to stir me; and so I had only like
+ the fourth part of fifty or sixty men to deal withal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And enough, too, I should think,&rdquo; replied I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dinna ken that,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;but I ken, that turn every ill-willer that I
+ had amang them out upon the green before the Clachan of Aberfoil, I wad
+ find them play with broadsword and target, one down and another come on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He now inquired into my adventures since we entered his country, and
+ laughed heartily at my account of the battle we had in the inn, and at the
+ exploits of the Bailie with the red-hot poker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let Glasgow Flourish!&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;The curse of Cromwell on me, if I
+ wad hae wished better sport than to see cousin Nicol Jarvie singe
+ Iverach's plaid, like a sheep's head between a pair of tongs. But my
+ cousin Jarvie,&rdquo; he added, more gravely, &ldquo;has some gentleman's bluid in his
+ veins, although he has been unhappily bred up to a peaceful and mechanical
+ craft, which could not but blunt any pretty man's spirit.&mdash;Ye may
+ estimate the reason why I could not receive you at the Clachan of Aberfoil
+ as I purposed. They had made a fine hosenet for me when I was absent twa
+ or three days at Glasgow, upon the king's business&mdash;But I think I
+ broke up the league about their lugs&mdash;they'll no be able to hound one
+ clan against another as they hae dune. I hope soon to see the day when a'
+ Hielandmen will stand shouther to shouther. But what chanced next?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I gave him an account of the arrival of Captain Thornton and his party,
+ and the arrest of the Bailie and myself under pretext of our being
+ suspicious persons; and upon his more special inquiry, I recollected the
+ officer had mentioned that, besides my name sounding suspicious in his
+ ears, he had orders to secure an old and young person, resembling our
+ description. This again moved the outlaw's risibility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As man lives by bread,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the buzzards have mistaen my friend the
+ Bailie for his Excellency, and you for Diana Vernon&mdash;O, the most
+ egregious night-howlets!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Vernon?&rdquo; said I, with hesitation, and trembling for the answer&mdash;&ldquo;Does
+ she still bear that name? She passed but now, along with a gentleman who
+ seemed to use a style of authority.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, ay,&rdquo; answered Rob, &ldquo;she's under lawfu' authority now; and full time,
+ for she was a daft hempie&mdash;But she's a mettle quean. It's a pity his
+ Excellency is a thought eldern. The like o' yourself, or my son Hamish,
+ wad be mair sortable in point of years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, then, was a complete downfall of those castles of cards which my
+ fancy had, in despite of my reason, so often amused herself with building.
+ Although in truth I had scarcely anything else to expect, since I could
+ not suppose that Diana could be travelling in such a country, at such an
+ hour, with any but one who had a legal title to protect her, I did not
+ feel the blow less severely when it came; and MacGregor's voice, urging me
+ to pursue my story, sounded in my ears without conveying any exact import
+ to my mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are ill,&rdquo; he said at length, after he had spoken twice without
+ receiving an answer; &ldquo;this day's wark has been ower muckle for ane
+ doubtless unused to sic things.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tone of kindness in which this was spoken, recalling me to myself, and
+ to the necessities of my situation, I continued my narrative as well as I
+ could. Rob Roy expressed great exultation at the successful skirmish in
+ the pass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They say,&rdquo; he observed, &ldquo;that king's chaff is better than other folk's
+ corn; but I think that canna be said o' king's soldiers, if they let
+ themselves be beaten wi' a wheen auld carles that are past fighting, and
+ bairns that are no come till't, and wives wi' their rocks and distaffs,
+ the very wally-draigles o' the countryside. And Dougal Gregor, too&mdash;wha
+ wad hae thought there had been as muckle sense in his tatty-pow, that
+ ne'er had a better covering than his ain shaggy hassock of hair!&mdash;But
+ say away&mdash;though I dread what's to come neist&mdash;for my Helen's an
+ incarnate devil when her bluid's up&mdash;puir thing, she has ower muckle
+ reason.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I observed as much delicacy as I could in communicating to him the usage
+ we had received, but I obviously saw the detail gave him great pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wad rather than a thousand merks,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that I had been at hame!
+ To misguide strangers, and forbye a', my ain natural cousin, that had
+ showed me sic kindness&mdash;I wad rather they had burned half the Lennox
+ in their folly! But this comes o' trusting women and their bairns, that
+ have neither measure nor reason in their dealings. However, it's a' owing
+ to that dog of a gauger, wha betrayed me by pretending a message from your
+ cousin Rashleigh, to meet him on the king's affairs, whilk I thought was
+ very like to be anent Garschattachin and a party of the Lennox declaring
+ themselves for King James. Faith! but I ken'd I was clean beguiled when I
+ heard the Duke was there; and when they strapped the horse-girth ower my
+ arms, I might hae judged what was biding me; for I ken'd your kinsman,
+ being, wi' pardon, a slippery loon himself, is prone to employ those of
+ his ain kidney&mdash;I wish he mayna hae been at the bottom o' the ploy
+ himsell&mdash;I thought the chield Morris looked devilish queer when I
+ determined he should remain a wad, or hostage, for my safe back-coming.
+ But I <i>am</i> come back, nae thanks to him, or them that employed him;
+ and the question is, how the collector loon is to win back himsell&mdash;I
+ promise him it will not be without a ransom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Morris,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;has already paid the last ransom which mortal man can
+ owe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eh! What?&rdquo; exclaimed my companion hastily; &ldquo;what d'ye say? I trust it was
+ in the skirmish he was killed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was slain in cold blood after the fight was over, Mr. Campbell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cold blood?&mdash;Damnation!&rdquo; he said, muttering betwixt his teeth&mdash;&ldquo;How
+ fell that, sir? Speak out, sir, and do not Maister or Campbell me&mdash;my
+ foot is on my native heath, and my name is MacGregor!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His passions were obviously irritated; but without noticing the rudeness
+ of his tone, I gave him a short and distinct account of the death of
+ Morris. He struck the butt of his gun with great vehemence against the
+ ground, and broke out&mdash;&ldquo;I vow to God, such a deed might make one
+ forswear kin, clan, country, wife, and bairns! And yet the villain wrought
+ long for it. And what is the difference between warsling below the water
+ wi' a stane about your neck, and wavering in the wind wi' a tether round
+ it?&mdash;it's but choking after a', and he drees the doom he ettled for
+ me. I could have wished, though, they had rather putten a ball through
+ him, or a dirk; for the fashion of removing him will give rise to mony
+ idle clavers&mdash;But every wight has his weird, and we maun a' dee when
+ our day comes&mdash;And naebody will deny that Helen MacGregor has deep
+ wrongs to avenge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he seemed to dismiss the theme altogether from his mind, and
+ proceeded to inquire how I got free from the party in whose hands he had
+ seen me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My story was soon told; and I added the episode of my having recovered the
+ papers of my father, though I dared not trust my voice to name the name of
+ Diana.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was sure ye wad get them,&rdquo; said MacGregor;&mdash;&ldquo;the letter ye brought
+ me contained his Excellency's pleasure to that effect and nae doubt it was
+ my will to have aided in it. And I asked ye up into this glen on the very
+ errand. But it's like his Excellency has foregathered wi' Rashleigh sooner
+ than I expected.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first part of this answer was what most forcibly struck me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was the letter I brought you, then, from this person you call his
+ Excellency? Who is he? and what is his rank and proper name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am thinking,&rdquo; said MacGregor, &ldquo;that since ye dinna ken them already
+ they canna be o' muckle consequence to you, and sae I shall say naething
+ on that score. But weel I wot the letter was frae his ain hand, or, having
+ a sort of business of my ain on my hands, being, as ye weel may see, just
+ as much as I can fairly manage, I canna say I would hae fashed mysell sae
+ muckle about the matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I now recollected the lights seen in the library&mdash;the various
+ circumstances which had excited my jealousy&mdash;the glove&mdash;the
+ agitation of the tapestry which covered the secret passage from
+ Rashleigh's apartment; and, above all, I recollected that Diana retired in
+ order to write, as I then thought, the billet to which I was to have
+ recourse in case of the last necessity. Her hours, then, were not spent in
+ solitude, but in listening to the addresses of some desperate agent of
+ Jacobitical treason, who was a secret resident within the mansion of her
+ uncle! Other young women have sold themselves for gold, or suffered
+ themselves to be seduced from their first love from vanity; but Diana had
+ sacrificed my affections and her own to partake the fortunes of some
+ desperate adventurer&mdash;to seek the haunts of freebooters through
+ midnight deserts, with no better hopes of rank or fortune than that
+ mimicry of both which the mock court of the Stuarts at St. Germains had in
+ their power to bestow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will see her,&rdquo; I said internally, &ldquo;if it be possible, once more. I will
+ argue with her as a friend&mdash;as a kinsman&mdash;on the risk she is
+ incurring, and I will facilitate her retreat to France, where she may,
+ with more comfort and propriety, as well as safety, abide the issue of the
+ turmoils which the political trepanner, to whom she has united her fate,
+ is doubtless busied in putting into motion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I conclude, then,&rdquo; I said to MacGregor, after about five minutes' silence
+ on both sides, &ldquo;that his Excellency, since you give me no other name for
+ him, was residing in Osbaldistone Hall at the same time with myself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To be sure&mdash;to be sure&mdash;and in the young lady's apartment, as
+ best reason was.&rdquo; This gratuitous information was adding gall to
+ bitterness. &ldquo;But few,&rdquo; added MacGregor, &ldquo;ken'd he was derned there, save
+ Rashleigh and Sir Hildebrand; for you were out o' the question; and the
+ young lads haena wit eneugh to ca' the cat frae the cream&mdash;But it's a
+ bra' auld-fashioned house, and what I specially admire is the abundance o'
+ holes and bores and concealments&mdash;ye could put twenty or thirty men
+ in ae corner, and a family might live a week without finding them out&mdash;whilk,
+ nae doubt, may on occasion be a special convenience. I wish we had the
+ like o' Osbaldistone Hall on the braes o' Craig-Royston&mdash;But we maun
+ gar woods and caves serve the like o' us puir Hieland bodies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose his Excellency,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;was privy to the first accident which
+ befell&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could not help hesitating a moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye were going to say Morris,&rdquo; said Rob Roy coolly, for he was too much
+ accustomed to deeds of violence for the agitation he had at first
+ expressed to be of long continuance. &ldquo;I used to laugh heartily at that
+ reik; but I'll hardly hae the heart to do't again, since the ill-far'd
+ accident at the Loch. Na, na&mdash;his Excellency ken'd nought o' that
+ ploy&mdash;it was a' managed atween Rashleigh and mysell. But the sport
+ that came after&mdash;and Rashleigh's shift o' turning the suspicion aff
+ himself upon you, that he had nae grit favour to frae the beginning&mdash;and
+ then Miss Die, she maun hae us sweep up a' our spiders' webs again, and
+ set you out o' the Justice's claws&mdash;and then the frightened craven
+ Morris, that was scared out o' his seven senses by seeing the real man
+ when he was charging the innocent stranger&mdash;and the gowk of a clerk&mdash;and
+ the drunken carle of a justice&mdash;Ohon! ohon!&mdash;mony a laugh that
+ job's gien me&mdash;and now, a' that I can do for the puir devil is to get
+ some messes said for his soul.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May I ask,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;how Miss Vernon came to have so much influence over
+ Rashleigh and his accomplices as to derange your projected plan?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mine! it was none of mine. No man can say I ever laid my burden on other
+ folk's shoulders&mdash;it was a' Rashleigh's doings. But, undoubtedly, she
+ had great influence wi' us baith on account of his Excellency's affection,
+ as weel as that she ken'd far ower mony secrets to be lightlied in a
+ matter o' that kind.&mdash;Deil tak him,&rdquo; he ejaculated, by way of summing
+ up, &ldquo;that gies women either secret to keep or power to abuse&mdash;fules
+ shouldna hae chapping-sticks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were now within a quarter of a mile from the village, when three
+ Highlanders, springing upon us with presented arms, commanded us to stand
+ and tell our business. The single word <i>Gregaragh,</i> in the deep and
+ commanding voice of my companion, was answered by a shout, or rather yell,
+ of joyful recognition. One, throwing down his firelock, clasped his leader
+ so fast round the knees, that he was unable to extricate himself,
+ muttering, at the same time, a torrent of Gaelic gratulation, which every
+ now and then rose into a sort of scream of gladness. The two others, after
+ the first howling was over, set off literally with the speed of deers,
+ contending which should first carry to the village, which a strong party
+ of the MacGregors now occupied, the joyful news of Rob Roy's escape and
+ return. The intelligence excited such shouts of jubilation, that the very
+ hills rung again, and young and old, men, women, and children, without
+ distinction of sex or age, came running down the vale to meet us, with all
+ the tumultuous speed and clamour of a mountain torrent. When I heard the
+ rushing noise and yells of this joyful multitude approach us, I thought it
+ a fitting precaution to remind MacGregor that I was a stranger, and under
+ his protection. He accordingly held me fast by the hand, while the
+ assemblage crowded around him with such shouts of devoted attachment, and
+ joy at his return, as were really affecting; nor did he extend to his
+ followers what all eagerly sought, the grasp, namely, of his hand, until
+ he had made them understand that I was to be kindly and carefully used.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mandate of the Sultan of Delhi could not have been more promptly
+ obeyed. Indeed, I now sustained nearly as much inconvenience from their
+ well-meant attentions as formerly from their rudeness. They would hardly
+ allow the friend of their leader to walk upon his own legs, so earnest
+ were they in affording me support and assistance upon the way; and at
+ length, taking advantage of a slight stumble which I made over a stone,
+ which the press did not permit me to avoid, they fairly seized upon me,
+ and bore me in their arms in triumph towards Mrs. MacAlpine's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On arrival before her hospitable wigwam, I found power and popularity had
+ its inconveniences in the Highlands, as everywhere else; for, before
+ MacGregor could be permitted to enter the house where he was to obtain
+ rest and refreshment, he was obliged to relate the story of his escape at
+ least a dozen times over, as I was told by an officious old man, who chose
+ to translate it at least as often for my edification, and to whom I was in
+ policy obliged to seem to pay a decent degree of attention. The audience
+ being at length satisfied, group after group departed to take their bed
+ upon the heath, or in the neighbouring huts, some cursing the Duke and
+ Garschattachin, some lamenting the probable danger of Ewan of Brigglands,
+ incurred by his friendship to MacGregor, but all agreeing that the escape
+ of Rob Roy himself lost nothing in comparison with the exploit of any one
+ of their chiefs since the days of Dougal Ciar, the founder of his line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The friendly outlaw, now taking me by the arm, conducted me into the
+ interior of the hut. My eyes roved round its smoky recesses in quest of
+ Diana and her companion; but they were nowhere to be seen, and I felt as
+ if to make inquiries might betray some secret motives, which were best
+ concealed. The only known countenance upon which my eyes rested was that
+ of the Bailie, who, seated on a stool by the fireside, received with a
+ sort of reserved dignity, the welcomes of Rob Roy, the apologies which he
+ made for his indifferent accommodation, and his inquiries after his
+ health.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am pretty weel, kinsman,&rdquo; said the Bailie&mdash;&ldquo;indifferent weel, I
+ thank ye; and for accommodations, ane canna expect to carry about the Saut
+ Market at his tail, as a snail does his caup;&mdash;and I am blythe that
+ ye hae gotten out o' the hands o' your unfreends.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Weel, weel, then,&rdquo; answered Roy, &ldquo;what is't ails ye, man&mdash;a's weel
+ that ends weel!&mdash;the warld will last our day&mdash;Come, take a cup
+ o' brandy&mdash;your father the deacon could take ane at an orra time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It might be he might do sae, Robin, after fatigue&mdash;whilk has been my
+ lot mair ways than ane this day. But,&rdquo; he continued, slowly filling up a
+ little wooden stoup which might hold about three glasses, &ldquo;he was a
+ moderate man of his bicker, as I am mysell&mdash;Here's wussing health to
+ ye, Robin&rdquo; (a sip), &ldquo;and your weelfare here and hereafter&rdquo; (another
+ taste), &ldquo;and also to my cousin Helen&mdash;and to your twa hopefu' lads,
+ of whom mair anon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he drank up the contents of the cup with great gravity and
+ deliberation, while MacGregor winked aside to me, as if in ridicule of the
+ air of wisdom and superior authority which the Bailie assumed towards him
+ in their intercourse, and which he exercised when Rob was at the head of
+ his armed clan, in full as great, or a greater degree, than when he was at
+ the Bailie's mercy in the Tolbooth of Glasgow. It seemed to me, that
+ MacGregor wished me, as a stranger, to understand, that if he submitted to
+ the tone which his kinsman assumed, it was partly out of deference to the
+ rights of hospitality, but still more for the jest's sake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the Bailie set down his cup he recognised me, and giving me a cordial
+ welcome on my return, he waived farther communication with me for the
+ present.&mdash;&ldquo;I will speak to your matters anon; I maun begin, as in
+ reason, wi' those of my kinsman.&mdash;I presume, Robin, there's naebody
+ here will carry aught o' what I am gaun to say, to the town-council or
+ elsewhere, to my prejudice or to yours?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make yourself easy on that head, cousin Nicol,&rdquo; answered MacGregor; &ldquo;the
+ tae half o' the gillies winna ken what ye say, and the tother winna care&mdash;besides
+ that, I wad stow the tongue out o' the head o' any o' them that suld
+ presume to say ower again ony speech held wi' me in their presence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aweel, cousin, sic being the case, and Mr. Osbaldistone here being a
+ prudent youth, and a safe friend&mdash;I'se plainly tell ye, ye are
+ breeding up your family to gang an ill gate.&rdquo; Then, clearing his voice
+ with a preliminary hem, he addressed his kinsman, checking, as Malvolio
+ proposed to do when seated in his state, his familiar smile with an
+ austere regard of control.&mdash;&ldquo;Ye ken yourself ye haud light by the law&mdash;and
+ for my cousin Helen, forbye that her reception o' me this blessed day&mdash;whilk
+ I excuse on account of perturbation of mind, was muckle on the north side
+ o' <i>friendly,</i> I say (outputting this personal reason of complaint) I
+ hae that to say o' your wife&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say <i>nothing</i> of her, kinsman,&rdquo; said Rob, in a grave and stern tone,
+ &ldquo;but what is befitting a friend to say, and her husband to hear. Of me you
+ are welcome to say your full pleasure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aweel, aweel,&rdquo; said the Bailie, somewhat disconcerted, &ldquo;we'se let that be
+ a pass-over&mdash;I dinna approve of making mischief in families. But here
+ are your twa sons, Hamish and Robin, whilk signifies, as I'm gien to
+ understand, James and Robert&mdash;I trust ye will call them sae in future&mdash;there
+ comes nae gude o' Hamishes, and Eachines, and Angusses, except that
+ they're the names ane aye chances to see in the indictments at the Western
+ Circuits for cow-lifting, at the instance of his majesty's advocate for
+ his majesty's interest. Aweel, but the twa lads, as I was saying, they
+ haena sae muckle as the ordinar grunds, man, of liberal education&mdash;they
+ dinna ken the very multiplication table itself, whilk is the root of a'
+ usefu' knowledge, and they did naething but laugh and fleer at me when I
+ tauld them my mind on their ignorance&mdash;It's my belief they can
+ neither read, write, nor cipher, if sic a thing could be believed o' ane's
+ ain connections in a Christian land.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If they could, kinsman,&rdquo; said MacGregor, with great indifference, &ldquo;their
+ learning must have come o' free will, for whar the deil was I to get them
+ a teacher?&mdash;wad ye hae had me put on the gate o' your Divinity Hall
+ at Glasgow College, 'Wanted, a tutor for Rob Roy's bairns?'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Na, kinsman,&rdquo; replied Mr. Jarvie, &ldquo;but ye might hae sent the lads whar
+ they could hae learned the fear o' God, and the usages of civilised
+ creatures. They are as ignorant as the kyloes ye used to drive to market,
+ or the very English churls that ye sauld them to, and can do naething
+ whatever to purpose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Umph!&rdquo; answered Rob; &ldquo;Hamish can bring doun a black-cock when he's on the
+ wing wi' a single bullet, and Rob can drive a dirk through a twa-inch
+ board.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sae muckle the waur for them, cousin!&mdash;sae muckle the waur for them
+ baith!&rdquo; answered the Glasgow merchant in a tone of great decision; &ldquo;an
+ they ken naething better than that, they had better no ken that neither.
+ Tell me yourself, Rob, what has a' this cutting, and stabbing, and
+ shooting, and driving of dirks, whether through human flesh or fir deals,
+ dune for yourself?&mdash;and werena ye a happier man at the tail o' your
+ nowte-bestial, when ye were in an honest calling, than ever ye hae been
+ since, at the head o' your Hieland kernes and gally-glasses?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I observed that MacGregor, while his well-meaning kinsman spoke to him in
+ this manner, turned and writhed his body like a man who indeed suffers
+ pain, but is determined no groan shall escape his lips; and I longed for
+ an opportunity to interrupt the well-meant, but, as it was obvious to me,
+ quite mistaken strain, in which Jarvie addressed this extraordinary
+ person. The dialogue, however, came to an end without my interference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And sae,&rdquo; said the Bailie, &ldquo;I hae been thinking, Rob, that as it may be
+ ye are ower deep in the black book to win a pardon, and ower auld to mend
+ yourself, that it wad be a pity to bring up twa hopefu' lads to sic a
+ godless trade as your ain, and I wad blythely tak them for prentices at
+ the loom, as I began mysell, and my father the deacon afore me, though,
+ praise to the Giver, I only trade now as wholesale dealer&mdash;And&mdash;and&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He saw a storm gathering on Rob's brow, which probably induced him to
+ throw in, as a sweetener of an obnoxious proposition, what he had reserved
+ to crown his own generosity, had it been embraced as an acceptable one;&mdash;&ldquo;and
+ Robin, lad, ye needna look sae glum, for I'll pay the prentice-fee, and
+ never plague ye for the thousand merks neither.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Ceade millia diaoul,</i> hundred thousand devils!&rdquo; exclaimed Rob,
+ rising and striding through the hut, &ldquo;My sons weavers!&mdash;<i>Millia
+ molligheart!</i>&mdash;but I wad see every loom in Glasgow, beam,
+ traddles, and shuttles, burnt in hell-fire sooner!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With some difficulty I made the Bailie, who was preparing a reply,
+ comprehend the risk and impropriety of pressing our host on this topic,
+ and in a minute he recovered, or reassumed, his serenity of temper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But ye mean weel&mdash;ye mean weel,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;so gie me your hand,
+ Nicol, and if ever I put my sons apprentice, I will gie you the refusal o'
+ them. And, as you say, there's the thousand merks to be settled between
+ us.&mdash; Here, Eachin MacAnaleister, bring me my sporran.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The person he addressed, a tall, strong mountaineer, who seemed to act as
+ MacGregor's lieutenant, brought from some place of safety a large leathern
+ pouch, such as Highlanders of rank wear before them when in full dress,
+ made of the skin of the sea-otter, richly garnished with silver ornaments
+ and studs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I advise no man to attempt opening this sporran till he has my secret,&rdquo;
+ said Rob Roy; and then twisting one button in one direction, and another
+ in another, pulling one stud upward, and pressing another downward, the
+ mouth of the purse, which was bound with massive silver plate, opened and
+ gave admittance to his hand. He made me remark, as if to break short the
+ subject on which Bailie Jarvie had spoken, that a small steel pistol was
+ concealed within the purse, the trigger of which was connected with the
+ mounting, and made part of the machinery, so that the weapon would
+ certainly be discharged, and in all probability its contents lodged in the
+ person of any one, who, being unacquainted with the secret, should tamper
+ with the lock which secured his treasure. &ldquo;This,&rdquo; said he touching the
+ pistol&mdash;&ldquo;this is the keeper of my privy purse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The simplicity of the contrivance to secure a furred pouch, which could
+ have been ripped open without any attempt on the spring, reminded me of
+ the verses in the Odyssey, where Ulysses, in a yet ruder age, is content
+ to secure his property by casting a curious and involved complication of
+ cordage around the sea-chest in which it was deposited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bailie put on his spectacles to examine the mechanism, and when he had
+ done, returned it with a smile and a sigh, observing&mdash;&ldquo;Ah! Rob, had
+ ither folk's purses been as weel guarded, I doubt if your sporran wad hae
+ been as weel filled as it kythes to be by the weight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind, kinsman,&rdquo; said Rob, laughing; &ldquo;it will aye open for a
+ friend's necessity, or to pay a just due&mdash;and here,&rdquo; he added,
+ pulling out a rouleau of gold, &ldquo;here is your ten hundred merks&mdash;count
+ them, and see that you are full and justly paid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Jarvie took the money in silence, and weighing it in his hand for an
+ instant, laid it on the table, and replied, &ldquo;Rob, I canna tak it&mdash;I
+ downa intromit with it&mdash;there can nae gude come o't&mdash;I hae seen
+ ower weel the day what sort of a gate your gowd is made in&mdash;ill-got
+ gear ne'er prospered; and, to be plain wi' you, I winna meddle wi't&mdash;it
+ looks as there might be bluid on't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Troutsho!&rdquo; said the outlaw, affecting an indifference which perhaps he
+ did not altogether feel; &ldquo;it's gude French gowd, and ne'er was in
+ Scotchman's pouch before mine. Look at them, man&mdash;they are a'
+ louis-d'ors, bright and bonnie as the day they were coined.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The waur, the waur&mdash;just sae muckle the waur, Robin,&rdquo; replied the
+ Bailie, averting his eyes from the money, though, like Caesar on the
+ Lupercal, his fingers seemed to itch for it&mdash;&ldquo;Rebellion is waur than
+ witchcraft, or robbery either; there's gospel warrant for't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind the warrant, kinsman,&rdquo; said the freebooter; &ldquo;you come by the
+ gowd honestly, and in payment of a just debt&mdash;it came from the one
+ king, you may gie it to the other, if ye like; and it will just serve for
+ a weakening of the enemy, and in the point where puir King James is
+ weakest too, for, God knows, he has hands and hearts eneugh, but I doubt
+ he wants the siller.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He'll no get mony Hielanders then, Robin,&rdquo; said Mr. Jarvie, as, again
+ replacing his spectacles on his nose, he undid the rouleau, and began to
+ count its contents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor Lowlanders neither,&rdquo; said MacGregor, arching his eyebrow, and, as he
+ looked at me, directing a glance towards Mr. Jarvie, who, all unconscious
+ of the ridicule, weighed each piece with habitual scrupulosity; and having
+ told twice over the sum, which amounted to the discharge of his debt,
+ principal and interest, he returned three pieces to buy his kinswoman a
+ gown, as he expressed himself, and a brace more for the twa bairns, as he
+ called them, requesting they might buy anything they liked with them
+ except gunpowder. The Highlander stared at his kinsman's unexpected
+ generosity, but courteously accepted his gift, which he deposited for the
+ time in his well-secured pouch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bailie next produced the original bond for the debt, on the back of
+ which he had written a formal discharge, which, having subscribed himself,
+ he requested me to sign as a witness. I did so, and Bailie Jarvie was
+ looking anxiously around for another, the Scottish law requiring the
+ subscription of two witnesses to validate either a bond or acquittance.
+ &ldquo;You will hardly find a man that can write save ourselves within these
+ three miles,&rdquo; said Rob, &ldquo;but I'll settle the matter as easily;&rdquo; and,
+ taking the paper from before his kinsman, he threw it in the fire. Bailie
+ Jarvie stared in his turn, but his kinsman continued, &ldquo;That's a Hieland
+ settlement of accounts. The time might come, cousin, were I to keep a'
+ these charges and discharges, that friends might be brought into trouble
+ for having dealt with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bailie attempted no reply to this argument, and our supper now
+ appeared in a style of abundance, and even delicacy, which, for the place,
+ might be considered as extraordinary. The greater part of the provisions
+ were cold, intimating they had been prepared at some distance; and there
+ were some bottles of good French wine to relish pasties of various sorts
+ of game, as well as other dishes. I remarked that MacGregor, while doing
+ the honours of the table with great and anxious hospitality, prayed us to
+ excuse the circumstance that some particular dish or pasty had been
+ infringed on before it was presented to us. &ldquo;You must know,&rdquo; said he to
+ Mr. Jarvie, but without looking towards me, &ldquo;you are not the only guests
+ this night in the MacGregor's country, whilk, doubtless, ye will believe,
+ since my wife and the twa lads would otherwise have been maist ready to
+ attend you, as weel beseems them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bailie Jarvie looked as if he felt glad at any circumstance which
+ occasioned their absence; and I should have been entirely of his opinion,
+ had it not been that the outlaw's apology seemed to imply they were in
+ attendance on Diana and her companion, whom even in my thoughts I could
+ not bear to designate as her husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the unpleasant ideas arising from this suggestion counteracted the
+ good effects of appetite, welcome, and good cheer, I remarked that Rob
+ Roy's attention had extended itself to providing us better bedding than we
+ had enjoyed the night before. Two of the least fragile of the bedsteads,
+ which stood by the wall of the hut, had been stuffed with heath, then in
+ full flower, so artificially arranged, that, the flowers being uppermost,
+ afforded a mattress at once elastic and fragrant. Cloaks, and such bedding
+ as could be collected, stretched over this vegetable couch, made it both
+ soft and warm. The Bailie seemed exhausted by fatigue. I resolved to
+ adjourn my communication to him until next morning; and therefore suffered
+ him to betake himself to bed so soon as he had finished a plentiful
+ supper. Though tired and harassed, I did not myself feel the same
+ disposition to sleep, but rather a restless and feverish anxiety, which
+ led to some farther discourse betwixt me and MacGregor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0018" id="AlinkCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER EIGHTEENTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A hopeless darkness settles o'er my fate;
+ I've seen the last look of her heavenly eyes,&mdash;
+ I've heard the last sound of her blessed voice,&mdash;
+ I've seen her fair form from my sight depart;
+ My doom is closed.
+ Count Basil.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ken not what to make of you, Mr. Osbaldistone,&rdquo; said MacGregor, as he
+ pushed the flask towards me. &ldquo;You eat not, you show no wish for rest; and
+ yet you drink not, though that flask of Bourdeaux might have come out of
+ Sir Hildebrand's ain cellar. Had you been always as abstinent, you would
+ have escaped the deadly hatred of your cousin Rashleigh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Had I been always prudent,&rdquo; said I, blushing at the scene he recalled to
+ my recollection, &ldquo;I should have escaped a worse evil&mdash;the reproach of
+ my own conscience.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MacGregor cast a keen and somewhat fierce glance on me, as if to read
+ whether the reproof, which he evidently felt, had been intentionally
+ conveyed. He saw that I was thinking of myself, not of him, and turned his
+ face towards the fire with a deep sigh. I followed his example, and each
+ remained for a few minutes wrapt in his own painful reverie. All in the
+ hut were now asleep, or at least silent, excepting ourselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MacGregor first broke silence, in the tone of one who takes up his
+ determination to enter on a painful subject. &ldquo;My cousin Nicol Jarvie means
+ well,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but he presses ower hard on the temper and situation of a
+ man like me, considering what I have been&mdash;what I have been forced to
+ become&mdash;and, above all, that which has forced me to become what I
+ am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He paused; and, though feeling the delicate nature of the discussion in
+ which the conversation was likely to engage me, I could not help replying,
+ that I did not doubt his present situation had much which must be most
+ unpleasant to his feelings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should be happy to learn,&rdquo; I added, &ldquo;that there is an honourable chance
+ of your escaping from it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You speak like a boy,&rdquo; returned MacGregor, in a low tone that growled
+ like distant thunder&mdash;&ldquo;like a boy, who thinks the auld gnarled oak
+ can be twisted as easily as the young sapling. Can I forget that I have
+ been branded as an outlaw&mdash;stigmatised as a traitor&mdash;a price set
+ on my head as if I had been a wolf&mdash;my family treated as the dam and
+ cubs of the hill-fox, whom all may torment, vilify, degrade, and insult&mdash;the
+ very name which came to me from a long and noble line of martial
+ ancestors, denounced, as if it were a spell to conjure up the devil with?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he went on in this manner, I could plainly see, that, by the
+ enumeration of his wrongs, he was lashing himself up into a rage, in order
+ to justify in his own eyes the errors they had led him into. In this he
+ perfectly succeeded; his light grey eyes contracting alternately and
+ dilating their pupils, until they seemed actually to flash with flame,
+ while he thrust forward and drew back his foot, grasped the hilt of his
+ dirk, extended his arm, clenched his fist, and finally rose from his seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And they <i>shall</i> find,&rdquo; he said, in the same muttered but deep tone
+ of stifled passion, &ldquo;that the name they have dared to proscribe&mdash;that
+ the name of MacGregor&mdash;<i>is</i> a spell to raise the wild devil
+ withal. <i>They</i> shall hear of my vengeance, that would scorn to listen
+ to the story of my wrongs&mdash;The miserable Highland drover, bankrupt,
+ barefooted,&mdash;stripped of all, dishonoured and hunted down, because
+ the avarice of others grasped at more than that poor all could pay, shall
+ burst on them in an awful change. They that scoffed at the grovelling
+ worm, and trode upon him, may cry and howl when they see the stoop of the
+ flying and fiery-mouthed dragon.&mdash;But why do I speak of all this?&rdquo; he
+ said, sitting down again, and in a calmer tone&mdash;&ldquo;Only ye may opine it
+ frets my patience, Mr. Osbaldistone, to be hunted like an otter, or a
+ sealgh, or a salmon upon the shallows, and that by my very friends and
+ neighbours; and to have as many sword-cuts made, and pistols flashed at
+ me, as I had this day in the ford of Avondow, would try a saint's temper,
+ much more a Highlander's, who are not famous for that gude gift, as ye may
+ hae heard, Mr. Osbaldistone.&mdash;But as thing bides wi' me o' what Nicol
+ said;&mdash;I'm vexed for the bairns&mdash;I'm vexed when I think o'
+ Hamish and Robert living their father's life.&rdquo; And yielding to despondence
+ on account of his sons, which he felt not upon his own, the father rested
+ his head upon his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was much affected, Will. All my life long I have been more melted by the
+ distress under which a strong, proud, and powerful mind is compelled to
+ give way, than by the more easily excited sorrows of softer dispositions.
+ The desire of aiding him rushed strongly on my mind, notwithstanding the
+ apparent difficulty, and even impossibility, of the task.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have extensive connections abroad,&rdquo; said I: &ldquo;might not your sons, with
+ some assistance&mdash;and they are well entitled to what my father's house
+ can give&mdash;find an honourable resource in foreign service?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I believe my countenance showed signs of sincere emotion; but my
+ companion, taking me by the hand, as I was going to speak farther, said&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ thank&mdash;I thank ye&mdash;but let us say nae mair o' this. I did not
+ think the eye of man would again have seen a tear on MacGregor's
+ eye-lash.&rdquo; He dashed the moisture from his long gray eye-lash and shaggy
+ red eye-brow with the back of his hand. &ldquo;To-morrow morning,&rdquo; he said,
+ &ldquo;we'll talk of this, and we will talk, too, of your affairs&mdash;for we
+ are early starters in the dawn, even when we have the luck to have good
+ beds to sleep in. Will ye not pledge me in a grace cup?&rdquo; I declined the
+ invitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, by the soul of St. Maronoch! I must pledge myself,&rdquo; and he poured
+ out and swallowed at least half-a-quart of wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I laid myself down to repose, resolving to delay my own inquiries until
+ his mind should be in a more composed state. Indeed, so much had this
+ singular man possessed himself of my imagination, that I felt it
+ impossible to avoid watching him for some minutes after I had flung myself
+ on my heath mattress to seeming rest. He walked up and down the hut,
+ crossed himself from time to time, muttering over some Latin prayer of the
+ Catholic church; then wrapped himself in his plaid, with his naked sword
+ on one side, and his pistol on the other, so disposing the folds of his
+ mantle that he could start up at a moment's warning, with a weapon in
+ either hand, ready for instant combat. In a few minutes his heavy
+ breathing announced that he was fast asleep. Overpowered by fatigue, and
+ stunned by the various unexpected and extraordinary scenes of the day, I,
+ in my turn, was soon overpowered by a slumber deep and overwhelming, from
+ which, notwithstanding every cause for watchfulness, I did not awake until
+ the next morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I opened my eyes, and recollected my situation, I found that
+ MacGregor had already left the hut. I awakened the Bailie, who, after many
+ a snort and groan, and some heavy complaints of the soreness of his bones,
+ in consequence of the unwonted exertions of the preceding day, was at
+ length able to comprehend the joyful intelligence, that the assets carried
+ off by Rashleigh Osbaldistone had been safely recovered. The instant he
+ understood my meaning, he forgot all his grievances, and, bustling up in a
+ great hurry, proceeded to compare the contents of the packet which I put
+ into his hands, with Mr. Owen's memorandums, muttering, as he went on,
+ &ldquo;Right, right&mdash;the real thing&mdash;Bailie and Whittington&mdash;where's
+ Bailie and Whittington?&mdash;seven hundred, six, and eight&mdash;exact to
+ a fraction&mdash;Pollock and Peelman&mdash;twenty-eight, seven&mdash;exact&mdash;Praise
+ be blest!&mdash;Grub and Grinder&mdash;better men cannot be&mdash;three
+ hundred and seventy&mdash;Gliblad&mdash;twenty; I doubt Gliblad's ganging&mdash;Slipprytongue;
+ Slipprytongue's gaen&mdash;but they are sma'sums&mdash;sma'sums&mdash;the
+ rest's a'right&mdash;Praise be blest! we have got the stuff, and may leave
+ this doleful country. I shall never think on Loch-Ard but the thought will
+ gar me grew again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sorry, cousin,&rdquo; said MacGregor, who entered the hut during the last
+ observation, &ldquo;I have not been altogether in the circumstances to make your
+ reception sic as I could have desired&mdash;natheless, if you would
+ condescend to visit my puir dwelling&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Muckle obliged, muckle obliged,&rdquo; answered Mr. Jarvie, very hastily&mdash;&ldquo;But
+ we maun be ganging&mdash;we maun be jogging, Mr. Osbaldistone and me&mdash;business
+ canna wait.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aweel, kinsman,&rdquo; replied the Highlander, &ldquo;ye ken our fashion&mdash;foster
+ the guest that comes&mdash;further him that maun gang. But ye cannot
+ return by Drymen&mdash;I must set you on Loch Lomond, and boat ye down to
+ the Ferry o' Balloch, and send your nags round to meet ye there. It's a
+ maxim of a wise man never to return by the same road he came, providing
+ another's free to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, ay, Rob,&rdquo; said the Bailie, &ldquo;that's ane o' the maxims ye learned when
+ ye were a drover;&mdash;ye caredna to face the tenants where your beasts
+ had been taking a rug of their moorland grass in the by-ganging, and I
+ doubt your road's waur marked now than it was then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The mair need not to travel it ower often, kinsman,&rdquo; replied Rob; &ldquo;but
+ I'se send round your nags to the ferry wi' Dougal Gregor, wha is converted
+ for that purpose into the Bailie's man, coming&mdash;not, as ye may
+ believe, from Aberfoil or Rob Roy's country, but on a quiet jaunt from
+ Stirling. See, here he is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wadna hae ken'd the creature,&rdquo; said Mr. Jarvie; nor indeed was it easy
+ to recognise the wild Highlander, when he appeared before the door of the
+ cottage, attired in a hat, periwig, and riding-coat, which had once called
+ Andrew Fairservice master, and mounted on the Bailie's horse, and leading
+ mine. He received his last orders from his master to avoid certain places
+ where he might be exposed to suspicion&mdash;to collect what intelligence
+ he could in the course of his journey, and to await our coming at an
+ appointed place, near the Ferry of Balloch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time, MacGregor invited us to accompany him upon our own road,
+ assuring us that we must necessarily march a few miles before breakfast,
+ and recommending a dram of brandy as a proper introduction to the journey,
+ in which he was pledged by the Bailie, who pronounced it &ldquo;an unlawful and
+ perilous habit to begin the day wi' spirituous liquors, except to defend
+ the stomach (whilk was a tender part) against the morning mist; in whilk
+ case his father the deacon had recommended a dram, by precept and
+ example.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very true, kinsman,&rdquo; replied Rob, &ldquo;for which reason we, who are Children
+ of the Mist, have a right to drink brandy from morning till night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bailie, thus refreshed, was mounted on a small Highland pony; another
+ was offered for my use, which, however, I declined; and we resumed, under
+ very different guidance and auspices, our journey of the preceding day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our escort consisted of MacGregor, and five or six of the handsomest, best
+ armed, and most athletic mountaineers of his band, and whom he had
+ generally in immediate attendance upon his own person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we approached the pass, the scene of the skirmish of the preceding
+ day, and of the still more direful deed which followed it, MacGregor
+ hastened to speak, as if it were rather to what he knew must be
+ necessarily passing in my mind, than to any thing I had said&mdash;he
+ spoke, in short, to my thoughts, and not to my words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must think hardly of us, Mr. Osbaldistone, and it is not natural that
+ it should be otherwise. But remember, at least, we have not been
+ unprovoked. We are a rude and an ignorant, and it may be a violent and
+ passionate, but we are not a cruel people. The land might be at peace and
+ in law for us, did they allow us to enjoy the blessings of peaceful law.
+ But we have been a persecuted generation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And persecution,&rdquo; said the Bailie, &ldquo;maketh wise men mad.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What must it do then to men like us, living as our fathers did a thousand
+ years since, and possessing scarce more lights than they did? Can we view
+ their bluidy edicts against us&mdash;their hanging, heading, hounding, and
+ hunting down an ancient and honourable name&mdash;as deserving better
+ treatment than that which enemies give to enemies?&mdash;Here I stand,
+ have been in twenty frays, and never hurt man but when I was in het bluid;
+ and yet they wad betray me and hang me like a masterless dog, at the gate
+ of ony great man that has an ill will at me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I replied, &ldquo;that the proscription of his name and family sounded in
+ English ears as a very cruel and arbitrary law;&rdquo; and having thus far
+ soothed him, I resumed my propositions of obtaining military employment
+ for himself, if he chose it, and his sons, in foreign parts. MacGregor
+ shook me very cordially by the hand, and detaining me, so as to permit Mr.
+ Jarvie to precede us, a manoeuvre for which the narrowness of the road
+ served as an excuse, he said to me&mdash;&ldquo;You are a kind-hearted and an
+ honourable youth, and understand, doubtless, that which is due to the
+ feelings of a man of honour. But the heather that I have trode upon when
+ living, must bloom ower me when I am dead&mdash;my heart would sink, and
+ my arm would shrink and wither like fern in the frost, were I to lose
+ sight of my native hills; nor has the world a scene that would console me
+ for the loss of the rocks and cairns, wild as they are, that you see
+ around us.&mdash;And Helen&mdash;what could become of her, were I to leave
+ her the subject of new insult and atrocity?&mdash;or how could she bear to
+ be removed from these scenes, where the remembrance of her wrongs is aye
+ sweetened by the recollection of her revenge?&mdash;I was once so hard put
+ at by my Great enemy, as I may well ca' him, that I was forced e'en to gie
+ way to the tide, and removed myself and my people and family from our
+ dwellings in our native land, and to withdraw for a time into MacCallum
+ More's country&mdash;and Helen made a Lament on our departure, as weel as
+ MacRimmon* himsell could hae framed it&mdash;and so piteously sad and
+ waesome, that our hearts amaist broke as we sate and listened to her&mdash;it
+ was like the wailing of one that mourns for the mother that bore him&mdash;the
+ tears came down the rough faces of our gillies as they hearkened; and I
+ wad not have the same touch of heartbreak again, no, not to have all the
+ lands that ever were owned by MacGregor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * The MacRimmons or MacCrimonds were hereditary pipers to the chiefs of
+ MacLeod, and celebrated for their talents. The pibroch said to have been
+ composed by Helen MacGregor is still in existence. See the Introduction to
+ this Novel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But your sons,&rdquo; I said&mdash;&ldquo;they are at the age when your countrymen
+ have usually no objection to see the world?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I should be content,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;that they pushed their fortune in
+ the French or Spanish service, as is the wont of Scottish cavaliers of
+ honour; and last night your plan seemed feasible eneugh&mdash;But I hae
+ seen his Excellency this morning before ye were up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did he then quarter so near us?&rdquo; said I, my bosom throbbing with anxiety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nearer than ye thought,&rdquo; was MacGregor's reply; &ldquo;but he seemed rather in
+ some shape to jalouse your speaking to the young leddy; and so you see&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There was no occasion for jealousy,&rdquo; I answered, with some haughtiness;
+ &mdash;&ldquo;I should not have intruded on his privacy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But ye must not be offended, or look out from amang your curls then, like
+ a wildcat out of an ivy-tod, for ye are to understand that he wishes most
+ sincere weel to you, and has proved it. And it's partly that whilk has set
+ the heather on fire e'en now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heather on fire?&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;I do not understand you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; resumed MacGregor, &ldquo;ye ken weel eneugh that women and gear are at
+ the bottom of a' the mischief in this warld. I hae been misdoubting your
+ cousin Rashleigh since ever he saw that he wasna to get Die Vernon for his
+ marrow, and I think he took grudge at his Excellency mainly on that
+ account. But then came the splore about the surrendering your papers&mdash;and
+ we hae now gude evidence, that, sae soon as he was compelled to yield them
+ up, he rade post to Stirling, and tauld the Government all and mair than
+ all, that was gaun doucely on amang us hill-folk; and, doubtless, that was
+ the way that the country was laid to take his Excellency and the leddy,
+ and to make sic an unexpected raid on me. And I hae as little doubt that
+ the poor deevil Morris, whom he could gar believe onything, was egged on
+ by him, and some of the Lowland gentry, to trepan me in the gate he tried
+ to do. But if Rashleigh Osbaldistone were baith the last and best of his
+ name, and granting that he and I ever forgather again, the fiend go down
+ my weasand with a bare blade at his belt, if we part before my dirk and
+ his best blude are weel acquainted thegither!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He pronounced the last threat with an ominous frown, and the appropriate
+ gesture of his hand upon his dagger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should almost rejoice at what has happened,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;could I hope that
+ Rashleigh's treachery might prove the means of preventing the explosion of
+ the rash and desperate intrigues in which I have long suspected him to be
+ a prime agent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Trow ye na that,&rdquo; said Rob Roy; &ldquo;traitor's word never yet hurt honest
+ cause. He was ower deep in our secrets, that's true; and had it not been
+ so, Stirling and Edinburgh Castles would have been baith in our hands by
+ this time, or briefly hereafter, whilk is now scarce to be hoped for. But
+ there are ower mony engaged, and far ower gude a cause to be gien up for
+ the breath of a traitor's tale, and that will be seen and heard of ere it
+ be lang. And so, as I was about to say, the best of my thanks to you for
+ your offer anent my sons, whilk last night I had some thoughts to have
+ embraced in their behalf. But I see that this villain's treason will
+ convince our great folks that they must instantly draw to a head, and make
+ a blow for it, or be taen in their houses, coupled up like hounds, and
+ driven up to London like the honest noblemen and gentlemen in the year
+ seventeen hundred and seven. Civil war is like a cockatrice;&mdash;we have
+ sitten hatching the egg that held it for ten years, and might hae sitten
+ on for ten years mair, when in comes Rashleigh, and chips the shell, and
+ out bangs the wonder amang us, and cries to fire and sword. Now in sic a
+ matter I'll hae need o' a' the hands I can mak; and, nae disparagement to
+ the Kings of France and Spain, whom I wish very weel to, King James is as
+ gude a man as ony o' them, and has the best right to Hamish and Rob, being
+ his natural-born subjects.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I easily comprehended that these words boded a general national
+ convulsion; and, as it would have been alike useless and dangerous to have
+ combated the political opinions of my guide, at such a place and moment, I
+ contented myself with regretting the promiscuous scene of confusion and
+ distress likely to arise from any general exertion in favour of the exiled
+ royal family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let it come, man&mdash;let it come,&rdquo; answered MacGregor; &ldquo;ye never saw
+ dull weather clear without a shower; and if the world is turned upside
+ down, why, honest men have the better chance to cut bread out of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I again attempted to bring him back to the subject of Diana; but although
+ on most occasions and subjects he used a freedom of speech which I had no
+ great delight in listening to, yet upon that alone which was most
+ interesting to me, he kept a degree of scrupulous reserve, and contented
+ himself with intimating, &ldquo;that he hoped the leddy would be soon in a
+ quieter country than this was like to be for one while.&rdquo; I was obliged to
+ be content with this answer, and to proceed in the hope that accident
+ might, as on a former occasion, stand my friend, and allow me at least the
+ sad gratification of bidding farewell to the object which had occupied
+ such a share of my affections, so much beyond even what I had supposed,
+ till I was about to be separated from her for ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Aimage-0009" id="Aimage-0009">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/pb284.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Loch Lomond " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ We pursued the margin of the lake for about six English miles, through a
+ devious and beautifully variegated path, until we attained a sort of
+ Highland farm, or assembly of hamlets, near the head of that fine sheet of
+ water, called, if I mistake not, Lediart, or some such name. Here a
+ numerous party of MacGregor's men were stationed in order to receive us.
+ The taste as well as the eloquence of tribes in a savage, or, to speak
+ more properly, in a rude state, is usually just, because it is unfettered
+ by system and affectation; and of this I had an example in the choice
+ these mountaineers had made of a place to receive their guests. It has
+ been said that a British monarch would judge well to receive the embassy
+ of a rival power in the cabin of a man-of-war; and a Highland leader acted
+ with some propriety in choosing a situation where the natural objects of
+ grandeur proper to his country might have their full effect on the minds
+ of his guests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We ascended about two hundred yards from the shores of the lake, guided by
+ a brawling brook, and left on the right hand four or five Highland huts,
+ with patches of arable land around them, so small as to show that they
+ must have been worked with the spade rather than the plough, cut as it
+ were out of the surrounding copsewood, and waving with crops of barley and
+ oats. Above this limited space the hill became more steep; and on its edge
+ we descried the glittering arms and waving drapery of about fifty of
+ MacGregor's followers. They were stationed on a spot, the recollection of
+ which yet strikes me with admiration. The brook, hurling its waters
+ downwards from the mountain, had in this spot encountered a barrier rock,
+ over which it had made its way by two distinct leaps. The first fall,
+ across which a magnificent old oak, slanting out from the farther bank,
+ partly extended itself as if to shroud the dusky stream of the cascade,
+ might be about twelve feet high; the broken waters were received in a
+ beautiful stone basin, almost as regular as if hewn by a sculptor; and
+ after wheeling around its flinty margin, they made a second precipitous
+ dash, through a dark and narrow chasm, at least fifty feet in depth, and
+ from thence, in a hurried, but comparatively a more gentle course, escaped
+ to join the lake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the natural taste which belongs to mountaineers, and especially to
+ the Scottish Highlanders, whose feelings, I have observed, are often
+ allied with the romantic and poetical, Rob Roy's wife and followers had
+ prepared our morning repast in a scene well calculated to impress
+ strangers with some feelings of awe. They are also naturally a grave and
+ proud people, and, however rude in our estimation, carry their ideas of
+ form and politeness to an excess that would appear overstrained, except
+ from the demonstration of superior force which accompanies the display of
+ it; for it must be granted that the air of punctilious deference and rigid
+ etiquette which would seem ridiculous in an ordinary peasant, has, like
+ the salute of a <i>corps-de-garde,</i> a propriety when tendered by a
+ Highlander completely armed. There was, accordingly, a good deal of
+ formality in our approach and reception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Highlanders, who had been dispersed on the side of the hill, drew
+ themselves together when we came in view, and, standing firm and
+ motionless, appeared in close column behind three figures, whom I soon
+ recognised to be Helen MacGregor and her two sons. MacGregor himself
+ arranged his attendants in the rear, and, requesting Mr. Jarvie to
+ dismount where the ascent became steep, advanced slowly, marshalling us
+ forward at the head of the troop. As we advanced, we heard the wild notes
+ of the bagpipes, which lost their natural discord from being mingled with
+ the dashing sound of the cascade. When we came close, the wife of
+ MacGregor came forward to meet us. Her dress was studiously arranged in a
+ more feminine taste than it had been on the preceding day, but her
+ features wore the same lofty, unbending, and resolute character; and as
+ she folded my friend the Bailie in an unexpected and apparently unwelcome
+ embrace, I could perceive by the agitation of his wig, his back, and the
+ calves of his legs, that he felt much like to one who feels himself
+ suddenly in the gripe of a she-bear, without being able to distinguish
+ whether the animal is in kindness or in wrath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kinsman,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you are welcome&mdash;and you, too, stranger,&rdquo; she
+ added, releasing my alarmed companion, who instinctively drew back and
+ settled his wig, and addressing herself to me&mdash;&ldquo;you also are welcome.
+ You came,&rdquo; she added, &ldquo;to our unhappy country, when our bloods were
+ chafed, and our hands were red. Excuse the rudeness that gave you a rough
+ welcome, and lay it upon the evil times, and not upon us.&rdquo; All this was
+ said with the manners of a princess, and in the tone and style of a court.
+ Nor was there the least tincture of that vulgarity, which we naturally
+ attach to the Lowland Scottish. There was a strong provincial
+ accentuation, but, otherwise, the language rendered by Helen MacGregor,
+ out of the native and poetical Gaelic, into English, which she had
+ acquired as we do learned tongues, but had probably never heard applied to
+ the mean purposes of ordinary life, was graceful, flowing, and
+ declamatory. Her husband, who had in his time played many parts, used a
+ much less elevated and emphatic dialect;&mdash;but even <i>his</i>
+ language rose in purity of expression, as you may have remarked, if I have
+ been accurate in recording it, when the affairs which he discussed were of
+ an agitating and important nature; and it appears to me in his case, and
+ in that of some other Highlanders whom I have known, that, when familiar
+ and facetious, they used the Lowland Scottish dialect,&mdash;when serious
+ and impassioned, their thoughts arranged themselves in the idiom of their
+ native language; and in the latter case, as they uttered the corresponding
+ ideas in English, the expressions sounded wild, elevated, and poetical. In
+ fact, the language of passion is almost always pure as well as vehement,
+ and it is no uncommon thing to hear a Scotchman, when overwhelmed by a
+ countryman with a tone of bitter and fluent upbraiding, reply by way of
+ taunt to his adversary, &ldquo;You have gotten to your English.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Be this as it may, the wife of MacGregor invited us to a refreshment
+ spread out on the grass, which abounded with all the good things their
+ mountains could offer, but was clouded by the dark and undisturbed gravity
+ which sat on the brow of our hostess, as well as by our deep and anxious
+ recollection of what had taken place on the preceding day. It was in vain
+ that the leader exerted himself to excite mirth;&mdash;a chill hung over
+ our minds, as if the feast had been funereal; and every bosom felt light
+ when it was ended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Adieu, cousin,&rdquo; she said to Mr. Jarvie, as we rose from the
+ entertainment; &ldquo;the best wish Helen MacGregor can give to a friend is,
+ that he may see her no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bailie struggled to answer, probably with some commonplace maxim of
+ morality;&mdash;but the calm and melancholy sternness of her countenance
+ bore down and disconcerted the mechanical and formal importance of the
+ magistrate. He coughed,&mdash;hemmed,&mdash;bowed,&mdash;and was silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For you, stranger,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I have a token, from one whom you can
+ never&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Helen!&rdquo; interrupted MacGregor, in a loud and stern voice, &ldquo;what means
+ this?&mdash;have you forgotten the charge?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;MacGregor,&rdquo; she replied, &ldquo;I have forgotten nought that is fitting for me
+ to remember. It is not such hands as these,&rdquo; and she stretched forth her
+ long, sinewy, and bare arm, &ldquo;that are fitting to convey love-tokens, were
+ the gift connected with aught but misery. Young man,&rdquo; she said, presenting
+ me with a ring, which I well remembered as one of the few ornaments that
+ Miss Vernon sometimes wore, &ldquo;this comes from one whom you will never see
+ more. If it is a joyless token, it is well fitted to pass through the
+ hands of one to whom joy can never be known. Her last words were&mdash;Let
+ him forget me for ever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And can she,&rdquo; I said, almost without being conscious that I spoke,
+ &ldquo;suppose that is possible?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All may be forgotten,&rdquo; said the extraordinary female who addressed me,&mdash;&ldquo;all&mdash;but
+ the sense of dishonour, and the desire of vengeance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Seid suas!</i>&rdquo;* cried the MacGregor, stamping with impatience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * &ldquo;Strike up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bagpipes sounded, and with their thrilling and jarring tones cut short
+ our conference. Our leave of our hostess was taken by silent gestures; and
+ we resumed our journey with an additional proof on my part, that I was
+ beloved by Diana, and was separated from her for ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0019" id="AlinkCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER NINETEENTH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Farewell to the land where the clouds love to rest,
+ Like the shroud of the dead, on the mountain's cold breast
+ To the cataract's roar where the eagles reply,
+ And the lake her lone bosom expands to the sky.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Our route lay through a dreary, yet romantic country, which the distress
+ of my own mind prevented me from remarking particularly, and which,
+ therefore, I will not attempt to describe. The lofty peak of Ben Lomond,
+ here the predominant monarch of the mountains, lay on our right hand, and
+ served as a striking landmark. I was not awakened from my apathy, until,
+ after a long and toilsome walk, we emerged through a pass in the hills,
+ and Loch Lomond opened before us. I will spare you the attempt to describe
+ what you would hardly comprehend without going to see it. But certainly
+ this noble lake, boasting innumerable beautiful islands, of every varying
+ form and outline which fancy can frame,&mdash;its northern extremity
+ narrowing until it is lost among dusky and retreating mountains,&mdash;while,
+ gradually widening as it extends to the southward, it spreads its base
+ around the indentures and promontories of a fair and fertile land, affords
+ one of the most surprising, beautiful, and sublime spectacles in nature.
+ The eastern side, peculiarly rough and rugged, was at this time the chief
+ seat of MacGregor and his clan,&mdash;to curb whom, a small garrison had
+ been stationed in a central position betwixt Loch Lomond and another lake.
+ The extreme strength of the country, however, with the numerous passes,
+ marshes, caverns, and other places of concealment or defence, made the
+ establishment of this little fort seem rather an acknowledgment of the
+ danger, than an effectual means of securing against it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On more than one occasion, as well as on that which I witnessed, the
+ garrison suffered from the adventurous spirit of the outlaw and his
+ followers. These advantages were never sullied by ferocity when he himself
+ was in command; for, equally good-tempered and sagacious, he understood
+ well the danger of incurring unnecessary odium. I learned with pleasure
+ that he had caused the captives of the preceding day to be liberated in
+ safety; and many traits of mercy, and even of generosity, are recorded of
+ this remarkable man on similar occasions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A boat waited for us in a creek beneath a huge rock, manned by four lusty
+ Highland rowers; and our host took leave of us with great cordiality, and
+ even affection. Betwixt him and Mr. Jarvie, indeed, there seemed to exist
+ a degree of mutual regard, which formed a strong contrast to their
+ different occupations and habits. After kissing each other very lovingly,
+ and when they were just in the act of parting, the Bailie, in the fulness
+ of his heart, and with a faltering voice, assured his kinsman, &ldquo;that if
+ ever an hundred pund, or even twa hundred, would put him or his family in
+ a settled way, he need but just send a line to the Saut-Market;&rdquo; and Rob,
+ grasping his basket-hilt with one hand, and shaking Mr. Jarvie's heartily
+ with the other, protested, &ldquo;that if ever anybody should affront his
+ kinsman, an he would but let him ken, he would stow his lugs out of his
+ head, were he the best man in Glasgow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these assurances of mutual aid and continued good-will, we bore away
+ from the shore, and took our course for the south-western angle of the
+ lake, where it gives birth to the river Leven. Rob Roy remained for some
+ time standing on the rock from beneath which we had departed, conspicuous
+ by his long gun, waving tartans, and the single plume in his cap, which in
+ those days denoted the Highland gentleman and soldier; although I observe
+ that the present military taste has decorated the Highland bonnet with a
+ quantity of black plumage resembling that which is borne before funerals.
+ At length, as the distance increased between us, we saw him turn and go
+ slowly up the side of the hill, followed by his immediate attendants or
+ bodyguard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We performed our voyage for a long time in silence, interrupted only by
+ the Gaelic chant which one of the rowers sung in low irregular measure,
+ rising occasionally into a wild chorus, in which the others joined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My own thoughts were sad enough;&mdash;yet I felt something soothing in
+ the magnificent scenery with which I was surrounded; and thought, in the
+ enthusiasm of the moment, that had my faith been that of Rome, I could
+ have consented to live and die a lonely hermit in one of the romantic and
+ beautiful islands amongst which our boat glided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bailie had also his speculations, but they were of somewhat a
+ different complexion; as I found when, after about an hour's silence,
+ during which he had been mentally engaged in the calculations necessary,
+ he undertook to prove the possibility of draining the lake, and &ldquo;giving to
+ plough and harrow many hundred, ay, many a thousand acres, from whilk no
+ man could get earthly gude e'enow, unless it were a gedd,* or a dish of
+ perch now and then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * A pike.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amidst a long discussion, which he &ldquo;crammed into mine ear against the
+ stomach of my sense,&rdquo; I only remember, that it was part of his project to
+ preserve a portion of the lake just deep enough and broad enough for the
+ purposes of water-carriage, so that coal-barges and gabbards should pass
+ as easily between Dumbarton and Glenfalloch as between Glasgow and
+ Greenock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length we neared our distant place of landing, adjoining to the ruins
+ of an ancient castle, and just where the lake discharges its superfluous
+ waters into the Leven. There we found Dougal with the horses. The Bailie
+ had formed a plan with respect to &ldquo;the creature,&rdquo; as well as upon the
+ draining of the lake; and, perhaps in both cases, with more regard to the
+ utility than to the practical possibility of his scheme. &ldquo;Dougal,&rdquo; he
+ said, &ldquo;ye are a kindly creature, and hae the sense and feeling o' what is
+ due to your betters&mdash;and I'm e'en wae for you, Dougal, for it canna
+ be but that in the life ye lead you suld get a Jeddart cast* ae day suner
+ or later. I trust, considering my services as a magistrate, and my father
+ the deacon's afore me, I hae interest eneugh in the council to gar them
+ wink a wee at a waur faut than yours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * [&ldquo;The memory of Dunbar's legal (?) proceedings at Jedburgh is preserved
+ in the proverbial phrase <i>Jeddart Justice,</i> which signifies trial <i>after</i>
+ execution.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Minstrelsy of the Border,</i> Preface, p. lvi.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sae I hae been thinking, that if ye will gang back to Glasgow wi' us,
+ being a strong-backit creature, ye might be employed in the warehouse till
+ something better suld cast up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Her nainsell muckle obliged till the Bailie's honour,&rdquo; replied Dougal;
+ &ldquo;but teil be in her shanks fan she gangs on a cause-way'd street, unless
+ she be drawn up the Gallowgate wi' tows, as she was before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, I afterwards learned that Dougal had originally come to Glasgow
+ as a prisoner, from being concerned in some depredation, but had somehow
+ found such favour in the eyes of the jailor, that, with rather overweening
+ confidence, he had retained him in his service as one of the turnkeys; a
+ task which Dougal had discharged with sufficient fidelity, so far as was
+ known, until overcome by his clannish prejudices on the unexpected
+ appearance of his old leader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Astonished at receiving so round a refusal to so favourable an offer, the
+ Bailie, turning to me, observed, that the &ldquo;creature was a natural-born
+ idiot.&rdquo; I testified my own gratitude in a way which Dougal much better
+ relished, by slipping a couple of guineas into his hand. He no sooner felt
+ the touch of the gold, than he sprung twice or thrice from the earth with
+ the agility of a wild buck, flinging out first one heel and then another,
+ in a manner which would have astonished a French dancing-master. He ran to
+ the boatmen to show them the prize, and a small gratuity made them take
+ part in his raptures. He then, to use a favourite expression of the
+ dramatic John Bunyan, &ldquo;went on his way, and I saw him no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bailie and I mounted our horses, and proceeded on the road to Glasgow.
+ When we had lost the view of the lake, and its superb amphitheatre of
+ mountains, I could not help expressing with enthusiasm, my sense of its
+ natural beauties, although I was conscious that Mr. Jarvie was a very
+ uncongenial spirit to communicate with on such a subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye are a young gentleman,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;and an Englishman, and a' this
+ may be very fine to you; but for me, wha am a plain man, and ken something
+ o' the different values of land, I wadna gie the finest sight we hae seen
+ in the Hielands, for the first keek o' the Gorbals o' Glasgow; and if I
+ were ance there, it suldna be every fule's errand, begging your pardon,
+ Mr. Francis, that suld take me out o' sight o' Saint Mungo's steeple
+ again!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The honest man had his wish; for, by dint of travelling very late, we
+ arrived at his own house that night, or rather on the succeeding morning.
+ Having seen my worthy fellow-traveller safely consigned to the charge of
+ the considerate and officious Mattie, I proceeded to Mrs. Flyter's, in
+ whose house, even at this unwonted hour, light was still burning. The door
+ was opened by no less a person than Andrew Fairservice himself, who, upon
+ the first sound of my voice, set up a loud shout of joyful recognition,
+ and, without uttering a syllable, ran up stairs towards a parlour on the
+ second floor, from the windows of which the light proceeded. Justly
+ conceiving that he went to announce my return to the anxious Owen, I
+ followed him upon the foot. Owen was not alone, there was another in the
+ apartment&mdash;it was my father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first impulse was to preserve the dignity of his usual equanimity,&mdash;&ldquo;Francis,
+ I am glad to see you.&rdquo; The next was to embrace me tenderly,&mdash;&ldquo;My dear&mdash;dear
+ son!&rdquo;&mdash;Owen secured one of my hands, and wetted it with his tears,
+ while he joined in gratulating my return. These are scenes which address
+ themselves to the eye and to the heart rather than to the ear&mdash;My old
+ eye-lids still moisten at the recollection of our meeting; but your kind
+ and affectionate feelings can well imagine what I should find it
+ impossible to describe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the tumult of our joy was over, I learnt that my father had arrived
+ from Holland shortly after Owen had set off for Scotland. Determined and
+ rapid in all his movements, he only stopped to provide the means of
+ discharging the obligations incumbent on his house. By his extensive
+ resources, with funds enlarged, and credit fortified, by eminent success
+ in his continental speculation, he easily accomplished what perhaps his
+ absence alone rendered difficult, and set out for Scotland to exact
+ justice from Rashleigh Osbaldistone, as well as to put order to his
+ affairs in that country. My father's arrival in full credit, and with the
+ ample means of supporting his engagements honourably, as well as
+ benefiting his correspondents in future, was a stunning blow to MacVittie
+ and Company, who had conceived his star set for ever. Highly incensed at
+ the usage his confidential clerk and agent had received at their hands,
+ Mr. Osbaldistone refused every tender of apology and accommodation; and
+ having settled the balance of their account, announced to them that, with
+ all its numerous contingent advantages, that leaf of their ledger was
+ closed for ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he enjoyed this triumph over false friends, he was not a little
+ alarmed on my account. Owen, good man, had not supposed it possible that a
+ journey of fifty or sixty miles, which may be made with so much ease and
+ safety in any direction from London, could be attended with any particular
+ danger. But he caught alarm, by sympathy, from my father, to whom the
+ country, and the lawless character of its inhabitants, were better known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These apprehensions were raised to agony, when, a few hours before I
+ arrived, Andrew Fairservice made his appearance, with a dismal and
+ exaggerated account of the uncertain state in which he had left me. The
+ nobleman with whose troops he had been a sort of prisoner, had, after
+ examination, not only dismissed him, but furnished him with the means of
+ returning rapidly to Glasgow, in order to announce to my friends my
+ precarious and unpleasant situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrew was one of those persons who have no objection to the sort of
+ temporary attention and woeful importance which attaches itself to the
+ bearer of bad tidings, and had therefore by no means smoothed down his
+ tale in the telling, especially as the rich London merchant himself proved
+ unexpectedly one of the auditors. He went at great length into an account
+ of the dangers I had escaped, chiefly, as he insinuated, by means of his
+ own experience, exertion, and sagacity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What was to come of me now, when my better angel, in his (Andrew's)
+ person, was removed from my side, it was,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;sad and sair to
+ conjecture; that the Bailie was nae better than just naebody at a pinch,
+ or something waur, for he was a conceited body&mdash;and Andrew hated
+ conceit&mdash;but certainly, atween the pistols and the carabines of the
+ troopers, that rappit aff the tane after the tother as fast as hail, and
+ the dirks and claymores o' the Hielanders, and the deep waters and weils
+ o' the Avondow, it was to be thought there wad be a puir account of the
+ young gentleman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This statement would have driven Owen to despair, had he been alone and
+ unsupported; but my father's perfect knowledge of mankind enabled him
+ easily to appreciate the character of Andrew, and the real amount of his
+ intelligence. Stripped of all exaggeration, however, it was alarming
+ enough to a parent. He determined to set out in person to obtain my
+ liberty by ransom or negotiation, and was busied with Owen till a late
+ hour, in order to get through some necessary correspondence, and devolve
+ on the latter some business which should be transacted during his absence;
+ and thus it chanced that I found them watchers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was late ere we separated to rest, and, too impatient long to endure
+ repose, I was stirring early the next morning. Andrew gave his attendance
+ at my levee, as in duty bound, and, instead of the scarecrow figure to
+ which he had been reduced at Aberfoil, now appeared in the attire of an
+ undertaker, a goodly suit, namely, of the deepest mourning. It was not
+ till after one or two queries, which the rascal affected as long as he
+ could to misunderstand, that I found out he &ldquo;had thought it but decent to
+ put on mourning, on account of my inexpressible loss; and as the broker at
+ whose shop he had equipped himself, declined to receive the goods again,
+ and as his own garments had been destroyed or carried off in my honour's
+ service, doubtless I and my honourable father, whom Providence had blessed
+ wi' the means, wadna suffer a puir lad to sit down wi' the loss; a stand
+ o' claes was nae great matter to an Osbaldistone (be praised for't!),
+ especially to an old and attached servant o' the house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As there was something of justice in Andrew's plea of loss in my service,
+ his finesse succeeded; and he came by a good suit of mourning, with a
+ beaver and all things conforming, as the exterior signs of woe for a
+ master who was alive and merry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father's first care, when he arose, was to visit Mr. Jarvie, for whose
+ kindness he entertained the most grateful sentiments, which he expressed
+ in very few, but manly and nervous terms. He explained the altered state
+ of his affairs, and offered the Bailie, on such terms as could not but be
+ both advantageous and acceptable, that part in his concerns which had been
+ hitherto managed by MacVittie and Company. The Bailie heartily
+ congratulated my father and Owen on the changed posture of their affairs,
+ and, without affecting to disclaim that he had done his best to serve
+ them, when matters looked otherwise, he said, &ldquo;He had only just acted as
+ he wad be done by&mdash;that, as to the extension of their correspondence,
+ he frankly accepted it with thanks. Had MacVittie's folk behaved like
+ honest men,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;he wad hae liked ill to hae come in ahint them, and
+ out afore them this gate. But it's otherwise, and they maun e'en stand the
+ loss.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bailie then pulled me by the sleeve into a corner, and, after again
+ cordially wishing me joy, proceeded, in rather an embarrassed tone&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ wad heartily wish, Maister Francis, there suld be as little said as
+ possible about the queer things we saw up yonder awa. There's nae gude,
+ unless ane were judicially examinate, to say onything about that awfu' job
+ o' Morris&mdash;and the members o' the council wadna think it creditable
+ in ane of their body to be fighting wi' a wheen Hielandmen, and singeing
+ their plaidens&mdash;And abune a', though I am a decent sponsible man,
+ when I am on my right end, I canna but think I maun hae made a queer
+ figure without my hat and my periwig, hinging by the middle like bawdrons,
+ or a cloak flung ower a cloak-pin. Bailie Grahame wad hae an unco hair in
+ my neck an he got that tale by the end.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could not suppress a smile when I recollected the Bailie's situation,
+ although I certainly thought it no laughing matter at the time. The
+ good-natured merchant was a little confused, but smiled also when he shook
+ his head&mdash;&ldquo;I see how it is&mdash;I see how it is. But say naething
+ about it&mdash;there's a gude callant; and charge that lang-tongued,
+ conceited, upsetting serving man o' yours, to sae naething neither. I
+ wadna for ever sae muckle that even the lassock Mattie ken'd onything
+ about it. I wad never hear an end o't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was obviously relieved from his impending fears of ridicule, when I
+ told him it was my father's intention to leave Glasgow almost immediately.
+ Indeed he had now no motive for remaining, since the most valuable part of
+ the papers carried off by Rashleigh had been recovered. For that portion
+ which he had converted into cash and expended in his own or on political
+ intrigues, there was no mode of recovering it but by a suit at law, which
+ was forthwith commenced, and proceeded, as our law-agents assured us, with
+ all deliberate speed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We spent, accordingly, one hospitable day with the Bailie, and took leave
+ of him, as this narrative now does. He continued to grow in wealth,
+ honour, and credit, and actually rose to the highest civic honours in his
+ native city. About two years after the period I have mentioned, he tired
+ of his bachelor life, and promoted Mattie from her wheel by the kitchen
+ fire to the upper end of his table, in the character of Mrs. Jarvie.
+ Bailie Grahame, the MacVitties, and others (for all men have their
+ enemies, especially in the council of a royal burgh), ridiculed this
+ transformation. &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Mr. Jarvie, &ldquo;let them say their say. I'll
+ ne'er fash mysell, nor lose my liking for sae feckless a matter as a nine
+ days' clash. My honest father the deacon had a byword,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Brent brow and lily skin,
+ A loving heart, and a leal within,
+ Is better than gowd or gentle kin.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Besides,&rdquo; as he always concluded, &ldquo;Mattie was nae ordinary lassock-quean;
+ she was akin to the Laird o' Limmerfield.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether it was owing to her descent or her good gifts, I do not presume to
+ decide; but Mattie behaved excellently in her exaltation, and relieved the
+ apprehensions of some of the Bailie's friends, who had deemed his
+ experiment somewhat hazardous. I do not know that there was any other
+ incident of his quiet and useful life worthy of being particularly
+ recorded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0020" id="AlinkCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER TWENTIETH.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Come ye hither my 'six' good sons,
+ Gallant men I trow ye be,
+ How many of you, my children dear,
+ Will stand by that good Earl and me?&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Five&rdquo; of them did answer make&mdash;
+ &ldquo;Five&rdquo; of them spoke hastily,
+ &ldquo;O father, till the day we die,
+ We'll stand by that good Earl and thee.&rdquo;
+ The Rising in the North.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the morning when we were to depart from Glasgow, Andrew Fairservice
+ bounced into my apartment like a madman, jumping up and down, and singing,
+ with more vehemence than tune,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The kiln's on fire&mdash;the kiln's on fire&mdash;
+ The kiln's on fire&mdash;she's a' in a lowe.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ With some difficulty I prevailed on him to cease his confounded clamour,
+ and explain to me what the matter was. He was pleased to inform me, as if
+ he had been bringing the finest news imaginable, &ldquo;that the Hielands were
+ clean broken out, every man o' them, and that Rob Roy, and a' his
+ breekless bands, wad be down upon Glasgow or twenty-four hours o' the
+ clock gaed round.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold your tongue,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;you rascal! You must be drunk or mad; and if
+ there is any truth in your news, is it a singing matter, you scoundrel?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Drunk or mad? nae doubt,&rdquo; replied Andrew, dauntlessly; &ldquo;ane's aye drunk
+ or mad if he tells what grit folks dinna like to hear&mdash;Sing? Od, the
+ clans will make us sing on the wrang side o' our mouth, if we are sae
+ drunk or mad as to bide their coming.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I rose in great haste, and found my father and Owen also on foot, and in
+ considerable alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrew's news proved but too true in the main. The great rebellion which
+ agitated Britain in the year 1715 had already broken out, by the
+ unfortunate Earl of Mar's setting up the standard of the Stuart family in
+ an ill-omened hour, to the ruin of many honourable families, both in
+ England and Scotland. The treachery of some of the Jacobite agents
+ (Rashleigh among the rest), and the arrest of others, had made George the
+ First's Government acquainted with the extensive ramifications of a
+ conspiracy long prepared, and which at last exploded prematurely, and in a
+ part of the kingdom too distant to have any vital effect upon the country,
+ which, however, was plunged into much confusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This great public event served to confirm and elucidate the obscure
+ explanations I had received from MacGregor; and I could easily see why the
+ westland clans, who were brought against him, should have waived their
+ private quarrel, in consideration that they were all shortly to be engaged
+ in the same public cause. It was a more melancholy reflection to my mind,
+ that Diana Vernon was the wife of one of those who were most active in
+ turning the world upside down, and that she was herself exposed to all the
+ privations and perils of her husband's hazardous trade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We held an immediate consultation on the measures we were to adopt in this
+ crisis, and acquiesced in my father's plan, that we should instantly get
+ the necessary passports, and make the best of our way to London. I
+ acquainted my father with my wish to offer my personal service to the
+ Government in any volunteer corps, several being already spoken of. He
+ readily acquiesced in my proposal; for though he disliked war as a
+ profession, yet, upon principle, no man would have exposed his life more
+ willingly in defence of civil and religious liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We travelled in haste and in peril through Dumfriesshire and the
+ neighbouring counties of England. In this quarter, gentlemen of the Tory
+ interest were already in motion, mustering men and horses, while the Whigs
+ assembled themselves in the principal towns, armed the inhabitants, and
+ prepared for civil war. We narrowly escaped being stopped on more
+ occasions than one, and were often compelled to take circuitous routes to
+ avoid the points where forces were assembling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we reached London, we immediately associated with those bankers and
+ eminent merchants who agreed to support the credit of Government, and to
+ meet that run upon the funds, on which the conspirators had greatly
+ founded their hopes of furthering their undertaking, by rendering the
+ Government, as it were, bankrupt. My father was chosen one of the members
+ of this formidable body of the monied interest, as all had the greatest
+ confidence in his zeal, skill, and activity. He was also the organ by
+ which they communicated with Government, and contrived, from funds
+ belonging to his own house, or over which he had command, to find
+ purchasers for a quantity of the national stock, which was suddenly flung
+ into the market at a depreciated price when the rebellion broke out. I was
+ not idle myself, but obtained a commission, and levied, at my father's
+ expense, about two hundred men, with whom I joined General Carpenter's
+ army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rebellion, in the meantime, had extended itself to England. The
+ unfortunate Earl of Derwentwater had taken arms in the cause, along with
+ General Foster. My poor uncle, Sir Hildebrand, whose estate was reduced to
+ almost nothing by his own carelessness and the expense and debauchery of
+ his sons and household, was easily persuaded to join that unfortunate
+ standard. Before doing so, however, he exhibited a degree of precaution of
+ which no one could have suspected him&mdash;he made his will!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this document he devised his estates at Osbaldistone Hall, and so
+ forth, to his sons successively, and their male heirs, until he came to
+ Rashleigh, whom, on account of the turn he had lately taken in politics,
+ he detested with all his might,&mdash;he cut him off with a shilling, and
+ settled the estate on me as his next heir. I had always been rather a
+ favourite of the old gentleman; but it is probable that, confident in the
+ number of gigantic youths who now armed around him, he considered the
+ destination as likely to remain a dead letter, which he inserted chiefly
+ to show his displeasure at Rashleigh's treachery, both public and
+ domestic. There was an article, by which he, bequeathed to the niece of
+ his late wife, Diana Vernon, now Lady Diana Vernon Beauchamp, some
+ diamonds belonging to her late aunt, and a great silver ewer, having the
+ arms of Vernon and Osbaldistone quarterly engraven upon it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Heaven had decreed a more speedy extinction of his numerous and
+ healthy lineage, than, most probably, he himself had reckoned on. In the
+ very first muster of the conspirators, at a place called Green-Rigg,
+ Thorncliff Osbaldistone quarrelled about precedence with a gentleman of
+ the Northumbrian border, to the full as fierce and intractable as himself.
+ In spite of all remonstrances, they gave their commander a specimen of how
+ far their discipline might be relied upon, by fighting it out with their
+ rapiers, and my kinsman was killed on the spot. His death was a great loss
+ to Sir Hildebrand, for, notwithstanding his infernal temper, he had a
+ grain or two of more sense than belonged to the rest of the brotherhood,
+ Rashleigh always excepted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perceval, the sot, died also in his calling. He had a wager with another
+ gentleman (who, from his exploits in that line, had acquired the
+ formidable epithet of Brandy Swalewell), which should drink the largest
+ cup of strong liquor when King James was proclaimed by the insurgents at
+ Morpeth. The exploit was something enormous. I forget the exact quantity
+ of brandy which Percie swallowed, but it occasioned a fever, of which he
+ expired at the end of three days, with the word, <i>water, water,</i>
+ perpetually on his tongue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dickon broke his neck near Warrington Bridge, in an attempt to show off a
+ foundered blood-mare which he wished to palm upon a Manchester merchant
+ who had joined the insurgents. He pushed the animal at a five-barred gate;
+ she fell in the leap, and the unfortunate jockey lost his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wilfred the fool, as sometimes befalls, had the best fortune of the
+ family. He was slain at Proud Preston, in Lancashire, on the day that
+ General Carpenter attacked the barricades, fighting with great bravery,
+ though I have heard he was never able exactly to comprehend the cause of
+ quarrel, and did not uniformly remember on which king's side he was
+ engaged. John also behaved very boldly in the same engagement, and
+ received several wounds, of which he was not happy enough to die on the
+ spot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Sir Hildebrand, entirely brokenhearted by these successive losses,
+ became, by the next day's surrender, one of the unhappy prisoners, and was
+ lodged in Newgate with his wounded son John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was now released from my military duty, and lost no time, therefore, in
+ endeavouring to relieve the distresses of these new relations. My father's
+ interest with Government, and the general compassion excited by a parent
+ who had sustained the successive loss of so many sons within so short a
+ time, would have prevented my uncle and cousin from being brought to trial
+ for high treason. But their doom was given forth from a greater tribunal.
+ John died of his wounds in Newgate, recommending to me in his last breath,
+ a cast of hawks which he had at the Hall, and a black spaniel bitch called
+ Lucy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My poor uncle seemed beaten down to the very earth by his family
+ calamities, and the circumstances in which he unexpectedly found himself.
+ He said little, but seemed grateful for such attentions as circumstances
+ permitted me to show him. I did not witness his meeting with my father for
+ the first time for so many years, and under circumstances so melancholy;
+ but, judging from my father's extreme depression of spirits, it must have
+ been melancholy in the last degree. Sir Hildebrand spoke with great
+ bitterness against Rashleigh, now his only surviving child; laid upon him
+ the ruin of his house, and the deaths of all his brethren, and declared,
+ that neither he nor they would have plunged into political intrigue, but
+ for that very member of his family, who had been the first to desert them.
+ He once or twice mentioned Diana, always with great affection; and once he
+ said, while I sate by his bedside&mdash;&ldquo;Nevoy, since Thorncliff and all
+ of them are dead, I am sorry you cannot have her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The expression affected me much at the time; for it was a usual custom of
+ the poor old baronet's, when joyously setting forth upon the morning's
+ chase, to distinguish Thorncliff, who was a favourite, while he summoned
+ the rest more generally; and the loud jolly tone in which he used to
+ hollo, &ldquo;Call Thornie&mdash;call all of them,&rdquo; contrasted sadly with the
+ woebegone and self-abandoning note in which he uttered the disconsolate
+ words which I have above quoted. He mentioned the contents of his will,
+ and supplied me with an authenticated copy;&mdash;the original he had
+ deposited with my old acquaintance Mr. Justice Inglewood, who, dreaded by
+ no one, and confided in by all as a kind of neutral person, had become,
+ for aught I know, the depositary of half the wills of the fighting men of
+ both factions in the county of Northumberland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The greater part of my uncle's last hours were spent in the discharge of
+ the religious duties of his church, in which he was directed by the
+ chaplain of the Sardinian ambassador, for whom, with some difficulty, we
+ obtained permission to visit him. I could not ascertain by my own
+ observation, or through the medical attendants, that Sir Hildebrand
+ Osbaldistone died of any formed complaint bearing a name in the science of
+ medicine. He seemed to me completely worn out and broken down by fatigue
+ of body and distress of mind, and rather ceased to exist, than died of any
+ positive struggle,&mdash;just as a vessel, buffeted and tossed by a
+ succession of tempestuous gales, her timbers overstrained, and her joints
+ loosened, will sometimes spring a leak and founder, when there are no
+ apparent causes for her destruction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a remarkable circumstance that my father, after the last duties
+ were performed to his brother, appeared suddenly to imbibe a strong
+ anxiety that I should act upon the will, and represent his father's house,
+ which had hitherto seemed to be the thing in the world which had least
+ charms for him. But formerly, he had been like the fox in the fable,
+ contemning what was beyond his reach; and, moreover, I doubt not that the
+ excessive dislike which he entertained against Rashleigh (now Sir
+ Rashleigh) Osbaldistone, who loudly threatened to attack his father Sir
+ Hildebrand's will and settlement, corroborated my father's desire to
+ maintain it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He had been most unjustly disinherited,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;by his own father&mdash;his
+ brother's will had repaired the disgrace, if not the injury, by leaving
+ the wreck of his property to Frank, the natural heir, and he was
+ determined the bequest should take effect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime, Rashleigh was not altogether a contemptible personage as
+ an opponent. The information he had given to Government was critically
+ well-timed, and his extreme plausibility, with the extent of his
+ intelligence, and the artful manner in which he contrived to assume both
+ merit and influence, had, to a certain extent, procured him patrons among
+ Ministers. We were already in the full tide of litigation with him on the
+ subject of his pillaging the firm of Osbaldistone and Tresham; and,
+ judging from the progress we made in that comparatively simple lawsuit,
+ there was a chance that this second course of litigation might be drawn
+ out beyond the period of all our natural lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To avert these delays as much as possible, my father, by the advice of his
+ counsel learned in the law, paid off and vested in my person the rights to
+ certain large mortgages affecting Osbaldistone Hall. Perhaps, however, the
+ opportunity to convert a great share of the large profits which accrued
+ from the rapid rise of the funds upon the suppression of the rebellion,
+ and the experience he had so lately had of the perils of commerce,
+ encouraged him to realise, in this manner, a considerable part of his
+ property. At any rate, it so chanced, that, instead of commanding me to
+ the desk, as I fully expected, having intimated my willingness to comply
+ with his wishes, however they might destine me, I received his directions
+ to go down to Osbaldistone Hall, and take possession of it as the heir and
+ representative of the family. I was directed to apply to Squire Inglewood
+ for the copy of my uncle's will deposited with him, and take all necessary
+ measures to secure that possession which sages say makes nine points of
+ the law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At another time I should have been delighted with this change of
+ destination. But now Osbaldistone Hall was accompanied with many painful
+ recollections. Still, however, I thought, that in that neighbourhood only
+ I was likely to acquire some information respecting the fate of Diana
+ Vernon. I had every reason to fear it must be far different from what I
+ could have wished it. But I could obtain no precise information on the
+ subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in vain that I endeavoured, by such acts of kindness as their
+ situation admitted, to conciliate the confidence of some distant relations
+ who were among the prisoners in Newgate. A pride which I could not
+ condemn, and a natural suspicion of the Whig Frank Osbaldistone, cousin to
+ the double-distilled traitor Rashleigh, closed every heart and tongue, and
+ I only received thanks, cold and extorted, in exchange for such benefits
+ as I had power to offer. The arm of the law was also gradually abridging
+ the numbers of those whom I endeavoured to serve, and the hearts of the
+ survivors became gradually more contracted towards all whom they conceived
+ to be concerned with the existing Government. As they were led gradually,
+ and by detachments, to execution, those who survived lost interest in
+ mankind, and the desire of communicating with them. I shall long remember
+ what one of them, Ned Shafton by name, replied to my anxious inquiry,
+ whether there was any indulgence I could procure him? &ldquo;Mr. Frank
+ Osbaldistone, I must suppose you mean me kindly, and therefore I thank
+ you. But, by G&mdash;, men cannot be fattened like poultry, when they see
+ their neighbours carried off day by day to the place of execution, and
+ know that their own necks are to be twisted round in their turn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the whole, therefore, I was glad to escape from London, from Newgate,
+ and from the scenes which both exhibited, to breathe the free air of
+ Northumberland. Andrew Fairservice had continued in my service more from
+ my father's pleasure than my own. At present there seemed a prospect that
+ his local acquaintance with Osbaldistone Hall and its vicinity might be
+ useful; and, of course, he accompanied me on my journey, and I enjoyed the
+ prospect of getting rid of him, by establishing him in his old quarters. I
+ cannot conceive how he could prevail upon my father to interest himself in
+ him, unless it were by the art, which he possessed in no inconsiderable
+ degree, of affecting an extreme attachment to his master; which
+ theoretical attachment he made compatible in practice with playing all
+ manner of tricks without scruple, providing only against his master being
+ cheated by any one but himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We performed our journey to the North without any remarkable adventure,
+ and we found the country, so lately agitated by rebellion, now peaceful
+ and in good order. The nearer we approached to Osbaldistone Hall, the more
+ did my heart sink at the thought of entering that deserted mansion; so
+ that, in order to postpone the evil day, I resolved first to make my visit
+ at Mr. Justice Inglewood's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That venerable person had been much disturbed with thoughts of what he had
+ been, and what he now was; and natural recollections of the past had
+ interfered considerably with the active duty which in his present
+ situation might have been expected from him. He was fortunate, however, in
+ one respect; he had got rid of his clerk Jobson, who had finally left him
+ in dudgeon at his inactivity, and become legal assistant to a certain
+ Squire Standish, who had lately commenced operations in those parts as a
+ justice, with a zeal for King George and the Protestant succession, which,
+ very different from the feelings of his old patron, Mr. Jobson had more
+ occasion to restrain within the bounds of the law, than to stimulate to
+ exertion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Justice Inglewood received me with great courtesy, and readily
+ exhibited my uncle's will, which seemed to be without a flaw. He was for
+ some time in obvious distress, how he should speak and act in my presence;
+ but when he found, that though a supporter of the present Government upon
+ principle, I was disposed to think with pity on those who had opposed it
+ on a mistaken feeling of loyalty and duty, his discourse became a very
+ diverting medley of what he had done, and what he had left undone,&mdash;the
+ pains he had taken to prevent some squires from joining, and to wink at
+ the escape of others, who had been so unlucky as to engage in the affair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were <i>tete-a'-tete,</i> and several bumpers had been quaffed by the
+ Justice's special desire, when, on a sudden, he requested me to fill a <i>bona
+ fide</i> brimmer to the health of poor dear Die Vernon, the rose of the
+ wilderness, the heath-bell of Cheviot, and the blossom that's transplanted
+ to an infernal convent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is not Miss Vernon married, then?&rdquo; I exclaimed, in great astonishment. &ldquo;I
+ thought his Excellency&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh! pooh! his Excellency and his Lordship's all a humbug now, you know&mdash;mere
+ St. Germains titles&mdash;Earl of Beauchamp, and ambassador
+ plenipotentiary from France, when the Duke Regent of Orleans scarce knew
+ that he lived, I dare say. But you must have seen old Sir Frederick Vernon
+ at the Hall, when he played the part of Father Vaughan?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good Heavens! then Vaughan was Miss Vernon's father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To be sure he was,&rdquo; said the Justice coolly;&mdash;&ldquo;there's no use in
+ keeping the secret now, for he must be out of the country by this time&mdash;otherwise,
+ no doubt, it would be my duty to apprehend him.&mdash;Come, off with your
+ bumper to my dear lost Die!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And let her health go round, around, around,
+ And let her health go round;
+ For though your stocking be of silk,
+ Your knees near kiss the ground, aground, aground.&rdquo; *
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ * This pithy verse occurs, it is believed, in Shadwell's play of Bury
+ Fair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was unable, as the reader may easily conceive, to join in the Justice's
+ jollity. My head swam with the shock I had received. &ldquo;I never heard,&rdquo; I
+ said, &ldquo;that Miss Vernon's father was living.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was not our Government's fault that he is,&rdquo; replied Inglewood, &ldquo;for
+ the devil a man there is whose head would have brought more money. He was
+ condemned to death for Fenwick's plot, and was thought to have had some
+ hand in the Knightsbridge affair, in King William's time; and as he had
+ married in Scotland a relation of the house of Breadalbane, he possessed
+ great influence with all their chiefs. There was a talk of his being
+ demanded to be given up at the peace of Ryswick, but he shammed ill, and
+ his death was given publicly out in the French papers. But when he came
+ back here on the old score, we old cavaliers knew him well,&mdash;that is
+ to say, I knew him, not as being a cavalier myself, but no information
+ being lodged against the poor gentleman, and my memory being shortened by
+ frequent attacks of the gout, I could not have sworn to him, you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was he, then, not known at Osbaldistone Hall?&rdquo; I inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To none but to his daughter, the old knight, and Rashleigh, who had got
+ at that secret as he did at every one else, and held it like a twisted
+ cord about poor Die's neck. I have seen her one hundred times she would
+ have spit at him, if it had not been fear for her father, whose life would
+ not have been worth five minutes' purchase if he had been discovered to
+ the Government.&mdash;But don't mistake me, Mr. Osbaldistone; I say the
+ Government is a good, a gracious, and a just Government; and if it has
+ hanged one-half of the rebels, poor things, all will acknowledge they
+ would not have been touched had they staid peaceably at home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Waiving the discussion of these political questions, I brought back Mr.
+ Inglewood to his subject, and I found that Diana, having positively
+ refused to marry any of the Osbaldistone family, and expressed her
+ particular detestation of Rashleigh, he had from that time begun to cool
+ in zeal for the cause of the Pretender; to which, as the youngest of six
+ brethren, and bold, artful, and able, he had hitherto looked forward as
+ the means of making his fortune. Probably the compulsion with which he had
+ been forced to render up the spoils which he had abstracted from my
+ father's counting-house by the united authority of Sir Frederick Vernon
+ and the Scottish Chiefs, had determined his resolution to advance his
+ progress by changing his opinions and betraying his trust. Perhaps also&mdash;for
+ few men were better judges where his interest was concerned&mdash;he
+ considered their means and talents to be, as they afterwards proved,
+ greatly inadequate to the important task of overthrowing an established
+ Government. Sir Frederick Vernon, or, as he was called among the
+ Jacobites, his Excellency Viscount Beauchamp, had, with his daughter, some
+ difficulty in escaping the consequences of Rashleigh's information. Here
+ Mr. Inglewood's information was at fault; but he did not doubt, since we
+ had not heard of Sir Frederick being in the hands of the Government, he
+ must be by this time abroad, where, agreeably to the cruel bond he had
+ entered into with his brother-in-law, Diana, since she had declined to
+ select a husband out of the Osbaldistone family, must be confined to a
+ convent. The original cause of this singular agreement Mr. Inglewood could
+ not perfectly explain; but he understood it was a family compact, entered
+ into for the purpose of securing to Sir Frederick the rents of the remnant
+ of his large estates, which had been vested in the Osbaldistone family by
+ some legal manoeuvre; in short, a family compact, in which, like many of
+ those undertaken at that time of day, the feelings of the principal
+ parties interested were no more regarded than if they had been a part of
+ the live-stock upon the lands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I cannot tell,&mdash;such is the waywardness of the human heart,&mdash;whether
+ this intelligence gave me joy or sorrow. It seemed to me, that, in the
+ knowledge that Miss Vernon was eternally divided from me, not by marriage
+ with another, but by seclusion in a convent, in order to fulfil an absurd
+ bargain of this kind, my regret for her loss was aggravated rather than
+ diminished. I became dull, low-spirited, absent, and unable to support the
+ task of conversing with Justice Inglewood, who in his turn yawned, and
+ proposed to retire early. I took leave of him overnight, determining the
+ next day, before breakfast, to ride over to Osbaldistone Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Inglewood acquiesced in my proposal. &ldquo;It would be well,&rdquo; he said,
+ &ldquo;that I made my appearance there before I was known to be in the country,
+ the more especially as Sir Rashleigh Osbaldistone was now, he understood,
+ at Mr. Jobson's house, hatching some mischief, doubtless. They were fit
+ company,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;for each other, Sir Rashleigh having lost all right
+ to mingle in the society of men of honour; but it was hardly possible two
+ such d&mdash;d rascals should collogue together without mischief to honest
+ people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He concluded, by earnestly recommending a toast and tankard, and an attack
+ upon his venison pasty, before I set out in the morning, just to break the
+ cold air on the words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0021" id="AlinkCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER TWENTY-FIRST.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ His master's gone, and no one now
+ Dwells in the halls of Ivor;
+ Men, dogs, and horses, all are dead,
+ He is the sole survivor.
+ Wordsworth.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There are few more melancholy sensations than those with which we regard
+ scenes of past pleasure when altered and deserted. In my ride to
+ Osbaldistone Hall, I passed the same objects which I had seen in company
+ with Miss Vernon on the day of our memorable ride from Inglewood Place.
+ Her spirit seemed to keep me company on the way; and when I approached the
+ spot where I had first seen her, I almost listened for the cry of the
+ hounds and the notes of the horn, and strained my eye on the vacant space,
+ as if to descry the fair huntress again descend like an apparition from
+ the hill. But all was silent, and all was solitary. When I reached the
+ Hall, the closed doors and windows, the grass-grown pavement, the courts,
+ which were now so silent, presented a strong contrast to the gay and
+ bustling scene I had so often seen them exhibit, when the merry hunters
+ were going forth to their morning sport, or returning to the daily
+ festival. The joyous bark of the fox-hounds as they were uncoupled, the
+ cries of the huntsmen, the clang of the horses' hoofs, the loud laugh of
+ the old knight at the head of his strong and numerous descendants, were
+ all silenced now and for ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While I gazed round the scene of solitude and emptiness, I was
+ inexpressibly affected, even by recollecting those whom, when alive, I had
+ no reason to regard with affection. But the thought that so many youths of
+ goodly presence, warm with life, health, and confidence, were within so
+ short a time cold in the grave, by various, yet all violent and unexpected
+ modes of death, afforded a picture of mortality at which the mind
+ trembled. It was little consolation to me, that I returned a proprietor to
+ the halls which I had left almost like a fugitive. My mind was not
+ habituated to regard the scenes around as my property, and I felt myself
+ an usurper, at least an intruding stranger, and could hardly divest myself
+ of the idea, that some of the bulky forms of my deceased kinsmen were,
+ like the gigantic spectres of a romance, to appear in the gateway, and
+ dispute my entrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While I was engaged in these sad thoughts, my follower Andrew, whose
+ feelings were of a very different nature, exerted himself in thundering
+ alternately on every door in the building, calling, at the same time, for
+ admittance, in a tone so loud as to intimate, that <i>he,</i> at least,
+ was fully sensible of his newly acquired importance, as squire of the body
+ to the new lord of the manor. At length, timidly and reluctantly, Anthony
+ Syddall, my uncle's aged butler and major-domo, presented himself at a
+ lower window, well fenced with iron bars, and inquired our business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are come to tak your charge aff your hand, my auld friend,&rdquo; said
+ Andrew Fairservice; &ldquo;ye may gie up your keys as sune as ye like&mdash;ilka
+ dog has his day. I'll tak the plate and napery aff your hand. Ye hae had
+ your ain time o't, Mr. Syddall; but ilka bean has its black, and ilka path
+ has its puddle; and it will just set you henceforth to sit at the
+ board-end, as weel as it did Andrew lang syne.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Checking with some difficulty the forwardness of my follower, I explained
+ to Syddall the nature of my right, and the title I had to demand
+ admittance into the Hall, as into my own property. The old man seemed much
+ agitated and distressed, and testified manifest reluctance to give me
+ entrance, although it was couched in a humble and submissive tone. I
+ allowed for the agitation of natural feelings, which really did the old
+ man honour; but continued peremptory in my demand of admittance,
+ explaining to him that his refusal would oblige me to apply for Mr.
+ Inglewood's warrant, and a constable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are come from Mr. Justice Inglewood's this morning,&rdquo; said Andrew, to
+ enforce the menace;&mdash;&ldquo;and I saw Archie Rutledge, the constable, as I
+ came up by;&mdash;the country's no to be lawless as it has been, Mr.
+ Syddall, letting rebels and papists gang on as they best listed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The threat of the law sounded dreadful in the old man's ears, conscious as
+ he was of the suspicion under which he himself lay, from his religion and
+ his devotion to Sir Hildebrand and his sons. He undid, with fear and
+ trembling, one of the postern entrances, which was secured with many a
+ bolt and bar, and humbly hoped that I would excuse him for fidelity in the
+ discharge of his duty.&mdash;I reassured him, and told him I had the
+ better opinion of him for his caution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sae have not I,&rdquo; said Andrew; &ldquo;Syddall is an auld sneck-drawer; he wadna
+ be looking as white as a sheet, and his knees knocking thegither, unless
+ it were for something mair than he's like to tell us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord forgive you, Mr. Fairservice,&rdquo; replied the butler, &ldquo;to say such
+ things of an old friend and fellow-servant!&mdash;Where&rdquo;&mdash;following
+ me humbly along the passage&mdash;&ldquo;where would it be your honour's
+ pleasure to have a fire lighted? I fear me you will find the house very
+ dull and dreary&mdash;But perhaps you mean to ride back to Inglewood Place
+ to dinner?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Light a fire in the library,&rdquo; I replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the library!&rdquo; answered the old man;&mdash;&ldquo;nobody has sat there this
+ many a day, and the room smokes, for the daws have built in the chimney
+ this spring, and there were no young men about the Hall to pull them
+ down.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our ain reekes better than other folk's fire,&rdquo; said Andrew. &ldquo;His honour
+ likes the library;&mdash;he's nane o' your Papishers, that delight in
+ blinded ignorance, Mr. Syddall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very reluctantly as it appeared to me, the butler led the way to the
+ library, and, contrary to what he had given me to expect, the interior of
+ the apartment looked as if it had been lately arranged, and made more
+ comfortable than usual. There was a fire in the grate, which burned
+ clearly, notwithstanding what Syddall had reported of the vent. Taking up
+ the tongs, as if to arrange the wood, but rather perhaps to conceal his
+ own confusion, the butler observed, &ldquo;it was burning clear now, but had
+ smoked woundily in the morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wishing to be alone, till I recovered myself from the first painful
+ sensations which everything around me recalled, I desired old Syddall to
+ call the land-steward, who lived at about a quarter of a mile from the
+ Hall. He departed with obvious reluctance. I next ordered Andrew to
+ procure the attendance of a couple of stout fellows upon whom he could
+ rely, the population around being Papists, and Sir Rashleigh, who was
+ capable of any desperate enterprise, being in the neighbourhood. Andrew
+ Fairservice undertook this task with great cheerfulness, and promised to
+ bring me up from Trinlay-Knowe, &ldquo;twa true-blue Presbyterians like himself,
+ that would face and out-face baith the Pope, the Devil, and the Pretender&mdash;and
+ blythe will I be o' their company mysell, for the very last night that I
+ was at Osbaldistone Hall, the blight be on ilka blossom in my bit yard, if
+ I didna see that very picture&rdquo; (pointing to the full-length portrait of
+ Miss Vernon's grandfather) &ldquo;walking by moonlight in the garden! I tauld
+ your honour I was fleyed wi' a bogle that night, but ye wadna listen to me&mdash;I
+ aye thought there was witchcraft and deevilry amang the Papishers, but I
+ ne'er saw't wi' bodily een till that awfu' night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get along, sir,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;and bring the fellows you talk of; and see they
+ have more sense than yourself, and are not frightened at their own
+ shadow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hae been counted as gude a man as my neighbours ere now,&rdquo; said Andrew,
+ petulantly; &ldquo;but I dinna pretend to deal wi' evil spirits.&rdquo; And so he made
+ his exit, as Wardlaw the land-steward made his appearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a man of sense and honesty, without whose careful management my
+ uncle would have found it difficult to have maintained himself a
+ housekeeper so long as he did. He examined the nature of my right of
+ possession carefully, and admitted it candidly. To any one else the
+ succession would have been a poor one, so much was the land encumbered
+ with debt and mortgage. Most of these, however, were already vested in my
+ father's person, and he was in a train of acquiring the rest; his large
+ gains by the recent rise of the funds having made it a matter of ease and
+ convenience for him to pay off the debt which affected his patrimony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I transacted much necessary business with Mr. Wardlaw, and detained him to
+ dine with me. We preferred taking our repast in the library, although
+ Syddall strongly recommended our removing to the stone-hall, which he had
+ put in order for the occasion. Meantime Andrew made his appearance with
+ his true-blue recruits, whom he recommended in the highest terms, as
+ &ldquo;sober decent men, weel founded in doctrinal points, and, above all, as
+ bold as lions.&rdquo; I ordered them something to drink, and they left the room.
+ I observed old Syddall shake his head as they went out, and insisted upon
+ knowing the reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I maybe cannot expect,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that your honour should put confidence
+ in what I say, but it is Heaven's truth for all that&mdash;Ambrose
+ Wingfield is as honest a man as lives, but if there is a false knave in
+ the country, it is his brother Lancie;&mdash;the whole country knows him
+ to be a spy for Clerk Jobson on the poor gentlemen that have been in
+ trouble&mdash;But he's a dissenter, and I suppose that's enough
+ now-a-days.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having thus far given vent to his feelings,&mdash;to which, however, I was
+ little disposed to pay attention,&mdash;and having placed the wine on the
+ table, the old butler left the apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Wardlaw having remained with me until the evening was somewhat
+ advanced, at length bundled up his papers, and removed himself to his own
+ habitation, leaving me in that confused state of mind in which we can
+ hardly say whether we desire company or solitude. I had not, however, the
+ choice betwixt them; for I was left alone in the room of all others most
+ calculated to inspire me with melancholy reflections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As twilight was darkening the apartment, Andrew had the sagacity to
+ advance his head at the door,&mdash;not to ask if I wished for lights, but
+ to recommend them as a measure of precaution against the bogles which
+ still haunted his imagination. I rejected his proffer somewhat peevishly,
+ trimmed the wood-fire, and placing myself in one of the large leathern
+ chairs which flanked the old Gothic chimney, I watched unconsciously the
+ bickering of the blaze which I had fostered. &ldquo;And this,&rdquo; said I alone, &ldquo;is
+ the progress and the issue of human wishes! Nursed by the merest trifles,
+ they are first kindled by fancy&mdash;nay, are fed upon the vapour of
+ hope, till they consume the substance which they inflame; and man, and his
+ hopes, passions, and desires, sink into a worthless heap of embers and
+ ashes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a deep sigh from the opposite side of the room, which seemed to
+ reply to my reflections. I started up in amazement&mdash;Diana Vernon
+ stood before me, resting on the arm of a figure so strongly resembling
+ that of the portrait so often mentioned, that I looked hastily at the
+ frame, expecting to see it empty. My first idea was, either that I had
+ gone suddenly distracted, or that the spirits of the dead had arisen and
+ been placed before me. A second glance convinced me of my being in my
+ senses, and that the forms which stood before me were real and
+ substantial. It was Diana herself, though paler and thinner than her
+ former self; and it was no tenant of the grave who stood beside her, but
+ Vaughan, or rather Sir Frederick Vernon, in a dress made to imitate that
+ of his ancestor, to whose picture his countenance possessed a family
+ resemblance. He was the first that spoke, for Diana kept her eyes fast
+ fixed on the ground, and astonishment actually riveted my tongue to the
+ roof of my mouth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are your suppliants, Mr. Osbaldistone,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and we claim the
+ refuge and protection of your roof till we can pursue a journey where
+ dungeons and death gape for me at every step.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; I articulated with great difficulty&mdash;&ldquo;Miss Vernon cannot
+ suppose&mdash;you, sir, cannot believe, that I have forgot your
+ interference in my difficulties, or that I am capable of betraying any
+ one, much less you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know it,&rdquo; said Sir Frederick; &ldquo;yet it is with the most inexpressible
+ reluctance that I impose on you a confidence, disagreeable perhaps&mdash;certainly
+ dangerous&mdash;and which I would have specially wished to have conferred
+ on some one else. But my fate, which has chased me through a life of
+ perils and escapes, is now pressing me hard, and I have no alternative.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment the door opened, and the voice of the officious Andrew was
+ heard&mdash;&ldquo;A'm bringin' in the caunles&mdash;Ye can light them gin ye
+ like&mdash;Can do is easy carried about wi' ane.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I ran to the door, which, as I hoped, I reached in time to prevent his
+ observing who were in the apartment, I turned him out with hasty violence,
+ shut the door after him, and locked it&mdash;then instantly remembering
+ his two companions below, knowing his talkative humour, and recollecting
+ Syddall's remark, that one of them was supposed to be a spy, I followed
+ him as fast as I could to the servants' hall, in which they were
+ assembled. Andrew's tongue was loud as I opened the door, but my
+ unexpected appearance silenced him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the matter with you, you fool?&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;you stare and look wild,
+ as if you had seen a ghost.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;N&mdash;n&mdash;no&mdash;nothing,&rdquo; said Andrew.&mdash;&ldquo;but your worship
+ was pleased to be hasty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because you disturbed me out of a sound sleep, you fool. Syddall tells me
+ he cannot find beds for these good fellows tonight, and Mr. Wardlaw thinks
+ there will be no occasion to detain them. Here is a crown-piece for them
+ to drink my health, and thanks for their good-will. You will leave the
+ Hall immediately, my good lads.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men thanked me for my bounty, took the silver, and withdrew,
+ apparently unsuspicious and contented. I watched their departure until I
+ was sure they could have no further intercourse that night with honest
+ Andrew. And so instantly had I followed on his heels, that I thought he
+ could not have had time to speak two words with them before I interrupted
+ him. But it is wonderful what mischief may be done by only two words. On
+ this occasion they cost two lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having made these arrangements, the best which occurred to me upon the
+ pressure of the moment, to secure privacy for my guests, I returned to
+ report my proceedings, and added, that I had desired Syddall to answer
+ every summons, concluding that it was by his connivance they had been
+ secreted in the Hall. Diana raised her eyes to thank me for the caution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You now understand my mystery,&rdquo; she said;&mdash;&ldquo;you know, doubtless, how
+ near and dear that relative is, who has so often found shelter here; and
+ will be no longer surprised that Rashleigh, having such a secret at his
+ command, should rule me with a rod of iron.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her father added, &ldquo;that it was their intention to trouble me with their
+ presence as short a time as was possible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I entreated the fugitives to waive every consideration but what affected
+ their safety, and to rely on my utmost exertions to promote it. This led
+ to an explanation of the circumstances under which they stood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I always suspected Rashleigh Osbaldistone,&rdquo; said Sir Frederick; &ldquo;but his
+ conduct towards my unprotected child, which with difficulty I wrung from
+ her, and his treachery in your father's affairs, made me hate and despise
+ him. In our last interview I concealed not my sentiments, as I should in
+ prudence have attempted to do; and in resentment of the scorn with which I
+ treated him, he added treachery and apostasy to his catalogue of crimes. I
+ at that time fondly hoped that his defection would be of little
+ consequence. The Earl of Mar had a gallant army in Scotland, and Lord
+ Derwentwater, with Forster, Kenmure, Winterton, and others, were
+ assembling forces on the Border. As my connections with these English
+ nobility and gentry were extensive, it was judged proper that I should
+ accompany a detachment of Highlanders, who, under Brigadier MacIntosh of
+ Borlum, crossed the Firth of Forth, traversed the low country of Scotland,
+ and united themselves on the Borders with the English insurgents. My
+ daughter accompanied me through the perils and fatigues of a march so long
+ and difficult.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And she will never leave her dear father!&rdquo; exclaimed Miss Vernon,
+ clinging fondly to his arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had hardly joined our English friends, when I became sensible that our
+ cause was lost. Our numbers diminished instead of increasing, nor were we
+ joined by any except of our own persuasion. The Tories of the High Church
+ remained in general undecided, and at length we were cooped up by a
+ superior force in the little town of Preston. We defended ourselves
+ resolutely for one day. On the next, the hearts of our leaders failed, and
+ they resolved to surrender at discretion. To yield myself up on such
+ terms, were to have laid my head on the block. About twenty or thirty
+ gentlemen were of my mind: we mounted our horses, and placed my daughter,
+ who insisted on sharing my fate, in the centre of our little party. My
+ companions, struck with her courage and filial piety, declared that they
+ would die rather than leave her behind. We rode in a body down a street
+ called Fishergate, which leads to a marshy ground or meadow, extending to
+ the river Ribble, through which one of our party promised to show us a
+ good ford. This marsh had not been strongly invested by the enemy, so that
+ we had only an affair with a patrol of Honeywood's dragoons, whom we
+ dispersed and cut to pieces. We crossed the river, gained the high road to
+ Liverpool, and then dispersed to seek several places of concealment and
+ safety. My fortune led me to Wales, where there are many gentlemen of my
+ religious and political opinions. I could not, however, find a safe
+ opportunity of escaping by sea, and found myself obliged again to draw
+ towards the North. A well-tried friend has appointed to meet me in this
+ neighbourhood, and guide me to a seaport on the Solway, where a sloop is
+ prepared to carry me from my native country for ever. As Osbaldistone Hall
+ was for the present uninhabited, and under the charge of old Syddall, who
+ had been our confidant on former occasions, we drew to it as to a place of
+ known and secure refuge. I resumed a dress which had been used with good
+ effect to scare the superstitious rustics, or domestics, who chanced at
+ any time to see me; and we expected from time to time to hear by Syddall
+ of the arrival of our friendly guide, when your sudden coming hither, and
+ occupying this apartment, laid us under the necessity of submitting to
+ your mercy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus ended Sir Fredericks story, whose tale sounded to me like one told in
+ a vision; and I could hardly bring myself to believe that I saw his
+ daughter's form once more before me in flesh and blood, though with
+ diminished beauty and sunk spirits. The buoyant vivacity with which she
+ had resisted every touch of adversity, had now assumed the air of composed
+ and submissive, but dauntless resolution and constancy. Her father, though
+ aware and jealous of the effect of her praises on my mind, could not
+ forbear expatiating upon them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has endured trials,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;which might have dignified the history
+ of a martyr;&mdash;she has faced danger and death in various shapes;&mdash;she
+ has undergone toil and privation, from which men of the strongest frame
+ would have shrunk;&mdash;she has spent the day in darkness, and the night
+ in vigil, and has never breathed a murmur of weakness or complaint. In a
+ word, Mr. Osbaldistone,&rdquo; he concluded, &ldquo;she is a worthy offering to that
+ God, to whom&rdquo; (crossing himself) &ldquo;I shall dedicate her, as all that is
+ left dear or precious to Frederick Vernon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a silence after these words, of which I well understood the
+ mournful import. The father of Diana was still as anxious to destroy my
+ hopes of being united to her now as he had shown himself during our brief
+ meeting in Scotland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We will now,&rdquo; said he to his daughter, &ldquo;intrude no farther on Mr.
+ Osbaldistone's time, since we have acquainted him with the circumstances
+ of the miserable guests who claim his protection.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I requested them to stay, and offered myself to leave the apartment. Sir
+ Frederick observed, that my doing so could not but excite my attendant's
+ suspicion; and that the place of their retreat was in every respect
+ commodious, and furnished by Syddall with all they could possibly want.
+ &ldquo;We might perhaps have even contrived to remain there, concealed from your
+ observation; but it would have been unjust to decline the most absolute
+ reliance on your honour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have done me but justice,&rdquo; I replied.&mdash;&ldquo;To you, Sir Frederick, I
+ am but little known; but Miss Vernon, I am sure, will bear me witness
+ that&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not want my daughter's evidence,&rdquo; he said, politely, but yet with an
+ air calculated to prevent my addressing myself to Diana, &ldquo;since I am
+ prepared to believe all that is worthy of Mr. Francis Osbaldistone. Permit
+ us now to retire; we must take repose when we can, since we are absolutely
+ uncertain when we may be called upon to renew our perilous journey.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He drew his daughter's arm within his, and with a profound reverence,
+ disappeared with her behind the tapestry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="AlinkCH0022" id="AlinkCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER TWENTY-SECOND.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ But now the hand of fate is on the curtain,
+ And gives the scene to light.
+ Don Sebastian.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I felt stunned and chilled as they retired. Imagination, dwelling on an
+ absent object of affection, paints her not only in the fairest light, but
+ in that in which we most desire to behold her. I had thought of Diana as
+ she was, when her parting tear dropped on my cheek&mdash;when her parting
+ token, received from the wife of MacGregor, augured her wish to convey
+ into exile and conventual seclusion the remembrance of my affection. I saw
+ her; and her cold passive manner, expressive of little except composed
+ melancholy, disappointed, and, in some degree, almost offended me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the egotism of my feelings, I accused her of indifference&mdash;of
+ insensibility. I upbraided her father with pride&mdash;with cruelty&mdash;with
+ fanaticism,&mdash;forgetting that both were sacrificing their interest,
+ and Diana her inclination, to the discharge of what they regarded as their
+ duty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Frederick Vernon was a rigid Catholic, who thought the path of
+ salvation too narrow to be trodden by an heretic; and Diana, to whom her
+ father's safety had been for many years the principal and moving spring of
+ thoughts, hopes, and actions, felt that she had discharged her duty in
+ resigning to his will, not alone her property in the world, but the
+ dearest affections of her heart. But it was not surprising that I could
+ not, at such a moment, fully appreciate these honourable motives; yet my
+ spleen sought no ignoble means of discharging itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am contemned, then,&rdquo; I said, when left to run over the tenor of Sir
+ Frederick's communications&mdash;&ldquo;I am contemned, and thought unworthy
+ even to exchange words with her. Be it so; they shall not at least prevent
+ me from watching over her safety. Here will I remain as an outpost, and,
+ while under my roof at least, no danger shall threaten her, if it be such
+ as the arm of one determined man can avert.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I summoned Syddall to the library. He came, but came attended by the
+ eternal Andrew, who, dreaming of great things in consequence of my taking
+ possession of the Hall and the annexed estates, was resolved to lose
+ nothing for want of keeping himself in view; and, as often happens to men
+ who entertain selfish objects, overshot his mark, and rendered his
+ attentions tedious and inconvenient.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His unrequired presence prevented me from speaking freely to Syddall, and
+ I dared not send him away for fear of increasing such suspicions as he
+ might entertain from his former abrupt dismissal from the library. &ldquo;I
+ shall sleep here, sir,&rdquo; I said, giving them directions to wheel nearer to
+ the fire an old-fashioned day-bed, or settee. &ldquo;I have much to do, and
+ shall go late to bed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Syddall, who seemed to understand my look, offered to procure me the
+ accommodation of a mattress and some bedding. I accepted his offer,
+ dismissed my attendant, lighted a pair of candles, and desired that I
+ might not be disturbed till seven in the ensuing morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The domestics retired, leaving me to my painful and ill-arranged
+ reflections, until nature, worn out, should require some repose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I endeavoured forcibly to abstract my mind from the singular circumstances
+ in which I found myself placed. Feelings which I had gallantly combated
+ while the exciting object was remote, were now exasperated by my immediate
+ neighbourhood to her whom I was so soon to part with for ever. Her name
+ was written in every book which I attempted to peruse; and her image
+ forced itself on me in whatever train of thought I strove to engage
+ myself. It was like the officious slave of Prior's Solomon,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Abra was ready ere I named her name,
+ And when I called another, Abra came.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I alternately gave way to these thoughts, and struggled against them,
+ sometimes yielding to a mood of melting tenderness of sorrow which was
+ scarce natural to me, sometimes arming myself with the hurt pride of one
+ who had experienced what he esteemed unmerited rejection. I paced the
+ library until I had chafed myself into a temporary fever. I then threw
+ myself on the couch, and endeavoured to dispose myself to sleep;&mdash;but
+ it was in vain that I used every effort to compose myself&mdash;that I lay
+ without movement of finger or of muscle, as still as if I had been already
+ a corpse&mdash;that I endeavoured to divert or banish disquieting
+ thoughts, by fixing my mind on some act of repetition or arithmetical
+ process. My blood throbbed, to my feverish apprehension, in pulsations
+ which resembled the deep and regular strokes of a distant fulling-mill,
+ and tingled in my veins like streams of liquid fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length I arose, opened the window, and stood by it for some time in the
+ clear moonlight, receiving, in part at least, that refreshment and
+ dissipation of ideas from the clear and calm scene, without which they had
+ become beyond the command of my own volition. I resumed my place on the
+ couch&mdash;with a heart, Heaven knows, not lighter but firmer, and more
+ resolved for endurance. In a short time a slumber crept over my senses;
+ still, however, though my senses slumbered, my soul was awake to the
+ painful feelings of my situation, and my dreams were of mental anguish and
+ external objects of terror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I remember a strange agony, under which I conceived myself and Diana in
+ the power of MacGregor's wife, and about to be precipitated from a rock
+ into the lake; the signal was to be the discharge of a cannon, fired by
+ Sir Frederick Vernon, who, in the dress of a Cardinal, officiated at the
+ ceremony. Nothing could be more lively than the impression which I
+ received of this imaginary scene. I could paint, even at this moment, the
+ mute and courageous submission expressed in Diana's features&mdash;the
+ wild and distorted faces of the executioners, who crowded around us with
+ &ldquo;mopping and mowing;&rdquo; grimaces ever changing, and each more hideous than
+ that which preceded. I saw the rigid and inflexible fanaticism painted in
+ the face of the father&mdash;I saw him lift the fatal match&mdash;the
+ deadly signal exploded&mdash;It was repeated again and again and again, in
+ rival thunders, by the echoes of the surrounding cliffs, and I awoke from
+ fancied horror to real apprehension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sounds in my dream were not ideal. They reverberated on my waking
+ ears, but it was two or three minutes ere I could collect myself so as
+ distinctly to understand that they proceeded from a violent knocking at
+ the gate. I leaped from my couch in great apprehension, took my sword
+ under my arm, and hastened to forbid the admission of any one. But my
+ route was necessarily circuitous, because the library looked not upon the
+ quadrangle, but into the gardens. When I had reached a staircase, the
+ windows of which opened upon the entrance court, I heard the feeble and
+ intimidated tones of Syddall expostulating with rough voices, which
+ demanded admittance, by the warrant of Justice Standish, and in the King's
+ name, and threatened the old domestic with the heaviest penal consequences
+ if he refused instant obedience. Ere they had ceased, I heard, to my
+ unspeakable provocation, the voice of Andrew bidding Syddall stand aside,
+ and let him open the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If they come in King George's name, we have naething to fear&mdash;we hae
+ spent baith bluid and gowd for him&mdash;We dinna need to darn ourselves
+ like some folks, Mr. Syddall&mdash;we are neither Papists nor Jacobites, I
+ trow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in vain I accelerated my pace down stairs; I heard bolt after bolt
+ withdrawn by the officious scoundrel, while all the time he was boasting
+ his own and his master's loyalty to King George; and I could easily
+ calculate that the party must enter before I could arrive at the door to
+ replace the bars. Devoting the back of Andrew Fairservice to the cudgel so
+ soon as I should have time to pay him his deserts, I ran back to the
+ library, barricaded the door as I best could, and hastened to that by
+ which Diana and her father entered, and begged for instant admittance.
+ Diana herself undid the door. She was ready dressed, and betrayed neither
+ perturbation nor fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Danger is so familiar to us,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that we are always prepared to
+ meet it. My father is already up&mdash;he is in Rashleigh's apartment. We
+ will escape into the garden, and thence by the postern-gate (I have the
+ key from Syddall in case of need.) into the wood&mdash;I know its dingles
+ better than any one now alive. Keep them a few minutes in play. And, dear,
+ dear Frank, once more fare-thee-well!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She vanished like a meteor to join her father, and the intruders were
+ rapping violently, and attempting to force the library door by the time I
+ had returned into it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You robber dogs!&rdquo; I exclaimed, wilfully mistaking the purpose of their
+ disturbance, &ldquo;if you do not instantly quit the house I will fire my
+ blunderbuss through the door.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fire a fule's bauble!&rdquo; said Andrew Fairservice; &ldquo;it's Mr. Clerk Jobson,
+ with a legal warrant&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To search for, take, and apprehend,&rdquo; said the voice of that execrable
+ pettifogger, &ldquo;the bodies of certain persons in my warrant named, charged
+ of high treason under the 13th of King William, chapter third.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the violence on the door was renewed. &ldquo;I am rising, gentlemen,&rdquo; said
+ I, desirous to gain as much time as possible&mdash;&ldquo;commit no violence&mdash;give
+ me leave to look at your warrant, and, if it is formal and legal, I shall
+ not oppose it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God save great George our King!&rdquo; ejaculated Andrew. &ldquo;I tauld ye that ye
+ would find nae Jacobites here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spinning out the time as much as possible, I was at length compelled to
+ open the door, which they would otherwise have forced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Jobson entered, with several assistants, among whom I discovered the
+ younger Wingfield, to whom, doubtless, he was obliged for his information,
+ and exhibited his warrant, directed not only against Frederick Vernon, an
+ attainted traitor, but also against Diana Vernon, spinster, and Francis
+ Osbaldistone, gentleman, accused of misprision of treason. It was a case
+ in which resistance would have been madness; I therefore, after
+ capitulating for a few minutes' delay, surrendered myself a prisoner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had next the mortification to see Jobson go straight to the chamber of
+ Miss Vernon, and I learned that from thence, without hesitation or
+ difficulty, he went to the room where Sir Frederick had slept. &ldquo;The hare
+ has stolen away,&rdquo; said the brute, &ldquo;but her form is warm&mdash;the
+ greyhounds will have her by the haunches yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A scream from the garden announced that he prophesied too truly. In the
+ course of five minutes, Rashleigh entered the library with Sir Frederick
+ Vernon and his daughter as prisoners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The fox,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;knew his old earth, but he forgot it could be stopped
+ by a careful huntsman.&mdash;I had not forgot the garden-gate, Sir
+ Frederick&mdash;or, if that title suits you better, most noble Lord
+ Beauchamp.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rashleigh,&rdquo; said Sir Frederick, &ldquo;thou art a detestable villain!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I better deserved the name, Sir Knight, or my Lord, when, under the
+ direction of an able tutor, I sought to introduce civil war into the bosom
+ of a peaceful country. But I have done my best,&rdquo; said he, looking upwards,
+ &ldquo;to atone for my errors.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could hold no longer. I had designed to watch their proceedings in
+ silence, but I felt that I must speak or die. &ldquo;If hell,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;has one
+ complexion more hideous than another, it is where villany is masked by
+ hypocrisy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha! my gentle cousin,&rdquo; said Rashleigh, holding a candle towards me, and
+ surveying me from head to foot; &ldquo;right welcome to Osbaldistone Hall!&mdash;I
+ can forgive your spleen&mdash;It is hard to lose an estate and a mistress
+ in one night; for we shall take possession of this poor manor-house in the
+ name of the lawful heir, Sir Rashleigh Osbaldistone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Rashleigh braved it out in this manner, I could see that he put a
+ strong force upon his feelings, both of anger and shame. But his state of
+ mind was more obvious when Diana Vernon addressed him. &ldquo;Rashleigh,&rdquo; she
+ said, &ldquo;I pity you&mdash;for, deep as the evil is which you have laboured
+ to do me, and the evil you have actually done, I cannot hate you so much
+ as I scorn and pity you. What you have now done may be the work of an
+ hour, but will furnish you with reflection for your life&mdash;of what
+ nature I leave to your own conscience, which will not slumber for ever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rashleigh strode once or twice through the room, came up to the
+ side-table, on which wine was still standing, and poured out a large glass
+ with a trembling hand; but when he saw that we observed his tremor, he
+ suppressed it by a strong effort, and, looking at us with fixed and daring
+ composure, carried the bumper to his head without spilling a drop. &ldquo;It is
+ my father's old burgundy,&rdquo; he said, looking to Jobson; &ldquo;I am glad there is
+ some of it left.&mdash;You will get proper persons to take care of old
+ butler, and that foolish Scotch rascal. Meanwhile we will convey these
+ persons to a more proper place of custody. I have provided the old family
+ coach for your convenience,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;though I am not ignorant that even
+ the lady could brave the night-air on foot or on horseback, were the
+ errand more to her mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrew wrung his hands.&mdash;&ldquo;I only said that my master was surely
+ speaking to a ghaist in the library&mdash;and the villain Lancie to betray
+ an auld friend, that sang aff the same Psalm-book wi' him every Sabbath
+ for twenty years!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was turned out of the house, together with Syddall, without being
+ allowed to conclude his lamentation. His expulsion, however, led to some
+ singular consequences. Resolving, according to his own story, to go down
+ for the night where Mother Simpson would give him a lodging for old
+ acquaintance' sake, he had just got clear of the avenue, and into the old
+ wood, as it was called, though it was now used as a pasture-ground rather
+ than woodland, when he suddenly lighted on a drove of Scotch cattle, which
+ were lying there to repose themselves after the day's journey. At this
+ Andrew was in no way surprised, it being the well-known custom of his
+ countrymen, who take care of those droves, to quarter themselves after
+ night upon the best unenclosed grass-ground they can find, and depart
+ before day-break to escape paying for their night's lodgings. But he was
+ both surprised and startled, when a Highlander, springing up, accused him
+ of disturbing the cattle, and refused him to pass forward till he had
+ spoken to his master. The mountaineer conducted Andrew into a thicket,
+ where he found three or four more of his countrymen. &ldquo;And,&rdquo; said Andrew,
+ &ldquo;I saw sune they were ower mony men for the drove; and from the questions
+ they put to me, I judged they had other tow on their rock.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They questioned him closely about all that had passed at Osbaldistone
+ Hall, and seemed surprised and concerned at the report he made to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And troth,&rdquo; said Andrew, &ldquo;I tauld them a' I ken'd; for dirks and pistols
+ were what I could never refuse information to in a' my life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They talked in whispers among themselves, and at length collected their
+ cattle together, and drove them close up to the entrance of the avenue,
+ which might be half a mile distant from the house. They proceeded to drag
+ together some felled trees which lay in the vicinity, so as to make a
+ temporary barricade across the road, about fifteen yards beyond the
+ avenue. It was now near daybreak, and there was a pale eastern gleam
+ mingled with the fading moonlight, so that objects could be discovered
+ with some distinctness. The lumbering sound of a coach drawn by four
+ horses, and escorted by six men on horseback, was heard coming up the
+ avenue. The Highlanders listened attentively. The carriage contained Mr.
+ Jobson and his unfortunate prisoners. The escort consisted of Rashleigh,
+ and of several horsemen, peace-officers and their assistants. So soon as
+ we had passed the gate at the head of the avenue, it was shut behind the
+ cavalcade by a Highland-man, stationed there for that purpose. At the same
+ time the carriage was impeded in its farther progress by the cattle,
+ amongst which we were involved, and by the barricade in front. Two of the
+ escort dismounted to remove the felled trees, which they might think were
+ left there by accident or carelessness. The others began with their whips
+ to drive the cattle from the road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who dare abuse our cattle?&rdquo; said a rough voice.&mdash;&ldquo;Shoot him, Angus!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rashleigh instantly called out&mdash;&ldquo;A rescue! a rescue!&rdquo; and, firing a
+ pistol, wounded the man who spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Claymore!</i>&rdquo; cried the leader of the Highlanders, and a scuffle
+ instantly commenced. The officers of the law, surprised at so sudden an
+ attack, and not usually possessing the most desperate bravery, made but an
+ imperfect defence, considering the superiority of their numbers. Some
+ attempted to ride back to the Hall, but on a pistol being fired from
+ behind the gate, they conceived themselves surrounded, and at length
+ galloped of in different directions. Rashleigh, meanwhile, had dismounted,
+ and on foot had maintained a desperate and single-handed conflict with the
+ leader of the band. The window of the carriage, on my side, permitted me
+ to witness it. At length Rashleigh dropped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will you ask forgiveness for the sake of God, King James, and auld
+ friendship?&rdquo; said a voice which I knew right well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, never!&rdquo; said Rashleigh, firmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, traitor, die in your treason!&rdquo; retorted MacGregor, and plunged his
+ sword in his prostrate antagonist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the next moment he was at the carriage door&mdash;handed out Miss
+ Vernon, assisted her father and me to alight, and dragging out the
+ attorney, head foremost, threw him under the wheel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Osbaldistone,&rdquo; he said, in a whisper, &ldquo;you have nothing to fear&mdash;I
+ must look after those who have&mdash;Your friends will soon be in safety&mdash;Farewell,
+ and forget not the MacGregor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He whistled&mdash;his band gathered round him, and, hurrying Diana and her
+ father along with him, they were almost instantly lost in the glades of
+ the forest. The coachman and postilion had abandoned their horses, and
+ fled at the first discharge of firearms; but the animals, stopped by the
+ barricade, remained perfectly still; and well for Jobson that they did so,
+ for the slightest motion would have dragged the wheel over his body. My
+ first object was to relieve him, for such was the rascal's terror that he
+ never could have risen by his own exertions. I next commanded him to
+ observe, that I had neither taken part in the rescue, nor availed myself
+ of it to make my escape, and enjoined him to go down to the Hall, and call
+ some of his party, who had been left there, to assist the wounded.&mdash;
+ But Jobson's fears had so mastered and controlled every faculty of his
+ mind, that he was totally incapable of moving. I now resolved to go
+ myself, but in my way I stumbled over the body of a man, as I thought,
+ dead or dying. It was, however, Andrew Fairservice, as well and whole as
+ ever he was in his life, who had only taken this recumbent posture to
+ avoid the slashes, stabs, and pistol-balls, which for a moment or two were
+ flying in various directions. I was so glad to find him, that I did not
+ inquire how he came thither, but instantly commanded his assistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rashleigh was our first object. He groaned when I approached him, as much
+ through spite as through pain, and shut his eyes, as if determined, like
+ Iago, to speak no word more. We lifted him into the carriage, and
+ performed the same good office to another wounded man of his party, who
+ had been left on the field. I then with difficulty made Jobson understand
+ that he must enter the coach also, and support Sir Rashleigh upon the
+ seat. He obeyed, but with an air as if he but half comprehended my
+ meaning. Andrew and I turned the horses' heads round, and opening the gate
+ of the avenue, led them slowly back to Osbaldistone Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some fugitives had already reached the Hall by circuitous routes, and
+ alarmed its garrison by the news that Sir Rashleigh, Clerk Jobson, and all
+ their escort, save they who escaped to tell the tale, had been cut to
+ pieces at the head of the avenue by a whole regiment of wild Highlanders.
+ When we reached the mansion, therefore, we heard such a buzz as arises
+ when bees are alarmed, and mustering in their hives. Mr. Jobson, however,
+ who had now in some measure come to his senses, found voice enough to make
+ himself known. He was the more anxious to be released from the carriage,
+ as one of his companions (the peace-officer) had, to his inexpressible
+ terror, expired by his side with a hideous groan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Rashleigh Osbaldistone was still alive, but so dreadfully wounded that
+ the bottom of the coach was filled with his blood, and long traces of it
+ left from the entrance-door into the stone-hall, where he was placed in a
+ chair, some attempting to stop the bleeding with cloths, while others
+ called for a surgeon, and no one seemed willing to go to fetch one.
+ &ldquo;Torment me not,&rdquo; said the wounded man&mdash;&ldquo;I know no assistance can
+ avail me&mdash;I am a dying man.&rdquo; He raised himself in his chair, though
+ the damps and chill of death were already on his brow, and spoke with a
+ firmness which seemed beyond his strength. &ldquo;Cousin Francis,&rdquo; he said,
+ &ldquo;draw near to me.&rdquo; I approached him as he requested.&mdash;&ldquo;I wish you
+ only to know that the pangs of death do not alter I one iota of my
+ feelings towards you. I hate you!&rdquo; he said, the expression of rage
+ throwing a hideous glare into the eyes which were soon to be closed for
+ ever&mdash;&ldquo;I hate you with a hatred as intense, now while I lie bleeding
+ and dying before you, as if my foot trode on your neck.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have given you no cause, sir,&rdquo; I replied,&mdash;&ldquo;and for your own sake
+ I could wish your mind in a better temper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You <i>have</i> given me cause,&rdquo; he rejoined. &ldquo;In love, in ambition, in
+ the paths of interest, you have crossed and blighted me at every turn. I
+ was born to be the honour of my father's house&mdash;I have been its
+ disgrace&mdash;and all owing to you. My very patrimony has become yours&mdash;Take
+ it,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and may the curse of a dying man cleave to it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Aimage-0010" id="Aimage-0010">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/pb338.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="The Death of Rashleigh " /><br />
+ </div>
+ <!-- IMAGE END -->
+ <p>
+ In a moment after he had uttered this frightful wish, he fell back in the
+ chair; his eyes became glazed, his limbs stiffened, but the grin and glare
+ of mortal hatred survived even the last gasp of life. I will dwell no
+ longer on so painful a picture, nor say any more of the death of
+ Rashleigh, than that it gave me access to my rights of inheritance without
+ farther challenge, and that Jobson found himself compelled to allow, that
+ the ridiculous charge of misprision of high treason was got up on an
+ affidavit which he made with the sole purpose of favouring Rashleigh's
+ views, and removing me from Osbaldistone Hall. The rascal's name was
+ struck off the list of attorneys, and he was reduced to poverty and
+ contempt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I returned to London when I had put my affairs in order at Osbaldistone
+ Hall, and felt happy to escape from a place which suggested so many
+ painful recollections. My anxiety was now acute to learn the fate of Diana
+ and her father. A French gentleman who came to London on commercial
+ business, was intrusted with a letter to me from Miss Vernon, which put my
+ mind at rest respecting their safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It gave me to understand that the opportune appearance of MacGregor and
+ his party was not fortuitous. The Scottish nobles and gentry engaged in
+ the insurrection, as well as those of England, were particularly anxious
+ to further the escape of Sir Frederick Vernon, who, as an old and trusted
+ agent of the house of Stuart, was possessed of matter enough to have
+ ruined half Scotland. Rob Roy, of whose sagacity and courage they had
+ known so many proofs, was the person whom they pitched upon to assist his
+ escape, and the place of meeting was fixed at Osbaldistone Hall. You have
+ already heard how nearly the plan had been disconcerted by the unhappy
+ Rashleigh. It succeeded, however, perfectly; for when once Sir Frederick
+ and his daughter were again at large, they found horses prepared for them,
+ and, by MacGregor's knowledge of the country&mdash;for every part of
+ Scotland, and of the north of England, was familiar to him&mdash;were
+ conducted to the western sea-coast, and safely embarked for France. The
+ same gentleman told me that Sir Frederick was not expected to survive for
+ many months a lingering disease, the consequence of late hardships and
+ privations. His daughter was placed in a convent, and although it was her
+ father's wish she should take the veil, he was understood to refer the
+ matter entirely to her own inclinations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When these news reached me, I frankly told the state of my affections to
+ my father, who was not a little startled at the idea of my marrying a
+ Roman Catholic. But he was very desirous to see me &ldquo;settled in life,&rdquo; as
+ he called it; and he was sensible that, in joining him with heart and hand
+ in his commercial labours, I had sacrificed my own inclinations. After a
+ brief hesitation, and several questions asked and answered to his
+ satisfaction, he broke out with&mdash;&ldquo;I little thought a son of mine
+ should have been Lord of Osbaldistone Manor, and far less that he should
+ go to a French convent for a spouse. But so dutiful a daughter cannot but
+ prove a good wife. You have worked at the desk to please me, Frank; it is
+ but fair you should wive to please yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How I sped in my wooing, Will Tresham, I need not tell you. You know, too,
+ how long and happily I lived with Diana. You know how I lamented her; but
+ you do not&mdash;cannot know, how much she deserved her husband's sorrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have no more of romantic adventure to tell, nor, indeed, anything to
+ communicate farther, since the latter incidents of my life are so well
+ known to one who has shared, with the most friendly sympathy, the joys, as
+ well as the sorrows, by which its scenes have been chequered. I often
+ visited Scotland, but never again saw the bold Highlander who had such an
+ influence on the early events of my life. I learned, however, from time to
+ time, that he continued to maintain his ground among the mountains of Loch
+ Lomond, in despite of his powerful enemies, and that he even obtained, to
+ a certain degree, the connivance of Government to his self-elected office
+ of protector of the Lennox, in virtue of which he levied black-mail with
+ as much regularity as the proprietors did their ordinary rents. It seemed
+ impossible that his life should have concluded without a violent end.
+ Nevertheless he died in old age and by a peaceful death, some time about
+ the year 1733, and is still remembered in his country as the Robin Hood of
+ Scotland&mdash;the dread of the wealthy, but the friend of the poor&mdash;and
+ possessed of many qualities, both of head and heart, which would have
+ graced a less equivocal profession than that to which his fate condemned
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Andrew Fairservice used to say, that &ldquo;There were many things ower bad
+ for blessing, and ower gude for banning, like Rob Roy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Here the original manuscript ends somewhat abruptly. I have reason to
+ think that what followed related to private a affairs.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0025" id="link_4_0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ POSTSCRIPT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The second article of the Appendix to the Introduction to Rob Roy contains
+ two curious letters respecting the arrest of Mr. Grahame of Killearn by
+ that daring freebooter, while levying the Duke of Montrose's rents. These
+ were taken from scroll copies in the possession of his Grace the present
+ Duke, who kindly permitted the use of them in the present publication.&mdash;The
+ Novel had but just passed through the press, when the Right Honourable Mr.
+ Peel&mdash;whose important state avocations do not avert his attention
+ from the interests of literature&mdash;transmitted to the author copies of
+ the original letters and enclosure, of which he possessed only the rough
+ draught. The originals were discovered in the State Paper Office, by the
+ indefatigable researches of Mr. Lemon, who is daily throwing more light on
+ that valuable collection of records. From the documents with which the
+ Author has been thus kindly favoured, he is enabled to fill up the
+ addresses which were wanting in the scrolls. That of the 21st Nov. 1716 is
+ addressed to Lord Viscount Townshend, and is accompanied by one of the
+ same date to Robert Pringle, Esquire, Under-Secretary of State, which is
+ here inserted as relative to so curious an incident:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Letter from the Duke of Montrose, to Robert Pringle, Esq.,
+ Under-Secretary to Lord Viscount Townshend.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sr,<i>Glasgow,</i> 21 <i>Nov.</i> 1716.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Haveing had so many dispatches to make this night, I hope ye'l excuse me
+ that I make use of another hand to give yow a short account of the
+ occasion of this express, by which I have written to my Ld. Duke of
+ Roxburgh, and my Lord Townshend, which I hope ye'l gett carefully
+ deleivered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Graham, younger of Killearn, being on Munday last in Menteith att a
+ country house, collecting my rents, was about nine o'clock that same night
+ surprised by Rob Roy with a party of his men in arms, who haveing
+ surrounded the house and secured the avenues, presented their guns in at
+ the windows, while he himself entered the room with some others with cokt
+ pistolls, and seased Killearn with all his money, books, papers, and
+ bonds, and carryed all away with him to the hills, at the same time
+ ordering Killearn to write a letter to me (of which ye have the copy
+ inclosed), proposeing a very honourable treaty to me. I must say this
+ story was as surprising to me as it was insolent; and it must bring a very
+ great concern upon me, that this gentleman, my near relation, should be
+ brought to suffer all the barbaritys and crueltys, which revenge and
+ mallice may suggest to these miscreants, for his haveing acted a faithfull
+ part in the service of the Government, and his affection to me in my
+ concerns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I need not be more particular to you, since I know that my Letter to my
+ Lord Townshend will come into your hands, so shall only now give you the
+ assurances of my being, with great sincerity,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sr, yr most humble servant, (Signed) &ldquo;Montrose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I long exceedingly for a return of my former dispatches to the
+ Secretary's about Methven and Colll Urquhart, and my wife's cousins,
+ Balnamoon and Phinaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must beg yow'll give my humble service to Mr. Secretary Methven, and
+ tell him that I must refer him to what I have written to My Lord Townshend
+ in this affair of Rob Roy, believing it was needless to trouble both with
+ letters.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Examined, Robt. Lemon, <i>Deputy Keeper of State Papers.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0026" id="link_4_0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ STATE PAPER OFFICE,
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <i>Nov.</i> 4, 1829
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Note.&mdash;The enclosure referred to in the preceding letter is another
+ copy of the letter which Mr. Grahame of Killearn was compelled by Rob Roy
+ to write to the Duke of Montrose, and is exactly the same as the one
+ enclosed in his Grace's letter to Lord Townshend, dated November 21st,
+ 1716. R. L.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last letter in the Appendix No. II. (28th November), acquainting the
+ Government with Killearn's being set at liberty, is also addressed to the
+ Under-Secretary of State, Mr. Pringle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Author may also here remark, that immediately previous to the
+ insurrection of 1715, he perceives, from some notes of information given
+ to Government, that Rob Roy appears to have been much employed and trusted
+ by the Jacobite party, even in the very delicate task of transporting
+ specie to the Earl of Breadalbane, though it might have somewhat resembled
+ trusting Don Raphael and Ambrose de Lamela with the church treasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_NOTE" id="link_NOTE">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ NOTES TO ROB ROY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0028" id="link_4_0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Note A.&mdash;The Grey Stone of MacGregor.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I have been informed that, at no very remote period, it was proposed to
+ take this large stone, which marks the grave of Dugald Ciar Mhor, and
+ convert it to the purpose of the lintel of a window, the threshold of a
+ door, or some such mean use. A man of the clan MacGregor, who was somewhat
+ deranged, took fire at this insult; and when the workmen came to remove
+ the stone, planted himself upon it, with a broad axe in his hand, swearing
+ he would dash out the brains of any one who should disturb the monument.
+ Athletic in person, and insane enough to be totally regardless of
+ consequences, it was thought best to give way to his humour; and the poor
+ madman kept sentinel on the stone day and night, till the proposal of
+ removing it was entirely dropped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0029" id="link_4_0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Note B.&mdash;Dugald Ciar Mhor.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The above is the account which I find in a manuscript history of the clan
+ MacGregor, of which I was indulged with a perusal by Donald MacGregor,
+ Esq., late Major of the 33d regiment, where great pains have been taken to
+ collect traditions and written documents concerning the family. But an
+ ancient and constant tradition, preserved among the inhabitants of the
+ country, and particularly those of the clan MacFarlane, relieves Dugald
+ Ciar Mhor of the guilt of murdering the youths, and lays the blame on a
+ certain Donald or Duncan Lean, who performed the act of cruelty, with the
+ assistance of a gillie who attended him, named Charlioch, or Charlie. They
+ say that the homicides dared not again join their clan, but that they
+ resided in a wild and solitary state as outlaws, in an unfrequented part
+ of the MacFarlanes' territory. Here they lived for some time undisturbed,
+ till they committed an act of brutal violence on two defenceless women, a
+ mother and daughter of the MacFarlane clan. In revenge of this atrocity,
+ the MacFarlanes hunted them down, and shot them. It is said that the
+ younger ruffian, Charlioch, might have escaped, being remarkably swift of
+ foot. But his crime became his punishment, for the female whom he had
+ outraged had defended herself desperately, and had stabbed him with his
+ own dirk in the thigh. He was lame from the wound, and was the more easily
+ overtaken and killed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I always inclined to think this last the true edition of the story, and
+ that the guilt was transferred to Dugald Ciar Mhor, as a man of higher
+ name, but I have learned that Dugald was in truth dead several years
+ before the battle&mdash;my authority being his representative, Mr.
+ Gregorson of Ardtornish. [See also note to introduction, &ldquo;Legend of
+ Montrose,&rdquo; vol. vi.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0030" id="link_4_0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Note C.&mdash;The Loch Lomond Expedition.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Loch Lomond expedition was judged worthy to form a separate pamphlet,
+ which I have not seen; but, as quoted by the historian Rae, it must be
+ delectable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the morrow, being Thursday the 13th, they went on their expedition,
+ and about noon came to Inversnaid, the place of danger, where the Paisley
+ men and those of Dumbarton, and several of the other companies, to the
+ number of an hundred men, with the greatest intrepidity leapt on shore,
+ got up to the top of the mountains, and stood a considerable time, beating
+ their drums all the while; but no enemy appearing, they went in quest of
+ their boats, which the rebels had seized, and having casually lighted on
+ some ropes and oars hid among the shrubs, at length they found the boats
+ drawn up a good way on the land, which they hurled down to the loch. Such
+ of them as were not damaged they carried off with them, and such as were,
+ they sank and hewed to pieces. That same night they returned to Luss, and
+ thence next day to Dumbarton, from whence they had at first set out,
+ bringing along with them the whole boats they found in their way on either
+ side of the loch, and in the creeks of the isles, and mooring them under
+ the cannon of the castle. During this expedition, the pinnaces discharging
+ their patararoes, and the men their small-arms, made such a thundering
+ noise, through the multiplied rebounding echoes of the vast mountains on
+ both sides of the loch, that the MacGregors were cowed and frighted away
+ to the rest of the rebels who were encamped at Strath Fillan.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Rae's
+ History of the Rebellion,</i> 4to, p. 287.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0031" id="link_4_0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Note D.&mdash;Author's Expedition against the MacLarens.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Author is uncertain whether it is worth while to mention, that he had
+ a personal opportunity of observing, even in his own time, that the king's
+ writ did not pass quite current in the Brass of Balquhidder. There were
+ very considerable debts due by Stewart of Appin (chiefly to the author's
+ family), which were likely to be lost to the creditors, if they could not
+ be made available out of this same farm of Invernenty, the scene of the
+ murder done upon MacLaren.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His family, consisting of several strapping deer-stalkers, still possessed
+ the farm, by virtue of a long lease, for a trifling rent. There was no
+ chance of any one buying it with such an encumbrance, and a transaction
+ was entered into by the MacLarens, who, being desirous to emigrate to
+ America, agreed to sell their lease to the creditors for L500, and to
+ remove at the next term of Whitsunday. But whether they repented their
+ bargain, or desired to make a better, or whether from a mere point of
+ honour, the MacLarens declared they would not permit a summons of removal
+ to be executed against them, which was necessary for the legal completion
+ of the bargain. And such was the general impression that they were men
+ capable of resisting the legal execution of warning by very effectual
+ means, no king's messenger would execute the summons without the support
+ of a military force. An escort of a sergeant and six men was obtained from
+ a Highland regiment lying in Stirling; and the Author, then a writer's
+ apprentice, equivalent to the honourable situation of an attorney's clerk,
+ was invested with the superintendence of the expedition, with directions
+ to see that the messenger discharged his duty fully, and that the gallant
+ sergeant did not exceed his part by committing violence or plunder. And
+ thus it happened, oddly enough, that the Author first entered the romantic
+ scenery of Loch Katrine, of which he may perhaps say he has somewhat
+ extended the reputation, riding in all the dignity of danger, with a front
+ and rear guard, and loaded arms. The sergeant was absolutely a Highland
+ Sergeant Kite, full of stories of Rob Roy and of himself, and a very good
+ companion. We experienced no interruption whatever, and when we came to
+ Invernenty, found the house deserted. We took up our quarters for the
+ night, and used some of the victuals which we found there. On the morning
+ we returned as unmolested as we came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The MacLarens, who probably never thought of any serious opposition,
+ received their money and went to America, where, having had some slight
+ share in removing them from their <i>paupera regna,</i> I sincerely hope
+ they prospered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rent of Invernenty instantly rose from L10 to L70 or L80; and when
+ sold, the farm was purchased (I think by the late Laird of MacNab) at a
+ price higher in proportion than what even the modern rent authorised the
+ parties interested to hope for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0032" id="link_4_0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Note E.&mdash;Allan Breck Stewart.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Allan Breck Stewart was a man likely in such a matter to keep his word.
+ James Drummond MacGregor and he, like Katherine and Petruchio, were well
+ matched &ldquo;for a couple of quiet ones.&rdquo; Allan Breck lived till the beginning
+ of the French Revolution. About 1789, a friend of mine, then residing at
+ Paris, was invited to see some procession which was supposed likely to
+ interest him, from the windows of an apartment occupied by a Scottish
+ Benedictine priest. He found, sitting by the fire, a tall, thin,
+ raw-boned, grim-looking, old man, with the petit croix of St. Louis. His
+ visage was strongly marked by the irregular projections of the cheek-bones
+ and chin. His eyes were grey. His grizzled hair exhibited marks of having
+ been red, and his complexion was weather-beaten, and remarkably freckled.
+ Some civilities in French passed between the old man and my friend, in the
+ course of which they talked of the streets and squares of Paris, till at
+ length the old soldier, for such he seemed, and such he was, said with a
+ sigh, in a sharp Highland accent, &ldquo;Deil ane o' them a' is worth the Hie
+ Street of Edinburgh!&rdquo; On inquiry, this admirer of Auld Reekie, which he
+ was never to see again, proved to be Allan Breck Stewart. He lived
+ decently on his little pension, and had, in no subsequent period of his
+ life, shown anything of the savage mood in which he is generally believed
+ to have assassinated the enemy and oppressor, as he supposed him, of his
+ family and clan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0033" id="link_4_0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Note F.&mdash;The Abbess of Wilton.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The nunnery of Wilton was granted to the Earl of Pembroke upon its
+ dissolution, by the magisterial authority of Henry VIII., or his son
+ Edward VI. On the accession of Queen Mary, of Catholic memory, the Earl
+ found it necessary to reinstate the Abbess and her fair recluses, which he
+ did with many expressions of his remorse, kneeling humbly to the vestals,
+ and inducting them into the convent and possessions from which he had
+ expelled them. With the accession of Elizabeth, the accommodating Earl
+ again resumed his Protestant faith, and a second time drove the nuns from
+ their sanctuary. The remonstrances of the Abbess, who reminded him of his
+ penitent expressions on the former occasion, could wring from him no other
+ answer than that in the text&mdash;&ldquo;Go spin, you jade!&mdash;Go spin!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0034" id="link_4_0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Note G.&mdash;Mons Meg.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mons Meg was a large old-fashioned piece of ordnance, a great favourite
+ with the Scottish common people; she was fabricated at Mons, in Flanders,
+ in the reign of James IV. or V. of Scotland. This gun figures frequently
+ in the public accounts of the time, where we find charges for grease, to
+ grease Meg's mouth withal (to increase, as every schoolboy knows, the
+ loudness of the report), ribands to deck her carriage, and pipes to play
+ before her when she was brought from the Castle to accompany the Scottish
+ army on any distant expedition. After the Union, there was much popular
+ apprehension that the Regalia of Scotland, and the subordinate Palladium,
+ Mons Meg, would be carried to England to complete the odious surrender of
+ national independence. The Regalia, sequestered from the sight of the
+ public, were generally supposed to have been abstracted in this manner. As
+ for Mons Meg, she remained in the Castle of Edinburgh, till, by order of
+ the Board of Ordnance, she was actually removed to Woolwich about 1757.
+ The Regalia, by his Majesty's special command, have been brought forth
+ from their place of concealment in 1818, and exposed to the view of the
+ people, by whom they must be looked upon with deep associations; and, in
+ this very winter of 1828-9, Mons Meg has been restored to the country,
+ where that, which in every other place or situation was a mere mass of
+ rusty iron, becomes once more a curious monument of antiquity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0035" id="link_4_0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Note H.&mdash;-Fairy Superstition.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The lakes and precipices amidst which the Avon-Dhu, or River Forth, has
+ its birth, are still, according to popular tradition, haunted by the Elfin
+ people, the most peculiar, but most pleasing, of the creations of Celtic
+ superstitions. The opinions entertained about these beings are much the
+ same with those of the Irish, so exquisitely well narrated by Mr. Crofton
+ Croker. An eminently beautiful little conical hill, near the eastern
+ extremity of the valley of Aberfoil, is supposed to be one of their
+ peculiar haunts, and is the scene which awakens, in Andrew Fairservice,
+ the terror of their power. It is remarkable, that two successive clergymen
+ of this parish of Aberfoil have employed themselves in writing about this
+ fairy superstition. The eldest of these was Robert Kirke, a man of some
+ talents, who translated the Psalms into Gaelic verse. He had formerly been
+ minister at the neighbouring parish of Balquhidder, and died at Aberfoil
+ in 1688, at the early age of forty-two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was author of the Secret Commonwealth, which was printed after his
+ death in 1691&mdash;(an edition which I have never seen)&mdash;and was
+ reprinted in Edinburgh, 1815. This is a work concerning the fairy people,
+ in whose existence Mr. Kirke appears to have been a devout believer. He
+ describes them with the usual powers and qualities ascribed to such beings
+ in Highland tradition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what is sufficiently singular, the Rev. Robert Kirke, author of the
+ said treatise, is believed himself to have been taken away by the fairies,&mdash;in
+ revenge, perhaps, for having let in too much light upon the secrets of
+ their commonwealth. We learn this catastrophe from the information of his
+ successor, the late amiable and learned Dr. Patrick Grahame, also minister
+ at Aberfoil, who, in his Sketches of Perthshire, has not forgotten to
+ touch upon the <i>Daoine Schie,</i> or men of peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Rev. Robert Kirke was, it seems, walking upon a little eminence to the
+ west of the present manse, which is still held a <i>Dun Shie,</i> or fairy
+ mound, when he sunk down, in what seemed to mortals a fit, and was
+ supposed to be dead. This, however, was not his real fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Kirke was the near relation of Graham of Duchray, the ancestor of the
+ present General Graham Stirling. Shortly after his funeral, he appeared,
+ in the dress in which he had sunk down, to a medical relation of his own,
+ and of Duchray. 'Go,' said he to him, 'to my cousin Duchray, and tell him
+ that I am not dead. I fell down in a swoon, and was carried into
+ Fairyland, where I now am. Tell him, that when he and my friends are
+ assembled at the baptism of my child (for he had left his wife pregnant),
+ I will appear in the room, and that if he throws the knife which he holds
+ in his hand over my head, I will be released and restored to human
+ society.' The man, it seems, neglected, for some time, to deliver the
+ message. Mr. Kirke appeared to him a second time, threatening to haunt him
+ night and day till he executed his commission, which at length he did. The
+ time of the baptism arrived. They were seated at table; the figure of Mr.
+ Kirke entered, but the Laird of Duchray, by some unaccountable fatality,
+ neglected to perform the prescribed ceremony. Mr. Kirke retired by another
+ door, and was seen no wore. It is firmly believed that he is, at this day,
+ in Fairyland.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>Sketches of Perthshire,</i> p. 254.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [The treatise by Robert Kirke, here mentioned, was written in the year
+ 1691, but not printed till 1815.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link_4_0036" id="link_4_0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Note I.&mdash;Clachan of Aberfoil.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I do not know how this might stand in Mr. Osbaldistone's day, but I can
+ assure the reader, whose curiosity may lead him to visit the scenes of
+ these romantic adventures, that the Clachan of Aberfoil now affords a very
+ comfortable little inn. If he chances to be a Scottish antiquary, it will
+ be an additional recommendation to him, that he will find himself in the
+ vicinity of the Rev. Dr. Patrick Grahame, minister of the gospel at
+ Aberfoil, whose urbanity in communicating information on the subject of
+ national antiquities, is scarce exceeded even by the stores of legendary
+ lore which he has accumulated.&mdash;<i>Original Note.</i> The respectable
+ clergyman alluded to has been dead for some years. [See note H.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Rob Roy, Complete, Illustrated, by Sir Walter Scott
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+</pre>
+ </body>
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